Franchise icon Wilkins speaks on Jalen Johnson, Trae Young, and more

Mar 9, 2020; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; NBA Hall of Fame player Dominique Wilkins, left, congratulates Atlanta Hawks guard Trae Young (11) after their double overtime win against the Charlotte Hornets at State Farm Arena. Mandatory Credit: Jason Getz-Imagn Images

Dominique Wilkins needs no introduction around these parts. His jersey hangs in the State Farm Arena rafters after a Hawks career that saw him total nine All-Star Games and seven All-NBA appearances.

So when he speaks, you listen.

If you’ve been living under a rock, a lot has happened with the Hawks this season. Trae Young has departed, and at the same time Jalen Johnson has ascended to stardom, becoming a first-time All-Star earlier this month. ‘Nique spoke with DJ Saddiqi of Casino dot org on his meteoric rise, saying:

“Well, I must say he’s a little bit of Scottie Pippen as far as being a point forward,” Wilkins led with. “Pippen was a point forward and was very effective at the position. This guy Jalen, he brings even another element, because the way he rebounds, the way he passes, and he flirts with a triple-double every single night. I love Jalen Johnson. The way he plays, man, and he’s so deserving of this honor that he received during All-Star weekend. I couldn’t be happier for him.”

On his relationship with Johnson and his family

“I look at Jalen like someone like your brother in a sense,” Wilkins continued. “I have a great relationship with him. I have a great relationship with his mom and dad. I saw the growth in him two years ago, and I said to his parents, ‘Don’t worry, he’s gonna do very well in this league, and he’s gonna be a great player in this league. Just be patient.’ And now look where he’s at.”

On Jalen Johnson’s improvement

“Jalen Johnson has developed quicker than a lot of people have given credit for or expected,” Wilkins said. “But they always say, take care of your business at hand. Don’t worry about too much down the road right now. Worry about what you’re doing now. You take this one game at a time, one month at a time, one year at a time.”

“He’s still a young guy, so it’s a few different areas where he can get better, and he will get better,” Wilkins detailed. “He will get better defensively. He will get better as far as different ways he can score. As a young guy, you can always get better. You can always add new things to your game to make you an even more lethal player. Being 24 years old, he’s still learning right now.”

On the current Hawks

It’s clear the Hawks have undergone a whirlwind series of changes to their roster in the past calendar year. As a result of the instability, the team is in ninth place in the East and slightly under .500 (29-21). But Wilkins believe the foundation has been laid, explaining:

“What you’re trying to do right now in this part of this season is continue to build some chemistry. And once you build that chemistry — hopefully sooner than later — we still have a chance to do a lot of damage, because there’s still 30 games left in the season. You have to make up some ground, because you’re right there. The Eastern Conference is very close, and we have a very good young team: Jalen Johnson, you got Nickeil Alexander-Walker, Dyson Daniels. Now you bring over Jonathan Kuminga, and you got Onyeka Okongwu, who’s come along now, and young Zaccharie Risacher, so you got all these younger kids now developing on the job. I think that’s the way it should be done. I look for us to make a move as far as the way we play and try to win games in the second half of the season, because now coming out of this All-Star break, now you really refocus yourself on winning games.”

On the youth and winning streaks

“We have something special and we can be that new young team that makes a difference in that Eastern Conference,” Wilkins explained. “I look for us to make a difference now. Not waiting for next year, because we are right there. In this league, it’ll only take you a month to get hot. You look at the Charlotte Hornets. They won 10 of the last 12, so they got hot at the right time going into the All-Star break, coming into the second half of the season. You need a quick run like that, maybe not eight or nine games, but you get on a five or six-game winning streak, that changes things.”

On the exit and lasting legacy of Trae Young

Young was the franchise pillar for the better part of 8 seasons here in Atlanta, and he leaves behind a résumé as good as any player since Dominique Wilkins himself. Wilkins can also empathize closely with being traded away from a franchise so key to one’s own identity.

Wilkins spoke on the trade, saying that, “sometimes in life, things don’t work out, and it’s time. We all have been through it. I’ve been through it, and it’s nobody’s fault. It’s just the way the business is running, how it’s done. Trae was a tremendous player in an Atlanta Hawks jersey. No one could ever take that from him. What he did was very special.”

Inside the Suns: Jalen Green, Dillon Brooks, Khaman Maluach, Rasheer Fleming

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 24: Jalen Green #4 of the Phoenix Suns goes to the basket against Sam Hauser #30 and Neemias Queta #88 of the Boston Celtics during the second half at Mortgage Matchup Center on February 24, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Welcome to Inside the Suns, your weekly deep-down analysis of the current Phoenix Suns team. Each week the Fantable — a round table of Bright Siders — give their takes on the Suns’ latest issues and news.

Fantable Questions of the Week

Q1: After returning from injury, Jalen Green’s offensive production for February has been underwhelming. 15 ppg, 35.3 FG%, 23.7 3PT%, 60 FT% on 12 FGAs per game. What are your thoughts on this?

GuarGuar: I don’t think he’s best as a #1 option, which is what he’s had to be these past few games with all the injuries. He’s also been injured literally all season and it was a hamstring reinjury, so I’ll give him some grace to come back to form. He’s gotta get used to NBA action again and regain that confidence in his body.

Ashton: Can you imagine being Jalen Green right now? He finally returns to the court, looks around, and there is an M.A.S.H. unit sitting on the bench. If we see “Hawkeye” (Alan Alda – not Marvel) on the bench, then I know the Suns are in trouble.

Between having work off some of the rust, he just does not have the starting player support needed to get those percentages up. The bench players and rookies are not going to help. But GA spotting up for a three or Book pulling double teams while making timely passing decisions would. Brooks doing his usual bullying thing would seriously help.

Sure, there is a bit of concern about the FT percentage, but that can be fixed. A broken and hobbled starter squad cannot. I would not read too much into it.

OldAz: He has not been on the court with these teammates all season, and now he has to be the focal point of the offense with the normal #1 and #3 options missing. On top of that, he has to do it without the needed practice time to even figure out what that offense looks like. And finally, he is supposed to do it while working himself back into game shape. One for finally, the pressure of fan expectations (based on his salary and a couple tantalizing games when Book and Brooks were playing) has to make every miss feel like the hole is a foot deeper. I believe he will work his way through this, but it is not going to be quick or easy.

Rod: It’s frustrating for fans, and I’m sure it is for him too. The team has recently been devastated by injuries that have left him in the position of trying to carry much of the scoring load instead of being eased back into the rotation after returning from his own injury, which already caused him to miss the bulk of this season. We already knew he wasn’t an especially efficient scorer, which has been very apparent lately as he’s been relied on way to much at this point.

He’s certainly not a perfect player, far from it, but he’s better than what we’ve seen lately. At full or even half-strength, I believe this team is good enough to cover for each other’s flaws, but, as it is now, those flaws are going to stand out even more and we’ve been seeing a lot more of those lately from more players than just Jalen.

Q2: Dillon Brooks’ broken hand will likely cause him to be out for 4-6 weeks, meaning that it is possible for him to miss all of the Suns’ remaining games. If that happens, do you believe that the Suns will finish the regular season with a record good enough to qualify for the play-in games?

GuarGuar: Barring absolute catastrophe, I think we are locked into the Play-In game. Unfortunately, with this injury, I think it’s really tough for us to finish higher than 7th and not have to play in the Play-In. We’d need to really get hot starting in March when Booker gets back. Hopefully, Brooks comes back sooner than expected. His toughness is much needed on this squad.

Ashton: I was a real proponent of the Suns taking the sixth seed. Now? It is time for a major revision. The two-way players are not going to be able to play much longer, and the rookies really just have not developed in the NBA, though they are doing fine in the G League.

To be honest, what a rotten turn of events for the Suns and their fans. Even if some of the starters outside of Brooks return, what remains is the question of how long they can stay healthy. I will take the under, but the over that Book can sell more shoes.

With all that said, I am not all doom-and-gloom. The Suns will need to lose a lot of games to fall out of the tenth seed. They have a six-game lead over the Clippers as of Tuesday afternoon.

I think the Suns will go dancing. Is it March Madness yet?

OldAz: I write this on Monday night, and the Suns have an 11-game cushion on the 11th-place Grizz with 24 to play. Those same Grizzlies are 14 games under .500 and on pace to win 31 games (the Suns have 33 currently). I am not sure I am prepared to contemplate this question further, as that would be an all-time collapse by the hometown team.

Rod: While I don’t think this is likely, I do believe there’s a small possibility of it happening, depending upon the health of the rest of the team…and how determined the teams currently below 10th in the West are to tank the rest of the season. With Brooks out for all of the rest of the regular season, I see it as pretty difficult for the Suns to stay put as the 7th seed, and could drop well down the play-in ladder though. At this point, I’m just hoping that they can avoid falling to 9th or 10th, where they would have to win two play-in games just to get into the playoffs.

Q3: With the recent rash of injuries, rookies Khaman Maluach and Rasheer Fleming have gotten some meaningful rotation minutes. Do you believe they proved that they’re ready for more, even when the team gets healthy again?

GuarGuar: I don’t know if they can crack the rotation yet when everyone is fully healthy (if that ever happens again this season haha), but I have liked what I’ve seen from them recently. Man Man had some bright stretches during that Portland game and Rasheer is beginning to look a tad more comfortable offensively. I still doubt they would be in the rotation come play-in/playoff time, though.

Ashton: No. This is probably the short answer, but they just have not been given the time to develop the minutes against NBA caliber players.

If this were a buy/sell question, I would sell. Maybe we will change the title of Inside the Suns to ‘Around the Suns Horn’ article.

Suns are going to lose some games in the immediate future (please beat the Lakers, and I will call it a win during the injury stretch), and the best-case scenario is that Fleming and KM get some decent development minutes for the future.

But for now, I will keep my expectations low.

OldAz: I thought this about Fleming the last time he got meaningful minutes and held his own, but alas, those minutes dried up pretty quick. Player development takes commitment, and I am hoping these injuries force the Suns to make a little (or a lot) more of this necessary commitment. I wouldn’t mind seeing KM get some more minutes too, but it seems to me that with Brooks out, Dunn and Fleming combining for 40+ minutes a night would not be a bad thing, even if the growing pains cost them a few wins in a stretch where they were likely to struggle anyway.

Rod: Not just yet. What I have seen from them lately in encouraging though and, hopefully, they’ll show that even more as they’re given more court time until the team heals up. And I do believe they’re now at the point where, even with the team fully healthy, it’s really worth taking a chance on putting them in under certain circumstances, particularly when the Suns are facing bigger teams whose size is creating problems for them.

As always, many thanks to our Fantable members for all their extra effort this week!


Quotes of the Week

“We do have to find ways to turn teams over, and a lot of that’s Goodie (Jordan Goodwin), so we’re going to have to find ways to manufacture it. That’s a big piece of what we do.” – Jordan Ott

“Especially with those guys being out (Book, Brooks, Goodwin), everybody has got to be aggressive to get open looks, take the open drive and knock down open shots.” – Royce O’Neale

“We’re 30th in free throws differential since February 1. We can’t get to the free throw line, cant get their rim.” – Jordan Ott

“When he (Dillon Brooks) first found out (that his hand was broken), he was probably disappointed. The next morning I think he was in here shooting with one hand. He’s crazy, but that’s who he is. That’s how hard he works and a testament to him as a player and a person. He’s special in that way.” – Collin Gillespie

“Everybody has got to have a little grace. He (Jalen Green) has been out for three quarters of the season. It’s not an easy thing to do to just insert yourself back into the lineup and be able to just play at that level or play at the speed of the game. I have a ton of grace for him because I’ve been through that where I missed a whole year. He’s missed like three quarters of the season. It’s not easy and he’s done an incredible job of just fitting in seamlessly. It’s been pretty cool to see.” – Collin Gillespie


Suns Trivia/History

On February 27, 1972, the Suns’ 6’1″ rookie reserve guard Mo Layton led all scorers with a career high 37 points to fuel a Suns 127-125 come-from-behind victory over the Cavaliers in Cleveland. It was the single 30+ point game of Layton’s 5-year NBA career. He only played for the Suns for two seasons, averaging a modest 8.2 ppg before being waived by the Suns before the beginning of the 1973-74 season. He also spent a short time that year playing for the ABA’s Memphis Tams under his former Suns head coach, Butch van Breda Kolff. Coach van Breda Kolff owns the dubious distinction of having the shortest tenure ever as a Suns head coach after he was fired just 7 games into the 1972-73 season.

On March 3, 1993, the 41-13 Phoenix Suns – as expected – defeated the 19-35 Philadelphia 76ers 125-115 in Phoenix. The one unexpected thing during that game was 76ers backup center, 7’7″ Manute Bol, who was mostly known only for his shot blocking, making 6 three pointers, 2 more than the entire Suns team. Suns forward Charles Barkley was both amazed and amused by it all.

On March 6, 2019, Devin Booker became the youngest player ever to make 500 3-Point Field Goals at 22 years, 127 days.

On March 6, 2020, Suns’ backup center Aron Baynes scored 37 points, gathered 16 rebounds, and recorded 2 blocks while making 9 of 14 shots (64.3%) from three while taking over for injured starting center Deandre Ayton in a 127-117 home win over the Portland Trail Blazers. In NBA history, no one else had ever done all of those things in one game.


This Week’s Game Schedule

Thursday, Feb 26 – Suns vs Los Angeles Lakers (7:00 pm)
Tuesday, March 3 – Suns @ Sacramento Kings (9:00 pm) Peacock


This Week’s Valley Suns Game Schedule

Thursday, Feb 26. Valley Suns vs South Bay Lakers (7:00 pm) ESPN+
Saturday, Feb 28 – Valley Suns @ Texas Legends (6:30 pm)
Monday, March 2 – Valley Suns vs Salt Lake City Stars (6:30 pm) Prime Video


Important Future Dates

March 1 – Playoff eligibility waiver deadline
March 4 – Final day to sign players to two-way contracts
March 28 – NBA G League Regular Season ends
March 31 – 2026 NBA G League Playoffs begin
April 12 – Regular season ends (All 30 teams play)
April 13 – Rosters set for NBA Playoffs 2026 (3 p.m. ET)
April 14-17 – SoFi NBA Play-In Tournament
April 18 – NBA Playoffs begin

Inside the Suns: Jalen Green, Dillon Brooks, Khaman Maluach, Rasheer Fleming

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 24: Jalen Green #4 of the Phoenix Suns goes to the basket against Sam Hauser #30 and Neemias Queta #88 of the Boston Celtics during the second half at Mortgage Matchup Center on February 24, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Welcome to Inside the Suns, your weekly deep-down analysis of the current Phoenix Suns team. Each week the Fantable — a round table of Bright Siders — give their takes on the Suns’ latest issues and news.

Fantable Questions of the Week

Q1: After returning from injury, Jalen Green’s offensive production for February has been underwhelming. 15 ppg, 35.3 FG%, 23.7 3PT%, 60 FT% on 12 FGAs per game. What are your thoughts on this?

GuarGuar: I don’t think he’s best as a #1 option, which is what he’s had to be these past few games with all the injuries. He’s also been injured literally all season and it was a hamstring reinjury, so I’ll give him some grace to come back to form. He’s gotta get used to NBA action again and regain that confidence in his body.

Ashton: Can you imagine being Jalen Green right now? He finally returns to the court, looks around, and there is an M.A.S.H. unit sitting on the bench. If we see “Hawkeye” (Alan Alda – not Marvel) on the bench, then I know the Suns are in trouble.

Between having work off some of the rust, he just does not have the starting player support needed to get those percentages up. The bench players and rookies are not going to help. But GA spotting up for a three or Book pulling double teams while making timely passing decisions would. Brooks doing his usual bullying thing would seriously help.

Sure, there is a bit of concern about the FT percentage, but that can be fixed. A broken and hobbled starter squad cannot. I would not read too much into it.

OldAz: He has not been on the court with these teammates all season, and now he has to be the focal point of the offense with the normal #1 and #3 options missing. On top of that, he has to do it without the needed practice time to even figure out what that offense looks like. And finally, he is supposed to do it while working himself back into game shape. One for finally, the pressure of fan expectations (based on his salary and a couple tantalizing games when Book and Brooks were playing) has to make every miss feel like the hole is a foot deeper. I believe he will work his way through this, but it is not going to be quick or easy.

Rod: It’s frustrating for fans, and I’m sure it is for him too. The team has recently been devastated by injuries that have left him in the position of trying to carry much of the scoring load instead of being eased back into the rotation after returning from his own injury, which already caused him to miss the bulk of this season. We already knew he wasn’t an especially efficient scorer, which has been very apparent lately as he’s been relied on way to much at this point.

He’s certainly not a perfect player, far from it, but he’s better than what we’ve seen lately. At full or even half-strength, I believe this team is good enough to cover for each other’s flaws, but, as it is now, those flaws are going to stand out even more and we’ve been seeing a lot more of those lately from more players than just Jalen.

Q2: Dillon Brooks’ broken hand will likely cause him to be out for 4-6 weeks, meaning that it is possible for him to miss all of the Suns’ remaining games. If that happens, do you believe that the Suns will finish the regular season with a record good enough to qualify for the play-in games?

GuarGuar: Barring absolute catastrophe, I think we are locked into the Play-In game. Unfortunately, with this injury, I think it’s really tough for us to finish higher than 7th and not have to play in the Play-In. We’d need to really get hot starting in March when Booker gets back. Hopefully, Brooks comes back sooner than expected. His toughness is much needed on this squad.

Ashton: I was a real proponent of the Suns taking the sixth seed. Now? It is time for a major revision. The two-way players are not going to be able to play much longer, and the rookies really just have not developed in the NBA, though they are doing fine in the G League.

To be honest, what a rotten turn of events for the Suns and their fans. Even if some of the starters outside of Brooks return, what remains is the question of how long they can stay healthy. I will take the under, but the over that Book can sell more shoes.

With all that said, I am not all doom-and-gloom. The Suns will need to lose a lot of games to fall out of the tenth seed. They have a six-game lead over the Clippers as of Tuesday afternoon.

I think the Suns will go dancing. Is it March Madness yet?

OldAz: I write this on Monday night, and the Suns have an 11-game cushion on the 11th-place Grizz with 24 to play. Those same Grizzlies are 14 games under .500 and on pace to win 31 games (the Suns have 33 currently). I am not sure I am prepared to contemplate this question further, as that would be an all-time collapse by the hometown team.

Rod: While I don’t think this is likely, I do believe there’s a small possibility of it happening, depending upon the health of the rest of the team…and how determined the teams currently below 10th in the West are to tank the rest of the season. With Brooks out for all of the rest of the regular season, I see it as pretty difficult for the Suns to stay put as the 7th seed, and could drop well down the play-in ladder though. At this point, I’m just hoping that they can avoid falling to 9th or 10th, where they would have to win two play-in games just to get into the playoffs.

Q3: With the recent rash of injuries, rookies Khaman Maluach and Rasheer Fleming have gotten some meaningful rotation minutes. Do you believe they proved that they’re ready for more, even when the team gets healthy again?

GuarGuar: I don’t know if they can crack the rotation yet when everyone is fully healthy (if that ever happens again this season haha), but I have liked what I’ve seen from them recently. Man Man had some bright stretches during that Portland game and Rasheer is beginning to look a tad more comfortable offensively. I still doubt they would be in the rotation come play-in/playoff time, though.

Ashton: No. This is probably the short answer, but they just have not been given the time to develop the minutes against NBA caliber players.

If this were a buy/sell question, I would sell. Maybe we will change the title of Inside the Suns to ‘Around the Suns Horn’ article.

Suns are going to lose some games in the immediate future (please beat the Lakers, and I will call it a win during the injury stretch), and the best-case scenario is that Fleming and KM get some decent development minutes for the future.

But for now, I will keep my expectations low.

OldAz: I thought this about Fleming the last time he got meaningful minutes and held his own, but alas, those minutes dried up pretty quick. Player development takes commitment, and I am hoping these injuries force the Suns to make a little (or a lot) more of this necessary commitment. I wouldn’t mind seeing KM get some more minutes too, but it seems to me that with Brooks out, Dunn and Fleming combining for 40+ minutes a night would not be a bad thing, even if the growing pains cost them a few wins in a stretch where they were likely to struggle anyway.

Rod: Not just yet. What I have seen from them lately in encouraging though and, hopefully, they’ll show that even more as they’re given more court time until the team heals up. And I do believe they’re now at the point where, even with the team fully healthy, it’s really worth taking a chance on putting them in under certain circumstances, particularly when the Suns are facing bigger teams whose size is creating problems for them.

As always, many thanks to our Fantable members for all their extra effort this week!


Quotes of the Week

“We do have to find ways to turn teams over, and a lot of that’s Goodie (Jordan Goodwin), so we’re going to have to find ways to manufacture it. That’s a big piece of what we do.” – Jordan Ott

“Especially with those guys being out (Book, Brooks, Goodwin), everybody has got to be aggressive to get open looks, take the open drive and knock down open shots.” – Royce O’Neale

“We’re 30th in free throws differential since February 1. We can’t get to the free throw line, cant get their rim.” – Jordan Ott

“When he (Dillon Brooks) first found out (that his hand was broken), he was probably disappointed. The next morning I think he was in here shooting with one hand. He’s crazy, but that’s who he is. That’s how hard he works and a testament to him as a player and a person. He’s special in that way.” – Collin Gillespie

“Everybody has got to have a little grace. He (Jalen Green) has been out for three quarters of the season. It’s not an easy thing to do to just insert yourself back into the lineup and be able to just play at that level or play at the speed of the game. I have a ton of grace for him because I’ve been through that where I missed a whole year. He’s missed like three quarters of the season. It’s not easy and he’s done an incredible job of just fitting in seamlessly. It’s been pretty cool to see.” – Collin Gillespie


Suns Trivia/History

On February 27, 1972, the Suns’ 6’1″ rookie reserve guard Mo Layton led all scorers with a career high 37 points to fuel a Suns 127-125 come-from-behind victory over the Cavaliers in Cleveland. It was the single 30+ point game of Layton’s 5-year NBA career. He only played for the Suns for two seasons, averaging a modest 8.2 ppg before being waived by the Suns before the beginning of the 1973-74 season. He also spent a short time that year playing for the ABA’s Memphis Tams under his former Suns head coach, Butch van Breda Kolff. Coach van Breda Kolff owns the dubious distinction of having the shortest tenure ever as a Suns head coach after he was fired just 7 games into the 1972-73 season.

On March 3, 1993, the 41-13 Phoenix Suns – as expected – defeated the 19-35 Philadelphia 76ers 125-115 in Phoenix. The one unexpected thing during that game was 76ers backup center, 7’7″ Manute Bol, who was mostly known only for his shot blocking, making 6 three pointers, 2 more than the entire Suns team. Suns forward Charles Barkley was both amazed and amused by it all.

On March 6, 2019, Devin Booker became the youngest player ever to make 500 3-Point Field Goals at 22 years, 127 days.

On March 6, 2020, Suns’ backup center Aron Baynes scored 37 points, gathered 16 rebounds, and recorded 2 blocks while making 9 of 14 shots (64.3%) from three while taking over for injured starting center Deandre Ayton in a 127-117 home win over the Portland Trail Blazers. In NBA history, no one else had ever done all of those things in one game.


This Week’s Game Schedule

Thursday, Feb 26 – Suns vs Los Angeles Lakers (7:00 pm)
Tuesday, March 3 – Suns @ Sacramento Kings (9:00 pm) Peacock


This Week’s Valley Suns Game Schedule

Thursday, Feb 26. Valley Suns vs South Bay Lakers (7:00 pm) ESPN+
Saturday, Feb 28 – Valley Suns @ Texas Legends (6:30 pm)
Monday, March 2 – Valley Suns vs Salt Lake City Stars (6:30 pm) Prime Video


Important Future Dates

March 1 – Playoff eligibility waiver deadline
March 4 – Final day to sign players to two-way contracts
March 28 – NBA G League Regular Season ends
March 31 – 2026 NBA G League Playoffs begin
April 12 – Regular season ends (All 30 teams play)
April 13 – Rosters set for NBA Playoffs 2026 (3 p.m. ET)
April 14-17 – SoFi NBA Play-In Tournament
April 18 – NBA Playoffs begin

Rogers, O’Neill looking to carry hot spring starts into Orioles regular season

SARASOTA, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 16: Trevor Rogers #28 of the Baltimore Orioles pitches live during practice at Ed Smith Stadium on February 16, 2026 in Sarasota, Florida. (Photo by Todd Olszewski/Baltimore Orioles/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Hello, friends.

Today marks exactly one month until Orioles Opening Day! The team will be playing exhibition games from now through March 23 to get ready for that. After yesterday’s 4-3 victory over the Rays, the Orioles are now 3-2-1 in Grapefruit League action. Awaiting today is a 1:05 game against the Tigers that will be broadcast on MASN. Dean Kremer is lined up as today’s starter. A day farther out, Shane Baz will get into his first organized spring game as Friday’s starting pitcher.

Yesterday’s win saw three scoreless innings from Trevor Rogers, who’s yet to allow a run in spring action. For anyone who was looking for a reason to believe that he’ll be able to pick up where he left off at the end of last season, that’s really not a bad thing to latch onto. It’s less outlandish of a belief now that we’ve seen him do what he did last year.

Another early spring standout is Tyler O’Neill. There’s a guy who was not exactly showing us success last year. It’s early and it doesn’t matter yet, and staying healthy might be his biggest issue rather than performance anyway. Still, O’Neill seems to be taking good at-bats and getting good results early on. One path to a better team in 2026 is to have last winter’s big signing start to get that contract out from being a waste.

If you’d already given up prospect Vance Honeycutt, the 2024 first rounder, as a bust, you might not have noticed that he’s gotten a pair of spring training homers, including one yesterday. He stunk in 2025, there’s no getting around that, and same as any of these other guys, it doesn’t matter yet. Still, it has to be nice for him after a tough year to get a positive early vibe from 2026. It will take a lot more homering in real games for this to connect into anything. I like the start.

With a few players leaving camp to participate in the World Baseball Classic – including O’Neill, who’ll be joining Team Canada – there’s going to be a bit more room for prospects to get playing time this year. If Honeycutt or others are able to take advantage of that, good for them.

Orioles stuff you might have missed

More notes from Orioles 4-3 win over Rays (School of Roch)
Roch Kubatko runs through more of the stuff from yesterday’s game. It wasn’t all positive, with Andrew Kittredge having a bit of a clunker.

Orioles believe bullpen’s a strength: “I think we’re going to surprise some people” (Baltimore Baseball)
Gotta love a dose of spring training optimism.

Pete Alonso broke this comedian’s son’s heart, and now wants him to be an Orioles fan (Orioles.com)
This is about the son of John Oliver, host of Last Week Tonight and a Mets fan, now getting a personal appeal from the Polar Bear to change fandoms with him. I’ve watched Oliver’s show and I think he’s absolutely ready to experience Orioles fandom.

Taylor Ward learned to embrace change. Then he got traded. (The Baltimore Sun)
I keep forgetting that the Orioles traded for Taylor Ward. I hope he doesn’t make me wish I could forget when the season happens. Although that’s also up to Grayson Rodriguez, who the O’s traded to the Angels.

Birthdays and Orioles anniversaries

Nothing of particular note has happened on this day in Orioles history. Unless there’s bad news, that probably won’t be changing today.

There is one lone former Oriole with a birthday today. Happy 49th birthday to 2001-02 pitcher Josh Towers, who had a 5.05 ERA in 29 games across his two seasons with the team.

Is today your birthday? Happy birthday to you! Your birthday buddies for today include: playwright/poet Christopher Marlowe (1564), author Victor Hugo (1802), blue jeans manufacturer Levi Strauss (1829), cereal creator John Harvey Kellogg (1852), chemical maker Herbert Henry Dow (1866), animator Tex Avery (1908), musician Fats Domino (1928), and musician Johnny Cash (1932).

On this day in history…

In 1616, the Catholic Church officially banned Galileo Galilei from teaching that the Earth orbits the sun.

In 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte escaped from the island of Elba, where he had been exiled following his defeat a year prior.

In 1919, President Woodrow Wilson signed legislation that established Grand Canyon National Park. Exactly a decade later, President Calvin Coolidge signed legislation establishing Grand Teton National Park.

A random Orioles trivia question

I received a random book of Orioles trivia for Christmas. I’ll ask a question each time it’s my turn in this space until I run out of questions or I forget. I’m skipping stupid questions; we’re already on question 48 today. The book gives multiple choice answers but that would be too easy for us, wouldn’t it? Here’s today’s question:

Which pitcher’s 15 wins led the 2005 Orioles?

If you are answering the question early in the day, please be considerate and place your guess behind spoiler text so that others arriving later can still make a fresh guess. Thank you!

The answer to Sunday’s question: which year did the B&O Warehouse open? 1904!

**

And that’s the way it is in Birdland on February 26. Have a safe Thursday.

Phillies News: Zack Wheeler, Andrew Painter, Bullpen

CLEARWATER, FL - FEBRUARY 22: The Philly Phanatic performs prior to the spring training baseball game between the Pittsburgh Pirates and Philadelphia Phillies at BayCare Ballpark on February 22, 2026 in Clearwater, Florida. (Photo by Mike Carlson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It was nice to see a healthy dose of Phillies regulars in the game yesterday. It’s hard to stay tuned into spring training games, especially this early, but seeing some of the players you recognize helps. Well at least it will until most of them leave for the World Baseball Classic next week.

On to the links.

Phillies news:

MLB news:

Thursday Headlines: Rise of Cason Wallace

Feb 25, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Oklahoma City Thunder guard Cason Wallace (22) dribbles in the second half against the Detroit Pistons at Little Caesars Arena. Mandatory Credit: Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images | Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images

When you think about the Oklahoma City Thunder, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander comes to mind.

SGA has been the face of the Thunder, winning the league MVP and Finals MVP last season. When he’s been healthy, he’s been dominant again this season.

But with SGA missing time due to an injury, another former Kentucky Wildcat has stepped up the last few games. Cason Wallace has been a key piece for the Thunder, averaging around 23 points per game the last three games to go along with about 5 rebounds and just over 7 assists.

On Tuesday, Wallace led OKC to a victory in Toronto with 27 points, 8 rebounds, and 7 assists on 11-16 shooting. Last night, the Thunder fell to the Detroit Pistons, but Wallace scored 23 points to go along with 5 assists and knocked down 3-6 from beyond the arc.

It’s unknown right now when SGA will return. He’s expected to be evaluated in the coming days, but if you’re the Thunder, you have to like how Cason Wallace has emerged in his absence and what he can provide moving forward during the remainder of the season.

Tweet of the Day

I think this season pretty much confirmed we need someone in this type of role.

Headlines

Pope says there are ongoing conversations about GM position – KSR

It’s been an ongoing conversation for a while…

Win or lose, Pope says pressure is always on Kentucky – Vaughts Views

Very true.

UK basketball succeeds in challenge to win without Oweh – Cats Pause

It’s an interesting stat.

UK Baseball bounces back with big offensive effort – UK Athletics

The Cats came out hot in the first inning.

That UCONN-St.Johns game was ugly – Yahoo

A historically bad day for Pitino’s squad.

Cincinnati sues Brendan Sorsby over $1M exit fee – ESPN

Wouldn’t be surprised if we started seeing more of this.

Which teams are potential bracket busters? – Bleacher Report

These teams could cause some issues in March.

Marques Johnson is still dunking at age 70 – NBC Sports

That’s impressive!

Is the NCAA going to go after tampering cases? – CBS Sports

We’ll have to wait and see.

NBC likely moving on from Tony Dungy – SI

Dungy has been with NBC for over 15 years.

One year later, Charlie Coyle trade has been a success for Bruins

One year later, Charlie Coyle trade has been a success for Bruins originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Bruins dismantled their roster ahead of the 2025 NHL trade deadline and dealt away many veteran players — including Brad Marchand, Brandon Carlo, Trent Frederic, and Charlie Coyle, among others — for draft picks and prospects.

It was the right decision at the time as the B’s were on their way to finishing with the league’s fifth-worst record. There was no playoff hockey at TD Garden for the first time since 2016.

The Carlo trade with the Toronto Maple Leafs has been a home run for the Bruins so far. The Coyle trade with the Colorado Avalanche has been a success for Boston, too.

Coyle returns to TD Garden on Thursday for the first time since the trade. He comes back to his hometown rink as a member of the Columbus Blue Jackets, who acquired him in a trade with the Avs last June.

Here’s a recap of the March 7, 2025 trade between the Bruins and Avalanche:

  • Bruins received: Casey Mittelstadt, Will Zellers, 2025 second-round pick (Liam Pettersson)
  • Avalanche received: Charlie Coyle, 2026 fifth-round pick

How has the Coyle trade benefitted the Bruins so far?

Casey Mittelstadt providing versatility, scoring depth

The NHL player the Bruins got in return for Coyle was forward Casey Mittelstadt. He has tallied 28 points (12 goals, 16 assists) in 47 games this season. He’s on pace to score 15-plus goals for the fourth time in his career. He’s also making a positive impact on Boston’s power play, which ranks third in the league with a 26.9 percent success rate. His 52.2 percent faceoff win rate is a career high as well.

Mittelstadt is a solid middle-six forward who’s versatile enough to play center or wing.

Will Zeller has exciting upside

The Bruins also acquired prospect Will Zellers in the Coyle trade. Zellers was a third-round pick by the Avalanche in 2024. He led the USHL in goals with 44 during the 2024-25 season and earned USHL Player of the Year and Forward of the Year awards.

Zellers has carried that success to the University of North Dakota, where he is having a tremendous freshman season with 26 points (16 goals, 10 assists) in 31 games for the No. 3 ranked team in the nation.

Zellers has exciting goal-scoring ability with the potential to be a top-six wing in the NHL.

The Bruins also received a 2025 second-round pick from the Avalanche in the Coyle deal, which turned out to be the No. 62 overall selection. Boston picked Swedish defenseman Liam Pettersson, who skates really well and has an impressive offensive skill. He’s still a raw talent, but there’s a lot to like about his skill set.

Coyle has been productive in Columbus

How is Coyle playing for the Blue Jackets?

He’s been a dependable two-way center and a strong leader for a young Blue Jackets squad. He has 42 points (15 goals, 27 assists) in 56 games. He had 35 points in 82 games last season, so he’s bounced back offensively and could reach 50-plus points for just the third time in his career.

The verdict

Even though Coyle is playing well, the trade still has worked out pretty well for the Bruins, and there’s a strong possibility that it could get much better depending on how Zellers and Pettersson develop. Mittelstadt is six years younger than Coyle and has proven to be a good fit in the lineup as a versatile forward.

The final grade on the Coyle trade won’t be complete for several years, but the players involved will have a real impact on this season’s playoff race. The Bruins occupy the second wild card playoff spot in the Eastern Conference standings, and one of the teams chasing them four points back is the Blue Jackets.

Thursday’s matchup is the first of three meetings between the Bruins and Blue Jackets over the next seven weeks. Valuable points in the playoffs are at stake in these matchups, and you can bet Coyle and Mittelstadt will have their say in the outcome.

Is Ryan Weathers a spring fad or someone to watch?

May 20, 2025; Miami, Florida, USA; Miami Marlins starting pitcher Ryan Weathers (35) looks on against the Chicago Cubs during the first inning at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images | Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

We’re a week into spring training games getting underway now, and the Yankees have some interesting highlights develop already. Perhaps the most intriguing name on everyone’s tongue after his first appearance has been Ryan Weathers, the left-handed arm that proved to be one of the few new faces the Yankees brought on board over the course of the offseason.

Weathers landed in New York via a trade with the Marlins for a package of four minor leaguers with the main purpose of boosting the early season rotation while several key arms finish up recovery from surgery and go through rehab stints. He likely is set to slide into the bullpen afterwards, but he can make his case to be something more if he can consistently showcase his new form. Weathers touched 100 mph on his fastball in a 3.2 inning start against the Nationals, allowing just a single hit and striking out five while getting over a 50 percent whiff rate on the day. Weathers’ stuff impressed as soon as camp opened, with his versatile repertoire catching people’s eyes, but to be in this form after his first start of spring eyebrows across the league are getting raised.

The Yankees are no strangers to spring successes, and plenty have translated while others fizzled out immediately. Just last year the team enjoyed a renaissance spring from Carlos Carrasco, gave him the fifth starter job as a fill-in with Gerrit Cole out for the year, and watched as he turned into a pumpkin as soon as April rolled around. Weathers is a lot younger than Carrasco, so the stuff disappearing is less of a concern, but he does carry a lengthy injury history around already and last year was no exception — he made just eight starts and pitched 38.1 innings overall. So do the Yankees have something to get excited about in Weathers, or should calmer minds prevail before shooting off fireworks about snagging him out of Miami? It’s completely fair to want more than just a single spring start before declaring him a budding ace for the rotation, but do you think he could prove to be a significant contributor throughout 2026?


Today on the site, John takes us through the time-honored tradition of taking a look at where all of the recent ex-Yankees landed for 2026. Then, Estevão recalls the career of Johnny Blanchard and his contribution to the early 60s Yankees on his birthday, Michael previews Ben Rice’s upcoming season after dominating the metrics but getting unlucky in the process, and Nick gives us our next team preview with the Twins on the docket. Finally, after today’s spring training game Andrés writes about the benefits to the race for the last few bullpen spots being highly-competitive.

Today’s Matchup:

New York Yankees vs. Atlanta Braves

Time: 1:05 p.m. EST

Video: YES Network, Gotham Sports App, Gray TV, MLB Network (out-of-market, only)

Venue: George M. Steinbrenner Field, Tampa, FL

Stephen A. Smith clarifies LeBron James beef, presidential campaign remarks

Broadcaster Stephen A. Smith is known for his outspoken personality, whether it’s discussing sports across the ESPN platform or talking about politics wherever he can.

Smith spoke with Graham Bensinger, host of "In Depth with Graham Bensinger," and provided some clarification on several notable topics involving himself, including his relationship with Los Angeles Lakers star LeBron James and a potential 2028 presidential campaign.

Stephen A. Smith on beef with LeBron James

Smith has often been critical of James, the face of the NBA for nearly two decades.

Smith didn’t completely shy away when asked about the tension between him and the 23-year NBA veteran. The media personality was not willing to fully divulge some of the things powering the “beef,” though.

“My daughters love LeBron. And I had to look at them and say, ‘Yeah, he is phenomenal.’ They ain't lying. He's one of the greatest ever. And so, again, you can have differences with people, but if you're a grownup, if you're a man, you're able to compartmentalize and say, 'we might have a disagreement.'

“We might have a beef,” Smith said. “... It doesn't mean you should look at him in a negative kind of way. I might have affected him in ways that other people haven't, and that might have provoked him to do whatever, I don't know. But at the end of the day, I just know that I'm 58 years old and I'm not interested in walking around bitter and with a grudge and with all of this other nonsense.

Smith’s latest remarks come nearly a year after he was confronted by James while sitting courtside after the Lakers’ 113-109 overtime win over the New York Knicks at Crypto.com Arena on March 6, 2025.

Smith has leaned on the support of his peers and colleagues when he needs it.

“There are people who helped (following the confrontation with James),” Smith said. “Charles Barkley got on me. Kenny Smith is like a brother to me, got on me. Shaq, and then guys internally, Ryan Clark, Marcus Spears. I love those brothers. They're my brothers. And they weren't the only ones.”

Will Stephen A. Smith make a presidential run? 

Smith has dabbled in politics over the years as a media personality. He decided to expand that part of his career, hosting a show on SiriusXM radio, covering politics and news that's happening outside of the sports world. That began in September 2025.

He’s also been mentioned as a potential 2028 presidential candidate.

“Do I desire the campaign and be on the campaign circuit and running for office? No, I do not,” Smith said. “Do I desire to be on a debate stage to call out these politicians for what they have done to compromise this country? Yes, I do. 

“That's where it gets serious for me, because you can enter the debate and then leave after the debate and decide you're not running.”

Smith also made it clear he intends to have the opportunity to ask politicians to justify what they've "done to contribute to the chaos that's happened in the streets of America."

“I want you to look at us in the face and justify the divide that you've caused, the friction that you've caused,” Smith said.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Stephen A. Smith clarifies LeBron beef, presidential campaign comments

March Madness predictions: 13 teams who can win men's tournament

March Madness is quickly approaching, with the men's college basketball regular season coming to a close in the coming weeks. A few teams are starting to pull ahead as national championship favorites.

Eight of the last nine national champions have been No. 1 seeds in the NCAA tournament, with the lone exception being UConn in 2023, as the Huskies were a No. 4 seed. Of course, UConn repeated as national champions in 2024. Coincidentally enough, the last team lower than a No. 4 seed to win a title was also UConn, when it won as a No. 7 seed in 2014.

That said, math favors the NCAA tournament champion being a team that dominated the regular season, which makes plenty of sense.

Here's a look at USA TODAY Sports predictions for which teams can win a national championship this season:

March Madness predictions 2026: Who can win a national championship?

Michigan

It only took Dusty May two seasons as head coach to turn Michigan into a national championship contender, as the Wolverines are 26-2 this season with wins over Gonzaga, Purdue and Michigan State, which all also appear on this list.

Michigan is the only team in the country ranked inside the top five of both KenPom's offensive and defensive adjusted efficiency, ranking No. 5 and No. 2 in the metrics, respectively. UAB transfer Yaxel Lendeborg is one of the best all-around players in the country, averaging 14.2 points with 7.2 rebounds and 3.3 assists per game on 49.6% shooting.

Michigan belongs at the top, or at least very close to it, among the national championship favorites this season.

Duke

Duke has been the best defensive team in the country this season per KenPom, and also has one of, if not the frontrunner for national player of the year in Cameron Boozer.

Boozer, who's averaging 22.7 points with 10.7 rebounds and four assists per game on 58.3% shooting this season, has had a Cooper Flagg-like impact on the Blue Devils. The surefire top-five pick in the upcoming 2026 NBA Draft was tremendous in Duke's win over Michigan on Feb. 21, scoring 18 points with 10 rebounds, seven assists and two blocks in the win.

Duke isn't quite as loaded as it was last season with top-three NBA picks Flagg and Kon Knueppel, but the Blue Devils are more than capable of winning a title.

Arizona

Fifth-year coach Tommy Lloyd, a former Mark Few assistant at Gonzaga, has reloaded Arizona this season after the Wildcats lost four starters from 2025's Sweet 16 team.

Arizona is young, with three true freshmen starters. The Wildcats are led by Brayden Burries and Koa Peat, who are averaging 15.5 and 13.8 points per game this season. Fellow true freshman Ivan Kharchenkov is also averaging 10.1 points this season.

Arizona ranks eighth in KenPom's adjusted offensive efficiency and third in adjusted defensive efficiency while playing in the Big 12, likely the best conference in college basketball this season. It has three wins over top-10 ranked teams – Florida, UConn and Houston – and looks like one of the best Final Four bets in 2026.

Florida

Reigning national champion Florida lost its three starting guards from last season's team – March Madness hero Walter Clayton Jr., Alijah Martin and Will Richard. However, the Gators' frontcourt trio of Thomas Haugh, Alex Condon and Rueben Chinyelu all returned, and form perhaps the best group of big men in the country.

Haugh, Condon and Chinyelu are averaging 17.3, 14 and 11.5 points per game this season, respectively. They're also averaging a combined 26 rebounds per game, and Chinyelu leads all players nationally with 11.6 boards per contest.

The guard play has been suspect at times this season, but the Gators are rolling as of late with a 12-2 record in conference play. Florida could go as far as starting guards Boogie Fland and Xaivian Lee take them, or its frontcourt could continue dominating and make their shaky play not even matter.

Houston

Houston is amid a 3-game losing streak, a rarity under legendary coach Kelvin Sampson, one of the best to never win a national title. The Cougars are coming off a national championship runner-up finish in 2025.

Houston boasts one of the most dynamic guards nationally in true freshman Kingston Flemings, who paces the offense with 16.6 points and 5.1 assists per game. Flemings, paired with returning starters Milos Uzan, Emanuel Sharp and Joseph Tugler, makes for a lineup with loads of experience.

The Cougars rank 15th in adjusted offensive efficiency and eighth in adjusted defensive efficiency, which is still elite but worse than their usual standards. Houston is still one of the strongest bets to reach the Final Four, which it has done twice since 2020.

Illinois

Illinois has scored better than anyone in college basketball this season, with all five starters averaging in double digits while ranking No. 1 in adjusted offensive efficiency. True freshman Keaton Wagler has been a great surprise for the Fighting Illini, raising their ceiling by averaging 18.2 points with 5 rebounds and 4.3 assists per game while shooting 42% from 3-point range.

Illinois' defense is the worst among KenPom's top-15 ranked teams, which could pose a threat come NCAA tournament time. Still, their transfer-heavy lineup could have enough firepower to make a run to a national title.

Purdue

The preseason No. 1-ranked team hasn't been quite as good as expected, but is still a top national championship contender.

Purdue's backcourt of Braden Smith and Fletcher Loyer have likely more experience than anyone in college basketball, as the four-year starters have been together since 2022-23. Smith, one of the best playmakers in the sport, is averaging 8.7 assists per game and paces an offense that ranks second nationally per KenPom.

Trey Kaufman-Renn, who led the team averaging 20.1 points per game last season, has taken a step back in 2025-26 averaging 13.3 points per contest. His emergence in March could be an X-Factor for the Boilermakers, and he could be heating up, with 27 and 20 points in his last two outings.

Michigan State

Never count out Tom Izzo in March Madness. The legendary coach hasn't won a national title since 2000, but has six Final Four appearance since and has an experienced roster in 2026.

Multi-year starters Jeremy Fears Jr. (15 points and 9.2 assists per game) and Jaxon Kohler (12.3 points and 9.3 rebounds per game) lead the way for the Spartans. Returning contributors Coen Carr and Carson Cooper have emerged as starters in 2026 and both average in the double figures.

The Spartans lack a go-to scorer and could win a title if their offense gets hot.

Iowa State

Iowa State has been one of the Big 12's top programs for a few years now, but doesn't have much NCAA tournament success to show for it, with only a pair of Sweet 16 appearances since T.J. Otzelberger took over in 2021.

The Cyclones were bounced in the Round of 32 last season, despite having a veteran roster. They also have an experienced group this season, and are looking to avoid that same fate this season.

Iowa State is led by a trio of multi-year starters in Milan Momcilovic, Joshua Jefferson and Tamin Lipsey, who are averaging 17.4, 16.6 and 13 points per game this season, respectively. The Cyclones can shoot and defend, which is a recipe for success in March.

Kansas

Kansas has been solid without star freshman Darryn Peterson this season, even taking down Arizona without the projected No. 1 overall pick. Still, the Jayhawks' ceiling is highest when Peterson is at his best.

Peterson is averaging 19.5 points per game this season while shooting 40.5% from 3-point range but has missed 11 games. If he can stay on the court, the Jayhawks are a true national title threat.

UConn

UConn is back to college basketball elite status this season after being a bubble team in 2025. The Huskies have won two national titles under Dan Hurley, and he has another squad capable of winning a championship in 2026.

UConn has three returning starters in Solo Ball, Tarris Reed Jr. and Alex Karaban, a four-year starter for the Huskies. UConn added true freshman Braylon Mullins and Georgia transfer Silas Demary Jr. to its backcourt, with both additions providing a huge boost to last season's core.

The Huskies haven't been tested much in Big East play, but have nonconference wins over Illinois and Florida. They rank No. 12 in KenPom's overall adjusted efficiency ratings.

Gonzaga

Gonzaga has one win this season over a currently ranked team (Alabama), and has dominated WCC play, per usual, which makes it hard to know just how good the Bulldogs are opposed to other seasons.

Gonzaga's frontcourt duo of Graham Ike and Braden Huff is stellar, as the duo is averaging 19.9 and 17.8 points per game this season, respectively. Outside shooting could be a problem in March Madness, though.

Arkansas

Arkansas surprised many last season when it reached the Sweet 16 despite being a bubble team for most of the season under John Calipari. The Razorbacks likely won't be a top-three seed in the NCAA tournament, but maybe is a sleeper national title team.

True freshman guard Darius Acuff Jr. is one of the best players in the country, averaging 22.2 points with 6.2 assists per game this season, and scored 49 points in an overtime loss to Alabama on Feb. 18.

Arkansas ranks fourth nationally in adjusted offensive efficiency and is capable of getting hot and making a run.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: March Madness predictions: Teams that can win 2026 NCAA tournament

Pens Points: Sid to the Sidelines

PITTSBURGH, PA - JANUARY 08: Evgeni Malkin #71 of the Pittsburgh Penguins skates against the New Jersey Devils at PPG PAINTS Arena on January 8, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Three weeks removed from their last game in Buffalo, the Pittsburgh Penguins return to action this evening at PPG Paints Arena against the New Jersey Devils. They have 26 games left on their 2025-26 schedule and currently sit second in the Metropolitan division in playoff positioning.

On the downside, they will have to play the majority of those remaining 26 games without Sidney Crosby who will be sidelined with a lower-body injury suffered at the Olympics. That puts his minimum timeline for return sometime around the last week of March and that is the best-case scenario. Until then, it’s next man up as the Penguins enter their toughest and most important stretch of the season.

Puck drop tonight is scheduled for 7:00 PM and will be broadcast on Sportsnet Pittsburgh.

Pens Points…

After what felt like an agonizing wait, we learned the fate of Sidney Crosby after his injury at the Olympics last week. It’s not the worst-case scenario, but the Penguins will be without their captain for at least the next four week as he recovers from an lower-body injury suffered against Czechia. [Pensburgh]

One person who still believes in the Penguins despite the Crosby injury is Crosby himself. He knows they are in a good position and they have the talent to still perform and win without him in the lineup. That is easier said then done but Crosby’s faith in the team should inspire some confidence. [Trib Live]

There will be a new face wearing a Penguins uniform when the team takes on the Devils tonight, with Samuel Girard now in the fold after being acquired on Tuesday for Brett Kulak. Girard is a former Stanley Cup champion who will be looking for a fresh start with the Penguins. [Pensburgh]

For Girard, transitioning to Pittsburgh is going to take some time after spending almost the entirety of his career in Colorado to this point. He’ll be dropped into a heated playoff race which should make the move easier since that is exactly the same situation he saw with the Avalanche. [Trib Live]

It didn’t take the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins long to get back to their winning ways after being swept the weekend prior. Last week, the Baby Pens went a perfect 3-for-3, moving to 8-1-1 in their past 10 games and further solidifying a potential bye in the Calder Cup playoffs. [Pensburgh]

NHL News and Notes…

Fresh off leading Canada to a silver medal, John Cooper’s return to the Tampa Bay Lightning bench will be delayed until Saturday as Cooper returns home following the death of his father. Cooper will miss two games as assistant coach Rob Zettler takes over in the interim. [NHL]

If the NHL is expecting a big viewership bump on the heels of an exciting Olympic tournament they may come out disappointed in the end. History suggests that won’t be the case when compared to the past despite seeing record viewership numbers for the gold medal game in Milan. [Awful Announcing]

9 Takeaways from Jarrett Allen’s 27-point performance in Cavs loss to Bucks

MILWAUKEE, WI - FEBRUARY 25: Jarrett Allen #31 of the Cleveland Cavaliers drives to the basket during the game against the Milwaukee Bucks on February 25, 2026 at Fiserv Forum Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Gary Dineen/NBAE via Getty Images). | NBAE via Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers didn’t do enough to get the win, but there were some positives to take away from their narrow 118-116 loss to the Milwaukee Bucks.

Jarrett Allen was far and away the most dominant on the court on a night the Cavs were without three starters in James Harden (thumb), Donovan Mitchell (groin), and Evan Mobley (calf). He controlled every aspect of the game on both ends of the floor, showcasing once again that he’s playing the best basketball of his career.

There was nothing the Bucks nor Myles Turner could really do to stop Allen, only the final buzzer coming a millisecond before his would-be game-tying shot did. Allen finished with 27 points and 11 rebounds on 10-15 shooting.

Performances like this have been nothing new for Allen this month, but there’s something symbolic of having this kind of game against Turner — someone who significantly outplayed him last postseason when he was a member of the Indiana Pacers.

Allen struggled for most of that series, besides having solid showings in Games 2 and 3. He was a non-factor on offense, allowed Turner to push him off his spots, combined for just six rebounds in the final two games, and made a minimal impact defensively against a Pacers team that had their way with the Cavs. It was the type of series that made you question whether Allen really belongs with this core.

The game he had on Wednesday couldn’t have been more opposite.

Allen was Cleveland’s offensive engine, consistently bullied Turner in the post, grabbed six offensive rebounds, and helped stabilize what was otherwise a poor defensive effort.

There have long been questions about how Allen fits with this team. Playing with two bigs is challenging in the modern NBA, even if you have two elite guards. That said, this version of Allen should work in any lineup that you put him in. And if you can’t find a way to get consistent production out of a big this skilled, with this much touch and coordination inside, then whatever system you’re trying to run isn’t worth it.

There’s simply no excuse for not prioritizing Allen going forward.

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Dennis Schroder has been a seamless fit. He’s consistently excelled in whatever lineup or context he’s been asked to play in. This game, he was tasked with being the team’s leading ball handler and play initiator, and did his job, pouring in 26 points and contributing five assists.

Shifting between roles like that isn’t easy; then again, if anyone is used to constantly adjusting to different situations, it’s someone who’s played on as many different teams as Schroder.

There’s a reason Schroder has bounced around from team to team. He’s overqualified to be a backup, but not quite good enough to be a high-end starter. And, he has the confidence and bravado of someone who’s won multiple MVPs in international tournaments. This combination makes him highly in demand, but also not someone you’re losing sleep over trading away if you get the right package in return.

Even though the boxscore will show that Schroder missed the game-tying shot, he did a good job of managing the offense in the clutch. Schroder made a nice floater to briefly tie the game with 36 seconds left after seeming to twist his ankle a few plays earlier. He followed that up with getting a clean look to potentially tie the game just before time expired, but missed.

It’s difficult to get too hung up on the results in a game like this. Schroder generated good looks and filled in admirably at point guard. The Cavs haven’t had a reserve who could do so since letting Ty Jerome walk in free agency last summer.

Speaking of perfect fits, Keon Ellis once again showed how impactful he can be. He was everywhere defensively, while providing 14 points on 5-9 shooting.

The Harden acquisition has gotten most of the praise, but Koby Altman targeting Schroder and Ellis shouldn’t be overlooked. Both have the skills to make a meaningful impact in the playoffs.

The Cavs need to find a better balance with their three-point defense. They have understandably emphasized protecting the paint first and foremost. That’s a worthwhile goal, but it seems like they could do so without crashing in as much as they do, especially from the corners.

The Bucks took 17 corner threes, which accounted for 19% of their total shots (99th percentile). They converted 52.9% of these looks (81st percentile). Both of these numbers are concerning if you’re the Cavs.

The rim is the most efficient place to score, but the corner three isn’t far behind. In an effort to cut off the basket, they’ve left themselves vulnerable to easy kickouts to the corner. And they’ve also made losing players in the corner a bad habit.

You can’t give up this many corner threes and be an elite defense.

Additionally, they gave up clean looks to Milwaukee’s best shooters. A.J. Green — a 42.3% three-point shooter — can’t be allowed to take 10 triples. It isn’t an outlier when he converts half of them.

To make matters worse, the Cavs also didn’t protect the rim well. They allowed Milwaukee to finish 89.5% of their looks in the restricted area (97th percentile).

It’s easy to dismiss some of the clunkiness as being without Mitchell and Harden, but there’s few excuses for being this poor defensively. No matter how good Mobley is on that end, you can’t rely on him this much to be passable.

We’re seeing too many preseason-like games in the NBA this season. The Cavs did the right thing by being cautious with their star players. Additionally, Giannis Antetokounmpo wasn’t available due to a calf strain that has kept him in and out of the lineup all season.

Injuries are a part of sports, and there’s nothing you can do to take those completely away. However, the number of games that have felt like a step above preseason games, but below other regular-season games, has been too much around the league. It’s not good for anyone when four All-NBA players from last season are in street clothes and not actually participating.

I’m not going to act like there’s an easy solution to the number of injuries and scheduling issues that we’re seeing. It’s just a bummer to watch a game and spend the same amount of time thinking about who isn’t playing as to who is.

Open Thread: The Spurs win 10 in a row

TORONTO, CANADA - FEBRUARY 25: Stephon Castle #5 of the San Antonio Spurs reacts after a foul call during the first half against the Toronto Raptors at Scotiabank Arena on February 25, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Cole Burston/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Slice up stats and records any way you like, the Spurs are on a roll.

When the Spurs won in Detroit the other night, it was their 1300th win since the start of the new millennium.

Wednesday night’s win in Toronto was their tenth in a row, the first time since the 2015-16 season.

Here’s an interesting piece of trivia.

The last time the Spurs won ten in a row their starting lineup was Tony Parker, Danny Green, Kawhi Leonard, Tim Duncan, and LaMarcus Aldridge. That’s quite a roster of talent.

Having Matt Bonner on with Jacob Tobey and Sean Elliott was a treat. The Red Mamba is knowledgeable, funny, and has a wealth of Spurs (and sandwich) information. Years ago, I launched a campaign retire Bonner’s #15.

It’s hard watching Sandro Mamukelashvili play for another team. I feel like he is the type of player the Spurs are lacking in their lineup. The Spurs have Kelly Olynyk who’s size, stature, and style are similar, but the latter has not seen minutes with the Silver & Black. Even Tobey, Elliott, and Bonner mentioned that the Spurs wanted to bring Mamu back this season but could not peel him away from Toronto.

It was also great to see Jakob Poeltl playing well despite his back issues this season. He had some good moments covering Victor Wembanyama. He also got stuffed by Wemby in the closing moments of the game.

Speaking of Victor Wembanyama, he continues to struggle when defended by heavy-duty players, but he shines defensively. Blocks and disruption are even more apparent when he isn’t knocking down 20+ points a night. That said, he supplies poster dunks and hits timely threes, demonstrating he cannot be shut down completely. As he builds up strength against the physicality being thrown his way, the Spurs will only be more difficult to beat.

In addition, Devin Vassell went 5 of 6 from three and Dylan Harper started 6 of 6 in the early minutes of the game ending the night 7 of 11. The team assisted on 28 of their 40 baskets.

Spurs play the second night of a back-to-back in Brooklyn against the Nets looking for their eleventh win in a row as the 2026 Rodeo Road Trip rides on.

Go Spurs Go!


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Cavs guard James Harden expected to play through broken thumb

MILWAUKEE, WI - FEBRUARY 25: Evan Mobley #4 and James Harden #1 of the Cleveland Cavaliers look on during the game against the Milwaukee Bucks on February 25, 2026 at Fiserv Forum Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Gary Dineen/NBAE via Getty Images). | NBAE via Getty Images

Cleveland Cavaliers guard James Harden injured his right thumb in the team’s win over the New York Knicks on Tuesday. X-rays the following day revealed a non-displaced fracture of the distal phalanx, which is the top of the thumb. The team hasn’t yet announced a timetable for his return.

According to ESPN’s Shams Charania, Harden could be back sooner rather than later. Even though he didn’t play in Wednesday’s loss to the Milwaukee Bucks, it’s reported that he is planning on playing through the right thumb fracture, and surgery will not be required.

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Estimating a timetable for a complete recovery from this injury is difficult if you don’t know the severity. The best estimate is that it could be two to four weeks before it completely heals.

On one hand, it’s easy to see why Harden would want to play through this. He needs to find time to gel with his new teammates, and he’s running out of time to do so with the playoffs just around the corner.

At the same time, the Cavs will need to be at or near 100% if they want to have postseason success. Bringing Harden back too early could jeopardize that.

We’ll see how this unfolds. The Cavs play two of their next three games against the conference-leading Detroit Pistons, with their first coming on the road on Friday evening. Getting to see how Harden plays in that matchup is enticing, but a physical Detroit team could be the last opponent you’d want to subject a guard with a broken thumb to.

Harden has played seven games with the Cavs. He’s averaging 18.9 points and 8 assists on .494/.488/.867 shooting splits.

Wing Stop: Celtics showcase impressive depth amid defensive surge

Wing Stop: Celtics showcase impressive depth amid defensive surge originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

One of the biggest questions surrounding an overhauled Boston Celtics roster entering the 2025-26 season was how much coach Joe Mazzulla could lean on a fleet of inexperienced wings. 

Jordan Walsh, Baylor Scheierman and Hugo Gonzalez — the three most prominent picks in Brad Stevens’ tenure as president of basketball operations — were all in line for increased opportunity with Jayson Tatum rehabbing from Achilles surgery. But all of them needed to earn Mazzulla’s trust with a mere 870 total minutes of NBA experience between them. 

Maybe the biggest surprise as Boston has outkicked outsider expectations this season has been that all three of have emerged as reliable rotation presences. Meanwhile, fellow wing Ron Harper Jr. is working his way toward a roster spot with the parent club given his strong play on both ends as a two-way player.

The team’s four-game road trip out West might have produced one of our favorite moments of the season, and it was a perfect encapsulation of the defensive production the team has received from its fleet of young wings.

A rare Payton Pritchard turnover allowed Jamaree Bouyea to break out in transition late in the third quarter of Boston’s dominant win in Phoenix on Tuesday night. Scheierman sprinted back to prevent an easy layup and, showing incredible discipline, he timed his leap to go straight up with a foul-free contest near the basket. Scheierman’s outstretched arms forced Bouyea to hold the ball just long enough for a sprinting Harper Jr. to come from behind and volleyball spike the ball off the backboard.

Gonzalez, who also hustled back, was in position to clean up the rebound on the baseline and then made another full-court trek — aided by a midcourt screen from newcomer Nikola Vucevic — before Eurostepping his way to a layup that put Boston out front by 23.

One game earlier, the Celtics dispatched the trio of Scheierman, Gonzalez, and Walsh to hound Luka Doncic in a win over the Lakers. Boston’s young guards so thoroughly attached themselves to Doncic that he looked exhausted by the second quarter. 

About the only downside of Tatum’s eventual return would be that some of the minutes available to Boston’s young wings will diminish. That was inevitable as the playoffs neared given how role players’ minutes tend to evaporate as rotations tighten.

But the glimpses showcased by Boston’s four-headed monster of young wings is a super encouraging sign, particularly as the Celtics try to build an economical roster around a core headlined by Tatum and Jaylen Brown.

Just how good have the young wings been? Let’s crunch some numbers: 

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What’s more, the four players with the best defensive rebound percentage on the Celtics’ roster this season are all wings. That list is topped by Brown, who has kicked his defensive rebounding into overdrive lately as the Celtics have shored up their biggest weakness at the start of the 2025-26 season.

And this is all before they add Tatum, who has long been an elite rebounder at his position. 

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The Celtics have only scratched the surface with how good each of these wings can be. Walsh had stretches this season where the league was raving about his defensive potential, while Gonzalez has been a plus/minus monster in his rookie campaign.

Scheierman has clearly earned Mazzulla’s trust, elevating to a starting role recently. We’d expect Harper Jr. to be with the parent club when the Celtics finish their roster tinkering before the end of the regular season.

In a league where the wing position tends to be an area where teams are desperate for depth, the Celtics have found a quartet they can trust, even in the infancy of their development journey.