Auston Matthews injury update: Maple Leafs star will miss rest of season

It didn't look good when Auston Matthews clutched at his knee immediately after absorbing a knee-on-knee hit from Radko Gudas during the game between the Toronto Maple Leafs and Anaheim Ducks Thursday, March 12. We now know that will mark Matthews' last minutes on the ice this season.

The Maple Leafs announced Friday, March 13 that Matthews will miss the rest of the 2025-26 NHL season after he suffered a Grade 3 MCL tear and quad contusion on the hit that will seemingly soon result in a suspension for Gudas, who was set to have a disciplinary hearing with the league Friday.

Toronto said Matthews will be re-evaluated in approximately two weeks, and the team will give another update then.

Matthews, 28, had gotten the puck alone in front of the net Thursday when a hard-charging Gudas, 35, drove right through the American star, with Gudas' left leg taking out Matthews' left. Matthews immediately clutched at his leg and needed assistance to get off the ice. Gudas was assessed a 5-minute major for kneeing and a 10-minute game misconduct, ending his night.

It's a brutal end to what's been a trying NHL season for 2016's top pick. He finishes with 27 goals and 53 points, both career lows, and the Maple Leafs will almost certainly miss the playoffs for the first time in his 10-year tenure.

The former MVP and three-time goal-scoring champ did experience great success at the Milano Cortina Olympics, captaining Team USA to the gold medal in men's hockey – its first since 1980. But his return to NHL play saw the Leafs drop eight consecutive games before Thursday night. That win, however, is overshadowed by the loss of the Leafs captain.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Auston Matthews knee injury update, for rest of Maple Leafs season

A’s Split Friday Split-Squad: Beat Brewers, Fall To Padres

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - MARCH 08: Aaron Civale #45 of the Athletics pitches against the Los Angeles Angels during the first inning of a spring training game at Las Vegas Ballpark on March 08, 2026 in Las Vegas, Nevada. The Athletics defeated the Angels 7-4. (Photo by David Becker/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Well you can’t win ‘em all. The A’s dropped one and won one on Friday afternoon when they split up and played two different games. Surprisingly, the half that had all the regulars fell to the San Diego Padres by a 13-9 final, while the other half, which featured mostly bench players and prospects, came out on top in their matchup at the Brewers’ spring complex. Not what you’d expect but that’s baseball for ya.

A’s vs. Padres

The first matchup of the day saw A’s veteran starter Aaron Civale make his second start of the spring for the Green & Gold while the Pads countered with staff leader Michael King. It’s still spring training so it wasn’t like it was always going to be a pitcher’s duel or anything like that, but man did the ball fly out of the park today.

Civale struggles, still makes it through four

The 30-year-old Civale ran into trouble right out of the gate, getting tagged for three runs in the very first inning that saw him give up plenty of hard contact. Results weren’t the point of today’s outing however, it was about getting his pitch count up and getting him ready for the start of the long regular season. Things wouldn’t get much better in the second frame as he allowed more hard hit balls en route to allowing a pair of runs to cross home plate, pushing the score to 5-0 after 2 innings. He’d allow one more run to score in the fourth, which would end up being his final frame of the day as he exited after 75 pitches.

A’s bats explode in the fourth

It took a few frames as the Athletics hitters struggled against Michael King. That’s not especially surprising considering his pedigree but they would wake up soon enough.

After working just a single walk the first time through the frame things turned up quickly. The fourth started innocently enough with a single followed by two outs, making it look like it’d be another fast inning of work for King agains the A’s. That would not be the case however as the rally was only beginning. First Max Muncy singled to put runners on the corners, and that brought up the hot-swinging Henry Bolte, who delivered a 3-run blast to get the A’s on the board, his third this spring:

The A’s weren’t done there! Immediately following Bolte was fellow outfielder Breyson Guedez, who blasted his own home run to further cut into the San Diego lead:

It was now suddenly 6-4 and we had a game on our hands. And following Guedez was “leadoff” man Nick Kurtz, who did what Nick Kurtz does and blasted his own solo home run to make it 6-5:

Do you think that the A’s were done there? Think again. This time it was Tyler Soderstrom’s turn to get on the fun as he blasted a two-run homer to right field to give the A’s the lead:

What a way to cap the frame. Suddenly the A’s were in front and feeling like all the momentum in the world was on their side.

Quite middle frames, but Padres take late lead

For a few innings the A’s looked in control. Civale was now out of the game (and off the hook for the loss) while it was now up to the bullpen to get it done. Jake Garland, Nick Martinez, Mark Leiter Jr., and Hogan Harris all did their job getting the game to the eighth with the lead still intact. Unfortunately for the A’s their bullpen luck ran out with Nick Hernandez, who got hit up for four runs without recording a single out. CD Pelham and Dairon De Jesus finished things off allowing some insurance runs to the Padres each, again putting this game seemingly out of reach.

The A’s did have some fight left in them at the end. Guedez collected an RBI sac fly in the seventh, and one more run in the bottom of the ninth came around to score but it was just far too little too late for our A’s as they dropped the contest 13-9.

On the bright side, Civale got his work in and could probably take the ball if the regular season was here. How the results would go is anyone’s guess but he’d be ready. The offense looks like it’s in mid-season form already, and they’re still missing Lawrence Butler. We don’t have anything to worry about with the bats right now. Let’s just get them all healthy and to Opening Day unscathed.

Here’s how the box score looked today:

A’s at Brewers

Meanwhile while the A’s/Padres game was going on the other half of the squad was a few miles down the road at the Brewers complex. Compared to the other half of the team this lineup and pitching matchup featured many more rookies and bench players that are either on the outer edges of the roster or are just waiting to be reassigned to minor league camp.

Jump impresses in fourth appearance

It was Gage Jump on the bump for the Athletics today. The A’s #3 ranked prospect came into spring with little chance of breaking camp with the club but has done nothing but impress in his time with the big league team. That continued for Jump today as he pitched three shutout frames and got his pitch count up to 59 while allowing just four hits. He also struck out three without issuing a free pass. He’d have to leapfrog someone in the current pecking order but Jump is making that decision harder and harder on Mark Kotsay. Even if he isn’t on the Opening Day roster, it shouldn’t be long before we see him suit up for the big league squad.

A’s strike first

With the B-lineup in against the Brewers the prospects and bench players got to work against Milwaukee starter Kyle Harrison. First they scored three times in the second via an RBI triple off the bat of Michael Stefanic, which was immediately followed by a two-run home run off the bat of veteran backstop Chad Wallach, who is presumably the 3rd or 4th catcher on the depth chart at this point.

They added on a trio more runs in the next frame. A bases-loaded situation presented itself to A’s prospect Tommy White, and he came through and delivered for his squad with a bases-clearing two-bagger that doubled the Athletics’ lead over the Brew Crew. Offense isn’t the question with White; it’s where his long-term home on defense is.

The A’s added on an insurance run in the fifth thanks to a solo blast off the bat of outfielder Colby Thomas that made it 7-0 A’s, his first long ball of spring. He’s had a rough go of it in camp so it’s a positive sign to see him run into one. Maybe that’ll kick start the former top prospect right before cutdown time arrives.

Brewers fight back

Once Jump was out of the game you could almost feel the sigh of relief coming from the opposing dugout. A quick inning of work from Justin Sterner kept them off the board but then they were able to push a couple runs across against Luis Medina. A former top prospect himself, Medina has not looked quite back to his old self quite yet but he is out of options and therefore could end up on roster to open the season, obviously in the bullpen. Otherwise if the front office doesn’t feel like he’ll find his former form, they could end up cutting him near the end of camp and hope to sneak him through waivers. Unlikely to succeed on that front but who knows? Other teams are seeing the same thing we’re seeing from the right-hander.

A’s tack on, finish off Brew Crew

Not looking to blow the lead, the offense kept up the pressure with another run in the seventh (a Cade Marlowe RBI single) and a solo shot in the eight (thank you Stefanik). Then, just looking to make it embareessing, Tommy White came to the plate again, and again came through with a huge hit. Only this time, it left the park for a grand slam. It’s only spring but there’s not really much doubt he can hit, right everyone?

The Brewers added on a pair of meaningless runs in the bottom of the ninth off an RBI single but it was over by then. The A’s finished them off, securing at least one win on this beautiful Friday afternoon.

Here’s the final box from this contest:

The team will regroup together tomorrow for an afternoon contest against the Kansas City Royals. It’ll be left-hander Jacob Lopez on the bump for what will be his second appearance this spring. The A’s have been taking things slowly with Lopez because he ended last year with a question mark injury. Cautiously letting him get stretched out, it seems like Lopez should be in the starting rotation come Opening Day but it’s not a guarantee quite yet. A big outing tomorrow would go a long way towards assuaging the coaches that he’s healthy and ready for the grind of a six month season. He’ll be worth watching tomorrow afternoon. The Royals will counter with righty Ryan Bergert, a promising pitcher in their system who could also be making some noise in Kansas City this coming season.

Brewers get throttled by A’s in 13-4 spring training loss

Milwaukee Brewers
PHOENIX, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 28, 2026: Andrew Vaughn #28 of the Milwaukee Brewers covers first base during the first inning of a spring training game against the Cincinnati Reds at American Family Fields of Phoenix on February 28, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by David Durochik/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

It’s a good thing these games don’t count yet. The Milwaukee Brewers struggled through a 13-4 loss to the Athletics in Cactus League play with some poor defense causing a lot of the problems.

Kyle Harrison got the start and pitched in five innings. He’s the first Brewers starter to get five “ups” this spring, but was charged with six earned runs. There was a fly ball lost in the sun and his defense did let him down on a couple of occasions leaving the Brewers in a big hole early. The Athletics were able to score three runs in the 2nd and three runs in the 3rd.

After Harrison, Trevor Megill came in and allowed a solo homer to Colby Thomas. Then Carlos Rodriguez pitched two innings of one run ball in his first Cactus League action in a couple weeks. Rodriguez was with Team Nicaragua in the World Baseball Classic, who were eliminated after the pool play round. Sammy Peralta then allowed a run in his inning of work and the wheels totally fell off when Mark Manfredi entered and allowed a grand slam to Tommy “Tanks” White without recording an out.

On the offensive end, the Brewers scored a pair of runs in the 6th on a Jake Bauers RBI single and an Andrew Vaughn RBI double. Milwaukee scraped together two more runs in the 9th on a 2 RBI single by Josh Adamczewski.

Cooper Pratt had a pair of singles and went 2-for-3 on the day while getting the start at second base. He’s now hitting .280 on the spring. Braylon Payne had a double, which was one of just two extra-base hits the Brewers had, along with Vaughn’s RBI double.

The Brewers fall to 8-11 in Cactus League play. They will be back at it tomorrow against the Colorado Rockies and will have Jacob Misiorowski on the bump.

3 pitches, 3 homers for Athletics in Cactus League matchup with Padres

MESA, Ariz. (AP) — Henry Bolte, Breyson Guedez and Nick Kurtz homered on consecutive pitches from San Diego’s Michael King in the Athletics’ Cactus League game with the Padres on Friday.

Bolte hit a 401-foot, three-run shot to right on an 0-1 pitch from King in the fourth inning. Guedez followed by delivering a 450-foot blast to right on the first pitch he saw from King. The next pitch King threw resulted in a drive that Kurtz sent just over the left-field wall.

The Padres eventually won the game 13-9.

Kurtz is trying to build off an outstanding 2025 season in which he earned AL rookie of the year honors and batted .290 with a .383 on-base percentage, 36 homers and 86 RBIs in 117 games. ___

AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

"Bear Down": Needing Points, Red Wings Know They Can't Miss Offensive Chances

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Following their most recent regulation setback, the shorthanded Detroit Red Wings know they must do a better job of taking advantage of the offensive opportunities they get. 

Playing without top centers Dylan Larkin and Andrew Copp, who both suffered lower-body injuries, has dampened their offensive attack, which already ranks near the bottom of the NHL in five-on-five scoring.

While they could get veteran David Perron back at some point next week, they must make do with the players currently available when they face the powerful Dallas Stars on Saturday evening.

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Forward Alex DeBrincat, who leads the Red Wings with 33 goals scored, believes that the club is going to remain confident despite the absence of several players. 

"I think we played well enough to win, we've got to bury on our chances," DeBrincat said afterward.

"I think we're confident in what we do," he continued. "These are two tough matchups, and we kind of gave away the Florida game at the end of the game. But, two good teams and another one on Saturday. So, we've got to come ready to play right from puck drop, and hopefully get some two points."

Shorthanded Red Wings Fall 4-1 To Lightning In Tampa Bay Shorthanded Red Wings Fall 4-1 To Lightning In Tampa Bay Playing without both Dylan Larkin and Andrew Copp, the shorthanded Detroit Red Wings fell in regulation for the third time in the last four games, a 4-1 setback to the Lightning.

Right now, the Red Wings occupy the first Wild Card Spot in the Eastern Conference, with the Boston Bruins and Columbus Blue Jackets hot on their trail. 

They know they can't afford to give away points as they did against the Florida Panthers on Tuesday evening, and it begins with bearing down and not letting chances slip away.

"We just have to get guys to the net, bear down in front and put some in the net," DeBrincat said. "Obviously, they have a world-class goalie over there, but we've got to find a way to put it in."

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Vermont women beat Maine 61-43 to win a second straight America East Conference championship

BURLINGTON, Vt. (AP) — Keira Hanson scored 23 points, Malia Lenz posted a double-double and Vermont beat Maine 61-43 on Friday night to win a second straight America East Conference championship and earn an automatic berth in the NCAA Tournament.

Hanson sank 9 of 13 shots with three 3-pointers for the top-seeded Catamounts (27-7), who will appear in the main event for the third time in four seasons and the ninth overall. Lenz totaled 13 points and 14 rebounds. Nikola Priede pitched in with 14 points, eight rebounds and two blocks. Jadyn Weltz went 0 for 7 from beyond the arc but finished with 11 points and five assists.

Adrianna Smith had 22 points and 15 rebounds to pace the second-seeded Black Bears (19-13), who were aiming for their 11th NCAA Tournament appearance. Smith made 7 of 18 shots, while her teammates hit 8 of 34.

Lala Woods hit a 3-pointer to give Maine a 9-2 lead with 4:29 left in the first quarter. Hanson sank back-to-back 3-pointers and Priede had the final two baskets in a 12-2 run that gave Vermont a 14-11 lead after one quarter.

Priede's layup extended Vermont's lead to 14 with 3:36 left in the second period. Woods and Asta Blauenfeldt hit 3-pointers for Maine and the Catamounts went scoreless as the Black Bears closed within 29-21 at halftime.

Hanson and Priede had the first two baskets of the third and the Catamounts outscored Maine by nine in the period for a 48-31 advantage heading to the fourth.

The two teams split two games during the regular season with both winning at home.

___

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Yankees working on infield contingency plans just in case need arises

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows New York Yankees infielder Ryan McMahon throws the ball after forcing out Atlanta Braves third baseman Austin Riley for a double play, Image 2 shows Cody Bellinger #35 of the New York Yankees warms up during team workouts
The Yankees are letting Ryan McMahon work at shortstop and Cody Bellinger at first base during spring games.

Observations from Yankees spring training on Friday:

Infield work

Ryan McMahon started at shortstop, with Cody Bellinger at first base, as Aaron Boone looks to get them work at unfamiliar positions in case the need arises during the season.

Bellinger is already comfortable at first and McMahon was relatively smooth at short, though Boone said he was a tick slow on getting in position on a potential relay play.

Ryan McMahon is pictured during the Yankees’ March 13 spring training game. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect
Cody Bellinger is pictured during the Yankees’ Feb. 17 workout in spring training. Getty Images

Coming up short

As the Yankees look to get more offense from McMahon, he’s now hitless in his last 11 at-bats, with a walk and four strikeouts.

Caught my eye

Boone said he wants a reliever — or two — to grab the final spots in the bullpen.

No one has stood out and Osvaldo Bido gave up a run on Friday.

Newcomer Yovanny Cruz did hit 100 mph, so maybe that’s something.

Saturday’s schedule

Max Fried makes another start, as the Yankees host the Phillies at Steinbrenner Field at 1:05 p.m.

Crosstown dominance: White Sox beat Cubs, again, 4-2

Mar 13, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Chicago White Sox catcher Korey Lee against the Chicago Cubs during a spring training game at Camelback Ranch-Glendale.
Lookit me, lookit me, I’m the suddenly-essential Korey Lee! | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Let’s just call it a technical knockout: The White Sox have reasserted their dominance over the rival Cubs.

Friday’s win, their third straight this spring over the ivy bumblers and first at Camelback Ranch, was the most pedestrian of the bunch; in other words, the White Sox clobbered only two homers in this one vs. the four homers in a 5-1 win on March 1 and the eight runs scored in the Cactus League opener on February 20.

Good progress, lil’ Cubbies, you’ll get there one day.

Friday’s win was marked by just enough hitting in support of some outstanding pitching. Davis Martin started and bested his surname counterpart in the other dugout with four scoreless innings of one-hit, four-K ball. After an intermission inning from Jordan Hicks (a hit and K in a 10-pitch, scoreless frame), Sean Newcomb came on for three strong innings (two unearned runs, three hits, walk, six Ks). Jordan Leasure wound things up with a scoreless, tw0-K frame to earn the save.

The White Sox offense spread four single runs over the first five innings, including a bomb from the suddenly-essential Korey Lee:

JUST PLAYING WITH LIKE HIS HAIR

Lee, 2-for-2 on the day, had also tapped home the first White Sox run of the game back in the second inning. He’s 10-for 26 this spring with a .529 on-base percentage.

The White Sox did allow their baby brothers from the north catch up to 3-2 in the sixth, with two gift runs from center fielder Jarred Kelenic:

Gotta say, for a fierce battle among several fringe roster players, several of whom have no options left and will be waived upon not making the team, Kelenic has been the one to consistently put his lack of want-to on display.

Like a kitten toying with a mouse, the White Sox immediately struck back in the bottom half, courtesy of an Everson Pereira home run:

The Cubs, having tumbled to 9-11, stand a chance of pulling back past .500 on the spring given that this was their final game against the White Sox. The South Siders, bristling up at 12-9, get right back at it as the home club hosting the Dodgers at Camelback Ranch on Saturday. Hannah Filippo will make her 2026 recapping debut for this radio-TV broadcast tomorrow afternoon.


Pistons vs Grizzlies Discussion: Game Time, TV, Odds, and More

MEMPHIS, TN - NOVEMBER 3: Cade Cunningham #2 of the Detroit Pistons is guarded by Ja Morant #12 of the Memphis Grizzlies on November 3, 2025 at FedExForum in Memphis, Tennessee. 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 2025 NBAE (Photo by Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

We know the season has been a mess for the Memphis Grizzlies, who seemed primed to move on from franchise staple Ja Morant, found out there was no market for him, and instead sold high on Jaren Jackson Jr. But it’s been even worse than you think since Christmas. The Grizzlies are tied with the Brooklyn Nets for the fewest wins since Dec. 26. They excel at nothing, but really struggle with defensive rebounding, last in the NBA, bottom 5 in turnover percentage, bottom five in points off turnovers against, and bottom two in allowing points in the paint. I feel like I’m repeating myself, but this feels like it has the potential to be another big game for Detroit’s big men, just as with the most recent Nets game and the Sixers game.

Tonight, the Pistons will be without Tobias Harris, while Caris LeVert returns. Ausar Thompson remains out. This also feels like a great time to remind fans everywhere, and risk jinxing territory, that the Pistons have the NBA’s best record on the second night of back-to-backs at 8-2.

Game Vitals

When: 7:30 p.m. ET
Where: Little Caesars Arena, Detroit, Michigan
Watch: Fan Duel Sports Network Detroit
Odds: Pistons -16

Projected Lineups

Detroit Pistons (47-18)

Cade Cunningham, Marcus Sasser, Duncan Robinson, Isaiah Stewart, Jalen Duren

Memphis Grizzlies (23-42)

Ty Jerome, Cedric Coward, Cam Spencer, Taylor Hendricks, Olivier-Maxence Prosper

ADP Risers and Fallers for 2026 Fantasy Baseball: Matt McLain and Kevin McGonigle turning heads

Opening Day is only two weeks away! Spring Training has flown by and drafts are getting more and more competitive.

With that, some players’ ADPs are moving dramatically. Whether it be injury news, role changes, positive coach speak, or solid exhibition play we need to know how draft boards are changing and why.

Here are the biggest ADP movers among the top 250 picks

Note: All ADP data courtesy of NFBC

⚾️ Coming soon: MLB returns toNBC and Peacock in 2026! In addition to becoming the exclusive home of Sunday Night Baseball, NBC Sports will broadcast MLB Sunday Leadoff, “Opening Day” and Labor Day primetime games, the first round of the MLB Draft, the entire Wild Card round of the postseason, and much more.

ADP Risers

Matt McLain, 2B Cincinnati Reds

Feb 27th - March 6th ADP: 184
March 7th - March 13th ADP: 158

Spring training stats are meant to be taken with a grain of salt. Yet, recent drafters might wind up with the gout because Matt McLain has ridden a red-hot spring up draft boards.

No player inside the top 200 picks’ stock has risen more over the last two weeks than McLain’s and as of March 13th, he’s now the ninth second baseman being taken as he approaches the top-150 overall.

Apart from the scalding hot spring, this is partially a market correction. McLain was being blatantly underdrafted in February outside the top-200 picks and top-12 second basemen.

The discount was fair. He was literally one of the worst hitters in the league last season – his .643 OPS was fourth-lowest among all qualified players – in his return from labrum surgery. At the same time, his underlying stats weren’t all that different to his 89 game breakout in 2023.

Screenshot 2026-03-13 at 5.29.07 PM.png

In reality, his true talent is probably somewhere between those two seasons and his new draft cost as a firm top-10 player at a weak second base position feels fair.

Kevin McGonigle, SS Detroit Tigers

Feb 27th - March 6th ADP:
March 7th - March 13th ADP:

Kevin McGonigle is making a strong case to be the Tigers’ opening day shortstop. As of March 13th, he has a .304 // .448 // .609 slash-line and the same number of walks as strikeouts over 29 plate appearances in camp while mostly playing with the big league squad.

More impressive than that small sample production is the type of contact McGonigle is making. Of the 17 balls he’s put in play, nine were hit harder than 100 mph. On top of that, there was this earth-shattering blast in the Tigers’ exhibition game against the Dominican Republic and Luis Severino.

Per Statcast, it traveled an estimated 461 feet with a 110.4 mph exit velocity!

McGonigle has always been known for his exceptional hit tool and fantastic plate discipline. Those give him a higher floor than most rookies. Raw power like we saw there could make him a star.

He still needs to make the team though. If winning games is the Tigers’ number one priority, McGonigle should get the nod. They don’t have another shortstop in their organization who’s better than him at any facet of the game, including defensively.

Also, similar to the Pirates with Konnor Griffin, Cardinals with JJ Wetherholt, and Mets with Carson Benge, new prospect promotion incentive rules will push these clubs to bring these guys up sooner.

Any PPI eligible player (prospect that appears on two of MLB Pipeline, Baseball America, or ESPN’s Top 100 list) can earn their team a draft pick if they accrue a full year of service time as a rookie and win Rookie of the Year. Or, if they place within the top-three for Cy Young or the MVP before becoming arbitration eligible.

To earn a full year of service time, a player must be on the big league roster for 172 days. That gives their team until roughly two weeks after opening day to call them up.

If called up by then, McGonigle would be a steal at this draft cost and many drafters are beginning to notice such. If he’s not called up by then, the Tigers would recoup an extra year of his service time without ever allowing him to qualify for these incentives.

Brandon Woodruff, SP Milwaukee Brewers

Feb 27th - March 6th ADP: 147
March 7th - March 13th ADP: 131

There’s been mystery shrouding Brandon Woodruff throughout the spring. He was excellent last season after returning from a serious shoulder injury, but has ramped up slowly and gave a few ominous quotes about being unsure if he’d be ready for Opening Day.

Then, we learned he was dealing with a lat issue despite remaining confident that he could avoid the IL. Two weeks passed and he looked solid in his spring debut over two innings with his velocity sitting just one tick below where it was last season. Recently, he completed four innings of a simulated game without any hiccups.

The whole timeline still doesn’t inspire a ton of confidence and Woodruff’s status for Opening Day remains in question.It makes sense seeing the positive reports push his draft cost up. I’m just unsure if I’m willing to pay that price around other pitchers like Ryan Pepiot, Michael King, Drew Rasmussen, or Nathan Eovaldi.

Griffin Jax, RP Tampa Bay Rays

Feb 27th - March 6th ADP: 193
March 7th - March 13th ADP: 170

This is the second consecutive piece where Griffin Jax has been a top riser. Since February 1st, his ADP has jumped from 217 to 170, like you see just above.

This second leap is directly tied to the recent news that his bullpenmate Edwin Uceta is expected to open the season on the injured list. That clears the way for Jax to be their full-time closer. With elite skills and an obvious path to saves, Jax still seems like a slam dunk at that ADP.

Something else seems to be afoot though. It’s clear why drafters are favoring Jax. At the same time, nine of the 15 biggest risers among the top-200 over the last week are closers.

After Jax, Ryan Walker, Dennis Santana, Jeff Hoffman, Abner Uribe, Daniel Palencia, Ryan Helsley, Devin Williams, and David Bednar have all seen their respective ADPs climb by at least 10 spots.

Saves are scarce and high-stakes drafters realize it’s hard to win championships without a steady diet of them.

ADP Fallers

Hunter Greene, SP Cincinnati Reds

Feb 27th - March 6th ADP:
March 7th - March 13th ADP:

The death knell finally came to Hunter Greene’s draft stock this week when it was confirmed that he had bone spurs in his elbow and would be getting surgery to remove them. Thankfully there’s no damage to his UCL, so the true catastrophe scenario has been avoided for now. Even still, the best case scenario is that Greene is back sometime in June. I wouldn’t hold my breath waiting for him either.

This is another injury in a long line of them for Greene. He’s only thrown more than 140 innings in a single season once as a professional. He also released a long statement and talked about how he felt pain in his elbow last year, but wanted to pitch through it with the Reds in the thick of the playoff race.

The whole situation feels a little odd and Greene is now only draft-able in leagues where you can stash him in an IL spot.

Other fallers due to recent injury news are Ivan Herrera (knee inflammation), Jeremy Peña (fractured finger), Brandon Lowe (lower body tightness) and Kyle Teel (hamstring strain).

Colson Montgomery, SS Chicago White Sox

Feb 27th - March 6th ADP: 218
March 7th - March 13th ADP: 238

Fantasy players love their shiny new toys during draft season. That’s why hyped up super prospects like Konnor Griffin and Kevin McGonigle are flying up boards. As drafters take shots on young players earlier on, they must mitigate their risk later.

That could be why Colson Montgomery is one of the biggest fallers over the last two weeks.

He played at a 50-homer, six-WAR pace over his 71 game debut last season and has star-like qualities. Elite bat speed and the ability to lift and pull the ball at a high rate supported that power production and he profiles like a plus shortstop defensively.

On the flip side, he could have some of the worst swing-and-miss in the league and doesn’t make good enough swing decisions to keep his floor high while whiffing that often. A spring training strikeout rate over 30% is certainly reminding managers of the downsides to drafting Montgomery.

Some builds will be able to fit a potentially 30+ homer middle infielder after pick 200. It just seems like Montgomery’s low floor has become more apparent as more exciting young shortstops have leapt over him.

Marcus Semien, 2B Mets

Feb 27th - March 6th ADP: 238
March 7th - March 13th ADP: 250

Again, we don’t want to put too much stock in spring training stats. Yet, when an aging player like Marcus Semien is already coming off two down seasons and struggling it sticks out.

He’s hitting under .200 with a strikeout rate approaching 30% against competition that would be similar to that in Double-A according to Baseball Reference’s Opponent Quality Index. That’s not great!

It’s only been nine games and may mean nothing in the long run, but confirmation bias is one heck of a drug and this is an easy reason to write off the potentially already written off Semien.

Game Thread: Knicks at Pacers, March 13, 2026

NEW YORK, NY - FEBRUARY 10: T.J. McConnell #9 of the Indiana Pacers and Jose Alvarado #5 of the New York Knicks look on during the game on February 10, 2026 at Madison Square Garden in New York City, New York. 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 Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Knicks (42*-25) visit the Indiana Pacers (15-51) tonight at Gainbridge Fieldhouse. New York is favored by A LOT because Indy has the league’s worst record and generally stinks. Yet do not be fooled by their extensive injury list (Siakam, Nesmith, McConnell, Toppin, and Jackson are all OUT) nor tempted by hubris, Knickerbockers. Coach Rick Carlisle always circles your games on the calendar and prepares for them like it’s a bar exam. The roster might be reduced to Ethan Thompson, a hot dog vendor, and three cheerleaders, but Indy never quits against the Knicks.

Tip-off is 7:30 pm EST on MSG. This is your game thread. This is Indy Cornrows. Please don’t post large photos, GIFs, or links to illegal streams in the thread. Enjoy each other’s company, respectfully. And go Knicks!

* Should be one more, but NBA Cup wins are Russian spies.

Cavs at Mavs open gamethread

DALLAS, TEXAS - JANUARY 03: Evan Mobley #4 of the Cleveland Cavaliers dunks against Quentin Grimes #5 of the Dallas Mavericks in the second half of an NBA basketball game at American Airlines Center on January 03, 2025 in Dallas, Texas. 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 Richard Rodriguez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers will look to pick up a win in their first of two-straight games against the Dallas Mavericks.

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Go Cavs!

No. 23 Princeton women rout Brown 65-51 in the Ivy League Tournament semifinals

ITHACA, N.Y. (AP) — Madison St. Rose scored 18 points, Fadima Tall had 11 points and 10 rebounds, and No. 23 Princeton routed Brown 65-51 on Friday night in the Ivy League Tournament semifinals.

Princeton (25-3), the No. 1 seed, moves on to play Saturday for the title — after not reaching the championship game last year for the first time in the tournament’s history.

Princeton scored 12 of the opening 15 points of the game to take control. The score was 23-6 after the opening 10 minutes and 36-14 at halftime after Princeton held Brown to 15% shooting (4 for 27). The Tigers shot 50% in the half, including 6 of 11 behind the arc — with 3-pointers from five different players.

Brown made six 3-pointers in the opening six minutes of the third quarter, but its deficit was still 47-32.

Princton made just 2 of 12 field goals in the fourth but held on by making 7 of 10 free throws, while Brown went 2 of 14 from 3-point range.

Ashley Chea added 12 points and Skye Belker scored 11 for Princeton, which outrebounded Brown 46-33.

Grace Arnolie scored 17 points and Olivia Young added 13 for Brown (16-11), the No. 4 seed. Alyssa Moreland, who entered averaging 11.0 points and 10.4 rebounds, played just six minutes due to a leg injury.

Eleven of Brown's 16 field goals were from behind the arc. The Bears shot 29% overall and turned it over 18 times.

Up next

Princeton plays on Saturday against the winner of the other semifinal between Harvard and Columbia. The Tigers have won 21 of its last 23 games — with both losses coming against the Lions.

___ Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here. AP women’s college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-womens-college-basketball-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/womens-college-basketball