Who's to blame for Knicks' fourth-quarter collapse? Plenty to go around.

NEW YORK — So, who’s to blame for the fourth-quarter collapse of New York Knicks?

The Atlanta Hawks rallied from a 12-point deficit to start the period and stunned New York, 107-106, evening the first-round playoff series at one game apiece Monday, April 20. It tied for the worst blown fourth-quarter lead in Knicks playoff history. The other game was the infamous Reggie Miller "choke" game in the 1994 Eastern Conference Finals.

Is it Mikal Bridges, whose attempted game-winning jumper bounced off front rim?

Is it OG Anunoby, who, with a chance at the line to take a one-point lead with 1:54 to play, missed both free throws?

Is it Karl-Anthony Towns, who didn’t record a single point, rebound, assist, steal or block in nearly eight fourth-quarter minutes?

Is it Jalen Brunson, who got cooked on defense down the stretch (twice) by CJ McCollum and whose shot selection in the fourth felt forced, if not potentially self-serving?

Or is it coach Mike Brown, who oversaw it all?

The reality, frankly, is that it’s some combination of all of the above. Losses like these are rarely the fault of a single person, but of an overall breakdown that’s gradual, at first, before it becomes sudden.

"In that fourth quarter, too, you could tell that they were playing with a level of desperation," Brown told reporters after the game. "There were four 50-50 balls, and they got three of the four. We always use that stat to gauge the level of aggression. And in the fourth quarter, their aggression stepped up."

But – fairly or unfairly – the blame for losses like this almost always fall on the head coach. In this case, there’s plenty to back it up.

The Knicks were outscored 28-15 in the fourth, at one point allowing an 11-0 run that finally ended with 1:21 left in the game. New York shot just 22.7% in the period and converted just five field goals, compared with Atlanta’s figures in the period: 72.2% and 13, respectively.

The curious thing about the fourth was that Brown seemingly didn’t reward Towns for a big third quarter.

In the third, Towns dropped 14 points on 6-of-7 shooting and was active on the offensive glass, getting easier second-chance points. He relied on his range to hit two massive trail 3s. Yet, in the fourth, Towns was not a principal part of New York’s offensive sets or actions, and he recorded just two shot attempts.

The offense, instead, ran through Brunson, which, on one hand, makes sense. Brunson is the team’s best offensive player and elite closer. But the Hawks threw double-teams and traps at Brunson in the quarter, making his touches and shots far more contested.

New York could’ve adjusted to use Brunson almost as a decoy in pick-and-rolls, creating open space and looks for other players, especially Towns.

Granted, Towns also could’ve remained active on the glass to earn some of those offensive touches, but it’s difficult for a player to assert himself when he’s not a key piece in an action.

Another curious thing was that Brown, at one stretch (from 1:50 left in the third, through 7:56 left in the fourth) had both Brunson and Towns getting breathers on the bench. Teams often stagger their rotations so at least one of their primary scorers is on the floor at all times.

In that span, the Knicks lead went from 12 to nine, but it signaled a change in the game for Atlanta, which built momentum from that point.

"I don’t think (the game got away)," Brown said. "We’ve played that lineup quite a bit since the end of the season, and that lineup has been pretty good. We weren’t good tonight, and we turned the ball over a few too many times during that period.

"But we had opportunities where our starters were in and we were up eight to 10, and Atlanta closed it. So I wouldn’t say that specific lineup caused it."

New York Knicks head coach Mike Brown coaches against the Atlanta Hawks during the third quarter of Game 2 of the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Madison Square Garden.

He’s not wrong, but it’s the job of the coach to understand that a team’s drive or focus or determination has been compromised, especially late in games. It’s also the coach’s job to motivate and guide his team to correct that.

The Knicks became far too passive. They didn’t match Atlanta’s pace and intention, and Brown’s tactics seemingly never addressed that.

So, now, the Knicks may have just given a young team a ton of confidence.

"This is a game we should’ve won," forward Josh Hart told reporters after the game, "and in the playoffs you can’t give away games."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Knicks collapse against Hawks in fourth quarter. Who's to blame?

New York Yankees vs. Boston Red Sox: Series Preview

BOSTON, MA - APRIL 20: Roman Anthony #19 of the Boston Red Sox leaves the field prior to the game between the Detroit Tigers and the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park on Monday, April 20, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Joe Sullivan/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The past two weeks have been adventurous for the Yankees since their 8-2 start to the season. A lengthy losing skid obliterated their fledgling division lead, then a perplexing four-game set with the Angels showed their greatest strengths and greatest flaws in equal measure. Consequently, it was a relief to watch the Bombers dispose of the Royals in convincing fashion over the weekend to complete the homestand. That gives them a good dose of momentum ahead of the first Rivalry Series of 2026.

The Red Sox are, to the pity of nobody on this pages, struggling. They sit tied for last place in the AL East with an 9-13 record, unable to rely on either a slumping lineup or a scuffling pitching staff. They game saw their ace Garrett Crochet get hammered around for the second consecutive outing over the weekend, and hitters they’re relying on to have big seasons have not answered the call. Roman Anthony is off to a slow start. Trevor Story and Caleb Durbin have been frightful. Marcelo Mayer still hasn’t found his footing in the majors.

How-evah, as John Sterling would say, the Red Sox are still a very talented team the Yankees cannot afford to take lightly. The struggling Crochet will not appear in the series, but three strong starters—including one who always seems to elevate his game against New York—will take the home hill at Fenway Park.

Tuesday: Luis Gil vs. Connelly Early (6:45 pm ET)

This is a bit of a rough draw for the opener. Luis Gil has not looked great through his first two starts—he at least made it through five innings last time, but has allowed seven runs across nine frames. Gil has issued five walks and surrendered four homers, including three against the Angels in an eventual come-from-behind win. It remains to be seen if Gil can reattain his Rookie of the Year vintage, but if he can handle a sleepy Red Sox offense, maybe that can spark a turnaround.

Connelly Early opposed Cam Schlittler in his unforgettable Wild Card Game 3 performance, and was matching Schlittler’s dominance until losing his footing in the fourth inning. And hey, it’s still early, but the 24-year old lefty is looking good. Through four starts he has a 2.29 ERA with 20 strikeouts counterbalancing 10 walks. For what it’s worth, the Yankees feasted on Royals southpaws over the weekend, dispatching both Noah Cameron and Cole Ragans with ease. Will Early be another victim of a suddenly hot New York lineup?

Wednesday: Max Fried vs. Ranger Suárez (6:45 pm ET)

Speaking of left-handed pitching, we have a doozy in the middle game (airing on Prime Video) between two very good lefty starters. Max Fried had a substandard performance against the Angels last time, with Oswald Peraza of all people beating him twice. But he still has a 2.97 ERA through his first five starts and has been particularly strong on the road. Fried pitched great against Boston last year, including a strong Wild Card performance and six scoreless innings in a game at the Stadium in which he had an interesting encounter with a squirrel.

Ranger Suárez was the Red Sox’ big signing to make up for Alex Bregman’s departure to the Cubs. His first four turns through the rotation have been the definition of a mixed bag—two clunkers against Houston and San Diego followed by a pair of scoreless outings against the Cardinals and Tigers. That last game was an eight-inning two-hit masterpiece—Boston ultimately won that game 1-0 in 10 innings. Suárez is at his best when he keeps opposing lineups on the ground; he grabbed 10 of them in that start.

Thursday: Cam Schlittler vs. Brayan Bello (6:10 pm ET)

Schlittler is due to receive a positively venomous reception from the Boston crowd thanks to that aforementioned utter domination of the Sox to eliminate them in the Wild Card Series. It’s hard to believe the Walpole native will be pitching at Fenway Park for the first time—Schlittler’s meteoric rise has come that quickly. He and fellow Massachusetts native Ben Rice are quickly turning New England against them, and that suits Schlittler just fine.

Brayan Bello, of course, is a Yankee-killer. He’s never really been an exceptional starting pitcher, but he routinely elevates his game against the Bombers. Given his 6.75 ERA through four starts, he’s certainly hoping that trendline can continue. Bello threw over 30 pitches in a rocky first inning and exited after four innings with four runs allowed—so the key to the Yankees will be to get after him early.

Why Kevin Durant’s eventual return could swing playoffs series vs. Lakers

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows Kevin Durant in a black hoodie and beanie looks on during the game, Image 2 shows Houston Rockets forward Kevin Durant shoots a basketball during a timeout against the Memphis Grizzlies, Image 3 shows Houston Rockets' Kevin Durant (7) dunks the ball as Los Angeles Lakers' LeBron James (23) defends

There’s a strange tension hovering over the first-round playoff series between the Rockets and Lakers

Like a night sky devoid of stars, you know some sort of storm is coming, you just don’t know when it will hit. 

LeBron James of the Los Angeles Lakers handles the ball while defended by Kevin Durant of the Houston Rockets during the game on March 16, 2026 at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Logan Riely/NBAE via Getty Images) NBAE via Getty Images

Luka Doncic, Austin Reaves and now Rockets’ superstar Kevin Durant were all out for Game 1 on Saturday, but it feels inevitable that one, two, or all three return at some point in the series.

Houston was supposed to walk into this first-round matchup and impose their will. They entered the series as heavy favorites. They had the health advantage, the deeper roster, and the defensive prowess to dispatch of the Lakers easily. Some analysts even predicted a sweep.

On paper, it wasn’t a fair fight.


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And then, about an hour before tipoff, everything flipped.

Durant — arguably the one player Houston couldn’t afford to lose — was ruled out of Game 1 with a knee injury.

Initially it sounded minor.

According to ESPN Insider Shams Charania, Durant has been diagnosed with a deep bruise in his right patellar tendon and his status for Game 2 on Tuesday is “up in the air.”

Durant — arguably the one player Houston couldn’t afford to lose — was ruled out of Game 1 with a knee injury. NBAE via Getty Images

Without Durant in the lineup in Game 1 the Rockets looked lost. Despite winning the battles regarding rebounds, turnovers, and possessions, they still came up short, 107-98.

“There’s a lot that you have to do with Kevin [Durant] and you just kind of scrap that and you move on to other stuff we’ve worked on,” said Lakers’ head coach J.J. Redick of adjusting their game plan on the fly with Durant out in Game 1. “I thought our guys responded well and met the moment.”

Houston Rockets forward Kevin Durant shoots a basketball during a timeout. Troy Taormina-Imagn Images

When Durant returns to the court, he will be a game-changer for the series.

He’s averaging 26 points per game this season and shoots 52% from the field and nearly 42% from three. Those two things alone are enough for Rockets’ fans to get excited about.

Game 1 exposed Houston’s biggest flaw without him: they don’t have a natural release valve. Shot-making dried up. The offense stalled. The Rockets shot 37% from the field and just 33% from three. That’s not just cold, that’s shivering.

Durant fixes that immediately.

Not just with his own scoring, but with the quality of shots he will provide to everyone else.

That means Reed Sheppard spotting up for three. Amen Thompson cutting into open space. Jabari Smith Jr. and Tari Eason will also benefit from Durant’s return with wide-open looks. That’s not theoretical, it’s the natural byproduct of the attention Durant draws from opposing defenses, like a magnet attracting metal.

Kevin Durant #7 of the Houston Rockets dribbles the ball during the game against the Los Angeles Lakers on March 18, 2026 at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Michael Gonzales/NBAE via Getty Images) NBAE via Getty Images

In their two back-to-back meetings in mid-March, the Lakers already revealed their defensive gameplan against Durant.

In the first game, they blitzed him relentlessly in the second half. The moment he crossed half court, they rushed two defenders at him like a trap snapping shut. It worked in that game, Durant was held scoreless until the waning seconds, by which point the Lakers had turned a double-digit deficit into a 10-point advantage.

The Lakers tried it again in the first half two nights later and Durant adjusted.

He again only scored two points, but everyone around him benefited from open looks. Six players scored in double-figures including a team-high 27 from Thompson. If not for Doncic dropping 40, the Lakers would have lost.

Doncic and Reaves were both available in those two games, scoring a combined 105 points.

That luxury is gone and now Houston becomes dangerous.

If the Lakers try that same tactic again when Durant returns, they’re not solving a problem—they’re creating another one somewhere else. Durant won’t panic against the pressure. He’ll dissect it, make the right read, and find the open man.

Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves of the Los Angeles Lakers do a handshake during a time out in the second half of a game against the Chicago Bulls at Crypto.com Arena. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images) Getty Images

That’s why the Lakers’ Game 1 victory was not just a luxury, but a necessity.

Without Doncic and Reaves the Lakers are on borrowed time. Every game they steal buys them another couple days for their superstars to heal. If Durant is out again for Game 2, the Lakers can’t afford to lose that one either.

“Obviously getting the news that KD [Kevin Durant] was a late-scratch changed some of our situational things, but that team is still dangerous,” said LeBron James. “Even more dangerous with KD [Kevin Durant], obviously.”

Even if the Rockets go down 0-2, they don’t have to panic. They can afford to be patient.

Houston doesn’t need to rush Durant back recklessly, not with Doncic and Reaves still “out indefinitely.” If there’s any weakness in Durant’s knee that limits him or puts him at risk of further injury, then missing one more game might be the smarter long play.

Because once Durant is back, the series changes shape.

Ahead of Game 2, oddsmakers still lean Houston at -225 to win the series, and they’re not wrong. They’re betting on inevitability.

They’re betting on Durant.

Open Thread: Wemby’s Defensive Player of the Year announcement interview

LOS ANGELES, CA - FEBRUARY 14: Victor Wembanyama #1 of Team World smiles during the NBA All Star Media Day as part of NBA All-Star Weekend on Saturday, February 14, 2026 at Intuit Dome in Los Angeles, California. 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 Mike Lawrence/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

On Monday evening, the NBA Defensive Player of the Year was announced, the first of many NBA honors beiong revealed this week. Spurs phenom Victor Wembanyama is the first unanimous recipient of the Defensive Player of the Year award. He is also the youngest.

This is his third NBA season and his third season to be the blocks leader.

Wemby was sitting with his mother as well as members of the Spurs coaching staff when Maria Taylor, Tracy McGrady, Vince Carter, and Carmelo Anthony of Peacock notifies the Spurs superstar of his first major career award.

Here’s the full interview:

Wembanyama continue to show poise and grace as he expressed how the award reaches beyond one man.

At each point in his career, Wemby has been thoughtful in his answers and careful to share credit with those that are involved with his day to day training and health.

His gratitude was so moving that Carmelo commented how his upbringing has taught him well, crediting his parents, and specifically his dad, for how well Victor handles himself with the media.

The Peacock team was in San Antonio for a nationally televised San Antonio game and had an opportunity to meet Wemby’s parents.

The announcement for Clutch Player of the Year is next, followed by Sixth Man of the Year on Wednesday. The Sixth Man involves another member of the Spurs, Keldon Johnson.

Thursday reveals the NBA Sportsman Award, for which Harrison Barnes is a finalist.

Closing out the week on Friday is the NBA Most Improved Player.

Three Spurs could soon be hoisting individual honors.

Go Spurs Go!


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Game 2 Preview: Bruins look to bounce back in Buffalo

BUFFALO, NEW YORK - APRIL 19: David Pastrnak #88 talks with Jonathan Aspirot #45 of the Boston Bruins before a faceoff during the second period in Game One of the First Round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs against the Buffalo Sabres at KeyBank Center on April 19, 2026 in Buffalo, New York. (Photo by Joe Hrycych/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Just the facts

  • When: Tonight, 7:30 PM
  • Where: KeyBank Center – Buffalo, NY
  • How to follow: NESN, ESPN, 98.5 The Sports Hub
  • Opposing perspective:Die by the Blade

Know your enemy

  • Sabres lead series, 1-0
  • Tage Thompson: 2G-1A-3PTS; Alex Tuch: 1G-1A-2PTS; Mattias Samuelsson: 1G-0A-1PT
  • Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen: 1-0-0, 3.01 GAA, .850 save percentage

Game notes

  • After a calamitous five-minute stretch saw them lose control of Game 1, the Bruins will be looking to bounce back with a more solid all-around effort in Game 2. 60 minutes of good play instead of 52, or something like that.
  • Marco Sturm has called on his group to regroup and recharge after Game 1, saying that his team is ready for a long series. He also got philosophical, according to NHL.com, saying “yesterday was yesterday, today is today. It’s actually sunny here in Buffalo.” Valid points, Marco.
  • Performance at the face-off dot was supposed to be a strength for the Bruins in this series: they had the fourth-best team winning percentage in the league during the regular season, while Buffalo was the worst face-off team in the NHL. In Game 1, however, the teams were just about even: the Bruins won 32 face-offs, while the Sabres won 31.
  • Sturm didn’t mention any lineup changes in his media availability on Monday, though that doesn’t necessarily mean he doesn’t have any up his sleeve. It seems a little early to be bringing in a new body on defense or up front, but he may have to consider some line-juggling if the second line struggles again tonight.
  • The Bruins can make things significantly easier on themselves if they take care of the puck better, particularly below their own goal line. While Buffalo certainly deserves credit for seizing their opportunities (and forcing those turnovers), the Bruins’ own carelessness with the puck led directly to Buffalo’s three non-empty-net goals in Game 1.
  • The B’s will also need to adjust to Buffalo’s tenacious forecheck, which seemed to wear the Bruins defensemen down as the game progressed. After dealing with it for 60 minutes, the Bruins will need to be better equipped to handle the pressure or this will be a short series.
  • While shots on net aren’t everything, it’s worth pointing out that the Bruins failed to land double-digit shots on net in any period on Sunday: they went 9-4-7 across the three periods, with that second period particularly woeful.

See ya tonight!

Five changes the Penguins could try for Game 3

PITTSBURGH, PA - APRIL 20: Dan Vladar #80 of the Philadelphia Flyers protects the net against Anthony Mantha #39 of the Pittsburgh Penguins in Game Two of the First Round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at PPG PAINTS Arena on April 20, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

The Penguins are in trouble.

They’re heading to Philadelphia this week down two games in their first-round series and, barring some immediate changes, could be staring down a 3-0 hole by Wednesday night.

Dan Muse and the Penguins have a few changes available to them before Wednesday, including some potential personnel changes. Here’s some possibilities:

1.Shake up the power play units.

The Penguins got five power play opportunities on Monday night. On those five tries they recorded a total of two shots and allowed a shorthanded goal.

 “There were just a few adjustments,” coach Rick Tocchet said about his team’s penalty kill after the game (h/t OnPattison.com’s Anthony SanFilippo). “We’re a little more aggressive. A little more pressure.”

That pressure showed. The Penguins couldn’t connect on passes, keep the puck in at the blue line or prevent breakaways. Shuffling personnel, maybe including bumping someone like Anthony Mantha up to the first unit, could help the Pens find a more shot-happy combination.

2. Swap the Chinakhov and Rakelllines.

The Penguins went into both of these first two games of the series with Egor Chinakhov on Sidney Crosby’s line, while Rickard Rakell centered Evgeni Malkin.

They haven’t had a lot of success at even strength with that top six, and Muse ended up swapping Chinakhov and Rakell back to Malkin and Crosby’s lines, respectively, during Monday’s second period.

Muse declined to make any conclusions about that mid-game swap after the loss, saying the Penguins didn’t get enough sustained looks at even strength for him to make an evaluation.

“I’m not in a position right now to really make any decisions in terms of lineup for next game,” Muse said after the loss. “That’s something— we’ll look at film, we’ll speak as a staff. We’ll make those decisions later.”

The Chinakhov-Malkin and Rakell-Crosby combos worked well down the stretch of the regular season. Given how much the Penguins have struggled to put together any offense through two playoff games, those combos could be worth trying again.

3. Dress Justin Brazeau.

Few of the forwards have been standouts through two games. The Penguins could try scratching a bottom-six forward and shuffling Brazeau into the lineup to see if he is able to find any more success.

4. Dress Jack St. Ivany.

The Ryan Shea-Connor Clifton pairing was on the ice for nine Penguins shot attempts and 10 shot attempts against on Monday night, by far the worst ratio among the defense pairings, per MoneyPuck. St. Ivany has experience skating alongside Shea from earlier this season and could be an option if the Penguins decide to swap out Clifton.

5. Figure out zone entries.

The Flyers have the Penguins’ number in terms of how Muse’s team usually likes to bring the puck into the zone. Even on the power play the Penguins regularly relied on wrapping the puck along the boards on Monday night, often at the cost of an immediate Flyers clear.

The Pens will need to figure out how to make their usual controlled breakouts work against Tocchet’s aggressive defensive system in order to get some more offensive momentum in Game 3.

The Penguins aren’t practicing tomorrow. Maybe they’ll have the opportunity to watch some tape, and hopefully make some adjustments, before Wednesday’s 7 p.m. ET puck drop.

Orioles news: The O’s pulled a ridiculous win out of their hat

Apr 20, 2026; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Baltimore Orioles relief pitcher Cameron Foster (65) celebrates with catcher Samuel Basallo (29) after the win over the Kansas City Royals in the twelfth inning at Kauffman Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Denny Medley-Imagn Images | Denny Medley-Imagn Images

Good morning, Camden Chatters.

You know, over the course of a six-month season, you’ll see every kind of baseball game. Sometimes you’ll see a heavyweight clash between two tenacious clubs, battling with every fiber of their being as they put on a clinic of intense, well-played baseball.

And then other times you’ll see what can only be described as a frenetic slap fight between two mediocre opponents, each apparently trying to give the game away but neither one willing to take it.

You can probably guess which of these descriptions applies to last night’s ridiculous Orioles vs. Royals contest. Somehow, some way, the O’s ended up with a 7-5, 12-inning win in a game that they trailed 1-0 with two outs in the ninth. For 8.2 innings, it was shaping up to be one of the Birds’ most embarrassing losses, one in which they managed a single hit — from the second batter of the game, no less — before the O’s offense vanished for eight innings. Gunnar Henderson got picked off twice. Kyle Bradish allowed 13 baserunners in 5.1 innings to a terrible Royals offense and somehow only one run, owing to the aforementioned terrible Royals offense.

In the end, Samuel Basallo saved the day with the game-tying, two-out, two-strike hit in the ninth and the go-ahead RBI single in the 12th, and Leody Taveras added the cherry on top with his first career grand slam. And still the Orioles almost blew a five-run lead in the bottom of the 12th. That was the game in a nutshell. An O’s victory both thrilling and maddening, equal parts exciting and exasperating. Against any other team it probably wouldn’t have been a win, but the Orioles took full advantage of the worst team in the AL. Mark Brown recapped all the ridiculous action.

I’m not going to go so far as to say that this is a win that will give the Orioles some momentum, because all of their season-long warts were on full display for most of it. Their problems aren’t exactly fixed. Still, it was nice to see Basallo’s bat start to come around and unexpected 2026 stalwarts like Taveras, Rico Garcia, and Anthony Nunez continue to contribute. The O’s need their star players to return to form, but in the meantime they’ve had lesser-known players keeping them afloat so far.

What the Orioles did last night sure wasn’t the way you’d script it, and it’s not a sustainable way to win. But let’s take the victories now and sort the rest out later.

Links

Updates on Holliday, Hiraldo and other injured Orioles – School of Roch

A bunch of injured Orioles appear close to returning, but we probably won’t see Yaramil Hiraldo again this season. My apologies to all the Yaramil Hiraldo stans out there.

Has Jeremiah Jackson solidified his place on the Orioles? | MAILBAG – BaltimoreBaseball.com

By being basically the best hitter on the team? I should think so!

Kyle Goon: Jeremiah Jackson’s fiery start for the Orioles merits a serious look at his long-term lineup spot – The Baltimore Banner

What he said. Jeremiah has been a great story for a 2026 Orioles team sorely lacking in them.

Orioles birthdays and history

Is today your birthday? Happy birthday! And happy birthday to an Orioles Hall of Famer and the 1973 AL Rookie of the Year, Al Bumbry. “The Bee” spent 13 of his 14 MLB seasons in Baltimore, racking up 252 stolen bases, third-most in O’s history. Enjoy your day, Al! Other former Orioles born on April 21 include lefty Cionel Pérez (30), infielder Ryan Adams (39), catcher Ronny Paulino (45), and MLB’s all-time leader in games pitched, Jesse Orosco (69), who made 336 of his 1,252 career appearances as an Oriole.

On this day in 1996, Brady Anderson set an MLB record by hitting a leadoff homer for the fourth consecutive game. He accomplished the feat in all three games of a series against the Rangers and a game in Boston before that. The kicker? The Orioles lost all four games.

Random Orioles game of the day

On April 21, 2005, the Orioles suffered a 1-0 shutout loss to the Red Sox at Camden Yards. The game’s only run came in the second inning on a Ramón Vázquez RBI groundout that plated future Oriole Kevin Millar. Birds starter Rodrigo López pitched brilliantly, going eight innings while allowing only that one (unearned) run, but the O’s offense had no answer for Red Sox righty Matt Clement, who worked eight scoreless of his own before Keith Foulke nailed down the save in the ninth. The O’s had eight hits in the game, including three by Melvin Mora, but couldn’t get any when it mattered.

St. Louis Cardinals Player Profile: Victor Scott II

ST. LOUIS, MO - SEPTEMBER 03: St. Louis Cardinals outfielder Lars Nootbaar (21), St. Louis Cardinals outfielder Victor Scott II (11) and St. Louis Cardinals outfielder Nathan Church (27) celebrate their teams victory during a game where the St. Louis Cardinals hosted the Athletics on Wednesday September 03, 2025, at Busch Stadium in St. Louis MO (Photo by Rick Ulreich/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

In a season-long search for answers, the Cardinals appear to have some offensive pieces emerging. Ivan Herrera, Alec Burleson, rookie JJ Wetherholt, and (hopefully) Jordan Walker can continue to do what he’s done through the first 3 weeks of the season. Between Walker, Nolan Gorman, and Victor Scott II, there existed the biggest questions about their offensive futures on this team. Walker, undoubtedly, has earned himself a lot longer leash with his start. Gorman is doing his Gorman thing, showing flashes of offensive upside, and then stretches where he can’t even touch the baseball.

The St. Louis Centerfielder Victor Scott II spent the offseason with a biomechanical specialist at West Virginia (his alma mater), and he worked to make his swing more efficient. The results early on this season have not shown a tangible improvement.

According to Statcast, Scott’s swing path still appears to be mostly unchanged, if only a minor tweak that Scott is trying to take the ball back up the middle more often than pulling it, which could allow him to leg out of a few more infield hits.

Victor Scott has also moved back in the box slightly on his setup and the stance he has closed himself off more, likely in an effort to keep himself more direct and up the middle with his approach.

What about when he’s putting the ball in play? Looking at his batted ball profile, it appears he is still struggling with pulled groundballs. Scott has cut his “AIR%” in half from 56% down to 33.3%, which is an okay trade-off for a player of Scott’s skill set. The problem is that Scott is not able to do any damage; he is not pulling the ball in the air, only at a putrid 2.4% so far in 2026.

When you look at what Scott has done against individual pitches to try to understand what has given him the most trouble, it’s pretty much everything that’s not a Sinker or Cutter.

Oddly enough, when you go over to Fangraphs, Victor Scott has a 123 wRC+ against LHP. Normally, you don’t see a player perform that well against same-handed pitching. The other unfortunate end of that is that his wRC+ against RHP is 10.

The bottom of the zone with those offspeed/breaking balls is the area of greatest need. Ordinarily, players will have a tough time if there is a spot or two that is tough to cover. When it’s the entire bottom 1/3 of the zone and underneath the zone that can be exploited by the opposition, especially the best in the world at that, it can almost be untenable.

Okay, what about his speed and defense?

Scott is a little bit slower in his reads, but he seems to process the flight of the ball really well, and has above-average to plus closing speed, and is great with closing speed and getting to the baseball once he has an idea of where it might land.

Scott’s 29.6 ft/s is in the 98th percentile in all of baseball. These are the two things that Scott does best. Impacting the baseball and providing any kind of offensive value is not. Which is unfortunate, with nearly 700 MLB PA in his career already, it doesn’t seem like, projecting forward at least, that Scott will be anything more than a 4th OF in MLB long term. Which would prove my initial evaluation of him wrong. I thought he could be someone with 10-15 HR power annually and play gold glove defense in CF, and that could be a nice above-average player on a competitive team.

ESPN’s Kiley McDaniel recently posted his first 2026 MLB mock draft, and included in that piece was the Cardinals at number 13. For that spot, one name that McDaniel talked about was Trevor Condon, who is a prep outfielder from the state of Georgia. McDaniel mentioned that some evaluators around the game whisper the name “McGonigle” when talking about Condon, and that caught my attention QUICKLY. MLB dot com drew comparisons to Brett Gardner or Sal Frelick, which are definitely different profiles, but that was released back in December, and we now have this spring’s results and performance to include in that evaluation. The overall purpose of this blurb in this article is that this years draft class is particularly loaded with some young exciting outfield prospects and while you dont draft for need, if the evaluations are close, position could be a tie breaker, lest we not forget the lurking emergence of Tai Peete or Ryan Mitchell, both of whom could project to play CF long term if their development continue in a positve way, both with considerable more offensive upside than Scott has displayed in his 2+ seasons at the big league level thus far.

Could Scott change something and unlock more offensive ability down the road? Sure. But, at this point, he hasn’t shown anything to convince us otherwise, and those asking the question about what Scott is long-term. It would be hard to argue anything other than a 4th outfielder at this point.

What are your thoughts on Victor Scott? Let me know, and let’s talk about it!

-Thanks for reading

Phillies news: Alec Bohm, Adolis Garcia, Mick Abel

Phillies News:

MLB News:

Canadiens Back To Work After Game 1 Win

The day after their 4-3 overtime win over the Tampa Bay Lightning, the Montreal Canadiens were back at work at the Benchmark International Arena. What was originally supposed to be an optional skate turned into a regular practice an hour before the time.  A regular practice, but a short one.

While the Canadiens came out on top on Sunday, they did so by scoring three power-play goals; if you take special teams out of the equation, the score would have been 1-1 after 60 minutes. Of course, nobody will complain about a power play that strikes as often, but you cannot take for granted that you’ll get so many calls every night, especially not in the playoffs, when the referees do tend to put the whistle away.

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Both Martin St-Louis and Cole Caufield were asked about the Nick Suzuki line being kept in check by the Anthony Cirelli line, and neither had a magic formula for the Habs’ top line to produce at even strength. The sniper was up front saying: There’s a lot to talk about five-on-five that we could do better at, and we’ll do that for game two. Asked if there was a workaround for the Cirelli line, the American simply replied:

Yeah, we’re going to have to figure it out. It’s the first game; there’s a little feeling-out process. It’s a line you can’t take any risk, and they don’t give up much, so we’re going to find ways, we’re going to find the answers, and hopefully, we’ll find some ways to do it.

As for the coach, when asked about that, he simply replied that they’d keep on going, as they have all season. Of course, if they did find a magical way to solve that line, they wouldn’t come out and say it, but so early in a series, it’s far from surprising that some adjustments have to be made, especially between two teams so evenly matched.

Once again, the coach spoke about the importance of playing the right way, of being calculated on both sides of the puck, which can lead to more offensive opportunities. That’s nothing new; that’s what he’s been selling to his players all season, and to be fair, for the most part, that’s how they played on Sunday.

The fact is, though, the Tampa Bay Lightning is the team on the other side, and they, too, are playing the right way. It wasn’t easy to come away with the win, but it wasn’t supposed to be easy; this is the Stanley Cup playoffs, and nothing comes easy.


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Billy Donovan ‘stepping away' as Chicago Bulls head coach, team announces

Billy Donovan ‘stepping away' as Chicago Bulls head coach, team announces originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Billy Donovan is “stepping away” as head coach for the Chicago Bulls, the team announced Tuesday.

In a message posted by the team on Instagram, Donovan said the decision came “after a series of thoughtful and extensive discussions with ownership regarding the future of the organization” and “to allow the search process to unfold.”

“I believe it is in the best interest of the Bulls, to allow the new leader to build out the staff as they see fit. My gratitude for this community and this organization is permanent,” he said in a statement. “Thank you Jerry and Michael for giving me this opportunity and more importantly, for the relationship that has been forged. I was so blessed to be able to work with such great owners. I owe so much to my players and staff over the last six years. You all have worked side by side with me, day in and day out to drive the Bulls organization forward. And a huge thank you to Bulls fans, your energy, passion and unwavering support provided a home-court advantage that is generally unmatched around the league.“

Donovan marks the latest to leave the team after a front office shakeup earlier this month that saw executive vice president of basketball operations Artūras Karnišovas and general manager Marc Eversley both fired.

“I want our fans to know that I hear you and understand the frustration,” Bulls CEO and president Michael Reinsdorf wrote after the earlier firings.

In his letter to fans, Reinsdorf said “these decisions are never easy, especially when they involve people we respect both personally and professionally,” but noted he hopes to build a team that can “ultimately contend for championships.”

It was for that reason, he said, the team and Donovan decided to part ways.

“While we clearly wanted Billy to return as our head coach, we had open dialogue about the importance of respecting the process of bringing in new Basketball Operations leadership,” Reinsdorf said. “Together, we mutually agreed that giving that person the freedom to shape the organization was the best approach for everyone involved. We are grateful for everything he has given to this team and wish Billy and his family all the best.”

Donovan has led the Bulls since 2020, going 226-256 over six seasons with one playoff appearance in 2022.

Bulls chairman Jerry Reinsdorf called him “one of the finest people and coaches I have had the privilege of knowing and working with” and said the decision followed the earlier front office changes.

“He brought class and genuine care to this organization that made a real impact on people. We wanted Billy to continue as our head coach – that was never in question. But through honest conversations, we all agreed that giving our new Head of Basketball Operations the right to build out his staff was the most important thing for the future of this franchise,” he said. “That is the kind of person Billy is – he put the Bulls first. We are deeply grateful for everything he has given to this organization.”

Just eight players have guaranteed contracts for next season (Josh Giddey, Patrick Williams, Matas Buzelis, Rob Dillingham, Isaac Okoro, Jalen Smith, Tre Jones and Noa Essengue), so it should be a busy offseason with new decision-makers in charge.

Lawrence Okolie’s fight against Tony Yoka off after British boxer’s failed drugs test

  • Heavyweight vows to clear his name with bout cancelled

  • Fighter cites elbow treatment and hopes ‘sense prevails’

Lawrence Okolie has pledged to clear his name after a failed drugs test that has led to the cancellation of his heavyweight bout against Tony Yoka this weekend.

The British fighter, a former cruiserweight world champion who moved up to heavyweight, had been scheduled to face the Frenchman in Paris on Saturday. Okolie is the No 1-ranked contender by the WBC, whose belt is held by Oleksandr Usyk.

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Where is Jared Jones in his comeback for Pirates?

FORT MYERS, FLORIDA - MARCH 13: Jared Jones #37 of the Pittsburgh Pirates throws a pitch during the first inning of a spring training game against the Minnesota Twins at Lee Health Sports Complex on March 13, 2025 in Fort Myers, Florida. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Pittsburgh Pirates are off to a good start so far this season, with the starting rotation and some improved hitting playing major roles. However, there’s still one important piece of the rotation still to add, and that is starting pitcher Jared Jones. He was injured last season and given a 10-12 month recovery time, and with Jones placed on the 60-day to start the season, the earliest he could be back on May 25. According to reports, that looks like it still might be possible.

Jones was throwing heaters this past week, according to 93.7 The Fan, and according to Ben Cherington, Jones has also been doing some in-game situation sims, throwing in both Pittsburgh and back in Bradenton. Cherington called it an “extended Spring Training type game sim” and is expecting a more formalized rehab stint soon.

Jones had his surgery last May, and with him still targeting this May as a return date, we’re still squarely in the original timeline and will keep an eye on his official rehab assignment.

Jones went 6-8 in 2024, finishing with a 4.14 ERA, a 1.14 WHIP and 132 strikeouts in 121 innings pitched against 39 walks. The Pirates had high hopes for Jones, and it was a disappointing injury, but it will be nice to have him back into the mix with the team playing so well.

The only question left would be how does he fit into the rotation? The entire group is pitching well. It’s certainly not going to be in place of Paul Skenes or Mitch Keller. Original logic would say he jumps in for Carmen Mlodzinksi, but he’s off to a good start too. It’s possible that Jones becomes a sixth starter, fitting in where he can until he’s back to full game strength, but that’s an absolutely good problem to have.

If you’re not watching these golden ticket softball stars now, you will be in May

The NCAA softball season is hitting the homestretch.

Conference tournaments will be held in early May with 31 automatic bids the NCAA Tournament at stake. Similar to basketball, 64 teams will qualify for the tournament, which culminates with the Women's College World Series, which begins May 29 in Oklahoma City.

So who are the players and teams to keep on our radar heading into the tournament? The Athletes Unlimited Softball League has given us a pretty good idea by handing out golden tickets − delivered by softball legends or AUSL league leadership in front of teammates, coaches and family members − to the best college players, soon to be pros, in the country. Getting a ticket means the athlete will be drafted to AUSL on May 4 (7 p.m. ET, ESPN2).

Fifteen golden tickets have been handed out so far, all but two of the players are on teams ranked in the top 25. Here are the athletes who have received them:

Nijaree Canady, Texas Tech, pitcher

This should come as zero surprise, given Nijaree Canady has an name image and likeness deal for $1.2 million and quickly became the face of college softball during last season's Women's College World Series. The 6-foot pitcher transferred from Stanford to Texas Tech in 2025. She has a 17-3 record this year with 1.40 ERA and 0.78 WHIP in 110 inning pitched. She has struck out 156 of the 382 batters she has faced in 2026.

Reese Atwood, Texas, catcher

Reese Atwood has been rewriting the Longhorns' record books since she arrived in Austin. She’s known for her power as a hitter and leadership as a catcher. She holds Texas school records for career home runs (70), RBIs (270) and slugging percentage (.758).

Leighann Goode, Texas, infielder

Known for her speed and consistency at the plate, Leighann Goode is hitting .400 this season through 38 games. She usually bats second and is able to get on base for players like Reese Atwood to bring her in. Goode plays both second base and shortstop and has a .966 career fielding percentage with 299 putouts.

Sydney Stewart, Arizona, catcher

Sydney Stewart has elite plate discipline with 131 career walks in 461 plate appearances. She has 36 of her 43 homers in the past two seasons and has notched 160 career RBIs. Stewart is also a strong defensive presence behind the plate. She received her golden ticket from Arizona legend Jennie Finch.

Karlyn Pickens, Tennessee, pitcher

Karlyn Pickens is known for her elite velocity and back‑to‑back SEC Pitcher of the Year honors. She a 1.47 career ERA and 755 career strikeouts. Pickens holds the record for the fastest pitch in NCAA softball history − 79.4 mph on May 25, 2025 − during super regionals.

Dakota Kennedy, Arkansas, outfielder

Kennedy transferred to Arkansas from Arizona for her senior season. She has a .393 career batting average with a .497 on‑base percentage and .700 slugging percentage. Kennedy has 112 career walks compared 76 strikeouts. One of the best defensive outfielders in college softball, she won the 2024 Rawlings Gold Glove with a perfect 1.000 fielding percentage with 111 putouts.

Kenzie Brown, Arizona State, pitcher

Kenzie Brown transferred from Tulsa as a sophomore and was an All-American last season. She has a career record of 30–19 with a 2.66 ERA in 45 starts including 21 complete games. She has improved her efficiency this season with less walks.

Taryn Kern, Stanford, infielder

Taryn Kern has a rare combination of power, on‑base skills and defensive versatility. She played her freshman season at Indiana and won Big Ten Player of the Year before transferring to Stanford. Kern has 17 homers and 61 RBIs this season with a .968 slugging percentage, which would be a school record if it holds.

Maya Johnson, Belmont, pitcher

The first mid-major player to receive a golden ticket from the AUSL, Maya Johnson has a .073 ERA and 22-2 record this season with the Bulldogs. She has 304 strikeouts this season, facing 599 batters. Johnson had a perfect game against Missouri State to open the season.

Jocelyn Erickson, Florida, catcher

Jocelyn Erickson is a left‑handed hitter with power. She had a .997 fielding percentage in 2025 with one error in 315 chances. Erickson is having the best offensive season of her career with a .424 batting average and .901 slugging percentage.

Kenleigh Cahalan, Florida, infielder

Kenleigh Cahalan is a left‑handed hitting infielder who began her career at Alabama, where she started every game as a freshman and sophomore. She has played shortstop, third base and second base. Cahalan has a career .960 fielding average.

Jordan Woolery, UCLA, infielder

Jordan Woolery has started every game of her college career − 226 and counting − and a cornerstone of UCLA’s offense and infield. She's hitting .529 this season with 30 home runs and 100 RBIs this season. Woolery has a .993 fielding average in 2026 with two errors.

Megan Grant, UCLA, utility

Megan Grant is having her best offensive season, hitting .478 with 31 home runs, 70 RBIs and 1.339 slugging percentage, which leads the Bruins. She has a career slugging percentage of .727 and career fielding percentage of .978.

Taylor Tinsley, UCLA, pitcher

Taylor Tinsley has a career ERA of 2.22 with 77 starts, 40 complete games and 13 shutouts. She has a 23-3 record this season as the Bruins' ace. Tinsley has 488 strike outs and 114 walks. She has a high‑spin fastball and strong vertical movement.

Amari Harper, Oregon, utility

Amari Harper is a left‑handed hitting utility player who transferred from Texas A&M to Oregon for her senior season. She has a career batting average of .367 with an OPS of 1.048 thanks in part to 41 HBP and 71 walks.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: As May looms, NCAA softball’s superstars are stepping forward

YouTube Gold: Could Larry Bird Still Dominate The NBA Today?

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - APRIL 24, 1981: Larry Bird #33 of the Boston Celtics drives against Julius Erving #6 of the Philadelphia 76ers during Game Three of the Eastern Conference Finals at The Spectrum in April 24, 1981 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by James Drake/Getty Images) | Getty Images

This video raises a question we’ve seen quite often in recent years: Could Larry Bird still dominate today? Or would be be a role player?

The answer is yes, he could still run the league, and for a few reasons.

First, Bird was, as Joe Dumar once said, a basketball savant. Do you think Charles Barkley could play today? Magic Johnson? Michael Jordan? Isaiah Thomas? James Worthy?

Of course they could – and they all said Bird was the one whom they feared most, who gave them sleepless nights.

The main criticism of Bird is that he was slow and couldn’t jump. Well, neither can Nikola Jokić or Luka Dončić, and both of those guys will be in the Hall of Fame, because they, like Bird, can force the game to adapt to them, rather than vice-versa.

If nothing else, Bird’s passing ability was off the charts, and his hand-eye coordination was superb. So was his ability to keep track of everything happening on the court: he didn’t have to see his teammates to know where they were.

What also really works in Bird’s favor is this: in his heyday, the NBA was far, far more physical than it is today. Go look at some Bill Laimbeer highlights.

The NBA in the 1980s could be brutal. Consider the courage Thomas had to go into the lane the way he did at his size, and consider also the Jordan Rules the Pistons had for #23. They all knew they were going to get a beating every game.

It’s not like that now. The game is far more open, and Bird would either drive, pass, or hit jumpers at will.

Finally, there are some other factors that would work in his favor. The first is personal. Bird’s desire to dominate would propel him in today’s game, too. His mindset is far different from anyone in today’s NBA. He would sneer at 90 percent of the players in the league now.

And second, the advances in training, nutrition, equipment, and medical care would have really helped him. Just for one thing, a back problem ended Bird’s career. The treatment options today are far better.

Note – for some reason, the embed doesn’t want to work, so please hit the link above.

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