Ask Pinstripe Alley: Yankees mailbag questions request

Ask Pinstripe Alley

Yankees baseball is back, and even though it’s only been a handful of games it feels like a turning point in the year to see the boys put on pinstripes and take the field at last. We’ve got a loaded schedule this year for spring with the World Baseball Classic right around the corner, and several Yankees participating in the competition means they’ve got to be in game shape quite quickly. To his credit, Aaron Judge certainly appears so after he made his spring debut memorable with a pair of homers already on his soon-to-be-wiped stat line.

With all this going on, there’s plenty to react to and look forward to as spring begins to unfold. Will we see a dark horse emerge from the spring hopefuls to make the roster? Will any of the regular starters stand out with a particularly hot spring, and does it matter if they do? Who has the deepest roster heading into the WBC? If you have questions like these, or anything else on your mind, send ‘em in for a chance to be featured in our Yankees mailbag.

Answers will run on Friday afternoon. All questions received by the night of February 19th will be considered. You can leave your submissions in the comment section below or by e-mail to pinstripealleyblog [at] gmail [dot] com.

Jimmy Butler has a message for Warriors season ticket holders

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - JANUARY 19: Jimmy Butler III #10 of the Golden State Warriors stands on the court during their game against the Miami Heat at Chase Center on January 19, 2026 in San Francisco, 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. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Having torn his ACL on January 19th, Jimmy Butler is out for the season — and likely a little bit of next season, too.

However, despite this, he is still incredibly dedicated to being a Golden State Warrior. Earlier this week, Butler sent this email to Warriors season ticket holders reminding them of how much he loves playing for Golden State:

“Dear Warriors Season Ticket Family,

I have played in front of many incredible crowds over my 15 seasons in the NBA, but there was always something about playing in the Bay Area that made it feel like more than just another game. It was always electric. So, when I received the phone call on February 5, 2025, that I had been traded to the Warriors, I knew it had a chance to be special. But even I wasn’t prepared for what it means to be part of Dub Nation, playing in front of the loudest, most loyal and dedicated fans in the NBA.

The energy you provided us down the stretch last year was magical, as we finished the season winning 23 of 31 games and, ultimately, clinching a playoff berth. And playing with Steph and all of my teammates in The Bay has been an incredible experience. Steph is truly the greatest shooter and showman of all time, and I am honored to be the Robin to his Batman. The energy you gave us during the first round against Houston was palpable, and further reinforced my desire to play through my Game 2 injury. It was your love, encouragement, and joy that helped me dig deep to play – and win – for this fanbase. Ultimately, last year’s playoffs left us with a big “what if,” as Steph’s injury was too much for us to overcome in the Western Conference Semifinals vs. Minnesota. But we knew what we had and were eager to play meaningful basketball once again this season.

After a roller coaster start to this season, we were finally rounding into form in mid-January, winning 12 of 16 games, looking like the playoff contender we envisioned and the NBA feared. Every NBA season is a puzzle and we were beginning to figure ours out. Unfortunately, on January 19 against Miami, I tore my ACL. I was/am devastated. For me, for my teammates, and for all of you. After being in this league for as long as I have — 15 years now — you eventually realize that you only have a certain number of these golden opportunities. We had that opportunity this year in a league filled with parity and a team full of promise. Nonetheless, we move forward and will continue to battle our way to the postseason. I am excited to see my guys compete for the remainder of this season, but also heartbroken to know that I will not be out there with them. They’re my brothers.

Despite experiencing almost every emotion over the last 12 months — from the highs of the fourth most wins in the NBA to the lows of a pair of season-ending injuries — your support has been unwavering. I can see clearly now why you, our Warriors season ticket family, are known as the best fans in the NBA. You are our most loyal supporters, and your incredible energy is the fuel that drives this team.

I can promise you that I will attack my rehab with a singular focus that will enable me to get back to playing the game that I love, in front of the fans that I have grown to love and appreciate. My life has shown me repeatedly that when something happens that is out of my control, all I can do is work and wait for the answer and the why. Both have always been shown to me, and this time will be no different. This story, which has been interrupted twice, is not complete. Not by a long shot. This period is simply a part of our journey. I can’t wait to see what next season holds and will treasure the opportunity to put my jersey back on and take the court with Steph, Dray, and the rest of the guys, in front of you all. I’m sure that when I return and hear all of you in unison chant “WAAAAARRRRRRIIIIORRRSSSSS,” it will push me forward and provide an incredible adrenaline rush.

I am the author of my story. I always have been and I always will be. I look forward to you all continuing this journey with me and with us. If you have learned anything about me over our year-plus together, it’s that I am never hard to find.

I will be back, and I need you back, too. Here’s to what’s ahead.

Go Dubs”

Since being acquired by the Warriors in January of 2025 (after a lengthy and dramatic saga with the Miami Heat), Butler has played in 68 games and has become a fan-favorite player both on and off the court. Even at age 36, he was still a valuable asset for the Warriors up until his ACL tear, putting up an average of 20 points per game. Hopefully, Butler will stay a Warrior after his recovery — he certainly seems dead-set on it, based on what he said in his email.

Supersub strikes again as Sesko gives Man United win at Everton

LIVERPOOL, England (AP) — Manchester United supersub Benjamin Sesko scored 13 minutes after entering the field to give his side a 1-0 win over Everton in the Premier League on Monday.

It was the third time in four games that Sesko has scored after coming off the bench and secured points for United.

“I believe in me and so do the other players as well,” Sesko told Sky Sports. “They know what they are going to get when I arrive in the game. It's up to me to deliver of course.”

His goal with 19 minutes remaining finished off the slickest move of an otherwise stodgy game.

Bryan Mbeumo controlled Matheus Cunha’s superb long ball and played a perfectly weighted pass to the feet of Sesko, who steered the ball past Jordan Pickford with aplomb.

“It was a great finish," United interim coach Michael Carrick said. “It was a ruthless finish. I liked the way he put it away with real confidence. It was great play from Cunha and Mbeumo to set it up and we are dangerous on the break.”

Until then defenses had been on top and the lack of attacking fluency was not helped by a heavy pitch that appeared to slow down both teams.

The result took fourth-placed United three points clear of Chelsea and Liverpool. United was three behind Aston Villa.

It also extended Carrick’s unbeaten run to six games since he replaced Ruben Amorim on Jan. 13.

The defeat was a blow to Everton’s hopes of a place in next year’s European competitions and left it languishing in ninth, behind Brentford and Bournemouth and eight points adrift of Chelsea and Liverpool.

David Moyes’ men have gone seven games without a win at their new Hill Dickinson Stadium.

“Generally we did very well in lots of bits," Moyes said. "We got done on the counterattack and they ran away and got the goal that was there. We put in a great effort to get the goal but lacked the quality to make it count.”

___

AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Lakers’ struggles against physicality highlighted in loss to Celtics

The Lakers’ struggles against more physical opponents hasn’t been a talking point in a while, but Sunday’s blowout loss to their longtime cross-country rival, the Boston Celtics, brought it back to the forefront.

Yes, the offense and the process behind it on Sunday afternoon was abysmal, especially in the first half. This led to the Lakers scoring their second-fewest points in a game this season (89) to the Celtics at Crypto.com Arena.

LeBron James drives to the basket against the Boston Celtics. AP

Part of the Lakers’ struggles were because they settled for what the Celtics wanted them to take: midrange shots against the deep drop defensive coverage Boston used with multiple big men when defending on-ball screens.

Just over 40% (40.7%) of the Lakers’ shot attempts against the Celtics came from midrange (outside of four feet from the rim to the 3-point line), which was tied for their seventh-highest mark of the season. Coach JJ Redick highlighted how the Celtics’ drop coverage put the Lakers in uncomfortable positions.  

“There were opportunities to put more pressure on the rim,” Redick said. “Particularly in the first half. A lot of times when teams are on a deeper drop versus all our guys that play pick and roll, it kind of puts you a little bit in a bind of not having the obvious choice to pass, if that makes sense? So we just got to do a better job of just finding guys and moving the ball.”

But the Celtics also presented similar issues that the Lakers have struggled to consistently have an answer for: a physical team that establishes a hard-nose style of play early on. 

Once the Lakers didn’t match physicality with physicality, frustration began to build. 

And the Lakers took out their frustrations toward the officials – albeit after multiple egregious non-calls that favored the Celtics.

There was the technical foul Marcus Smart picked up after Jaylen Brown elbowed him in the face, with Smart being assessed the technical for arguing about the play. Reaves was also T’d up for arguing about the play. 

Redick was given a technical later in the game while arguing Neemias Queta should’ve been called for goaltending or basket inference on a LeBron James layup attempt. 

LeBron James gets to the basket against the Celtics. NBAE via Getty Images

And once those frustrations were built up, the Lakers struggled to stay in the game.

“We can get that way sometimes,” Reaves said. “When you don’t get those calls, you can’t stay frustrated. You got to move on to the next play. I’m a culprit of that. I got to do better in that situation, and our whole team does as well.”

And the frustrations also affected the Lakers’ offensive playstyle.

Too often they resorted to one-on-one basketball or going to high pick and rolls without off-ball actions or movements once the Celtics took control of the game. 

“Got to be able to understand games that are going to be tailored to play different ways,” Reaves said. “[With the] scoring ability [of] Luka [Doncic] and Bron, there’s going to be nights where you take matchups and you score and you win that way, and it’s going to be nights like [Sunday]. Got to do a better job all of us, myself included, playing with the pass. When you do that, everything’s going to open up more for one-on-one basketball. That’s what you want to do.”

The Celtics presented a similar challenge the Lakers will experience in the postseason.

Sunday showed they have more progress to make before passing the test.

Mets’ Clay Holmes, Tobias Myers using early spring outing to build up, experiment

While New York was dealing with close to 2 feet of snow, Mets pitchers Clay Holmes and Tobias Myers had to deal with the challenges of cool temperatures on the west coast of Florida during their outings on Monday in Dunedin against the Blue Jays.

“It was one of those days where it was a little chilly, it was dry, windy. Typically, these are the days [weather-wise] that are tough for sinkerballers,” Holmes said after dealing 3.2 innings in the Mets' win. “It was just good to get that experience and that challenge and to be back into the game action and figure out how to make pitches and see swings and feel the game speed.” 

And that is what the early spring outings come down to: coming out feeling physically strong and tinkering with the adjustments to new and existing pitches they have been working on this offseason.

“This is the time to kinda still play around with some of the things, get reactions, kinda go to this pitch, that pitch,” Holmes said of experimenting with the pitch arsenal. “You’re always finding ways to get better and what you can tinker here and there before things really start to matter.”  

Holmes said he entered the spring feeling strong after pitching 165.2 innings as a starter last year (after pitching 189.2 innings over the previous three seasons combined as a reliever), and is looking to avoid some of the issues he had in the second half of last season when his ERA went from 2.99 to 4.23.

“There were some stretches there, I feel like I could have been better. And I think being able to look back and learn from those moments will be big for this year,” he said, adding that it “wasn’t just one thing” during those spells when maybe the added innings caught up to him. 

“Maybe the delivery wasn’t quite the same,” he said. “I think it boils down to: I gotta find a way to stay in the zone and attack hitters, especially the lefties. That’s what kinda hurt me at times.”

Holmes said that he’s been focusing on that aspect, and during Monday’s outing, when the conditions are tough for getting a good grip and his bread-and-butter sinker, the cutter “got me back into some good counts. Last year, I felt like it got me into worse counts.”

“To me, that was a big positive for today,” he continued. “And that goes to some of the stretches of the command’s not totally there, finding a way to stay in good counts.”

Manager Carlos Mendoza said it was “overall a good day of work for Holmes” and that the cutter stood out.

“The cutter was a pitch that is the one he’s working on the most this spring training, and I felt like he got back in counts with that pitch, especially against lefties,” the skipper said. “I thought the sweeper was good, and the fact that he got up to the fourth up at 60 pitches and was like, ‘Physically. ‘I can keep going.’ That’s a really good sign.”

Holmes said he changed the grip on his cutter, but the success of the pitch will come down to his comfort with it. “I think just having that pitch in the zone will help the other pitches,” he said.  

Of course, not everything worked out so well. Holmes threw four curveballs, a pitch he last threw in a game in 2021. And while he did get one whiff on three swings, Kazuma Okamoto launched a 1-2 curve 431 feet to center for a two-run homer.

“It’s probably not something I’ll throw a ton to right-handed batters,” he said of the curveball. “Threw one today and got hurt on it, so it was a good learning experience.”

For Myers, coming off making 31 starts and 18 relief appearances over the past two years with Milwaukee, he said that while his destination of rotation or bullpen isn’t set, his build-up is the same.

“There’s some new pitches in there,” he said after pitching 2.1 scoreless innings against Toronto. “We’re definitely working on them. The slider I threw a lot today, you probably think it’s a curveball, pretty big. We’re trying to get that velo up on that a little bit. And the split, been throwing the split for half a season now, trying to fine-tune that pitch.”  

Myers, who threw six splitters according to Statcast's tracking, said it is more of a split-change that he feels he can "execute a lot better” than the previous changeup he was throwing.

“If I can go out there and use it consistently, throw it whenever I want any count, righty, lefty, I think that opens up a lot of doors for me instead of just going up there and trying to rely on the fastball,” he said.

He credited Mets pitching coach Justin Willard for coming up with the “little baby spike” slider less than two weeks ago in the hopes of getting more swing-and-miss.

“If I can throw that pitch north of 82 mph, with the right metrics and everything,” he said, “I think that can definitely open up some doors for some swing-and-miss.”

What pitch do you want to come along first? “You hope it’s the fastball,” Myers said. “You hope the fastball kinda comes first and then you can just kinda work on things from there. 

“For me, that’s always my main goal, especially in the offseason, the first couple bullpens: lotta fastballs, kinda get that location right."

Mendoza said the fastball has “got life.”

“Even though it was like 92 [mph] today, we know he can get to the mid-90’s. It’s just the life on the fastball, the change is always gonna be good, and we saw it today,” the skipper said before speaking complimentarily of the rest of the right-hander’s pitches. “And I like that cutter/slider that he’s got going for him now. It’s a pitch that he’s going to need, and he’s working on that one, and I thought he threw some good ones today.” 

Myers, who was glad to get in three ups after going for two in his past two live outings this spring, says coming out feeling good is still the most important part of this time of year.

“Body feels good, body’s healthy, I think that’s the only thing looking for this time, just check that box off and keep building up,” he said.

Myers said that while he doesn’t know his role, how he deploys his pitches won’t change either. 

“The usage might change a little bit, but I think that’s gonna come from the staff and the catchers and reading hitters, reading swings,” he said. “Visually, watching the game, I think hitters come out a little bit more aggressive when they get a bullpen arm in there. So that might change [it] a little bit. But as far as pitches, no, everything will kinda be the same.”

Sabres Have Clear Move To Make With Alex Tuch

The 2026 Winter Olympics are over, which means the Buffalo Sabres will soon be returning to game action. The 2026 NHL trade deadline is also rapidly approaching, so trade activity around the NHL should certainly pick up. 

Fans will naturally be keeping an eye on the Sabres. With star forward Alex Tuch being a pending unrestricted free agent (UFA) and still without a contract extension at the time of this writing, he has been the subject of trade rumors. 

Yet, when noting that the Sabres are currently in a playoff spot and Tuch is an incredibly important part of their roster, they should not trade him. Instead, their next move should be to find a way to sign him to a contract extension. 

Tuch is exactly the kind of player that a team on the rise, like the Sabres, should be keeping around. He is not only a big part of their top six due to his strong offensive ability, but is also a well-respected leader in their room. Thus, moving on from him would undoubtedly be negative for the Sabres. This is especially so when noting that they have a real shot of finally snapping their 14-year playoff drought.

The Sabres would be wise to work hard on getting a new deal done with Tuch as the deadline gets closer. If they extend him, it would be great news for the Sabres. 

In 56 games this season with the Sabres, Tuch has recorded 22 goals, 26 assists, 48 points, and a plus-14 rating. 

Why Was Brock Boeser In A Non-Contact Jersey At Today's Canucks Practice?

On January 25, Vancouver Canucks forward Brock Boeser received an elbow to the head that would ultimately keep him out until after the 2026 Winter Olympic Games concluded. While he’d previously returned to Vancouver’s practices in a regular jersey, at today’s practice, the forward wore a red non-contact jersey. 

Why was this the case? 

Throughout the past little while, the Canucks have had some sort of bug making its way through the dressing room. When Vancouver first returned to practice on February 17, Conor Garland was the lone player to not return to the ice. Canucks Head Coach Adam Foote later revealed this was due to illness. 

That same day, Boeser had been requested for media availability but was unable to speak as he wasn’t feeling well. It was these illness symptoms that led to the Canucks putting Boeser in a non-contact jersey today. The main concern from the organization was that the symptoms had to do with the concussion he’d sustained back on January 25, though it was more done out of an abundance of caution rather than suspicion. 

“He didn't feel good a couple days ago, and they had to make sure […] that it was actually viral and not his concussion, right? So they're just doing the right thing with the protocol.” 

From Foote’s perspective, things are trending positively in the direction of Boeser being A-Ok to get back in a regular jersey for tomorrow’s practice. 

“[He had] a couple things going on, not being on the ice as much with the injury, and having the break, and then getting through the concussion, and then you have a viral on top of it, and tried to condition. And he went out there. He didn't want to leave, but I think the therapists wanted to do the right thing, just because the concussion was in play. And then once you get caught up in that you’ve got to make sure it is the viral, and you still have to go through the protocol of the NHL coming back your first skate in a red jersey.” 

Time will tell whether Boeser's symptoms of sickness have to do with his concussion or the locker room's illness, but for now, it appears to be trending in the direction of the latter. 

Jan 25, 2026; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks forward Brock Boeser (6) skates against the Pittsburgh Penguins in the second period at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images
Jan 25, 2026; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks forward Brock Boeser (6) skates against the Pittsburgh Penguins in the second period at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images

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Kevin Durant says he wants to play in 2028 Summer Olympics in LA

Kevin Durant, 37, is feeling the Olympics call to him yet again. After the United States won gold in both men and women's hockey in Milano Cortina, the former NBA MVP and the United States' all-time leading Olympic scorer debunked the theory that 2024 was the last Olympic ride for many of the games biggest stars.

"You guys, the media, have projected that," Durant told ESPN. "That narrative, where did the last dance thing come from? I didn't say I wasn't playing. LeBron said he wasn't. You didn't hear that from me or Steph."

Curry is unlikely to participate in 2028 and James has already said that he will not play. Durant added that he wants to play, but only if he is still at the "top of [his] game."

He said, "I want to produce on the floor and make Grant and whoever is making the decisions, want to put me on the team." He continued, "I want to still prove I can help the team win."

Houston Rockets forward Kevin Durant celebrates after scoring in the third quarter against the New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden.

Durant's Olympic resumé

As mentioned earlier, Durant is the United States' all-time leading scorer at the Olympics. He began his Olympic career in 2012, playing in London.

Durant averaged 19.5 points per game in the London Olympics, all while hitting more than 48.5% of his three-point attempts. Durant has averaged at least 19.8 points per game in every Olympics since with his worst mark coming in 2024, when he averaged just 13.8 points per game in Paris.

The U.S. has won gold at every Olympics Durant has participated in.

When and where will the 2028 Olympics be?

The 2028 Olympics will take place in Los Angeles, California. The basketball games, specifically, will be played at the Intuit Dome in Inglewood.

The first basketball game of the event will take place two days prior to the Opening Ceremonies on Wednesday, July 12, 2028, with the gold medal game not yet set but likely on Sunday, July 30, 2028. Durant will be 39 years old.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Kevin Durant wants to play for Team USA at 2028 Olympics

Tarik Skubal reveals surprising WBC role for Team USA as free agency looms

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Tarik Skubal of the Detroit Tigers throws a baseball during spring training

Team USA’s one-two punch of Paul Skenes and Tarik Skubal will be short-lived.

Skubal, the reigning back-to-back American League Cy Young winner, announced Monday that he plans to make just one start in the 2026 World Baseball Classic before returning to Tigers camp, according to The Athletic.

The 29-year-old’s lone appearance is expected to be an abbreviated start during pool play on March 7 against Great Britain.

Tarik Skubal will make just one start with Team USA. AP

“I’m trying to do both things, trying to pitch for Team USA but I understand the need to be here with these guys and get ready for the season,” Skubal said. “I think it’s kind of the best of both worlds in that aspect, and I’m grateful they took me in that capacity.”

Skubal added that he will push to rejoin the squad as a spectator should the team reach the tournament finals.

“If they go to the finals, I think I’m going to try and lobby to just go watch and be with the guys,” he added.

Skubal’s one-and-done plan dampens what was expected to be a dominant rotation fronted by him and Skenes, a fellow 2025 Cy Young winner.

Skubal told 97.1 The Ticket in February that he “bought in” on joining the roster after extended talks with agent Scott Boras, Tigers manager AJ Hinch and Skenes.

“It was pretty easy to convince me because I was already kind of bought-in on it, and he confirmed everything that I thought,” Skubal said. “I think it’s great for the game of baseball, too. Just from a fan perspective, when you get to watch something with that kind of atmosphere and electricity in March, I think it’s going to bring a lot of eyes onto our sport in April and May. I think the game of baseball’s in a really good spot, and I think this really helps elevate it.

“For me, I take a ton of pride in being able to wear the USA across the chest,” Skubal added. “It’s something I’ve never had the opportunity to do, and I take a ton of pride in the United States of America. It’s the best country in the world.”

Skubal, 29, has won the last two AL Cy Young awards. AP

The decision comes just weeks after Skubal secured a record-breaking $32 million salary for 2026 in arbitration with the Tigers.

Detroit countered at $19 million, intensifying speculation that Skubal — slated for free agency after the season — could be dealt.

In November, The Post’s Jon Heyman reported a staggering $250 million gap in extension talks between Skubal and the Tigers.

Over the past two seasons, Skubal has cemented himself as arguably the game’s best pitcher, going 31-10 with a 2.30 ERA and 469 strikeouts in 387 ⅓ innings across 62 outings.

Despite losing the arbitration case to Skubal, Detroit responded by opening the checkbook to bolster the starting rotation.

The Tigers signed star left-hander Framber Valdez and reunited with franchise icon Justin Verlander.

With the Tigers expected to compete for the postseason and Skubal’s looming free agency, Team USA will get a brief cameo instead of a full commitment.

Video Shows Injured Panthers Sasha Barkov, Seth Jones Doing On-Ice Work At Team Practice Facility

The Florida Panthers are gearing up for a late-season playoff push as the NHL gets set to resume its season following a nice, long break for the 2026 Winter Olympics.

Many of the Panthers players who have been battling injuries are either now healthy enough to return or nearing that level.

Over the weekend, Panthers Head Coach Paul Maurice provided updates on all of those players.

The only guys who are not expected to play in a game in the next couple weeks are Florida captain Sasha Barkov and defenseman Seth Jones.

Barring any setbacks, every else who has either been out long-term or missed time recently with a minor injury – Aaron Ekblad, Brad Marchand, Evan Rodrigues, Tony Bjornfot, Dmitry Kulikov, Jonah Gadjovich, Tomas Nosek and Daniil Tarasov – should be back in the Panthers’ lineup in or around a fortnight.

As for Barkov and Jones, it’s going to be a little longer for them.

Jones is around a week away from being cleared to re-join regular team practices, though he’ll likely start off wearing a non-contact jersey.

With Barkov, he’s still got quite a few hours to log in regard to rehabbing his surgically repaired knee.

Both Barkov and Jones have been skating on their own, getting in work with Panthers Skills Coach Max Ivanov.

Over the weekend, Ivanov posted some very cool footage of one of those sessions on social media.

You can check it out below:

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Photo caption: Mar 30, 2025; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Florida Panthers defenseman Seth Jones (3) celebrates with center Aleksander Barkov (16) after scoring against the Montreal Canadiens at Amerant Bank Arena. (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)

Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao to fight in September rematch on Netflix

  • 40-something fighters will meet in Las Vegas

  • Mayweather won previous encounter in 2015

Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao will face each other on 19 September in Las Vegas in a rematch of one of the biggest fights in boxing history.

Their first fight, in 2015, was generally seen as a tame affair with both fighters past their peaks. September’s bout, which will be streamed live on Netflix, is likely to be of a lower quality. Mayweather and Pacquiao will be 49 and 47 respectively when they fight. Mayweather’s last professional fight, which preserved his unbeaten record, came in 2017, although that was a glorified exhibition against UFC star Conor McGregor. Pacquiao fought for the WBC welterweight championship last year, but is far from the force he was in his prime.

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Austin Reaves was confused about his technical foul vs. Celtics

Los Angeles, CA - February 22: Guard Luka Doncic, left, along with teammate guard Marcus Smart #36 and guard Austin Reaves #15 of the Los Angeles Lakers on the bench late in the second half of a NBA basketball game against the Boston Celtics at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles on Sunday, February 22, 2026. (Photo by Keith Birmingham/MediaNews Group/Pasadena Star-News via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images

The Lakers had plenty of self-inflicted wounds in Sunday’s loss to the Celtics.

Both a lack of effort and a lack of execution doomed them, bitter pills to swallow in a rivalry game. But while it may not have ultimately affected the outcome of the game, officiating was also a big storyline.

Across the course of the contest, though mostly in the first half, the Lakers had some fair complaints toward the officials. At least one missed goaltending call and questionable foul calls culminated in a sequence in which both Austin Reaves and Marcus Smart received technical fouls.

The technicals came after Jaylen Brown appeared to elbow Smart in the face on a play when Smart was called for a foul.

Reaves was assessed a technical immediately after the foul for clapping at the official. Smart protested for quite a while after before eventually earning his own technical After the contest, Reaves was asked about hte play, leading to some larger thoughts on what is and isn’t a technical in the league now.

“I mean, I thought (Jaylen Brown) elbowed Marcus [Smart] in the face,” Reaves said. “I didn’t say anything disrespectful. He told me I got a tech because I clapped my hands. I just said, ‘Offensive foul’ over and over again. I kind of walked by him, didn’t turn around and say anything else. But he told me that it’s an automatic tech when you clap, I guess, towards a ref.

“I don’t know. I’ve heard way more disrespectful things said to officials and nothing, no tech or anything. But yeah, I mean, there’s a level of frustration. You want to stand up for your teammates. But alsoI know he elbowed him in the face and might have fouled him before. But yeah, I didn’t think that it warranted a tech, but it’s not for me to say.”

Complaints about officials always land pretty hollow after a blowout loss to a rival, but it doesn’t mean they’re wrong either. Officiating was, at best, lackluster in this contest and the Lakers were on the wrong end of things.

That being said, they also let the poor officiating impact their play. Every questionable play became an opportunity to complain to the refs again. The focus shifted from the game to the officials and Boston took full advantage, opening up a double-digit lead late in the second quarter that changed the game.

For as little or much as it matters, Reaves acknowledged that the Lakers can’t let that happen moving forward.

“When you don’t get those calls, you can’t stay frustrated,” Reaves said. “You got to move on to the next play. I’m a culprit of that. I got to do better in that situation and our whole team does as well.”

Unfortunately, this has become a trait of this Lakers team. It’s pretty easy to point the finger at Luka Dončić, but this is a team-wide problem and everyone else shouldn’t escape blame.

But so long as this remains a constant for the Lakers, they will fail to be a real contender.

You can follow Jacob on Twitter at @JacobRude or on Bluesky at @jacobrude.bsky.social.

Will, When Or Should Otto Stenberg Return To The Blues' NHL Roster?

With the conclusion of the 2026 Olympics, the focus now turns back to the 2025-26 NHL regular season.

For the St. Louis Blues, the break was needed, as the season has been a total mess from the get-go. They’ve dealt with numerous injuries, plenty of their star players have massively underperformed, and they sit in 31st place in the NHL. 

Although mathematically they haven’t been eliminated from playoff contention, they sit 14 points back of the final wild card spot in the Western Conference and have shown no signs of turning things around. 

The Blues will be sellers at the deadline, and that’s okay.

Despite their low place in the standings, when looking at their roster when completely healthy, it’s difficult to find spots to place their young forwards. That’s especially true for 20-year-old Swedish winger Otto Stenberg. 

After a spectacular performance at the Olympics and a strong start to his NHL career, Dalibor Dvorsky may never play in the AHL again. For Stenberg, as it stands, he’s currently down in the AHL with the Springfield Thunderbirds.

Stenberg hasn’t lit up the AHL offensively as some may have expected. With just four goals and 12 points in 28 games, Stenberg’s numbers aren’t much to rave about, but he plays a balanced game with the mindset to win pucks back at all costs. Stenberg has performed better at the NHL level rather than the AHL level, but that doesn’t necessarily mean the NHL is the best spot for him. 

Otto Stenberg has scored one goal and eight points in 18 NHL games. (Terrence Lee-Imagn Images)
Otto Stenberg has scored one goal and eight points in 18 NHL games. (Terrence Lee-Imagn Images)

The AHL remains a developmental league, and if the Blues envision Stenberg as a top-six forward for their future, they need him to hone his offensive skills and play meaningful minutes, rather than playing in a fourth-line role on the Blues, which is what he would currently play with a healthy Blues lineup.

But Stenberg could be back up with the Blues again this season. The March 6 trade deadline is just 11 days away, and the Blues are expected to move on from several key players. That’s when Stenberg could find his opportunity to rejoin the Blues’ NHL roster. 

At just 20 years old, the results and the production aren’t the most important things for Stenberg; it’s the process. They believe Stenberg has the intangibles and compete level of an NHL player, but his next step is to improve his offensive skill set and slowly turn it into production. 

The Blues aren’t making the playoffs, and they aren’t in a total rebuild, so patience is a tool the Blues can utilize to their benefit with Stenberg.

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Rice and Domínguez power Yanks’ win over Pirates.

TAMPA, FL - FEBRUARY 18: New York Yankees Infielder Ben Rice (22) smiles as he warms up during the spring training workout on February 18, 2026 at George M. Steinbrenner Field in Tampa, FL. (Photo by Cliff Welch/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The thing about spring training is that, in the first couple weeks, most of the action involves players that you will not see in the regular season. The first few innings might be something fun, but after that it’s only for those who really crave baseball or are overtly interested in the team’s prospects.

Today, the Yankees got most of their damage done early and by the regulars, as four second-inning walks chased Bubba Chandler and both Ben Rice and Jasson Domínguez delivered clutch run-scoring hits that set the tone for a 6-2 win down in Bradenton. Despite traffic on the bases all day, the Yanks mostly kept the Pirates’ offense at bay, with former first-round pick Ben Hess turning the most heads with a strong outing late in the game.

Chandler got things started with a quick 1-2-3 first, which saw Domínguez strike out, sandwiched by both Ben Rice and Ryan McMahon popping out in foul territory.

Ryan Yarbrough gave up a leadoff single to Oneil Cruz, struck out Nick Gonzales, and jumped ahead of Bryan Reynolds 0-2 before walking him. That would prove to be costly, as after a flyout moved Cruz to third, Marcell Ozuna punched one through the right side for a go-ahead RBI single in the first for the Pirates.

Paul DeJong and Spencer Jones led off the second with walks off the usually frugal Chandler, who battled back to get the next two outs before walking both Zack Short and Payton Henry to force in a run, ending his day. After walking just four batters in 31.1 innings last year, he had four in 1.2 innings today.

Former Yankee farmhand Tyrone Yulie came in to face Rice, who smoked a 100.4 mph, two-run single through the right side. Domínguez joined the party a few pitches later, lofting an RBI double into right field to finish off a four-run second.

Yarbrough settled in after a challenging first, giving up a two-out double to Alika Williams between a pair of strikeouts. The second strikeout of the inning was ABS-assisted, as home plate umpire Macon Hammond originally called ball four to put Cruz on first, but the Yankees challenged, and it was overturned to strike three. Overall, not a bad day for Yarbrough, who struck out four in two innings.

Another former Yankee, Dennis Santana, tossed a scoreless third around an infield single by Max Schuemann and a walk by Short. Paul Blackburn took over for Yarbrough in the third and got into immediate trouble with an infield single and a walk. After threatening to walk the bases loaded with nobody out, Blackburn induced a 3-2 forceout before a clear 5-4-3 double play ended the third.

Gregory Soto pitched a 1-2-3 fourth for the Pirates. Blackburn got into more trouble with back-to-back singles in the bottom half. Fortunately, he pulled out another Houdini act, retiring three straight batters, capping it off with a filthy 2-2 curveball to Cruz to end the inning.

Kyle Nicolas retired the middle of the Yankees’ order quickly, including a strikeout of Spencer Jones, in the fifth. Dylan Coleman continued his bullpen audition in the bottom half and got into trouble, but the Pirates stranded two for the third straight inning.

The Yankees threatened to break the game open in the sixth off of Hunter Barco with two walks and a hit by pitch to load the bases, but Domínguez (batting from the right side) struck out, and McMahon slapped a liner the other way that was snagged by new third baseman Jhonny Severino.

Hess made his first appearance of the spring in the sixth as the regulars were removed from the game, and he was impressive, striking out Nick Cimillo and Omar Alfonzo in a quick, nine-pitch inning. Hess got up to 95 mph on his fastball and got three whiffs, including one on a looping curveball to retire Alfonzo.

The Yankees got an extra run in the seventh. Yanquiel Fernandez walked and stole second, Marco Luciano walked against pitcher Kyle Larsen (no, not the NASCAR driver), and Ali Sanchez reached on a throwing error by Severino that allowed Fernandez to score, making it 5-1 into the seventh inning stretch. Hess went back to work and flirted with trouble with a walk and a single allowed, but he struck out the side around it in the seventh.

Miguel Palma, a soft-hitting depth catcher signed away from the Astros this offseason, smacked a leadoff homer off of former Tigers reliever Beau Burrows in the eighth. George Lombard Jr. got his first at-bat of the game later that inning and walked, but was stranded.

After two strong innings, Hess faltered to start the bottom of the eighth, plunking Severino, allowing an RBI double to Cimillo to cut it to 6-2, and walking Alfonzo. He settled down with a 6-4-3 double play and got out of the inning by retiring former Yankee farmhand Brian Sanchez. That wrapped up a three-inning outing from Hess, who impressive on the whole.

Luciano’s leadoff walk in the ninth was stranded by Brandan Bidois, while Geoff Gilbert came on for the Yanks and got the final three outs, improving the spring record to 2-2.

The Yankees are back in action tomorrow, taking on the Blue Jays in Dunedin at 1:07. Will Warren is scheduled to make his first spring start, while Toronto’s starter is to be determined. The game will be available on the Gotham Sports App and MLB Network (out-of-market only).

Box Score

Question Time: Mad Max

Oct 27, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Max Scherzer (31) reacts in the dugout after being relieved in the fifth inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers during game three of the 2025 MLB World Series at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images | Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

The birds are singing, the snow is melting, and pitchers are getting hurt. Spring is here. The Jays have already lost Bowden Francis for the season. Shane Bieber is delayed, and now it sounds like Yimi Garcia will be as well. The Jays wisely invested in depth this winter. Cody Ponce was an interesting signing to shore up the back of the rotation, and Jose Berrios is still here after a winter of trade speculation. Eric Lauer is here too, and wants a starting job. He’s not in the top 5 right now, but he has a case and he’d crack most rotations in the league. The depth in AAA looks thin if you don’t think Ricky Tiedemann is a starter in 2026 (we’ll see about long term), but Jake Bloss should be working his way back by June. All of which is to say that the Jays have some shuffling to do but right now look set to field a very good five man rotation with some depth.

Enter Max Scherzer. The last time the future first ballot hall of famer walked off a mound, he’d held the fearsome Dodgers offence to one run over four and a third to start game 7 of the World Series, leaving with a lead and having out-dueled Shohei Ohtani. If the Jays had held on, it would be the crowning moment of one of the best pitching careers of his generation. But they didn’t, and so Scherzer wants to give the storybook ending one more try. It seems like if he pitches in 2026 it will be for the Blue Jays, and repots are that the talks are heating up.

For all his past greatness, he had a 5.19 ERA in the regular season last year and while the stats suggest he deserved a little better he’s firmly a #5 in 2026. As it is, he probably doesn’t crack the starting five even before Shane Bieber’s slow ramp up is completed. It’s hard to imagine him accepting a bullpen role. On the other hand, you never have enough pitching, and he brings a ton of leadership and (arguably psychotic) intensity to the clubhouse. My questions are: will the Blue Jays end up signing Scherzer, and should they?