Michigan sends message: You don't want to play them

CHICAGO – With Tennessee already down by 19, one basket wasn’t going to make a difference. The game was effectively over, and whether Michigan won by 10 or 20, the outcome was still going to be the same.

Michigan coach Dusty May challenged the goaltending call, anyway. The Wolverines weren’t just here to win, they were here to send a message:

They’re the best team in the country, and they’ll steamroll anyone who is in their way.

"It's just people stepping up to the moment," Roddy Gayle Jr. said. "I feel like March brings out the best in people."

It certainly has with this team.

Top-seeded Michigan routed sixth-seeded Tennessee 95-62 on Sunday, March 29, to reach the Final Four for the third time since 2013. With apologies to Moritz Wagner and Glenn Robinson III, these Wolverines have the best chance yet to win the school’s first national title since 1989.

In a span of two days, Michigan humbled the country’s top offensive team and the SEC’s best defensive team, and the Wolverines barely broke a sweat in doing so. They’ve scored 90 or more points and shot 50% or better in each of their NCAA Tournament games, and the 33-point win over Tennessee was the biggest blowout of the weekend.

And if Yaxel Lendeborg isn’t the player of the year, he’s for sure the player of March.

Lendeborg tagged Tennessee for 27 points, his third game with 23 or more, and 10 of those came during a 23-2 run in the first half that effectively sealed the game. He’s making a career’s worth of highlights every game, including his tip-in layup off his own missed 3-pointer with 11:57 left to play against Tennessee.

The Wolverines are not a one-man team, however. Four other players finished in double figures and two others were only a bucket away. Elliot Cadeau had double-digit assists (10) for the fifth time this season.

Whatever those hiccups Michigan had in the Big Ten tournament, where they struggled against Ohio State and Wisconsin before losing to Purdue in the title game, they are long gone. Michigan is rolling, and good luck to anyone who faces them.

Michigan plays fellow No. 1 seed Arizona in the Final Four in Indianapolis on Friday night, April 3.

"When this group got together, we all wanted to make it the national championship and win it," Lendeborg said. "We worked tirelessly on making sure that our mental was right, not just physical. And we all trust each other. We play hard for each other. We make extra plays for each other. We're going to do whatever we want for each other.

"So just being able to make it this far and continuing to want to get more, it means a lot."

Michigan is only two seasons removed from a team that lost 24 games. While quick turnarounds are more doable now with the transfer portal, building chemistry when there's a new coach and new players presents its own challenges.

Add in being thrust into the spotlight as a national title contender a month into the season, and Michigan very easily could have gone sideways.

"The most difficult part is that everyone starts getting so much more attention, advice. Literally everything they get more of," May said. "It's difficult not to make it about you because the people you're talking to are making it about you.

"There's just a lot of distracting information," May added. "And if you're not mature and you're not connected as a group and you're not willing to be held accountable by the staff and each other, then it's not going to work. Once it creeps in it's almost impossible to weed it out. So our guys never let it in.

"They stayed the course and stayed about each other. And that's ultimately why we're here," May said. "We weren't a super team, but these guys became super teammates."

Though Michigan’s Fab Five never won an NCAA title, they changed college basketball with their outsized personalities, baggy shorts and black socks. These Wolverines aren't going to have that kind of influence, but they’ve got a similar brand of fun.

Lendeborg is as goofy as he is good, and Gayle isn’t far behind. They all love to hype each other up — when Lendeborg said Will Tschetter deserved a shout out for his toughness, Nimari Burnett woofed in response — and their tightknit chemistry isn't forced.

They might be stealing people's souls, but they're having a blast doing it.

"That's our main thing. We say before every game to just go out there and have fun," Cadeau said. "We're not worrying about our stats, not worrying about the scoreboard."

Michigan cruised through the regular season, not losing a single Big Ten road game. Its two losses, to Wisconsin in January and Duke in late February, were by a combined eight points. They spent time at No. 1 and were never ranked lower than third after Dec. 1.

But the Wolverines didn't have their usual swagger in the Big Ten tournament. When they lost to Purdue in the title game, it wasn't even that big a surprise.

It also might have been the best thing for them.

"Watching another team cut down the nets, feeling that was something that we didn't want to feel again," Gayle said.

Message received.

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Michigan basketball makes statement with win over Tennessee in Elite 8

Huge homer from Eugenio Suárez leads Reds past Red Sox

CINCINNATI, OH - MARCH 26: Johnny Bench talks with Eugenio Suárez #28 of the Cincinnati Reds prior to the game between the Boston Red Sox and the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park on Thursday, March 26, 2026 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Jeffrey Dean/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

It had been a bit of a slow start to the season for Eugenio Suárez entering play on Sunday. It’s hard to fault him for it, of course, as he’d been away on the roller coaster that was Team Venezuela’s victory in the World Baseball Classic and had far from the typical spring training warm-up.

He also was returning to the Cincinnati Reds after four seasons elsewhere, and surely was putting some added pressure on himself to perform for a base of fans that adored him so. Spotlighting it was that the players who have been hitting ahead of him in the lineup – namely Sal Stewart and Matt McLain – have been so impossible to retire that each and every time Geno stepped to the plate it seemed as if there were multiple runners in scoring position.

Suárez put in a more vintage showing on Sunday in Great American Ball Park, however. With the Reds trailing the Boston Red Sox 2-0 in the Bottom of the 6th and a pair of runners on, Geno absolutely obliterated a ball into the second deck in LF for a 3-run homer, a 431 foot blast that flipped the scoreboard completely.

Thanks to Rhett Lowder holding Boston to just a pair of runs in an otherwise rock soild start and the bullpen holding firm over the final four frames, that swing was all the offense the Reds would need on the day in a 3-2 victory that earned them a series victory in their first of the year.

Geno, of course, takes home Joe Nuxhall Memorial Honorary Star of the Game honors for the day, the first time I’ve been able to dote the award on him in some five years.

Hat tips are in order for Sal Stewart, too, who was on base another four times in a masterful outing that’s becoming the norm for the rookie. He doubled, singled, walked twice, and even tagged up on a deep fly ball to CF off the bat by Geno that was nearly another homer.

The vibes on this team right now – they are quite good.

Other Notes

  • Suarez did his damage on the day while also getting the start at 3B, as Ke’Bryan Hayes (who later came on to pinch run and play defense) got a break. I do often wonder how a guy who is so accustomed to playing defense in games every day adjusts to life as a DH, and it’ll be interesting to track how different Geno performs offensively on the days when he’s getting run at the other aspect of the game vs. on the days when he’s stuck twiddling his thumbs in the dugout for an hour at a time.
  • Spencer Steer got his first hit of the season. Hooray, Spence!
  • TJ Friedl played LF as Dane Myers got the start in CF, and he looked just fine over there. That’s certainly a rock solid defensive alignment when put together that way.
  • Elly De La Cruz will never not look weird to me hitting right-handed, which he did all four times he came to the plate today. He struck out in three of those appearances.
  • The Reds will rest up this evening and tomorrow will begin a three-game series at home against the Pittsburgh Pirates, who dropped their first two games of the season (and are in extra-innings against the New York Mets at the time of writing this). Chase Burns will get his first start of the season opposite Bucs starter Braxton Ashcraft, with first pitch slated for 6:40 PM ET. That game will be on FS1, for those parties interested in watching it that way, and also via MLB.tv.

Knicks vs Thunder Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight’s NBA Game

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The New York Knicks are being slightly undervalued on the road, even against an elite opponent like the Oklahoma City Thunder.

New York played OKC tight the last time these teams met, and my Knicks vs. Thunder predictions and NBA picks for Sunday, March 29, expect another close game tonight at Paycom Center.

Knicks vs Thunder prediction

Knicks vs Thunder best bet: Knicks +8.5 (-110)

The New York Knicks and Oklahoma City Thunder both come into tonight’s game playing well, with New York having a seven-game winning streak before losing on Thursday, while OKC has won 13 of its last 14 contests. Both still have a lot to play for in the race for top seeds in their respective contests, and both teams are relatively healthy heading into tonight’s matchup.

That’s all to say that we’re going to get the best of both sides tonight. In the case of these teams, that means tough defense that makes every possession into a battle. The Thunder have arguably the best defense in the NBA, allowing 107.7 ppg with a league-best 104.6 defensive efficiency, but the Knicks aren’t far behind, giving up just 110.5 ppg themselves.

That showed in the first meeting between these teams, when OKC fought its way to a 103-100 victory in New York. And with two defenses playing this well, it will be hard for either team to put together big runs or pull away from the other.

As well as the Thunder have been playing, they haven’t been dominating the way their backers need lately. OKC has covered in only three of its last 14 games overall, with two of those covers coming against overmatched opponents in the 76ers and Nets.

Quality opponents like the Knicks have been able to stay in games against the Thunder, and that’s exactly what I’m expecting tonight. I’m taking New York to cover.

Knicks vs Thunder same-game parlay

This game features two of the best defensive teams in the NBA, and we’ve already seen them play once this year, resulting in a game total of 203 points.

I’m taking the Under for my SGP, and I think it’s a good straight bet as well. Let’s round out the SGP by backing Karl-Anthony Towns to pick up Over 17.5 points, a total he’s hit in four of his last five games overall.

Knicks vs Thunder SGP

  • Knicks +8.5
  • Under 223.5
  • Karl-Anthony Towns Over 17.5 points

Our "from downtown" SGP: Double-double trouble

Both sides have serious double-double threats in this game, and I’m targeting one from each lineup for this parlay. First, KAT has been a consistent double-double machine for the Knicks, picking up five in his last six games.

Chet Holmgren isn’t far behind for the Thunder, with 23 double-doubles on the season. I’ll round things out by taking OG Anunoby to hit at least three shots from beyond the arc tonight, as he’s coming off back-to-back games where he made five threes in each.

Knicks vs Thunder SGP

  • Knicks +8.5
  • Karl-Anthony Towns to record a double-double
  • Chet Holmgren to record a double-double
  • OG Anunoby Over 2.5 threes

Knicks vs Thunder odds

  • Spread: Knicks +8.5 | Thunder -8.5
  • Moneyline: Knicks +280 | Thunder -360
  • Over/Under: Over 223.5 | Under 223.5

Knicks vs Thunder betting trend to know

The Thunder have covered in just three of their last 14 games. Find more NBA betting trends for Knicks vs. Thunder.

How to watch Knicks vs Thunder

LocationPaycom Center, Oklahoma City, OK
DateSunday, March 29, 2026
Tip-off7:30 p.m. ET
TVNBC

Knicks vs Thunder latest injuries

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Vancouver Goldeneyes snap a 2-game skid with a 3-2 win over the Toronto Sceptres

TORONTO (AP) — Izzy Daniel had a goal and an assist and the Vancouver Goldeneyes snapped a two-game skid with a 3-2 win over the Toronto Sceptres on Sunday.

Hannah Miller and Mannon McMahon also scored for Vancouver. Sarah Nurse had two assists.

Emerance Maschmeyer stopped 25 shots.

Blayre Turnbull scored twice for Toronto, while Elaine Chuli made 26 saves.

The Sceptres were missing forward Clara Van Wieren after she was suspended for one game for a boarding penalty late in Friday’s loss to Boston.

Turnbull put a rebound from a Renata Fast shot past Maschmeyer just 2:31 into the contest.

Three former Sceptres connected on the Goldeneyes’ response at 7:55. Miller put home a rebound on a shot from the slot by Daniel, who took a pass from Nurse.

Daniel put Vancouver ahead just 35 seconds into the second period. Off an initial miss on a tip on a Nurse shot, Daniel tucked in her own rebound.

Turnbull netted her second of the game on the power play when she took a pass from Daryl Watts by the goal line, spun and her backhand went in off the skate of Claire Thompson at 8:09 of the middle frame.

McMahon restored Vancouver’s lead with a tip-in off a Sophie Jaques shot on the power play at 8:54.

Turnbull’s power-play goal was Toronto’s first since a 6-4 loss to Seattle on Jan. 20. The Sceptres had gone 0 for 15 since, including 0 for 12 in seven games after the Olympic break.

Up next

Sceptres: Visit Calgary to take on the Ottawa Charge as part of the Takeover Tour on Wednesday.

Goldeneyes: Visit the Montreal Victoire on Wednesday.

___

AP women’s hockey: https://apnews.com/hub/womens-hockey

Game Preview #75 – Timberwolves at Mavericks

MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - FEBRUARY 20: Rudy Gobert #27 of the Minnesota Timberwolves handles the ball against Marvin Bagley III #35 of the Dallas Mavericks in the third quarter at Target Center on February 20, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The Timberwolves defeated the Mavericks 122-111. 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 David Berding/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Minnesota Timberwolves at Dallas Mavericks
Date: March 30th, 2026
Time: 7:30 PM CDT
Location: American Airlines Center
Television Coverage: FanDuel Sports Network – North
Radio Coverage: KFAN FM, Wolves App, iHeart Radio

There are games in the NBA where you squint at the injury report, notice the early tip, and quietly tell yourself that it might just not be your day. Saturday’s contest against Detroit had all the makings of one of those games, and for the Minnesota Timberwolves, it pretty much played out exactly that way.

For the Wolves, it was no Anthony Edwards, no Ayo Dosunmu, and to round things out, no Jaden McDaniels after the injury he picked up late in that chaos-fueled Houston game. Three core pieces. Gone.

On the other side, the Detroit Pistons, the Eastern Conference’s top team, were missing their own engine in Cade Cunningham. So in theory, this game could’ve been a competitive “who has more left in the tank?” grind-it-out afternoon game. Instead, it turned into something much simpler.

Minnesota just didn’t have enough.


The Moment the Game Slipped—and Never Came Back

The Wolves actually started this one the right way. The defensive energy was there early. Rotations were sharp enough. They hung around, traded punches, and for a brief stretch, it looked like they might be able to piece together one of those undermanned, “everyone chips in” performances that they’d been stringing together over the past week.

And then Rudy Gobert subbed out.

That was it. That was the hinge point.

Because the second he hit the bench, the defensive resistance, everything that had been holding this thing together, just evaporated. Driving lanes opened up. The rim stopped feeling protected. Detroit got comfortable, and once they got comfortable, they started building a lead that never really felt in danger again.


The Offense: When the Shots Don’t Fall, There’s No Plan B

Let’s be honest about what this game really came down to: the Wolves couldn’t hit anything.

They finished shooting 32% from the field, went 9-for-43 from three (21%), and scored 87 total points.

In the third quarter, they managed just four made field goals. Four. That’s not an offensive slump. That’s an offensive blackout.

It wasn’t like they weren’t getting looks. This wasn’t Detroit suffocating them into submission on every possession. Minnesota had decent opportunities. Open threes. Clean catch-and-shoot chances. Looks that, on most nights, at least some of these guys knock down.

Instead?

  • Naz Reid: 0-for-7
  • Bones Highland: 2-for-9
  • Mike Conley Jr.: 1-for-5
  • Julius Randle: 0-for-3 from deep

That’s the game right there.

This is a team that, for better or worse, lives and dies by the three. When it’s falling, the offense opens up, the pace quickens, everything feels connected. When it’s not? You get what we saw on Saturday with stagnation, frustration, and a slow bleed that turns into a double-digit deficit before you even realize it.

At 21%, they weren’t just cold. They were DOA.


And Then the Little Things Started Adding Up

If the shooting was the headline, everything else was the supporting evidence.

They missed nine free throws, continuing a trend that’s quietly becoming a real problem. They got outrebounded 52–38, including getting pushed around on second chances. They turned it over enough to matter, but, here’s the twist, Detroit turned it over 19 times… and Minnesota still couldn’t capitalize.

That’s the part that sticks with you.

The Pistons gave them chances. Real ones. Sloppy passes, careless possessions, the kind of miscues that usually open the door for a comeback. And every time the door cracked open, Minnesota just… didn’t walk through it.

That’s what happens when your offense is that out of rhythm. You can’t string together stops and scores. You can’t build momentum. You just kind of tread water… until you realize you’re drowning.


Perspective Check: This One Wasn’t the End of the World

If you zoom out for a second, this loss isn’t the disaster it feels like in the moment. If you told anyone before this stretch that included Boston, Houston, Detroit, all without Edwards, that Minnesota would go 2–1, people would’ve signed up for that immediately. Especially given how things looked after that California road trip when the defense disappeared and the identity went with it.

They beat Boston. They survived Houston in one of the wildest games of the season. Those wins matter.

Saturday? That was the tax you pay for being short-handed, for playing your third high-intensity game in a row, for asking too much from a roster that’s already stretched thin.

It was still frustrating, still ugly, but not season-defining.


Dallas and the Games You Can’t Afford to Blow

Now comes the part of the schedule that’s less forgiving. Next up: the Dallas Mavericks, then a quick rematch in Detroit, followed by the second night of a back-to-back in Philly against the 76ers. Suddenly, the margin for error is right back where it always is in the West… basically nonexistent.

Minnesota is sitting just a game and a half behind Denver for the four seed. They don’t own the tiebreaker. They’re still jockeying with Houston. And if they want home court, these are the games you have to bank.

Not the Boston game. Not the Houston game.

The Dallas game.

The “bottom of the standings” game that looks easy on paper and turns into a problem if you don’t take it seriously.


Keys to the Game

1. Maintain the Defensive Identity

The blueprint is already there. They beat Boston and Houston by leaning into defense withconnected rotations, physical perimeter play, and Gobert anchoring everything. That doesn’t change just because Dallas isn’t a top-tier opponent.

If anything, it becomes more important. Because the Wolves’ worst habit this season has been that “flip the switch later” mentality. Against Dallas, there can’t be a later. They need to set the tone early, lock in defensively, and never let the game drift into that danger zone where effort becomes optional.


2. Hit Your Threes

This one feels obvious, but after Detroit, it has to be said.

You cannot shoot 21% from three and expect to beat anyone in this league. The looks were there. They just didn’t fall. That has to normalize.

Getting Edwards, McDaniels, or Dosunmu would go a long way. Those are three of your most reliable shooters. Their presence alone changes spacing, changes confidence, changes everything. But regardless of who plays, this team has to rediscover its shooting rhythm. Because when the threes fall, the entire offense opens up.


3. Win the Glass

Against Detroit, the Wolves got outworked, out-hustled, and paid for it. Against Dallas, that can’t happen again. Gobert, Randle, Reid need to clean the glass, eliminate second chances and turn rebounds into putbacks. If you’re bigger, you have to play like it.


4. Julius Randle Has to Be the Guy

Let’s not dance around it. Eleven points on 2-for-13 shooting isn’t going to cut it.

Randle has to be the offensive engine. That means attacking, getting downhill, living in the paint, and, just as importantly, facilitating. When he draws attention and kicks out, this offense becomes dangerous.

Saturday was a dud.

Monday can’t be.


5. Stay Focused, No Matter Who’s Available

Maybe Edwards plays. Maybe he doesn’t. Same with Dosunmu. Same with McDaniels.

It doesn’t matter.

The Wolves have the talent advantage in this matchup. But we’ve seen this story before. Minnesota has games where they assume that’s enough, where the urgency dips, and where the opponent hangs around just long enough to make things uncomfortable.

This has to be a professional win.

Jump on them early. Stay disciplined. Don’t let it become a fourth-quarter coin flip. Because in the West, those are the games that come back to haunt you.


The Bottom Line: This Is About Banking Wins, Not Making Statements

The Wolves aren’t chasing style points right now. They’re chasing positioning.

Denver’s remainig schedule isn’t easy with two games against San Antonio and a battle with OKC. There’s an opportunity to gain ground, but only if Minnesota does its part.

That means beating Dallas.
That means not letting a bad shooting night turn into a bad week.
That means stacking the wins you’re supposed to stack.

Because home court in the first round, something this franchise has only had three times in its history, is right there.

Not guaranteed. Not gifted.

But there.

And after everything this team has been through over the past two weeks, the question isn’t whether they’re capable of climbing back up the ladder.

It’s whether they’re disciplined enough to stay on it.

Jonathan Toews Throws Out First Pitch in Jets Team Trip To Wrigley Field

The Winnipeg Jets are making the most of their road trip to the Windy City, blending business with a bit of baseball ahead of their Tuesday night matchup against the Chicago Blackhawks.

Several members of the Jets roster took in Sunday’s MLB game at Chicago Cubs versus the Washington Nationals, enjoying a relaxed afternoon before turning their focus back to hockey. The highlight of the day came before the first pitch, when Blackhawks legend and current Jets center Jonathan Toews was invited to the mound.

Toews, who spent the majority of his storied NHL career in Chicago, received a warm ovation from the crowd as he delivered the ceremonial first pitch to Cubs shortstop Scott Kingery. The moment served as a fitting homecoming of sorts for the 37-year-old veteran, whose legacy with the Blackhawks still resonates strongly with fans in the city.

Joining Toews in attendance were several of his Jets teammates, including Haydn Fleury, Vladislav Namestnikov, Kyle Connor, Connor Hellebuyck, Adam Lowry, Dylan DeMelo, Josh Morrissey, Gustav Nyquist, Colin Miller and Nino Niederreiter, among others.

The outing provided a chance for the team to unwind and build camaraderie during a crucial stretch of the season. Winnipeg enters Tuesday’s contest riding a strong run of form, with three wins in their last four games.

As the playoff race tightens, the Jets find themselves just three points behind the Nashville Predators for the second wild card spot. With momentum on their side and spirits lifted from a fun day at the ballpark, Winnipeg will look to carry that energy onto the ice against Chicago as they continue their push toward the postseason.

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2-1 – Newcomers help Rangers to 8-3 victory over Phillies

Mar 29, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Texas Rangers center fielder Andrew McCutchen (4) steps on home plate after hitting a three run home run against the Philadelphia Phillies during the third inning at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images | Eric Hartline-Imagn Images

The Texas Rangers scored eight runs while the Philadelphia Phillies scored three runs.

The two most notable offseason acquisitions for the Rangers this winter were Brandon Nimmo when he was acquired from the New York Mets for Marcus Semien back in November, and MacKenzie Gore when the Rangers unloaded the farm on the Washington Nationals for the lefty back in late January.

The Rangers had a third move up their sleeves that made headlines earlier this month when they brought in former National League MVP Andrew McCutchen to fight for a platoon DH job with spring training already fully underway. McCutchen won the job and now the trio of new blood have combined to lead the Rangers to a win today to claim the first series of the season from Philadelphia.

Gore was as advertised as a guy who can strike out hitters with the best of ’em but one prone to walks and innings that can sometimes get away from him. Luckily for Gore, by the time he had a trouble inning in the bottom of the sixth, the Rangers were already up 5-0 and he was nearing the end of his day anyway.

Before that, Gore tossed five scoreless innings and looked the part of a pitcher with limitless potential. Overall, the lefty went 5 1/3 innings and allowed two runs on two hits with three walks and seven strikeouts.

Assisting Gore to a win in his first start with Texas was Nimmo, who smacked a third inning two-run shot off of Philly’s Jesus Luzardo in a lefty-on-lefty matchup for his first dong of the year. That gave the Rangers an early lead that they would add to when McCutchen followed suit with a three-run shot — also his first of the year — an inning later on a wall-scraper that just stayed fair.

Though the Phillies would eventually get a couple of runs in the sixth to end Gore’s day, Texas tamped down any hopes of a comeback rally and then padded their lead with a run of their own in the sixth and two more in the seventh.

In the end, despite the disappointment on Opening Day, the Rangers went to Philadelphia and came away with a series victory to begin the year against one of the NL’s favorites. Thanks to the new guys on Sunday, the Rangers were winners.

Player of the Game: McCutchen continues to look like a shrewd mid-spring signing as he made a big impact in both wins to claim the series. Today, McCutchen had two extra base hits, drove in three, and scored two runs while his three-run home run proved to be the big “ok, the Rangers are going to win this one” hit of the afternoon.

The new (old?) fella also has a sense of humor:

Up Next: The early east coast road trip continues for the Rangers with a series against the Orioles beginning tomorrow. RHP Jack Leiter is scheduled to make his season debut for Texas in the opener opposite RHP Chris Bassitt for Baltimore.

The Monday evening first pitch from Oriole Park at Camden Yards is scheduled for 5:35 pm CDT and will be aired on the Rangers Sports Network.

Jaylen Carey gets Elite 8 technical foul for shoulder hit vs Michigan

The physicality extended beyond the whistle as No. 1 seed Michigan pulled away from No. 6 seed Tennessee in the second half of Sunday, March 29's Midwest region final at United Center.

Tennessee forward Jaylen Carey was given a dead-ball contact technical foul with fewer than 15 minutes remaining after he intentionally slammed his shoulder into the shoulder of Michigan's Morez Johnson Jr. after a jump ball.

Johnson had been jawing with Volunteers guard Amari Evans after both went after a rebound, but the two had already appeared to have been separated by teammates when Carey entered the fray.

Carey was given a technical foul after an official review. It was his fourth foul for the game. Michigan had already built a commanding 30-point lead at the time of the incident.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Tennessee vs. Michigan March Madness: Jaylen Carey gets technical foul

Royals salvage series, beat Braves 4-1 in finale

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - SEPTEMBER 14, 2025: Carter Jensen #22 of the Kansas City Royals bats during the fifth inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on September 14, 2025 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Chris Bernacchi/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

The game started like the first two for the Royals, scoreless innings. However, a leadoff walk in the third to Jac Caglianone started the scoring. Nick Loftin would hit into a double play, but the Royals would successfully overturn the out call at first base. So, they still had a runner on first with one out. Kyle Isbel would strike out, but an infield single from Maikel Garcia and an RBI single from Bobby Witt Jr. put the Royals up 1-0. It was the Royals first hit with a runner in scoring position this season, after being 0-10 in the first two contests.

In the top of the fourth, Carter Jensen would hit his first home run of the season, a 371-foot shot into the right field seats. Jensen has had a good approach the first two games, and it was nice to see him get rewarded, putting his team up 2-0.

Nick Loftin would lead off the fifth inning with a double down the left field line, he would score on a two out single from Vinnie Pasquantino, and for the third straight inning, the Royals had scored a run.

The three runs were more than the Royals had scored in the first two games combined and was more than enough for Seth Lugo, who was in 2024 form today. Just a masterful first appearance on the season for Lugo. 6.1 innings, five hits, no runs, no walks and three strikeouts. It was the second straight quality start for the Royals. A good sign early that they haven’t had to rely on the bullpen too much.

Matt Strahm would replace Lugo in the bottom of the seventh, with one out and a runner on second and would retire the two Braves he faced. Strahm has looked really good in his back-to-back appearances to start the season.

A leadoff walk in the top of the 8th to Witt Jr., and a single from Vinnie put the Royals on the corners with nobody out. After Perez struck out, Jensen would hit a sacrifice fly to center field to put the Royals up 4-0.

John Schreiber would make his 2026 debut in the bottom of the 8th. After retiring his first two batters, he would surrender a solo shot to right field to Drake Baldwin on a full count pitch. But would quickly bounce back by striking out Matt Olson looking.

After the Carlos Estevez meltdown last night, velocity concerns and the X-rays he got on his ankle after taking a comebacker last night. Lucas Erceg got the first crack at recording the save.

It was quick and dominant for “Lights Out” Lucas, as he struck out Austin Riley, and induced a game ended double play ball from Ozzie Albies after a nice swing single from Mike Yastrzemski. A 4-1 win for the boys in blue.

The Royals avoided being swept and got their first win on the season. They are 1-2 heading into their home opener tomorrow afternoon against the Minnesota Twins. They will also be home for the Milwaukee Brewers next weekend, to conclude the six-game homestand. First pitch tomorrow is set for 3:10 p.m. CT and can be watched on Royals.TV or KCTV5/KSMO.

Connor Seabold illustrates why the Tigers signed him

Mar 28, 2026; San Diego, California, USA; Detroit Tigers relief pitcher Connor Seabold (43) throws a pitch during the sixth inning against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park. Mandatory Credit: David Frerker-Imagn Images | David Frerker-Imagn Images

All throughout spring training, a tough question in Detroit Tigers camp was who would take the last spot in their bullpen. Their seven best relief options were pretty obvious, other than the question of whether Keider Montero would stay stretched out to start or not, but no one stepped to take the last right-handed spot in the pen. Beau Brieske got hurt, Brenan Hanifee wasn’t sharp, and the hoard of minor league signings and post-prospect farm hands never made a move to seize the role. Enter right-hander Connor Seabold.

The 30-year-old reliever was in camp on a minor league deal with the Toronto Blue Jays this spring, and there were some interesting developments in his stuff. When the Blue Jays planned to send him to Triple-A to begin the season, Seabold utilized his opt-out clause and signed a major league deal with the Tigers instead.

It was certainly fair to wonder what the Tigers were doing here. Seabold was drafted by the Phillies out of Cal State Fullerton in the third round of the 2017 draft. A starter originally, Seabold never made it to the show in Philadelphia and was instead dealt to Boston as part of the Nick Pivetta trade. He debuted in 2021 with the Red Sox, and was basically a replacement level reliever through parts of four major league seasons, bouncing to the Rockies, Rays, and Braves in those years until signing a minor league deal with the Blue Jays during the offseason.

The past few years, Seabold has worked with a fourseam fastball, slider, and circle changeup. None of these pitches has been above average, and Seabold’s command wasn’t sharp enough to make it work. Instead, he’s run mediocre strikeout and walk rates, giving up way too many home runs.

The change he worked on over the offseason and in spring camp was to get his arm slot higher, looking to produce more vertical break on the fourseamer. That worked out, but he’s also throwing harder so far this year. After averaging 92.6 mph on the fourseam fastball from 2023-2025, he’s averaged 94.5 mph this spring. At the same time, he’s getting an average of 17.2 inches of induced vertical break, whereas from 2023-2025, he averaged just 13.2 inches. Now, 17.2 inches is still fairly average, but an extra four inches is a lot. Trust me, I’m telling you four inches is way more than you think.

The other effect of the higher arm slot, is that he’s also getting another four inches of depth on his 83-84 mph slider. It remains to be seen whether that will produce a signficant bump in whiffs at the major league level, but it obviously helps. In isolation, meaning with no other changes to the movement profile, more depth is always better. So far this year, with spring training and his outing on Saturday all included, the whiff rate on the slider is a monstrous 61.5 percent. His whiff rate from 2023-2025 in the majors was just 26.3 percent.

The whiff rate on Seabold’s fourseamer so far this year, with spring camp included, is 29.4 percent. Over the previous three seasons, that whiff rate was just 19.9 percent. So, these are small samples, and in spring action to boot, but his whiff rates are showing some very good signs all around.

Seabold also has the circle changeup, and the effect of the added velocity has extended to the changeup as well, and he’s throwing that 3 mph faster than he used to as well. That stands to reason, but what’s good to see is that he’s throwing it harder, but still has 11 mph separation between the fourseamer and his changeup. That differential is still good, but at higher velocities, which is always a plus.

These are all modest changes for Seabold this spring, but the improvements go all the way through his whole repertoire of pitches. He already has a little deception in his short, quick arm stroke, and now he’s hiding the ball better behind his head with the higher slot, giving him some invisiball vibes, where hitters pick it up late out of his hand.

It’s way too early to suggest that Seabold is now going to function as a solid, setup level reliever. He may not even work out as the mop-up guy in the pen. However, these are all tangible, positive developments that are still pretty recently implemented. There’s at least a chance that as he gets more and more comfortable with the new arm slot and sees success, that he can air it out a little more and pitch with a minor margin for error that he’s never had before.

Right now, the Tigers options for relief help aren’t that great, and that’s the other point illustrating why the Tigers picked up Seabold. They have Enmanuel de Jesus, Drew Anderson, and Brant Hurter in the pen, giving them three guys with deep pitch mixes and proven command who can provide good depth to the rotation. Keider Montero is also a helpful depth piece and might do better as a pure reliever in time if the Tigers go that route. Could say the same for former starting prospects like Ty Madden, and when healthy, Sawyer Gipson-Long. But right now, depth in terms of pure relieveris is pretty thinned out by injury and the fact that guys like Tyler Mattison and Dylan Smith haven’t been able to break through and command their stuff consistently.

Scott Harris told reporters on Sunday that Troy Melton is on track to return before Jackson Jobe, and that they’re hopeful they’ll have Jobe back in August. The Tigers also have some young prospects at the Double-A level like Moises Rodriguez and Marco Jimenez who could break out, as well as an older, talented former prospect in Tanner Kohlhepp who has good stuff but hasn’t been able to stay healthy and refine his command. There are others in the same boat. So the Tigers have some hope for help before Brieske, or Melton, or Jobe, is ready to contribute again, but they really need a solid presence in the 8th spot in the pen for the near future.

Perhaps Connor Seabold can give them that much.

Vanderbilt 2026 Baseball Mail Bag (3 SEC Series In): Call For Submissions

Post VANDERBILT Baseball and/or SEC Baseball questions in the comments here.

Earlier in the week, we received the news that our already beleaguered pitching staff would not have Austin Nye this season (and potentially next, depending on how he rehabs from what we can only assume to be Tommy John surgery). Coming off a brutal losing sweep in Clangaville, you would be forgiven for not exactly looking forward to our HATED RIVALS coming into town.

Then… whatever the hell those three games were happened. We’re being told it was baseball.

Friday: an extra inning 3-2 victory fueled by 7 and 1/3 IP of one run, 9 K ball by Connor “The Spice” Fennel” and a 10th inning walk-off single by Johnstone the Elder.

Saturday: Saturday damn near never ended. After 400 hours of college baseball, the Diamond Dores finally had them loaded after The Rooster and PH Max Jensen worked one out walks, then pulled off a double steal, and The Chuggers wisely walked the “so hot right now” Ryker Waite.

It all came down to 3rd catcher Mack “The Mack Daddy” Whitcomb, who, though a transfer from TN Tech, proved himself to be all Diamond Dore by executing a perfect suicide Vanderbunt to put this game out of its misery. Bottom of the 16th inning bunt-off 6-5 victory. Jebus.

Sunday: If you thought Saturday was insane, well… this one had everything (except for pitching). I’ll let Stefon explain this one:

Down 15-10 in the bottom of the 9th, well…

That settles it. I’ve determined that even without the type of pitching staff we’re accustomed to, I’m going to have fun this season. Opening up the mail bag right now.

Here are the rules of the mail bag:

  1. This is a BASEBALL mailbag, so limit your questions to Vanderbilt baseball, SEC baseball, college baseball, or Vanderbilt baseball alums in the pros like Tony Kemp.
  2. Post your questions here in the comments and I’ll answer them in a post later this week.
  3. I will collate the best of said emails/questions in the comments, and cull ones that deal with the same topic (so we don’t have to repeat ourselves multiple times weekly).
  4. All Anchor of Gold community guidelines apply to the questions. Our basic rule is “don’t be the worst.” Chuggers fans violate this like it’s their birth right.
  5. Mike Papi, Luke Smith, and Ton “The Calf” Vitello are human garbage.

…and that’s it.

Rockets vs. Pelicans as season winds down

Mar 27, 2026; Memphis, Tennessee, USA; Houston Rockets forward Kevin Durant (7) during the third quarter against the Memphis Grizzlies at FedExForum. Mandatory Credit: Petre Thomas-Imagn Images | Petre Thomas-Imagn Images

Houston Rockets vs New Orleans Pelicans

March 29, 2026

Location: Smoothie King Center — New Orleans, Louisiana

TV: Space City Home Network

Radio: KBME Sports Talk 790

Online: Rockets App, SCHN+

Time: 6:00pm

Probable Starting Lineups

Rockets: Amen Thompson, Reed Sheppard, Jabari Smith Jr., Kevin Durant, Alperen Sengun

Pelicans: Dejounte Murray, Jeremiah Fears, Saddiq Bey, Zion Williamson, Herb Jones

Blue Jays Complete the Sweep, Down the A’s 5-2

TORONTO, ON- MARCH 29 - left fielder Jesús Sánchez #12 of the Toronto Blue Jays hits a two run homer in the third inning as the Toronto Blue Jays play the Athletics at Rogers Centre in Toronto. March 29, 2026. Steve Russell/Toronto Star (Steve Russell/Toronto Star via Getty Images) | Toronto Star via Getty Images

The first two games of the season were a ton of fun, but it’s nice to keep the drama a little lower sometimes. Everyobody looked pretty good today, from Eric Lauer and the bullpen holding the A’s to two runs on five hits against 15 strikeouts, to the power bats showing up to the tune of three home runs. A season opening sweep is, by definition, the best start you can have.


Eric Lauer came out of the blocks looking like he wasn’t going to let Kevin Gausman and Dylan Cease outshine him just because they throw 8mph harder. He struck out the side in the first, picked up another in the second, another in the third, and one more to lead off the fourth before a Nick Kurtz walk gave the A’s their first baserunner. His seventh closed out the inning without the A’s scoring. Sacramento got some back in the fifth, as Jacob Wilson lead off with a line drive double and (not that) Max Muncy went yard the other way, cutting Toronto’s lead to 4-2. It was a brief blip, though, and he got two more Ks and a pop out to end the inning there. Lauer returned to start the sixth, getting a fly out and counceding a ground ball single up the middle. At 87 pitches, John Schneider decided to call his afternoon there, pulling him in favour of Braydon Fisher. Ultimately, Lauer only managed 9 Ks, while giving up two runs on three hits and a walk over 5.1 innings pitched. I guess that’s why he’s only a swingman. Fisher picked up a strikeout of his own and got a ground out to end the inning.

Meanwhile, the offence rolled from the jump. George Springer his his 64th career game opening home run, pulling him within 9 of Rickey Henderson for the all time lead. They went quietly in the second, but jumped back on Luis Morales in the third. Tyler Heineman lined a single with one out, and Jesus Sanchez followed with a 417ft bomb to centre field that made it 3-0. Kazuma Okamoto added one of his own in the fourth to increase the margin to four.

After Oakland closed the gap in the top of the fifth, they turned to small ball to manufacture one more run in the home half. Heineman and Sanchez walked, prompting Mark Kostay to call for J.T. Ginn to take over. Ginn’s first batter, Vladimir Guerrero jr., hit a hard ground ball single. His second, Addison Barger, worked a walk that forced Heineman home and made it 5-2. Okamoto grounded into a double play that prevented a big inning.

Ginn handled the Jays quitely in the bottom of the sixth. Fisher returned for the seventh and pitched a 1-2-3 inning while picking up his second strikeout. Ginn did it again in the eighth, retiring the jays in order. The top of the eighth fell to Tommy Nance. He got the first two A’s, but then gave up a single to Shea Langeliers and John Schneider decided to call for Mason Fluharty to face the lefty Kurtz. Fluharty had declared himself able to go after leaving the game yesterday when he took back to back come-backers to the knee. He apparently has a pretty gnarly bruise on the inside of his knee but no more serious damage, and he looked just fine freezing the Colonel on 93 on the top outside corner to end the inning.

Ginn stayed in for the bottom of the eighth and continued to look sharp, again facing the minimum and picking up two more strikeouts. That set up Jeff Hoffman for the three run save opportunity. Jacob Wilson managed a ground ball single, that was it.


Jays of the Day: Sanchez (0.18) is the only hitter who qualifies for either award. Lauer (0.11) and Fisher (0.10) make it on the pitching side.

Less so: Nobody!


That’s it for the A’s in Toronto this year. Tomorrow night we move on to the Colorado Rockies. Tomoyuki Sugano will represent the visitors, while Cody Ponce makes his official North American return for the Jays. First pitch goes at 7:07pm ET.

Igor Shesterkin makes 27 saves in Rangers' 3-1 victory over Panthers

NEW YORK (AP) — Adam Sykora broke a scoreless tie early in the third period and Igor Shesterkin made 27 saves and the New York Rangers defeated the Florida Panthers 3-1 on Sunday.

Sykora, a rookie who was a second-round pick in 2022, scored his second goal of the season at 5:10, tipping Adam Fox's shot past Panthers goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky.

Conor Sheary then scored his fifth of the season — on a short-handed breakaway — at 11:14 before Fox added an empty-netter at 16:06.

Sykora also scored in the Rangers' 6-1 win against Chicago on Friday. The Rangers are just 11-18-7 at home this season.

Florida's Mackie Samoskevich scored with 40.2 seconds left to end Shesterkin's shutout bid.

New York nearly scored late in the second when Mika Zibanejad’s shot with 1:35 left skittered along the goal line before Panthers defenseman Gustav Forsling cleared it out.

Florida appeared to take the lead at 3:22 of the third when Matthew Tkachuk scored on a breakaway, but the Rangers challenged and the play was ruled offside.

Florida was coming off a 5-2 loss at the New York Islanders on Saturday in which Tkachuk scored both goals.

Up next

Panthers: host Ottawa on Tuesday.

Rangers: host New Jersey on Tuesday.