An ESPN spokesman has denied a report that the network has barred Paul Finebaum from its shows after he teased a U.S. Senate run
Defensive Lineman Titan Davis Honored as a 2026 Navy All-American
Athlete Jaxx DeJean Honored as a 2026 Navy All-American
Lakers star LeBron James to announce ‘decision of all decisions'
Lakers star LeBron James to announce ‘decision of all decisions' originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston
LeBron James plans to make a major announcement Tuesday as speculation swirls around the four-time NBA champion’s future at the end of what will be the Lakers star’s record 23rd season in the league.
In a post tagged #TheSecondDecision with the cryptic caption, “The decision of all decisions,” the Lakers’ 21-time NBA All-Star teased an announcement scheduled for Tuesday at 9 a.m. California time.
The hashtag on the open-ended post and video are apparent references to the much-hyped 2010 announcement that he was leaving the Cleveland Cavaliers to play for the Miami Heat. The announcement was part of an ESPN special titled, “The Decision.”
The special featured a sit-down talk between James and sportscaster Jim Gray and the dramatic announcement that included the phrase, “taking my talents to South Beach.”
James went on to win back-to-back titles with the Heat in 2012 and 2013 before heading back to Cleveland and winning a third, his hometown franchise’s first. He won the 2020 NBA title with the Lakers.
James, 40, and the Lakers open the regular season Oct. 21 at home against the Warriors, embarking on the team’s first full season with All-Star Luka Dončić. The King, who will turn 41 in December, enters the season tied with Vince Carter for most NBA seasons played at 22.
He was asked about retirement in September and simply said he was excited to play his 23rd season. James has acknowledged that his playing days are nearing an end, but has not offered specifics on a timeline for retirement.
James averaged 24.4 points, 8.2 assists and 7.8 rebounds last season. The Lakers were bounced in the first round of the playoffs by the Minnesota Timberwolves. The league’s all-time leading scorer earned All-NBA Second Team honors for the 2024-25 season.
He enters the 2025-26 season on an expiring contract and is set to become an unrestricted free agent in the spring.
Due to the teasing nature of the post, it’s possible Tuesday’s announcement has nothing to do with retirement. Note that Tuesday also is the start of Amazon’s Prime Day, something James has helped promote in the past.
Lakers star LeBron James to announce ‘decision of all decisions'
Lakers star LeBron James to announce ‘decision of all decisions' originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia
LeBron James plans to make a major announcement Tuesday as speculation swirls around the four-time NBA champion’s future at the end of what will be the Lakers star’s record 23rd season in the league.
In a post tagged #TheSecondDecision with the cryptic caption, “The decision of all decisions,” the Lakers’ 21-time NBA All-Star teased an announcement scheduled for Tuesday at 9 a.m. California time.
The hashtag on the open-ended post and video are apparent references to the much-hyped 2010 announcement that he was leaving the Cleveland Cavaliers to play for the Miami Heat. The announcement was part of an ESPN special titled, “The Decision.”
The special featured a sit-down talk between James and sportscaster Jim Gray and the dramatic announcement that included the phrase, “taking my talents to South Beach.”
James went on to win back-to-back titles with the Heat in 2012 and 2013 before heading back to Cleveland and winning a third, his hometown franchise’s first. He won the 2020 NBA title with the Lakers.
James, 40, and the Lakers open the regular season Oct. 21 at home against the Warriors, embarking on the team’s first full season with All-Star Luka Dončić. The King, who will turn 41 in December, enters the season tied with Vince Carter for most NBA seasons played at 22.
He was asked about retirement in September and simply said he was excited to play his 23rd season. James has acknowledged that his playing days are nearing an end, but has not offered specifics on a timeline for retirement.
James averaged 24.4 points, 8.2 assists and 7.8 rebounds last season. The Lakers were bounced in the first round of the playoffs by the Minnesota Timberwolves. The league’s all-time leading scorer earned All-NBA Second Team honors for the 2024-25 season.
He enters the 2025-26 season on an expiring contract and is set to become an unrestricted free agent in the spring.
Due to the teasing nature of the post, it’s possible Tuesday’s announcement has nothing to do with retirement. Note that Tuesday also is the start of Amazon’s Prime Day, something James has helped promote in the past.
Uefa gives ‘reluctant’ approval for domestic games to be played abroad this season
Governing body says go-ahead shouldn’t set precedent
Barcelona poised to play in US and Milan in Australia
Uefa has given its “reluctant” approval to Serie A and La Liga each playing a domestic game abroad this season. The decision clears a path for Barcelona and Villarreal to meet in Miami in December and for Milan and Como to play in Perth, Australia, in February.
Uefa said in a statement that it had “reiterated its clear opposition to domestic league matches being played outside their home country” but that because “the relevant Fifa regulatory framework – currently under review – is not clear and detailed enough, the Uefa Executive Committee has reluctantly taken the decision to approve, on an exceptional basis, the two requests referred to it”.
The move comes after the Italian and Spanish football federations applied for those matches to be played abroad. Uefa said its national associations had agreed to engage with it before submitting any future requests.
Continue reading...NHL Insider Casts Doubt on Red Wings' Playoff Hopes, Citing Inexperience on Blue Line
Detroit's young defense is the reason why Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman believes the Red Wings likely won't make the playoffs this upcoming season.
As the regular season fast approaches, more and more season long predictions are coming out with insiders and hockey outlets beginning to make their call on who wins the cup, makes the playoffs and who will breakout in a big way.
Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman, who is known for his insider reports, has finally announced who he is backing going into the 2025-26 season. Last year, Friedman notably picked the Ottawa Senators as a surprising pick to make the playoffs and was correct with his prediction. When asked about who he's liking this year he mentioned several teams but not the young Detroit Red Wings.
Bookmark The Hockey News Detroit Red Wings team site to stay connected to the latest news, game-day coverage, and player features.
As the Motor City hockey club hopes to snap their near decade-long playoff drought, Friedman explained he thinks their team is still too young. Defenseman Justin Holl and Erik Gustafsson being placed on waivers likely to clears room for 20-year-old Axel Sandin-Pellikka, which could mean they start with a very young defense to start the season.
"They put Holl and Gustafsson on waivers, which is totally fine, but that says to me, they're thinking about doing a really young defense to start the year, like a really young D, we talked about this at the year end last year how Yzerman didn't give out term to veterans because he's like, the young guys need to play and I will bet on these young players, I wonder if that bet really starts right now, I just I don't think that they're ready," Friedman said.
With Sandin-Pellikka projected into the Red Wings defense, that would give their top six, an average age of 24.8 which would be very young with Ben Chairot being the only player on their backend older than 25 years old. The lack of experience would put added pressure on young players like Simon Edvinsson and Moritz Seider to carry the load. The signing of Travis Hamonic ruffled some fans feathers as they didn't want the 35-year-old veteran to get in the way of some of the young prospects on the rise but his experience may be needed.
Depending on how Detroit is positioned heading into the trade deadline, they may need to bolster their blue line further if they're in playoff contention. With $13.2 million in available cap space, this could be the year they finally address the long-standing defensive issues that have kept them in the league’s bottom 12 for goals against per game average in nine straight seasons.
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Jets Cut Ville Heinola Again – Former First Round Pick Dangled on Waivers
The Winnipeg Jets are nearing final cuts.
Over the weekend, the team set for Thursday's season opener began to take shape. A number of cuts have been made, with youthful players sent back to Junior and more veteran pieces loaned to the AHL's Manitoba Moose.
With Adam Lowry and Dylan Samberg beginning the season on the injured reserve, some opportunities have opened up for both newcomers and youth.
Further injuries to Cole Perfetti and Jonathan Toews have allowed lengthier tryouts to pieces not previously expected to last this long at training camp.
The Samberg injury opens a spot within the top-four defencemen for the first month or two of the season, on what is already a very crowded blueline.
With Josh Morrissey, Dylan DeMelo and Neal Pionk already cemented as the team's top-3 outside of Samberg, Luke Schenn, Haydn Fleury, Colin Miller, Logan Stanley and Ville Heinola were always in the mix for the final few spots.
But on Sunday, the Jets opted to make their move, cutting Ville Heinola and placing him on Waivers with the hope he clears and can resume his season with the Moose.
News on Heinola will come mid-day on Monday, but a claim via Waivers may be the best thing for Heinola's development.
Selected 20th overall in the first round of the 2019 NHL Draft, the now 24-year-old cracked the Jets out of camp that fall following the retirement of Dustin Byfuglien. He became the first player born in the 21st century to score on NHL goal, and had a goal and five points in eight games to start that rookie season prior to being sent home for further development.
He never made the Jets out of training camp again.
In 53 games over five seasons, Heinola has that single goal and 12 points to his name. The majority of his time has been spent with the Moose, where he has played 154 games over parts of seven seasons. He has 23 goals and 103 points over that lengthy time spent in antlers.
Waiver claims will be announced at 1:00 PM central time on Monday.
Way-Too-Early 2026 Fantasy Baseball Top 300 Rankings
Here's an initial stab at a 2006 fantasy baseball top 300 for 5x5 leagues. I'm just now getting started on my projections, so by the time December rolls around, this list will look much, much different.
Free agents are listed without teams. Those with options whose status is up in the air have asterisks listed along with their teams. That includes someone like Shane Bieber, who is probably going to opt out of a $15 million player option, but not a Pete Alonso, who is certainly opting out, or Luis Robert Jr., whose $20 million option will be picked up by the White Sox.
This will probably be the lone October edition of the list. I'll revisit things in early November. Weekly updates will resume in the spring.
Early 2026 Fantasy Baseball Top 300 overall ranks
**Updated Oct. 6**
| Oct. 6 | Top 300 | Team | Pos | Rank |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Aaron Judge | Yankees | OF | 1 |
| 2 | Shohei Ohtani | Dodgers | DH | 1 |
| 3 | Bobby Witt Jr. | Royals | SS | 1 |
| 4 | Ronald Acuna Jr. | Braves | OF | 2 |
| 5 | Juan Soto | Mets | OF | 3 |
| 6 | Elly De La Cruz | Reds | SS | 2 |
| 7 | Tarik Skubal | Tigers | SP | 1 |
| 8 | Corbin Carroll | Diamondbacks | OF | 4 |
| 9 | Kyle Tucker | OF | 5 | |
| 10 | Julio Rodriguez | Mariners | OF | 6 |
| 11 | Jose Ramirez | Guardians | 3B | 1 |
| 12 | Paul Skenes | Pirates | SP | 2 |
| 13 | Fernando Tatis Jr. | Padres | OF | 7 |
| 14 | Gunnar Henderson | Orioles | SS | 3 |
| 15 | Vladimir Guerrero Jr. | Blue Jays | 1B | 1 |
| 16 | Yordan Alvarez | Astros | OF | 8 |
| 17 | Jackson Chourio | Brewers | OF | 9 |
| 18 | James Wood | Nationals | OF | 10 |
| 19 | Francisco Lindor | Mets | SS | 4 |
| 20 | Logan Gilbert | Mariners | SP | 3 |
| 21 | Junior Caminero | Rays | 3B | 2 |
| 22 | Garrett Crochet | Red Sox | SP | 4 |
| 23 | Nick Kurtz | Athletics | 1B | 2 |
| 24 | Wyatt Langford | Rangers | OF | 11 |
| 25 | Trea Turner | Phillies | SS | 5 |
| 26 | Pete Crow-Armstrong | Cubs | OF | 12 |
| 27 | Jarren Duran | Red Sox | OF | 13 |
| 28 | Cal Raleigh | Mariners | C | 1 |
| 29 | Pete Alonso | 1B | 3 | |
| 30 | Jazz Chisholm Jr. | Yankees | 2B | 1 |
| 31 | Matt Olson | Braves | 1B | 4 |
| 32 | Kyle Schwarber | DH | 2 | |
| 33 | Jackson Merrill | Padres | OF | 14 |
| 34 | Freddie Freeman | Dodgers | 1B | 5 |
| 35 | Austin Riley | Braves | 3B | 3 |
| 36 | Bryce Harper | Phillies | 1B | 6 |
| 37 | Ketel Marte | Diamondbacks | 2B | 2 |
| 38 | Manny Machado | Padres | 3B | 4 |
| 39 | Zach Neto | Angels | SS | 6 |
| 40 | Blake Snell | Dodgers | SP | 5 |
| 41 | Bo Bichette | SS | 7 | |
| 42 | Yoshinobu Yamamoto | Dodgers | SP | 6 |
| 43 | Rafael Devers | Giants | 1B | 7 |
| 44 | Mookie Betts | Dodgers | SS | 8 |
| 45 | CJ Abrams | Nationals | SS | 9 |
| 46 | Bryan Woo | Mariners | SP | 7 |
| 47 | Seiya Suzuki | Cubs | OF | 15 |
| 48 | Chris Sale | Braves | SP | 8 |
| 49 | Roman Anthony | Red Sox | OF | 16 |
| 50 | Cristopher Sanchez | Phillies | SP | 11 |
| 51 | Brent Rooker | Athletics | OF | 18 |
| 52 | Corey Seager | Rangers | SS | 10 |
| 53 | Jacob deGrom | Rangers | SP | 9 |
| 54 | George Kirby | Mariners | SP | 10 |
| 55 | Michael Harris II | Braves | OF | 19 |
| 56 | Oneil Cruz | Pirates | OF | 17 |
| 57 | Jeremy Pena | Astros | SS | 11 |
| 58 | Hunter Brown | Astros | SP | 12 |
| 59 | Brice Turang | Brewers | 2B | 3 |
| 60 | Joe Ryan | Twins | SP | 13 |
| 61 | Mike Trout | Angels | OF | 20 |
| 62 | Riley Greene | Tigers | OF | 21 |
| 63 | Cody Bellinger | OF | 22 | |
| 64 | Logan Webb | Giants | SP | 14 |
| 65 | Teoscar Hernandez | Dodgers | OF | 23 |
| 66 | Max Fried | Yankees | SP | 15 |
| 67 | Jhoan Duran | Phillies | RP | 1 |
| 68 | Hunter Greene | Reds | SP | 16 |
| 69 | Michael Busch | Cubs | 1B | 8 |
| 70 | Edwin Diaz | Mets* | RP | 2 |
| 71 | Framber Valdez | Astros | SP | 17 |
| 72 | Dylan Crews | Nationals | OF | 24 |
| 73 | Josh Naylor | 1B | 9 | |
| 74 | Josh Hader | Astros | RP | 3 |
| 75 | Jose Altuve | Astros | 2B | 4 |
| 76 | Ian Happ | Cubs | OF | 25 |
| 77 | Andres Munoz | Mariners | RP | 4 |
| 78 | Luis Robert Jr. | White Sox | OF | 26 |
| 79 | William Contreras | Brewers | C | 2 |
| 80 | Kyle Bradish | Orioles | SP | 18 |
| 81 | Trevor Story | Red Sox* | SS | 12 |
| 82 | Mason Miller | Padres | RP | 5 |
| 83 | Byron Buxton | Twins | OF | 27 |
| 84 | Vinnie Pasquantino | Royals | 1B | 10 |
| 85 | Maikel Garcia | Royals | 3B | 5 |
| 86 | Anthony Volpe | Yankees | SS | 13 |
| 87 | Devin Williams | RP | 6 | |
| 88 | Jacob Wilson | Athletics | SS | 14 |
| 89 | Cole Ragans | Royals | SP | 19 |
| 90 | David Bednar | Yankees | RP | 7 |
| 91 | Christian Yelich | Brewers | OF | 28 |
| 92 | Freddy Peralta | Brewers | SP | 20 |
| 93 | Jordan Westburg | Orioles | 3B | 6 |
| 94 | Jasson Dominguez | Yankees | OF | 29 |
| 95 | Isaac Paredes | Astros | 3B | 7 |
| 96 | Dylan Cease | SP | 21 | |
| 97 | Tyler Soderstrom | Athletics | 1B | 11 |
| 98 | Willson Contreras | Cardinals | 1B | 12 |
| 99 | Kevin Gausman | Blue Jays | SP | 22 |
| 100 | Robert Suarez | Padres* | RP | 8 |
| 101 | Carlos Rodon | Yankees | SP | 23 |
| 102 | Ben Rice | Yankees | C | 3 |
| 103 | Josh Lowe | Rays | OF | 30 |
| 104 | Alec Bohm | Phillies | 3B | 8 |
| 105 | Tanner Bibee | Guardians | SP | 24 |
| 106 | Bryan Reynolds | Pirates | OF | 31 |
| 107 | Ezequiel Tovar | Rockies | SS | 15 |
| 108 | Tyler Glasnow | Dodgers | SP | 25 |
| 109 | Alex Bregman | Red Sox* | 3B | 9 |
| 110 | Willy Adames | Giants | SS | 16 |
| 111 | Nolan McLean | Mets | SP | 26 |
| 112 | Jonathan Aranda | Rays | 1B | 13 |
| 113 | Spencer Schwellenbach | Braves | SP | 27 |
| 114 | Bryce Miller | Mariners | SP | 28 |
| 115 | Daniel Palencia | Cubs | RP | 9 |
| 116 | Andy Pages | Dodgers | OF | 32 |
| 117 | Brenton Doyle | Rockies | OF | 33 |
| 118 | Jesus Luzardo | Phillies | SP | 29 |
| 119 | Jac Caglianone | Royals | OF | 34 |
| 120 | Marcell Ozuna | DH | 3 | |
| 121 | Brandon Woodruff | Brewers* | SP | 30 |
| 122 | Lawrence Butler | Athletics | OF | 35 |
| 123 | Nico Hoerner | Cubs | 2B | 5 |
| 124 | Robbie Ray | Giants | SP | 31 |
| 125 | Aroldis Chapman | Red Sox | RP | 10 |
| 126 | Brandon Nimmo | Mets | OF | 36 |
| 127 | Luke Keaschall | Twins | 2B | 6 |
| 128 | Carlos Estevez | Royals | RP | 11 |
| 129 | Randy Arozarena | Mariners | OF | 37 |
| 130 | Yandy Diaz | Rays | 1B | 14 |
| 131 | Sonny Gray | Cardinals | SP | 32 |
| 132 | Jeff Hoffman | Blue Jays | RP | 12 |
| 133 | Shohei Ohtani | Dodgers | SP | 33 |
| 134 | Matt Chapman | Giants | 3B | 10 |
| 135 | Tommy Edman | Dodgers | 2B | 7 |
| 136 | Pablo Lopez | Twins | SP | 34 |
| 137 | Jackson Holliday | Orioles | 2B | 8 |
| 138 | Nick Pivetta | Padres | SP | 35 |
| 139 | Geraldo Perdomo | Diamondbacks | SS | 17 |
| 140 | Raisel Iglesias | RP | 13 | |
| 141 | Shane Bieber | Blue Jays* | SP | 36 |
| 142 | Steven Kwan | Guardians | OF | 38 |
| 143 | Christian Walker | Astros | 1B | 15 |
| 144 | Ranger Suarez | SP | 37 | |
| 145 | Eugenio Suarez | 3B | 11 | |
| 146 | Ceddanne Rafaela | Red Sox | 2B | 9 |
| 147 | Drew Rasmussen | Rays | SP | 38 |
| 148 | Brandon Lowe | Rays* | 2B | 10 |
| 149 | Jo Adell | Angels | OF | 39 |
| 150 | Matthew Boyd | Cubs | SP | 39 |
| 151 | Matt McLain | Reds | 2B | 11 |
| 152 | Salvador Perez | Royals | C | 4 |
| 153 | Eury Perez | Marlins | SP | 40 |
| 154 | Kyle Stowers | Marlins | OF | 40 |
| 155 | Trevor Rogers | Orioles | SP | 41 |
| 156 | Noelvi Marte | Reds | 3B | 12 |
| 157 | Spencer Strider | Braves | SP | 42 |
| 158 | Tanner Scott | Dodgers | RP | 14 |
| 159 | Gleyber Torres | 2B | 12 | |
| 160 | Munetaka Murakami | 3B | 13 | |
| 161 | Michael King | SP | 43 | |
| 162 | Pete Fairbanks | Rays | RP | 15 |
| 163 | Adolis Garcia | Rangers | OF | 41 |
| 164 | Shota Imanaga | Cubs* | SP | 44 |
| 165 | Gavin Williams | Guardians | SP | 45 |
| 166 | Cam Schlitter | Yankees | SP | 46 |
| 167 | Spencer Torkelson | Tigers | 1B | 16 |
| 168 | Shane McClanahan | Rays | SP | 47 |
| 169 | George Springer | Blue Jays | OF | 42 |
| 170 | Andrew Vaughn | Brewers | 1B | 17 |
| 171 | Cade Horton | Cubs | SP | 48 |
| 172 | Mark Vientos | Mets | 3B | 14 |
| 173 | MacKenzie Gore | Nationals | SP | 49 |
| 174 | Anthony Santander | Blue Jays | OF | 43 |
| 175 | Trey Yesavage | Blue Jays | SP | 56 |
| 176 | Tyler O’Neill | Orioles | OF | 44 |
| 177 | Joe Musgrove | Padres | SP | 51 |
| 178 | Kodai Senga | Mets | SP | 52 |
| 179 | Adley Rutschman | Orioles | C | 5 |
| 180 | Shane Baz | Rays | SP | 53 |
| 181 | Dylan Beavers | Orioles | OF | 45 |
| 182 | Kenley Jansen | RP | 16 | |
| 183 | Jacob Misiorowski | Brewers | SP | 54 |
| 184 | Nick Castellanos | Phillies | OF | 46 |
| 185 | Sal Stewart | Reds | 1B | 18 |
| 186 | Shea Langeliers | Athletics | C | 6 |
| 187 | Bubba Chandler | Pirates | SP | 55 |
| 188 | Chase Burns | Reds | SP | 50 |
| 189 | Jordan Lawlar | Diamondbacks | 3B | 15 |
| 190 | Dansby Swanson | Cubs | SS | 18 |
| 191 | Wilyer Abreu | Red Sox | OF | 47 |
| 192 | Cade Smith | Guardians | RP | 17 |
| 193 | Clay Holmes | Mets | SP | 57 |
| 194 | Will Smith | Dodgers | C | 7 |
| 195 | Ha-Seong Kim | Braves* | SS | 19 |
| 196 | Addison Barger | Blue Jays | 3B | 16 |
| 197 | Ivan Herrera | Cardinals | DH | 4 |
| 198 | Sandy Alcantara | Marlins | SP | 58 |
| 199 | Daulton Varsho | Blue Jays | OF | 48 |
| 200 | Kris Bubic | Royals | SP | 59 |
| 201 | Taylor Ward | Angels | OF | 49 |
| 202 | Colson Montgomery | White Sox | SS | 20 |
| 203 | Giancarlo Stanton | Yankees | OF | 56 |
| 204 | Hunter Goodman | Rockies | C | 8 |
| 205 | Reese Olson | Tigers | SP | 60 |
| 206 | Kyle Manzardo | Guardians | 1B | 19 |
| 207 | TJ Friedl | Reds | OF | 51 |
| 208 | Dennis Santana | Pirates | RP | 18 |
| 209 | Royce Lewis | Twins | 3B | 17 |
| 210 | Drake Baldwin | Braves | C | 9 |
| 211 | Nick Lodolo | Reds | SP | 61 |
| 212 | Alec Burleson | Cardinals | OF | 52 |
| 213 | Ramon Laureano | Padres | OF | 53 |
| 214 | Ryan Pepiot | Rays | SP | 62 |
| 215 | Heliot Ramos | Giants | OF | 54 |
| 216 | Masyn Winn | Cardinals | SS | 21 |
| 217 | Trevor Megill | Brewers | RP | 19 |
| 218 | Luis Garcia Jr. | Nationals | 2B | 13 |
| 219 | Sal Frelick | Brewers | OF | 55 |
| 220 | Ryan Helsley | RP | 20 | |
| 221 | Jung Hoo Lee | Giants | OF | 50 |
| 222 | Jesus Sanchez | Astros | OF | 57 |
| 223 | Luis Gil | Yankees | SP | 63 |
| 224 | Ryan Mountcastle | Orioles | 1B | 20 |
| 225 | Samuel Basallo | Orioles | C | 10 |
| 226 | Luis Arraez | 1B | 21 | |
| 227 | Evan Carter | Rangers | OF | 58 |
| 228 | Edward Cabrera | Marlins | SP | 64 |
| 229 | Xavier Edwards | Marlins | SS | 22 |
| 230 | Spencer Steer | Reds | 1B | 22 |
| 231 | Kerry Carpenter | Tigers | OF | 59 |
| 232 | Lars Nootbaar | Cardinals | OF | 60 |
| 233 | Roki Sasaki | Dodgers | SP | 65 |
| 234 | Bryce Eldridge | Giants | DH | 5 |
| 235 | Colt Keith | Tigers | 2B | 14 |
| 236 | Brendan Donovan | Cardinals | 2B | 15 |
| 237 | Sean Manaea | Mets | SP | 66 |
| 238 | Bryson Stott | Phillies | 2B | 16 |
| 239 | Jorge Polanco | 2B | 17 | |
| 240 | Rhys Hoskins | 1B | 23 | |
| 241 | Ozzie Albies | Braves | 2B | 18 |
| 242 | Daylen Lile | Nationals | OF | 61 |
| 243 | Will Vest | Tigers | RP | 21 |
| 244 | Cam Smith | Astros | OF | 62 |
| 245 | Marcus Semien | Rangers | 2B | 19 |
| 246 | Zack Wheeler | Phillies | SP | 67 |
| 247 | Nathan Eovaldi | Rangers | SP | 68 |
| 248 | Parker Meadows | Tigers | OF | 63 |
| 249 | Jonah Tong | Mets | SP | 69 |
| 250 | Agustin Ramirez | Marlins | C | 11 |
| 251 | Xander Bogaerts | Padres | SS | 23 |
| 252 | Chris Bassitt | SP | 70 | |
| 253 | Jakob Marsee | Marlins | OF | 64 |
| 254 | Brett Baty | Mets | 3B | 18 |
| 255 | Abner Uribe | Brewers | RP | 22 |
| 256 | Josh Jung | Rangers | 3B | 19 |
| 257 | Max Muncy | Dodgers* | 3B | 20 |
| 258 | Grayson Rodriguez | Orioles | SP | 71 |
| 259 | Triston Casas | Red Sox | 1B | 24 |
| 260 | Gerrit Cole | Yankees | SP | 72 |
| 261 | Ryan O’Hearn | 1B | 25 | |
| 262 | Emmet Sheehan | Dodgers | SP | 73 |
| 263 | Matt Shaw | Cubs | 3B | 21 |
| 264 | Jurickson Profar | Braves | OF | 65 |
| 265 | Kevin McGonigle | Tigers | SS | 24 |
| 266 | Yainer Diaz | Astros | C | 12 |
| 267 | Joe Boyle | Rays | SP | 74 |
| 268 | Chandler Simpson | Rays | OF | 66 |
| 269 | Nathaniel Lowe | Red Sox | 1B | 26 |
| 270 | Coby Mayo | Orioles | 1B | 27 |
| 271 | Jordan Beck | Rockies | OF | 67 |
| 272 | Nolan Arenado | Cardinals | 3B | 22 |
| 273 | Andrew Painter | Phillies | SP | 75 |
| 274 | Ryan Walker | Giants | RP | 23 |
| 275 | David Peterson | Mets | SP | 76 |
| 276 | Zac Gallen | SP | 77 | |
| 277 | Kyle Finnegan | RP | 24 | |
| 278 | Carlos Correa | Astros | SS | 25 |
| 279 | Marcelo Meyer | Red Sox | 3B | 23 |
| 280 | Jack Flaherty | Tigers* | SP | 78 |
| 281 | Caleb Durbin | Brewers | 3B | 24 |
| 282 | Trent Grisham | OF | 68 | |
| 283 | Parker Messick | Guardians | SP | 79 |
| 284 | Luis Castillo | Mariners | SP | 80 |
| 285 | JJ Wetherholt | Cardinals | SS | 26 |
| 286 | Connelly Early | Red Sox | SP | 81 |
| 287 | Walker Jenkins | Twins | OF | 69 |
| 288 | Cristian Javier | Astros | SP | 82 |
| 289 | Luke Weaver | RP | 25 | |
| 290 | Josh Bell | 1B | 28 | |
| 291 | Seth Lugo | Royals | SP | 83 |
| 292 | Ryan Weathers | Marlins | SP | 84 |
| 293 | Gabriel Moreno | Diamondbacks | C | 13 |
| 294 | Cade Cavalli | Nationals | SP | 85 |
| 295 | Troy Melton | Tigers | SP | 86 |
| 296 | C.J. Kayfus | Guardians | OF | 70 |
| 297 | Joey Cantillo | Guardians | SP | 87 |
| 298 | Emmanuel Clase | Guardians | RP | 26 |
| 299 | Colton Cowser | Orioles | OF | 71 |
| 300 | Reid Detmers | Angels | SP | 88 |
Oct. 6 Notes
- Just like last year, it's Aaron Judge, Shohei Ohtani and Bobby Witt Jr. at the top, with only the order in question. I went Witt, Ohtani and then Judge last offseason. For now, I'm sticking with the same order that I've had since May, aside from when Judge was on the IL.
- I assume most will be listing Juan Soto no lower than fourth, but I'm sliding Ronald Acuña Jr. in there ahead of him. Maybe Soto will be inspired to run again, but it's a hard thing to count on, and any sort of injury could shut that down in a hurry. Acuña curbed his basestealing in his return from a torn ACL, but he'll probably be a little busier there next year, and he looked like his usual self offensively in his 95 games this year. I would think the Braves lineup is in line for a nice rebound.
- Mason Miller checks in at No. 82 for now. I’ll be tempted to rank him first among closers if Robert Suarez opts out of his Padres contract and Miller is tabbed for the ninth. If the Padres decide to give Miller a chance as a starter, I’ll move him down some because of the injury risk, though there’s certainly a chance he’d dominate in the rotation.
- It's going to be fascinating to see what happens with the Red Sox lineup this winter. Do they give Alex Bregman, who is set to opt out, the long-term deal they didn't want to last year? Does Trevor Story opt out of the $50 million he's owed the next two years? Do they alleviate the outfield logjam by moving Jarren Duran or Wilyer Abreu? Do they give Triston Casas another chance at first? What they really need is a superstar for the middle of the order, but there's a very good chance that giving a long-term deal to Kyle Schwarber or Pete Alonso will end badly. It might be worth it anyway.
- Sliding Jasson Domínguez back into the top 100 at No. 94 seems kind of risky, but I have to imagine the Yankees will commit to him with both Cody Bellinger and Trent Grisham set to hit free agency. Domínguez wasn't too bad in batting .257/.331/.388 at age 22, and he should be capable of finishing with 20 homers and 30 steals if the playing time is there. Of course, there is a scenario that sees Domínguez get a spot to himself, only to wind up being overtaken by Spencer Jones if he gets off to a slow start.
- Yakult Swallows third baseman Munetaka Murakami, long one of Japan's best players, is slated to be posted this winter and is No. 160 here. He'll probably be a first baseman in MLB, but he should be a pretty good one right away. In spite of Japan's deadened baseball, he hit .273/.382/.672 in 55 games this season. He has 181 homers over the last five seasons, and he's just turning 26 in February.
- Another Japanese corner infielder, Kazuma Okamoto, and right-hander Tatsuya Imai could also show up here later.
- At the moment, there are 26 relievers on the list, six of whom are free agents and two of whom will probably opt out of their contracts (Suarez and Edwin Díaz). There are also two teams, besides the Padres, represented twice in the Brewers and Guardians. Abner Uribe was just too good to leave off, even if he starts off behind Trevor Megill on the depth chart. I also stuck Emmanuel Clase at the bottom of the list in case he's cleared after MLB's investigation.
That leaves 13 teams with no RPs here...
Angels: Too many health questions with Ben Joyce and Robert Stephenson should mean they'll again sign a closer.
Athletics: None of the internal options seems particularly intriguing.
Braves: Reynaldo López might head back to the pen after struggling to stay healthy as a starter. He was in the 300-320 range here.
Cardinals: Riley O'Brien was another guy in the mix for a spot, but even though the Cardinals are shedding payroll, they still might add a stopgap and potential deadline trade candidate.
D-backs: Justin Martinez figures to miss next season after Tommy John, and A.J. Puk is likely out until at least midseason. The Diamondbacks will probably wind up with a modestly priced free agent.
Marlins: Ronny Henríquez was in my first draft at the bottom of the list, but it sounds like the Marlins want to spend on bullpen help this winter.
Nationals: Jose A. Ferrer was considered for a spot, but the Nationals figure to be in the market for a closer, and even if they cheap out, Cole Henry could end up overtaking Ferrer.
Orioles: Félix Bautista is probably out for the year after shoulder surgery, and after emptying out at their pen at the deadline, the Orioles will be in the market for multiple late-game options.
Rangers: The Rangers will probably have to sign someone after potential future closers Emiliano Teodo and Marc Church ended up missing most of 2025. It'll be interesting to see if Kumar Rocker winds up in the pen at some point next year.
Reds: Tony Santillan might be able to do the job, but the Reds will surely bring in some competition.
Rockies: With a 68/25 K/BB in 61 2/3 innings as a rookie, Juan Mejia was the most impressive of the Rockies' young relievers this year, and he'll be a spring sleeper if the team declines to spend.
Twins: The Twins won't want to spend much, but they'll probably sign someone to close. Also, one or two of their younger starters could be tried in the pen. It doesn't seem quite right to give up on Taj Bradley as a starter just yet, but he also probably doesn't belong in the Twins rotation right now.
White Sox: Grant Taylor was considered for a spot, but the White Sox are considering moving him back to the rotation. They might sign a cheap veteran to close anyway.
Stella admits McLaren ‘face difficulties’ managing Norris and Piastri in title run-in
Oscar Piastri furious with Lando Norris for risky overtake
Singapore result reduces championship lead to 22 points
The way in which McLaren manage Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri, after the pair clashed again at the Singapore Grand Prix, is now crucial to avoid the drivers losing trust in the team’s approach on the title run-in, the team principal, Andrea Stella, has acknowledged.
The team will conduct an extensive review of their decision-making during the race at the Marina Bay circuit where Norris barged into his teammate while overtaking him in the opening corners.
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NHL Rumor Roundup: The Cost Of Lane Hutson's Next Contract With Canadiens
Two recent contract signings could factor into determining Lane Hutson's next contract with the Montreal Canadiens.
On Oct. 1, the New Jersey Devils signed defenseman Luke Hughes to a seven-year contract with an average annual value of $9 million, ending a standoff that dragged on throughout training camp and the pre-season.
The following day, the Anaheim Ducks signed blueliner Jackson LaCombe to an eight-year extension, also with an average annual value of $9 million, making it the most lucrative contract in franchise history.
Hutson is in the final season of his entry-level contract. The 21-year-old Canadiens blueliner is coming off a strong NHL debut, winning the 2024-25 Calder Memorial Trophy.
Like Hughes, Hutson will lack arbitration rights if unsigned at the end of this season. He'll also be ineligible to receive an offer sheet from a rival club. His only leverage will be staying away from training camp next September if he's without a contract by that point.
That has scribes pondering what it will cost the Canadiens to sign Hutson.
The Athletic's Pierre LeBrun felt Hughes' contract sets the bar for young defensemen like Hutson coming out of their entry-level deals.
The Hockey News' Adam Proteau cited several reasons why he felt the young Canadiens star deserves a higher salary than Hughes, pointing to his 60 assists last season, his elevated ice time and 123 blocked shots.
RG.org's Marco D'Amico believes the Canadiens have the leverage to keep Hutson's cap hit closer to $9 million. He suggested that they could use signing bonuses and retirement compensation agreements through the Canada Revenue Agency, netting Hutson more in real dollars.
TVA Sports' Nicolas Cloutier thinks another dominant performance by Hutson this season will improve the youngster's bargaining position. He recommends the Canadiens sign him as soon as possible or risk having to pay much more by season's end.
Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman reported Friday that the two sides are already engaged in detailed contract talks. He believes the final price could be closer to what Hughes and LaCombe are earning on their new deals.
PuckPedia indicates that the Canadiens have a projected $36.7 million in cap space for 2026-27, with 15 active roster players under contract. Management had done a good job getting their best young players signed to long-term deals with reasonable cap hits. Nick Suzuki is earning $7.875 million annually through 2029-30, Cole Caufield's AAV is $7.85 million through 2030-31, and Juraj Slafkovsky's is $7.6 million through 2033.
Getting Hutson signed to a long-term deal with an AAV of $9 million would be a significant move on their part. It could give them significant long-term savings to put toward maintaining a contender.
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Candid Coach John Tortorella Returns To ESPN For NHL Analysis
Longtime NHL coach John Tortorella is back in the studio.
ESPN announced Tortorella will be part of its NHL studio coverage as an analyst this season.
"Known for his candid insights and authentic commentary, Tortorella will bring his deep understanding of the game as a veteran coach with 23 NHL seasons behind the bench, including leading the Tampa Bay Lightning to a Stanley Cup championship in the 2003-04 season," ESPN said in a news release on Monday.
Tortorella, 67, was part of ESPN's NHL coverage in 2021-22 when he was between coaching jobs. He had coached for the Columbus Blue Jackets for six years before that campaign, and he joined the Philadelphia Flyers for parts of three seasons afterward.
On March 27, the Flyers fired Tortorella, replacing him with Brad Shaw for the rest of the 2024-25 season before hiring Rick Tocchet for 2025-26. Tortorella said two days before his firing that he's not really interested in learning how to coach that type of season, where the Flyers where second-last in the Eastern Conference. But Briere said there was a series of things that happened leading up to the decision to part ways.
In September, Tortorella told NHL.com he loved coaching the Flyers, and he wasn't quitting on the team when he made those comments.
"I think a coach has to change," Tortorella told NHL.com. "A coach has to show the players respect, that you’re not backing off, but you also care about the grind that they just went through, and they’re done in another few weeks. That’s what I was saying. I don’t want to learn how to coach that way. I don’t know how to coach that way, and I don’t want to learn. If you can keep yourself out of those spots of playing to the end, you won’t be good at that."
Tortorella said he wants to continue coaching. He's currently sixth in NHL history for most games coached, with 1,620, and ninth all-time for wins, with 770. He'll also be an assistant coach for USA's men's squad at the 2026 Olympics.
In the meantime, he'll provide insight on hockey in the studio.
Some of Tortorella's highlights from his last time on ESPN include questioning whether then-rookie Trevor Zegras' over-the-net alley-oop assist to Sonny Milano was too showmanlike for the game.
"If you did that back in 2000, late ’90s, 2000s, you'd get your head taken off," Tortorella said at the time. "It's cool. It's cool to watch, but I'm not so sure it's good for the game, and I stand by that."
Stanley Cup champion T.J. Oshie will also be a studio and game analyst on ESPN. The right winger played 1,010 regular-season NHL games between the St. Louis Blues and Washington Capitals, recording 302 goals and 695 points. He added another 69 points in 106 playoff contests. He won the Cup with Washington in 2018.
ESPN also announced it re-signed NHL on-air personalities, such as play-by-play commentator Bob Wischusen, analysts Cassie Campbell-Pascall, P.K. Subban and Kevin Weekes and reporter Leah Hextall.
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Liverpool’s struggles show that Trent Alexander-Arnold is not easily replaced
Three straight defeats laid bare the issues with Arne Slot’s offseason makeover, with one departure looming particularly large
It’s not a crisis, not yet, but Liverpool’s run of three defeats in a row is reason to take stock. It’s true that the two league games in that run were both lost via last-minute winners, and that in isolation these three games could be explained away relatively easily. But context matters, and the truth is that while Liverpool won their first five league games of the season, they did not play well in them.
New players are struggling to settle and Arne Slot’s rejig of the formation has not really worked, while a number of regulars look out of sorts. Last season Liverpool won the league playing extremely controlled soccer, making 2-0 almost a trademark scoreline, establishing their lead and then running the clock down. This season there has been none of that, no sense of playing within themselves. They’ve been extremely open through midfield and most of their wins have come through late goals. There’s been an unexpected wildness to them, almost as though Slot is going through his transition a season late.
This is an extract from Soccer with Jonathan Wilson, a weekly look from the Guardian US at the game in Europe and beyond. Subscribe for free here. Have a question for Jonathan? Email soccerwithjw@theguardian.com, and he’ll answer the best in a future edition.
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