2026 NBA Playoff Predictions: Full Bracket Picks, Upsets, Conference Winners & Finals Champion

Now things get real.

The NBA playoffs are here and make no mistake: Oklahoma City is the team to beat. The Thunder are the reigning champions and had the best record in the NBA despite a rash of injuries, including their second-best player from last season missing the majority of the season.

That doesn't mean they are invincible. San Antonio, Denver, Boston and others would have a shot, but they all have to make it to face OKC first. This is going to be a long and wild playoffs.

Here are my predictions for the 2026 NBA Playoffs.

First Round

Eastern Conference

• Detroit beats Orlando 4-1
• Boston beats Philadelphia 4-1
• New York beats Atlanta 4-3
• Cleveland beats Toronto 4-2

Atlanta is going to put a scare into New York (and an upset is not out of the question). This Hawks team had the third-best net rating in the league over the last two months, is fearless, has an All-NBA talent in Jalen Johnson, plus they have Nickeil Alexander-Walker and CJ McCollum giving them plenty of scoring, and Dyson Daniels locking guys down. The Knicks' bench and experience get them over the hump, but barely. Aside from that, Cleveland should look improved with its shrunken playoff rotation, and Boston and Detroit are just better than their opponents.

Western Conference

• Oklahoma City beats Phoenix 4-1
• San Antonio beats Portland 4-1
• Denver beats Minnesota 4-2
• Houston beats Los Angeles Lakers 4-2

The Suns played the Thunder tough in the regular season, but this isn't the regular season. Portland has interesting young athletes, San Antonio has better ones. The Lakers would have won this series if healthy, but at least Kevin Durant vs. LeBron James is always entertaining.

Denver vs. Minnesota is the best first-round series in either conference — a real rivalry between teams that match up well. Both teams are big, talented and know how to level up in the playoffs. I will take the consistency of Denver — and the way Nikola Jokic enjoys putting up numbers on Rudy Gobert.

Conference Semi-Finals

Eastern Conference

• Cleveland beats Detroit 4-2
• Boston beats New York 4-2

Do I feel comfortable picking a James Harden-led team to win a big playoff series? No. Not even close. However, styles make fights, and Detroit wants a low-scoring series where it gets its buckets in the paint, but Cleveland is waiting with Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen to shut that down. If the Pistons win this series, it will be because Daniss Jenkins and Duncan Robinson stepped up big time. The Knicks vs. Celtics will be fun, but the Celtics have been the better team of late and will send the Knicks and their owner into a tailspin this offseason.

Western Conference

• Oklahoma City beats Houston 4-1
• Denver beats San Antonio 4-3

Denver vs. San Antonio is a coin flip, and maybe the experience factor does not matter — the Spurs don’t believe it does — but if forced to choose, I will bet on it and on the Nuggets' desperation for the win. That all depends on Aaron Gordon's hamstrings holding up, by the way. In the other West series, the Rockets are a flawed team and the Thunder will expose that.

Eastern Conference Finals

• Boston beats Cleveland 4-1

Cleveland has the talent to make this a tight seven-game series, but this is where I will no longer trust Harden and a Donovan Mitchell-led team to go any further. Especially against a team that has been there and done that.

Western Conference Finals

• Oklahoma City beats Denver 4-3

This is the real NBA Finals, and the Nuggets have a chance at the upset here (as will the Spurs if they outlast the Nuggets in the second round). That said, in the end, I will trust the depth and versatility of the defending champions, not to mention Shai Gilgeous-Alexander in the clutch to get it done.

2026 NBA Finals

• Oklahoma City beats Boston 4-1

Boston is a very good team about to step into a bad matchup. Oklahoma City has more depth and versatility, more athleticism, and it has more high-level defenders to impede Boston's stars than any team in the league. OKC has one ring and is now playing for a legacy, and it knows that. Expect the Thunder to win this far more comfortably than they did in the Finals a year ago.

Dodgers notes: Garret Anderson, Hyeseong Kim, bullpen improvement

LOS ANGELES, CA - JUNE 02: Garret Anderson #9 of the Los Angeles Dodgers celebrates after hitting the game winning base hit in the 14th inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Dodger Stadium on June 2, 2010 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Jeff Gross/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Garrett Anderson, who played the first 15 seasons of his career with the Angels and finished up with the Dodgers in 2010, died at age 53, the Angels announced on Friday.

Anderson was born and raised in Los Angeles, and played at Kennedy High School before getting drafted by the Angels in 1990. I first saw him play with the Class-A Palm Springs Angels in 1992. Anderson made three All-Star teams and drove in the go-ahead runs in Game 7 of the 2002 World Series to help clinch the Angels’ only championship.

With the Dodgers, a 38-year-old Anderson played sparingly, but did notably drive in the only run of a 14-inning win over the Arizona Diamondbacks on June 2, 2010. It marked the first time the Dodgers had won back-to-back 1-0 games for the first time in 26 years.

Freddie Freeman, who grew up in Orange County, told Jack Harris of the California Post that Anderson was his favorite player:

“You always hear, ‘Don’t meet your heroes,’” Freeman told The California Post. “But then I got to meet him, and I was like, ‘I’m glad I did.’ Because he was a beautiful man. And I wish he was still here. He meant a lot to so many people … I’m at a loss for words really.”

Anderson remembrances



Hyeseong Kim talked to Jack Harris of the California Post about getting optioned to the minors at the beginning of the season, and his subsequent return two weeks ago when Mookie Betts was placed on the injured list. Manager Dave Roberts praised Kim’s swing, noting improvement from late in spring training: “I think he’s into the ground much better. I think the swing decisions are better mechanically. It looks great. So really proud of the work.”

Earlier Friday, Katie Woo at The Athletic noted the improvement of Tanner Scott, Alex Vesia, and Blake Treinen in the Dodgers bullpen in the first three weeks of the season. Through Friday, that trio has combined to allow only one run in 22 2/3 innings with a 27.7-percent strikeout rate.

ESPN Predicts Flyers Will Get Swept By Penguins

As they head into their first appearance in the Stanley Cup playoffs since 2020, it is becoming clear that the Philadelphia Flyers still don't have many believers out there.

Some of the skepticism is, of course, understandable. Veterans like Christian Dvorak, Noah Cates, and Dan Vladar all enjoyed career years, and the Flyers don't yet have a superstar in their ranks like many other contenders do.

That's exactly why national pundits--namely ESPN--have the Flyers on the outs before the puck is even dropped for Game 1 of the series with the Penguins.

In their recent preview, x-factor, and bold prediction story, ESPN's bold prediction is that the Flyers are swept by the Penguins. Here's the rationale:

"Vladar's lack of past playoff reps is exposed early, and the Flyers can't counteract with enough goal support. Coach Rick Tocchet does his best to shuffle the deck and keep Philadelphia alive, but it gets swept in the opening round," they wrote.

Flyers Coach Rick Tocchet Has Rave Reviews for Porter MartoneFlyers Coach Rick Tocchet Has Rave Reviews for Porter MartoneAfter a short adjustment period, Porter Martone was one of the best players for the <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/philadelphia-flyers">Philadelphia Flyers</a> during their playoff push, and head coach Rick Tocchet quickly took notice.

They were careful to note in the leadup, too, that Trevor Zegras, the team's No. 2 scorer with 67 points in 81 games this season, has never played in an NHL playoff game himself.

That is what makes the upcoming experience with the battle-hardened Penguins so valuable, even though the sentiment amongst the Flyers themselves is that they have been playing playoff hockey since the Olympic break.

There is some truth to that, as the Flyers were eight points back of the New York Islanders for third place in the Metropolitan Division with two games in hand back on Feb. 22.

As for the Penguins, they were still second in the division at that time and never relented, whereas the Flyers had to scratch and claw for it after a dismal winter stretch.

Flyers' Travis Sanheim Deserves Credit for This Insane StatFlyers' Travis Sanheim Deserves Credit for This Insane StatThe <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/philadelphia-flyers">Philadelphia Flyers</a> made the Stanley Cup playoffs largely through hard work and discipline, and one veteran leader took the discipline part literally.

ESPN's prediction of the Flyers getting swept is interesting, if nothing else, due to the rivalry behind the series. It seems a near-impossible outcome, especially with the two sides finishing the regular season with very similar records.

The Flyers will get their first crack at proving the ESPN crew wrong when they face the Penguins at PPG Paints Arena in Pittsburgh at 8 p.m. on Saturday night.

A Look At The Columbus Blue Jackets Attendance Numbers For 2025-26

The one thing that people can be proud of is that the Columbus Blue Jackets always put fans in the stands. We can argue about whether or not they deserve it, but that's an argument for another day. 

Let's take a look at the attendance numbers for this past season. 

Total Nationwide Arena Capacity: 18,500 - 14th highest in the NHL. 

Total Fans For Season: 691,996 total fans came out to games - 24th in the NHL.

Average Attendance: 16,878 - 26th in the NHL.

Capacity % - 91.2% - 30th in the NHL

Sellouts - 16 - Most since the 2003-04 season (16). 

Home Record - 20-13-8

Per NHL PR, the National Hockey League set a total attendance record for the 4th straight year, with a total of 23,158,522 fans passing through NHL doors. NHL teams played in front of an average of 17,651 fans, which comes out to 97.5% capacity. 

Despite the CBJ not making the playoffs for the 6th straight year, attendance remains strong. Some fans see that as a bad thing and would like attendance to drop to get the owner's attention, whiles most choose to support the team no matter what.

No matter where you sit on the issue, there is no right or wrong answer. Support the team how you'd like, but more fans in seats means more money to spend on free agents and young future stars like Adam Fantilli, Denton Mateychuk, and Jet Greaves.

The fans of the Columbus Blue Jackets are loyal, loud, and love showing up at Nationwide Arena to watch their team play NHL Hockey.  

With the excitement of the CBJ re-signing Head Coach Rick Bowness to a one-year contract, many fans said they'd come out to support the team next year, even after the epic collapse that cost them the playoffs. It's hard to imagine fans being excited about a head coach, but here we are. 

Next Up For Columbus: The NHL Draft Lottery on May 5, 2025, where the CBJ will most likely pick 14 or 15. 

Stay updated with the most interesting Blue Jackets stories, analysis, breaking news, and more!

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Let us know what you think below.

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Game 1 Preview: Timberwolves at Nuggets

DENVER, COLORADO - APRIL 1: Anthony Edwards #5 of the Minnesota Timberwolves celebrates after a three-point basket against the Denver Nuggets in the second half at Ball Arena on April 1, 2025 in Denver, Colorado. 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 Dustin Bradford/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Minnesota Timberwolves at Denver Nuggets
Date: April 18th, 2026
Time: 2:30 PM CDT
Location: Target Center
Television Coverage: Prime Video

Every great rivalry needs its trilogy.

Not the kind where two teams randomly bump into each other once every few years and call it history, but the kind where the games start to blur together, where every possession feels familiar, where the players know what’s coming and still can’t stop it. The kind where every matchup feels like a sequel, not a standalone episode.

That’s what this has become.

The Minnesota Timberwolves and the Denver Nuggets are about to meet in the playoffs for the third time in four years. It’s a score that never quite feels settled. Denver struck first in 2023, brushing Minnesota aside in the first round on their way to a title. Minnesota answered in 2024 with one of the most defining wins in franchise history, a Game 7 comeback that flipped a twenty-point deficit into a Western Conference Finals berth and, more importantly, flipped the psychology of the matchup.

That game changed everything.

Because ever since then, these teams haven’t just played each other, they’ve tested each other. You can run through the list like a greatest hits album. The 10-point fourth-quarter comeback at Target Center in November 2024. The double-overtime war in April 2025 where Nikola Jokic emptied the clip and still somehow lost. The recent Christmas Day classic where Anthony Edwards hit a last-second dagger to send the game into overtime, only for Denver steal it right back.

Every game has been a battle. Every game has had stakes. Every game has ended with one fanbase walking away like they just survived something and the other wondering how it slipped away.

And now, after a one-year hiatus, we get the playoff version again.


The Uneasy Road That Led Here

Here’s the part that makes this whole thing a little more complicated than it should be.

The Wolves didn’t exactly cruise into this matchup.

They didn’t build momentum in March and April the way they did last year. They didn’t lock in a top seed and spend the final week sharpening their edge. Instead, they stumbled. They dealt with injuries. They rotated players in and out, ultimately settling into the six seed. It’s the exact same spot they occupied a year ago, but with a very different path waiting on the other side.

That’s the tension hanging over this series.

We’ve seen what this Wolves team can be. We’ve seen the version that overwhelms teams defensively, that moves the ball, that knocks down threes a ridiculous clip. But we’ve also seen the version that checks out for a quarter, that lets games slip, and that turns winnable nights into inexplicable losses.

Last year, Minnesota entered the playoffs looking like a team ascending. This year, they enter looking like a team still trying to remember exactly who they are.

The silver lining? They’re fresh.

Anthony Edwards. Julius Randle. Jaden McDaniels. Rudy Gobert. All of them have spent the last couple weeks on what is essentially a managed workload. They’re not peaking, but they’re not exhausted either. Against a Denver team that plays through the most physically demanding superstar in basketball, that might matter more than we think.


Game 1: The Swing Game Nobody Talks About Enough

Let’s zoom in on what actually matters right now: Game 1.

Stealing Game 1 on the road flips the entire structure of the series. Win Game 1 in Denver, and suddenly the pressure shifts. The Nuggets are the ones answering questions. The Wolves are the ones holding leverage. The math changes. The tone changes. Everything changes.

Lose it, and you’re immediately climbing uphill.

Let’s be honest. The expectation outside Minnesota is pretty clear. Denver is rolling into the playoffs on a heater. The narrative is that they’ve figured it out again. That they’re the more complete team. That they have the best player in the world.

Minnesota? They’re the wild card. The team that could win this series… or could just as easily lose in five if things go sideways.

The good news for Wolves fans: we’ve seen that script before.

And we’ve seen how it can end.


The Keys to Game 1

1. Make Nikola Jokic Work for Everything

This isn’t about stopping Jokic. That’s not a real strategy.

This is about cost.

Every possession has to cost him something. Every touch, every post-up, every rotation. You don’t let him play in rhythm. You don’t let him dictate pace. You don’t let him casually drift into a 38-point, 12-assist, 15-rebound night.

This is why this roster exists. Tim Connelly specifically constructed this team to defeat the monster he drafted.

Gobert. Randle. Reid. Three big men, same objective: wear Jokic down. Hit him. Lean on him. Make him defend. Turn the game into something physical, something draining, something that builds over time.

Because you’re not beating Jokic in one quarter. You’re trying to beat him in Game 5… Game 6… Game 7.


2. Recreate the 2024 Defensive Identity

This is where Minnesota won the series last time. They turned Denver into a grind. They made Jamal Murray uncomfortable. They closed out on shooters. They rotated with purpose. They made every possession feel like it was being played in a phone booth.

That version of this team has to show up again. Jaden McDaniels has to be a problem. Anthony Edwards has to bring that second-level intensity we saw in 2024. The guards have to fight over screens instead of dying on them. The rotations have to be sharp.

Because if Denver gets clean looks? If Murray is allowed to get comfortable? If the role players start feeling it?

It’s over.


3. No More Stagnant Offense

When things get tight, Minnesota has a tendency to default into isolation basketball. Edwards dribbling. Randle backing down. Everyone else watching.

That cannot be the Wolves’ approach to offense.

The Wolves’ offense works when it’s connected. When the ball moves. When Edwards collapses the defense and kicks. When Randle draws help and finds shooters. When the ball doesn’t stick.

Denver’s defense is vulnerable, but only if Minnesota makes them work.


4. Hitting Shots is Not Optional

This isn’t complicated.

The Wolves are going to get looks, but looks don’t matter if they don’t fall. Minnesota cannot afford one of those 8-for-38 from three nights. They cannot afford to go ice cold for six-minute stretches. They cannot afford to leave points at the free-throw line.

This team’s margin for error is too thin.

Shoot league average from three, and they’re in this game. Shoot well, and they can win it.

Shoot poorly, and they’ll be down 0-1 with even more pressure to perform in Game 2.


5. Be Who You’ve Been Hinting At All Year

This is the biggest one. All season long, this team has flirted with its ceiling. We’ve seen flashes. Moments. Quarters. Stretches where everything clicks.

And then it disappears.

This is the moment where it can’t disappear.

This is where Anthony Edwards has to be that guy for 40 minutes, not just the last five. This is where Julius Randle has to play like the version of himself that dominated playoff games, not the one that drifts. This is where Gobert anchors everything. Where McDaniels impacts both ends.

This is where the Wolves stop being theoretical.


82 games.

The bad losses. The injuries. The nights where they looked like contenders and the nights where they looked like they forgot how to play basketball.

It all leads here.

This is the round. This is the opponent. This is the standard.

If the Wolves want to be taken seriously as contenders, they have to go through this. They have to beat a team led by the best player in the world. They have to win in their building. They have to prove that 2024 wasn’t a one-off.

We’ve seen them go toe-to-toe with this exact team and come out on top. But that version of the Wolves, the one that defends like its life depends on it, that moves the ball, that hits shots, that plays with edge and purpose, has to show up.

Because this isn’t about potential anymore. This isn’t about what they could be.

This is about what they are… right now.

Game 1 in Denver.

They either take it… or spend the rest of the series trying to get it back.

PTH Roundtable: X-factors and series predictions

Apr 6, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Atlanta Hawks forward Jonathan Kuminga (0) dribbles against New York Knicks guard Landry Shamet (44) during the second half at State Farm Arena. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-Imagn Images | Dale Zanine-Imagn Images

This is the fourth and final of a series of roundtable questions I’m asking the staff here at Peachtree Hoops about the Hawks as we approach the postseason. Today’s two questions: who will be the X-factor in this series and who wins the Knicks-Hawks series?


Who will be the X-factor in this series and why?

Wes: CJ McCollum took a week or two to adapt to the screening-heavy and ball movement-heavy offense here in Atlanta, but his shot creation off the dribble has been key to unlocking a 20-6 record since the All-Star break. I suspect that — just as Jalen Brunson will have the ball in his hands during crunch time this series — the Hawks may give CJ McCollum ‘four flat’ sets late in games, and he’ll need to get to his spots for the Hawks to pull out close games.

Jackson: Dyson Daniels. In all likelihood, the Knicks will try to hide Brunson on defense by matching him up with Daniels, and it will be up to the Great Barrier Thief to make New York pay by attacking the basket and forcing Brunson to move his feet on that end of the floor. If he’s unable to do so, Daniels’ lack of perimeter shooting could become an easily exploitable vulnerability for the Hawks, especially in a playoff setting, where halfcourt offense comes more into the forefront.

Malik: Onyeka Okongwu. He’s probably going to have the task of guarding Karl-Anthony Towns, and when he and Jalen Brunson start getting into their two-man game, Okongwu will have to make the right decisions on defense. He’ll also play a big part if he’s on the court with Robinson, and his perimeter shooter could lure him out the paint, making it easier for the other Hawks to get to the rim.

Graham: Jonathan Kuminga. If Kuminga absolutely stinks off the bench, I really worry for the Hawks’ bench production in this series – unless Gabe Vincent catches fire and Zaccharie Risacher can be productive (if he even plays). If the Hawks can’t win that battle, I’m not sure they can win this series. Kuminga will have to play and be productive in order for the Hawks to have a chance to win that bench battle. 

Hassan: Mouhamed Gueye. With Jock Landale set to miss the majority of the first-round thanks to the ankle injury he suffered against Orlando on April 1st, Gueye will likely get the first shot as the backup ‘5’ against New York, stepping in to guard Karl Towns whenever Okongwu needs a breather or gets into foul trouble. More importantly, he’ll draw the unenviable task of keeping New York’s back up big man, Mitchell Robinson off the glass – which will be one of the most important swing factors in the series. 

On a per-possession basis, Robinson is the best offensive rebounder in the NBA, with New York grabbing the rebound on a whopping 40% (!) of their misses in the halfcourt with him on the floor this season per cleaningtheglass. Additionally, Gueye has typically operated at the ‘4’ this season, as – at 6’11”, 210 pounds – he’s struggled to match up against some of the more physically imposing bigs in the league. Lineups featuring Gueye at the ‘5’ ranked in just the 16th percentile in defensive rebounding rate during the regular season, and it’s clear that Gueye is going to have his work cut out for him going up against Robinson. 

That said, I’ve had a plot on ‘Mo Gueye island’ ever since his rookie season, and one thing that’s for certain is that he is not going to back down from any matchup – no matter the size difference. Gueye is a freak athlete who ranked in the 93rd percentile in defensive EPM last season and in the 89th percentile this season. He has the agility to guard at the level of the screen and switch out on the perimeter. He posted one of the highest steal rates on the team this season. Robinson is undoubtedly a tough matchup for him, but if Gueye can give the Hawks enough on offense (30.8% from three this season), while holding his own on the defensive end and on the boards, it will significantly boost Atlanta’s chances of pulling off the upset.

The injury to Landale has clearly put Atlanta’s bench unit in a precarious position, and to be perfectly honest, if they had someone better than Gueye or Tony Bradley to step into this role, I’d be all for it. However, given the options on the roster, Gueye is their best bet, and I’m holding out hope that he’ll be able to hold his own against a physical Knicks front line. The Hawks are going to need Gueye to be at his best in this first round series.

Who wins the Knicks-Hawks series and in how many games?

Wes: Five years ago, I said Hawks in six. As we all remember, they ended up winning in five. I trust the Hawks to get the better of the Dyson Daniels on Jalen Brunson matchup and gum up New York’s entire offense. This team is playing connected and inspired basketball once again.

This is purely a vibes call but run it back. Hawks in six.

Jackson: Knicks in seven. The Hawks have many ways they can make life hard for New York, including their stable of strong perimeter defenders to throw at Brunson, as well as the Knicks’ lack of a good defensive matchup for Johnson. However, experience and homecourt advantage count for a lot in the playoffs, as does having a clear go-to option down the stretch of close games — which Atlanta currently does not. Those factors, plus New York’s undeniable advantage around the basket in this matchup, might be too much to overcome for the Hawks, but not after they give the Knicks all they can handle.

Malik: Knicks in six. Not only do I think that Mitchell Robinson will be a problem for the Hawks if Jock Landale doesn’t return in time, but Jalen Brunson always knows how to turn it on when it matters. The Hawks have several players to throw at him, but he still finds a way to get his. I also think Karl-Anthony Towns will make things hard for the Hawks. They’ll definitely put up a fight, but I think the Knicks are the better team and will prevail.

Graham: I look at the season-series numbers and think ‘what is likely to repeat in the playoffs?’ I remember looking at the Knicks-Hawks 2021 series preview and felt confident that Julius Randle was not going to average 37 again in the playoffs, nor Immanuel Quickley likely to replicate his series production from the regular season-series. In short, I thought the Knicks overplayed to their potential in the regular season. Sure enough, neither could replicate those numbers and the Hawks advanced in five games.

But this time I look at the season series averages, and I don’t see the potential for the averages to significantly regress. I think it’s entirely reasonable ‘KAT’ could average nearly 30 points on high efficiency based on how this Hawks’ frontline may be exploited. Brunson could certainly average close to 30 points in this series as he did in the regular season, and possibly more because I he will average a better three-point shooting number than 29% in the season series. The same applies for the Knicks as a whole, who averaged 29% from three against the Hawks in the season series – they were fourth in the NBA with 37.3% per game. 

From the Hawks’ side of ‘what is likely to repeat’ in the postseason, Alexander-Walker averaged 28 points per game to lead the Hawks in scoring. That could persist, but the three-point shooting I fear may not – and that’s not exclusive to Alexander-Walker (who shot 45.5% from three on 11 attempts per game in the season series). Okongwu shot 47.8% from three on nearly eight attempts, and Johnson shot 45% from three – I’m just not convinced these averages can persist in the playoffs, and even with these percentages in the regular season the Hawks fell 1-2 in the season series.

Atlanta’s bench production concerns me, as does the potential reliance on CJ McCollum as the ball-handler down the stretch; I just think that’s a very one-sided matchup when you consider Brunson will be doing the same for the Knicks. McCollum has been good for the Hawks, but there is a gap in quality and reliability between those two players in two different stages of their careers. Elsewhere, the offensive rebounding/second chance scoring is obviously a huge worry.

This Hawks group is in completely new territory together in the postseason for the first time while this Knicks group have been battle-tested together — not to mention they also have homecourt. These are factors that can swing games on their own.

In short, there’s too many logical arguments in the Knicks’ favor this time around to overlook, and not many other variables go in the Hawks’ favor. I think the Knicks advance in five games.  

Hassan: Knicks in 7. My heart is telling me Atlanta, but my brain is saying New York. I think the lack of firepower off the Hawks bench, New York’s advantage on the glass, and Jalen Brunson’s abilities as a closer prove too much for Atlanta to overcome. 

The Knicks had the sixth best clutch record in the NBA this season (21-13) while the Hawks went just 17-18 in clutch games. I think these two teams are more evenly matched than a lot of people think, and Atlanta advancing to the second round isn’t out of the question, however New York’s experience and comfort in close games will put them over the edge. 

Tyler Freeman, versatility and the cost of never choosing his role

DENVER, CO - AUGUST 15: Second baseman Tyler Freeman #2 of the Colorado Rockies flips the baseball to first with his glove but is unable to get the runner in the fourth inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Coors Field on August 15, 2025 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Rockies love versatility. 

They collect it. They prioritize it. They build around it — players who can move, adjust, and fill gaps across the roster. 

Under the current front office, that emphasis has been explicit. 

In theory, it works. But, like any philosophy, it only works if you know when to stop applying it. 

Tyler Freeman might be that moment. 

The Rockies didn’t invent the experiment — but they’ve kept it going

Freeman wasn’t developed as a utility player. 

In the minors, he was overwhelmingly an infielder — developed at shortstop with the expectation he’d eventually slide to second base as his long-term home. 

Cleveland began expanding that role late, even moving him into center field in 2024 and asking him to learn a new position on the fly. By the time Colorado acquired him, the flexibility was already part of his profile. 

The Rockies didn’t create that version of Freeman. They chose to keep going. 

The Rockies saw a problem — and chose more flexibility 

In 2025, Freeman hit .281, posted a .354 OBP, and still finished with negative bWAR  

Because, as Joelle Milholm wrote here on the Row — he “raked at the plate, tanked in the field.” 

The Rockies have a real reason to hesitate here. Freeman struggled defensively across positions, including second base.

And in 2026, they’ve already leaned on players like Willi Castro and Edouard Julien to cover those innings. That approach isn’t irrational, but the response has been more movement for Freeman. 

And defense, especially in the infield, is built on repetition. 

Freeman hasn’t gotten that. 

The profile has never really changed 

For years, the reports have been consistent: 

  • Elite bat-to-ball skill  
  • Advanced feel for contact  
  • Modest but developing gap power  
  • A likely defensive home at second base  

Statcast tells a similar story now: 

This isn’t a star profile. But it is: An everyday, contact-oriented profile the Rockies haven’t fully defined 

So what’s missing? 

The last step. 

Freeman makes contact as well as almost anyone. But he hasn’t consistently turned that into damage. 

And development like that doesn’t happen in abstraction — it happens in routine. 

It’s the same glove. The same angles. The same pre-pitch rhythm. The feel of the dirt under your cleats, every inning. 

Freeman hasn’t had that. 

Instead, it’s been different gloves, different sightlines, different responsibilities. One night he’s reading hops on the infield dirt, the next he’s standing in the outfield grass, waiting instead of reacting. 

That instability matters — even if the exact effects are hard to isolate. 

Sports psychology research consistently shows that role clarity can influence confidence, decision-making, and perceived effectiveness. Baseball-specific evidence is more limited, but the general principle holds: players tend to perform best when expectations are stable. 

And when things aren’t stable, hitters often get more conservative. 

They shorten up. They put the ball in play. They avoid risk. 

So a player with developing pop can become: a contact hitter who never fully taps into it 

That’s not proven cause and effect, but it’s a pattern worth considering. 

What happens if they choose a lane?

Make Freeman the everyday second baseman.

Not because it’s guaranteed to work, but because it hasn’t really been given a chance to.

Once that decision is made, the rest of the roster starts to organize itself.

Ryan Ritter isn’t part of the current roster, but that actually reinforces the point. His path isn’t as a primary second baseman — it’s as a true super-utility player. When he’s up, his value comes from moving between the infield and outfield, not competing for a single position. Castro already fills a version of that role at the major-league level, rotating through shortstop, second, and third base in a way that makes the roster more flexible without blurring development.

The real redundancy is elsewhere.

Freeman and Julien share a similar offensive identity — contact-driven, bat-first players whose value comes from what they do at the plate. Both have been moved around defensively. Both have below-average defensive track records. But they’re not interchangeable.

Freeman brings more athleticism. He was developed as an infielder. His profile — contact, speed, and just enough developing pop (maybe) — fits more cleanly at second base if given the chance to settle there.

Julien’s path is narrower. His value likely comes as a bat-first option moving between second, first, and DH. And if that role overlaps too heavily with Freeman’s, the Rockies eventually have to decide whether carrying both actually creates value — or just duplicates it.

Just as importantly, the outfield stops being a catch-all.

Instead of absorbing infield uncertainty, it can stabilize around players like Brenton Doyle, Mickey Moniak, Jordan Beck, Troy Johnston, and Jake McCarthy — players who are actually being evaluated as outfielders, not filling gaps created elsewhere.

That clarity extends beyond the active roster.

With Freeman anchored at second, the path for the next wave — Charlie Condon (No. 1 PuRP), Zac Veen (No. 9 PuRP), Cole Carrigg (No. 4 PuRP) — becomes easier to see. Not guaranteed, not blocked, but defined. They’re no longer competing against positional drift; they’re competing within structure.

And that’s the real point. Choosing a lane for Freeman doesn’t just answer one question.

It forces the Rockies to decide which overlapping skill sets they actually believe in — and which ones they don’t.

The clock is ticking 

Freeman is 26 and under club control through the 2028 season. 

That gives the Rockies a limited window to define him, develop him, or extract value.  

Right now, they’re still figuring out what he is. 

Let him be the exception 

Purple Row has already documented the Rockies’ embrace of optionality. The front office has been clear about valuing adaptability. 

That philosophy has value, but it still requires decisions. 

Tyler Freeman doesn’t need more positions. He needs a clearer role.


On the Farm

Triple-A: Oklahoma City Comets 13, Albuquerque Isotopes 12

The Isotopes (10-9) fall just short to the Comets (10-9) in a scoring bonanza. Charlie Condon led the way, going 3-for-5 with three RBI, while Cole Carrigg drew two walks and Chad Stevens stayed hot with a 2-for-5 performance. On the mound, Luis Peralta took the loss as pitching struggled to contain the Comets’ offense. Welinton Herrera was a bright spot, tossing two scoreless innings to open the game.

Double-A: Richmond Flying Squirrels 7, Hartford Yard Goats 4

The Yard Goats (5-8) fell to the Flying Squirrels (11-2) in a hard-fought game. Aidan Longwell led the way on offense, going 3-for-5 with a home run, while Andy Perez added three hits of his own. Pitching proved to be the difference, as every arm allowed at least one run, with starter Alberto Pacheco taking the loss after giving up three earned runs in 2.1 innings.

High-A: Vancouver Canadians 0, Spokane Indians 1

The Indians (6-7) walked it off in the 10th inning, edging the Canadians (4-9) after a scoreless battle through nine. Robert Calaz delivered the game-winning single in extras to seal the win. On the mound, Jordy Vargas and Fisher Jameson were outstanding, combining for a shutout. It was a tightly played game throughout, with pitching dominating until the final swing.

Single-A: Fresno Grizzlies 5, Ontario Tower Buzzers 4

The Grizzlies (9-4) edged the Tower Buzzers (6-6) in a close contest, scoring five runs on just five hits despite striking out 11 times. Wilder Dalis provided the biggest swing of the night, going 1-for-3 with a crucial three-run homer in the seventh. On the mound, Austin Newton delivered a strong start, allowing one run while striking out six over 5.2 innings. It was a gritty win, with Fresno making the most of limited opportunities.


Through early season bumps, Tovar’s on trip ‘to the next level’ | MLB.com

In this piece by Thomas Harding on MLB.com, Ezequiel Tovar is off to a slow start, but underlying metrics suggest better results could be on the way. The Rockies remain encouraged, as he looks to turn those signs into production while aiming to reach a higher level this season.

Snow covers Coors, inspiring impromptu snowman | MLB.com

Snow blanketed Coors Field before the Dodgers-Rockies game, where Emmet Sheehan even paused to admire a snowman near the field. Crews cleared it in time, but the scene added a perfect “only in Colorado” twist to an April night at the ballpark.

Albuquerque Isotopes 2026 walk-up songs | Purple Row

Renee Dechert of Purple Row takes a fun look at the Albuquerque Isotopes’ 2026 walk-up songs, highlighting the mix of personality and culture throughout the roster. From hip-hop and reggaeton to rock and country, the playlist reflects each player’s style and adds a behind-the-scenes feel to the team’s at-bats.


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Chicago Cubs news and notes — Hoerner, PCA, Imanaga, Palancia, Horton, Giolito, Busch, Ramirez, Conforto, Taillon, Boyd

At the moment, I’m not on the IL. I am, however, perpetually listed day-to-day.

“Every page these days has some form of advertising. {$} means paywall. {$} means limited views. Italics are often used on this page as sarcasm font. The powers that be have enabled real sarcasm font in the comments.“

Food For Thought:

D Man is the driving force behind D Man & The Alley Hounds, a prominent blues-rock outfit based in Louisville, Kentucky. D Man is recognized for his “High Energy Blues & Rock ‘n’ Roll Show,” often interacting closely with the audience. His performances are characterized by soulful vocals and a repertoire that honors legends like Muddy Waters and Howlin’ Wolf while keeping a modern edge.

An Arkansas athlete donned 55 T-shirts and ran a half marathon

Most Unique Places to Visit in the USA | Hidden Gems Travel Guide

Please be reminded that Cub Tracks and Bleed Cubbie Blue do not necessarily endorse the content of articles, podcasts, or videos that are linked to in this series.

Max Clark homers for the Hens, Zach MacDonald stays hot for Lakeland

Toledo Mud Hens 6, Louisville Bats 2 (box)

Dylan File put together a nice start and Max Clark had a big night as the Hens took down the Bats and evened the series 2-2.

Clark singled but was picked off in the first inning, but in the top of the second, Eduardo Valencia led off with a single. Jace Jung followed with a single and Corey Julks reached on an error. After a Tyler Gentry strikeout, Ben Malgeri lifted a deep enough fly ball to get the run in, but that was all they’d get from the inning. 1-0 Hens.

File cruised through four innings without much trouble in the meantime, although he certainly wasn’t racking up the whiffs. He allowed two hits and two walks, and then watched his team add on a run in the top of the fifth. Trei Cruz led off with a single and Clark lined another single to right field. Gage Workman doubled in Cruz, but Clark was thrown out trying to score on a Valencia ground ball, and the Bats escaped the inning with the Hens leading 2-0.

File allowed a run in the bottom half, but escaped a minor jam on a Blake Dunn double play ball and wrapped up a pretty good outing overall.

Gentry and Malgeri immediately got the Hens going in the top of the sixth with back-to-back doubles to make it 3-1. A pair of ground outs followed, but Clark stepped to the dish and crushed a 108.4 mph blast to right field for a two-run shot, his first Triple-A home run. 5-1 Hens.

Max Burt tripled and scored on a wild pitch in the eighth to make it 6-1. Matt Seelinger allowed a run in the bottom of the ninth, but wrapped this one up without much trouble.

Clark: 4-5, R, 2 RBI, HR

Jung: 2-4, 2B, BB

Julks: 2-5, K

File (W, 1-0): 5.0 IP, ER, 4 H, 2 BB, K

Coming Up Next: It’s a 1:05 p.m. ET start on Saturday.

Harrisburg Senators 2, Erie SeaWolves 0 (box)(F/7)(Gm1)

Knuckleballer Kenny Serwa survived issuing five walks, surrendering just a pair of runs, only one earned, but it was a quiet game from the SeaWolves offense.

Brett Callahan doubled and drew a walk, but Justice Bigbie was the only other player with a hit. Harrisburg right-hander Davian Garcia wasn’t exactly dominant, but he had a solid night and got good defensive work behind him.

Woo-Suk Go did post his second straight outstanding outing, striking out five and giving up one hit in two scoreless innings.

Callahan: 1-2, 2B, BB

Serwa (L, 0-3): 5.0 IP, 2 R, ER, 4 H, 5 BB, 3 K

Erie SeaWolves 5, Harrisburg Senators 2 (box)(F/7)(Gm2 )

Carlos Pena gave the SeaWolves a good outing, and the bats had enough to take down the Senators on Friday.

The SeaWolves started quickly as Seth Stephenson lead off with an infield single, and Peyton Graham doubled him in. A pair of ground outs got Graham home for a 2-0 lead.

Pena allowed a two-run homer in the top of the second as Harrisburg tied it up, but he shut the Senators down from there, striking out eight without a walk allowed, scattering four hits on the night.

The SeaWolves came right back as Justice Bigbie singled to lead off the game, and E.J. Exposito cracked a two-run homer to re-open a 4-2 lead.

Pena got in a bit of trouble in the fourth after a single allowed, and then a two-out double, but a relay from left fielder Chris Meyers in to Graham and home to Bennett Lee cut down the runner and ended the inning.

The SeaWolves made it 5-2 in the bottom half after Bigbie led off with a single, Exposito walked, and Lee singled in Bigbie.

Peña finished his outing by striking out the side in the fifth. Trevin Michael walked three in two innings of work, but collected the save anyway.

Exposito: 1-2, R, 2 RBI, HR, BB

Stephenson: 2-3, R, K

Bigbie: 2-3, 2 R

Pena (W, 1-1): 5.0 IP, 2 ER, 4 H, 0 BB, 8 K

Coming Up Next: It’s a 1:35 p.m. ET start on Saturday.

West Michigan Whitecaps 6, Lansing Lugnuts 4 (box)(F/7)(Gm1)

The Whitecaps got a good outing from Lucas Ellisalt and just held on against a late charge from Lansing to take Game 1 on Friday.

Elissalt only went four innings in this one, but he blanked the Lugnuts, striking out four. Meanwhile, his teammates gave him an early lead to work with. Patrick Lee and Ricardo Hurtado hit one-out singles in the top of the first, and Garrett Pennington reached on an infield single to load the bases. Andrew Sojka paddled a single through the right side of the infield to plate Lee and Hurtado, though Pennington was thrown out trying to take third base, and Cristian Santana flew out. Still is was a 2-0 lead.

Lee got them started again in the fifth when he hammered a deep drive to center field for a triple. Hurtado walked, and their first baseman, Pennington, did first baseman things by ripping a three-run shot the opposite way to make it 5-0.

Duque Hebbert took over for the ‘Caps after a clean fifth from CJ Weins. Hebbert got knocked around a little for two runs in the sixth.

In the top of the seventh, leading 5-2, Hurtado drew a one-out walk and Pennington singled him to third. A Sojka fly ball was deep enough to get the run in for a 6-2 lead.

Hebbert got into trouble in the bottom of th eseventh, but held on to wrap this one up.

Pennington: 3-4, R, 3 RBI, HR

Hurtado: 2-2, 3 R, 2 BB

Patrick Lee: 2-4, 2 R, 3B, 2 K

Elissalt: 4.0 IP, 0 R, H, 2 BB, 4 K

West Michigan Whitecaps 4, Lansing Lugnuts 1 (box)(F/7)(Gm2)

The Whitecaps swept the Lugnuts despite Lansing outhitting them 11 to 4. That makes it four straight for the Whitecaps in this series, and five straigth overall.

On a bit of a makeshift night from the bullpen, the Whitecaps built a lead right away and managed to hold on despite all the traffic on the bases. The game started with Patrick Lee reaching on an error, and Juan Hernandez, just up from Lakeland, followed with a single. Garrett Pennington stepped in and launched his second three-run bomb on the day, and it was 3-0.

Zack Lee got the start, and he tossed three scoreless innings. Lefty Ethan Sloan handled the fourth, and then Ryan Harvey took over in the fifth. Harvey allowed a pair of singles before getting a strikeout and a pop-up. Another single drove in the Lugnuts only run of the game. One more single to Nolan McCarthy in left, making his High-A debut, saw McCarthy cut down Gunner Gouldsmith trying to score to end the inning.

The Tigers signed RHP Seth Chavez to a minor league deal back on April 8, and he took over for the final two innings. Hunter Dobbins singled in the top of the seventh, advanced to second on a Clayton Campbell soft tapper to the pitcher, advanced to third on a balk, and scored on a wild pitch to make it 4-1, where it ended.

Pennington: 1-3, R, 3 RBI, HR

Patrick Lee: 0-2, R, 2 BB

Lee: 3.0 IP, 0 R, 3 H, 0 BB, K

Coming Up Next:

Lakeland Flying Tigers 5, Fort Myers Mighty Mussels 2 (box)

Zach MacDonald remains red hot at the plate, and the Flying Tigers got good pitching on a bullpen day to win again on Friday.

The Flying Tigers got out to a quick lead when Jesus Pinto singled and MacDonald walked with one out in the first. Beau Ankeney doubled to left and both runners came around to score.

Charlie Christensen is off to a nice start in his pro career, and he tossed two scoreless to start this one off. Cale Wetwiska had a little more trouble, striking out five, but giving up two solo shots that tied the game in his two innings of work.

In the fifth, MacDonald, playing left field in this one, crushed another hard hit homer at 111.4 mph to make it a 3-2 lead. Wetwiska started the fifth, but came out of the game with an injury, though there was nothing obviously wrong and his velocity had been good all night.

Scott Effross and Eliseo Mota got the Flying Tigers through the fifth, sixth, and seventh without a baserunner, combining for five strikeouts.

In the top of the ninth, Jack Goodman singled, and catcher Sergio Tapia pulled a fly ball to left for a two-run shot to make it 5-2, where it ended. Donye Evans was a little shaky in his two innings of work, but collected the save.

While Zach MacDonald is tearing it up, Bryce Rainer continues to struggle pretty terribly after his long absence. He’s struck out 19 times in 10 games this season and his approach is a mess currently. It’s very early though.

MacDonald: 1-3, 2 R, RBI, HR, BB, K

Tapia: 1-4, R, 2 RBI, HR, K

Espinal: 1-2, 2 BB

Wetwika (W, 1-0): 2.0 IP, 2 ER, 6 H, BB, 5 K

Mota: 1.2 IP, 0 R, 0 H, 0 BB, 3 K

Coming Up Next: The series is even at two games apiece. First on Saturday is set for 6:05 p.m. ET.

2026 Cubs Heroes and Goats: Game 19

Just like that, there is no real reason to parse scoring stats for the Cubs anymore. With 33 runs over their last three games and 47 over five, they are now up to 106 runs in 19 games (~5.6/game). Last season, over the whole season, they averaged about 4.9 runs per game. Summer weather and rosters depleted by injuries and/or trades haven’t happened yet.

I know some were worried about the offense after an anemic open to the season, but just like that, the Cubs offense is clicking. To be fair, when they struggled over those early games, I noted that the distressing thing is that they really hadn’t had to go through very many elite pitchers. That was a daunting aside at that point. Now, through this earlier schedule, they’ve produced very well. The wear and tear of a season and those elite arms still lay ahead. But the Cubs offense has shown that they can be dangerous.

There is a lot of baseball to be played. I’m not going to be exuberant about things based off of three straight wins, just like I wasn’t in the doldrums when they had gotten off to a sluggish start. Even the worst teams look good sometimes and even the best teams look lousy sometimes. Through a little less than 15 percent of the season, the team is 10-9. Over 162 games, that would be an 86-win pace. I’m going to bet most of you won’t quibble that this team has felt like about an 86-win team over the course of the season.

The real question from here is does the team stay around that level? Or does this team take off from here? I’ve learned that, despite the marathon nature of baseball, a lot of fans suffer from a lot of recency bias. So this is a weird conversation for me to have with many of you. I thought they were a 90-95 win team before the season. So these three wins feel like some signal that they can be that kind of team. But if you thought they were an 80-85 win team, you are probably looking at the whole 19 and saying this is going to be a bumpy ride.

Either way, enjoy it when things swing up like this.

Three Positives:

  • Moisés Ballesteros had two hits, one a three-run homer that blew the game open early.
  • I love Nico Hoerner, he’s my favorite current Cub. That said, if I had to list Cubs who might put up MVP caliber numbers over a 20 game period, he’d be well down the list. I would be highly surprised to see a Hoerner like player do well in the MVP voting, but he’s having that kind of run right now. Three more hits, one more a homer and two more runs driven in. Second in all of baseball in RBI. Largely from the lead-off spot.
  • Michael Busch had two hits, a walk and scored twice. The numbers are rebounding some and I’m hoping the power numbers start to fall in place next.

Game 19, April 17: Cubs 12, Mets 4 (9-8)

GRAPH

Reminder: Heroes and Goats are determined by WPA scores and are in no way subjective.

THREE HEROES:

  • Superhero: Moisés Ballesteros (.226). 2-2, HR, 3 RBI, R
  • Hero: Nico Hoerner (.156). 3-5, HR, 2 RBI, R
  • Sidekick: Seiya Suzuki (.077). 2-5, 2B, RBI, 2 R

THREE GOATS:

  • Billy Goat: Carson Kelly (-.044). 1-4, R, DP
  • Goat: Pete Crow-Armstrong (-.030). 0-3, BB
  • Kid: Dansby Swanson (-.029). 1-2, BB, 2 R

WPA Play of the Game: Moisés Ballesteros hit a three-run homer with two outs in the first to add to an early 1-0 lead. (.206)

*Mets Play of the Game: Marcus Semien with runners at first and second and no outs in the second, scoring one and decreasing the Cub lead to three. (.122)

Cubs Player of the Game:

Game 18 Winner: Nico Hoerner received 145 out of 244 votes.

Up Next: Game two of the three-game set. Jameson Taillon (0-1, 4.86, 16.2 IP) makes his fourth start and seeks his first win. Old nemesis Freddy Peralta (1-1, 3.86, 21 IP) makes his first start as a Met against the Cubs. This is his fifth start for the Mets.

I have no objections to a fourth straight win. If the Mets want to implode, I’m definitely here for it.

Who do Giants fans think was the Player of the Week?

CINCINNATI, OHIO - APRIL 15: Jung Hoo Lee #51 of the San Francisco Giants is congratulated by his teammates after scoring a run during the second inning of the game against the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park on April 15, 2026 in Cincinnati, Ohio. All players are wearing the number 42 in honor of Jackie Robinson Day. (Photo by Kirk Irwin/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good morning, baseball fans!

Another week of San Francisco Giants baseball is drawing to a close, which means it’s time to pick our Player of the Week!

They say there’s a song for any and every occasion, and I guess the one for today is “Slim Pickins” by Sabrina Carpenter. Because there was not a lot to cheer for this week. As of the time this is being written, the Giants have lost every game so far this week.

But that doesn’t mean there aren’t silver linings, I guess. So I’m going to give the honors to Jung Hoo Lee this week. He has been heating up a bit over the last few games, and even got his first home run of the season in last Friday’s win over the Baltimore Orioles. The last recorded win as of the time this is being written. So that’s something to celebrate.

Who is your pick for Player of the Week?

What time do the Giants play today?

The Giants continue their series against the Washington Nationals today at 1:05 p.m. PT.

These former Arizona Wildcats are in the NBA Playoffs

DENVER, COLORADO - APRIL 6: Aaron Gordon #32 of the Denver Nuggets reacts after a made three point shot in the second half against the Denver Nuggets at Ball Arena on April 6, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. 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 Dustin Bradford/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Flip on an NBA Finals game from the past decade, and you’re sure to see the Arizona men’s basketball program represented at the highest level of the sport.

For 11 straight years, a former Arizona player has coached or played in the NBA Finals. Whether that streak continues into 2026 will likely come down to whether the Western Conference Finals is won by the Oklahoma City Thunder or one of their competitors.

Five of the seven former Wildcats in this year’s NBA Playoffs are on Western Conference teams, with three of the top four seeds in the conference featuring an Arizona alum.

And while Arizona’s presence in the postseason isn’t as large as it could have been had the Warriors, Clippers or Heat advanced to out of the Play-In Tournament, the UA still has a respectable contingent.

Here are the former Arizona players in this year’s NBA Playoffs.

Aaron Gordon, Denver Nuggets

The Nuggets have been a mainstay near the top of the Western Conference over the last few years, in large part thanks to Gordon’s contributions. Denver didn’t quite as sharp for parts of this season, and one reason why is Gordon’s limited playing time due to a hamstring injury.

Fortunately for Denver, Gordon appears to be as healthy as he’s been all season. He played a season-high 41 minutes two weeks ago against the Spurs, a team that Denver could run into the Western Conference Semifinals.

Gordon is averaging 16.2 points and 5.8 rebounds this season.

The Nuggets begin their series against the Timberwolves on Saturday.

Deandre Ayton, Los Angeles Lakers

Ayton’s first season playing for the Lakers has been rocky at times, but as the playoffs begin Ayton appears fully locked in.

“I want to do backflips. I’m in the purple and gold, and I just want to really just play hard as hell to contribute to wins,” Ayton said this week.

Ayton, the Lakers’ starting center, has seen his scoring dip every month of the season. He’s averaging 12.5 points and 8 rebounds.

With the Lakers missing Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves to start the playoffs versus a gritty Rockets team, Ayton will need to be at his best for Los Angeles to have a shot at advancing.

The Lakers and Rockets begin their series on Saturday.

Carter Bryant, San Antonio Spurs

Bryant might be Arizona’s best chance of having a former player in the NBA Finals. San Antonio is the two seed in the Western Conference after fighting with OKC for supremacy the last several months.

Bryant has made solid contributions as a rookie reserve, averaging 4.2 points and 2.5 rebounds in 11 minutes per game.

Bryant got to see some extra playing time down the stretch of the regular season and made the most of it, scoring in double figures in three straight games.

The Spurs enter the playoffs with the second-best record in the NBA, only behind the Thunder.

The Spurs face the Trail Blazers beginning Sunday.

Zeke Nnaji, Denver Nuggets

Nnaji is competing in his sixth straight postseason with the Nuggets, and much like the last five trips it’s in a limited role.

Nnaji is averaging 3.7 points and 2.6 rebounds in 12 minutes per game. His playing time dropped precipitously in February, and a hip impingement injury in late March slowed him down even more.

While Nnaji did get a start in the Nuggets’ final game of the regular season, don’t expect to see him getting much run these playoffs.

Christian Koloko, Atlanta Hawks

Koloko bounced around multiple teams this season before settling with the Hawks. He has appeared in 13 games with Atlanta since late January.

Koloko, who is averaging 2.7 points and 3 rebounds, is unlikely to see meaningful minutes this postseason.

The Hawks take on the Knicks beginning Saturday.

Caleb Love, Portland Trail Blazers

Love made a big impact early in the year for Portland before getting sent down to the G League in February. Love is back with the Trail Blazers as they make their first playoff appearance since 2020-21.

Love has appeared in four games for Portland since late March, and it’s unlikely he’ll see much playing time in the playoffs.

For the season, he’s averaging 10.4 points and 2.5 assists across 49 games.

Dalen Terry, Philadelphia 76ers

If there’s a player on this list who is just happy to be here, it’s Terry. The reserve guard was sent from Chicago to Philadelphia at the trade deadline. Terry has made 11 appearances with the 76ers but last played significant minutes on March 23.

Terry is averaging 3.7 points and 1.4 assists.

The 76ers face the Celtics beginning Sunday.

Guardians News and Notes: Let’s Forget That Happened

CLEVELAND, OHIO - APRIL 17: Daniel Schneemann #10 of the Cleveland Guardians celebrates as he rounds the bases after hitting a grand slam during the seventh inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Progressive Field on April 17, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Jason Miller/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Yesterday was bad. The bullpen was bad. The situational hitting was bad.

Today is a new day. Gavin Williams pitches at 6:10PM ET. Let’s get back on track.

AROUND MLB:

Royals, Tigers and Twins lost. White Sox won.

Remembering a certified Yankee Killer: Garret Anderson

BRONX, NY - OCTOBER 7: Garret Anderson of the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim bats as John Flaherty of the New York Yankees looks on during Game Three of the American League Division Series at Yankee Stadium on October 7, 2005 in Bronx, New York. The Angels defeated the Yankees 11-7. (Photo by Rich Pilling/MLB via Getty Images) | MLB via Getty Images

Yesterday afternoon, the baseball world received stunning news. Former Angels outfielder Garret Anderson, who earned three All-Star nods, won the 2003 Home Run Derby and All-Star Game MVP, had the game-winning hit in 2002 World Series Game 7, and sits atop the Angels franchise leaderboards in several categories, passed away at just 53 years old, having suffered a fatal heart attack. As the Anderson family, not to mention the baseball world at large, let us honor his career in the best way an opposing fanbase can: by remembering the times we cursed his name.

You see, Garret Anderson belongs to a small fraternity of certified Yankees Killers — players who, no matter the situation, always found a way to come up big against the Bombers. His numbers, of course, speak for themselves. Overall, he had a career .293/.324/.461 slash line across his 17-year career — good for a slightly above-average 102 OPS+ despite multiple seasons of sub-100 offensive production at the end of his career dragging it down. Against the Yankees? That line skyrockets to .319/.338/.486 — the fourth-best against teams he played at least 100 games against and honestly pretty close to the .312/.341/.497 he had against Boston, his most victimized foe.

The thing is, though, a lot of players have great numbers against a particular team. What made Anderson a Yankee Killer, though, was the context. It didn’t matter how the Yankees approached him. Send out Andy Pettitte or David Wells as the day’s starter, giving you the platoon advantage against the lefty Anderson? It didn’t matter — in 83 plate appearances against Pettitte, he had three homers and posted a .402/.410/.549 slash line, and in 66 against Wells, he had two homers and posted a .400/.409/.569 slash.

Bring in a top LOOGY like Mike Stanton late in the game in a big spot? He still got on at a .375 clip and walked him off as well. Was future Hall of Famer Mike Mussina starting that day? Moose did a tad better, getting his batting average under .300, but he still posted a .283/.321/.528 slash with three home runs in 53 plate appearances. These were some of the best arms the Yankees had during his career, and Anderson simply pummeled them.

It was characteristic of Anderson’s Angels, who stood alone in their dominance of Joe Torre’s dynastic Yankees. They were the only AL opponent with a winning record against them during Torre’s tenure, going 61-55 from 1996 through 2007. Anderson certainly did his part in twisting the knife.

Furthermore, when the Yankees faced the Angels during the postseason, Anderson went nuclear. During his first career playoff series after nine years in the majors, Anderson went 7-for-18 with a walk, one home run, and five runs scored (good for a 1.088 OPS) against New York in the 2002 ALDS. His leadoff homer off playoff veteran Orlando “El Duque” Hernández in the eighth inning of Game 2, tying the game at five apiece, was arguably the series’ turning point, as it helped prevent the Yankees from jumping out to a 2-0 series lead.

Fellow Halos nemesis Troy Glaus immediately followed with a solo shot of his own, and the eventual champion Angels never looked back in an upset series victory over the four-time defending AL champs.

Three years later, the Yankees and Angels squared off in another Division Series, this time with no one taking Anderson’s club for granted. He didn’t smolder quite as much as he did in 2002 and was held to five hits — and none in three of the five games. But Anderson still managed to muster a .934 OPS because he absolutely made his hits count. At 0-for-8 entering Game 3 at the old Yankee Stadium with no less a lefty-neutralizing demon than Hall of Famer Randy Johnson on the bump, Anderson greeted him in the first with a three-run bomb.

It was the first of four hits on the night (including a triple) for Anderson in an 11-7 win. A split series turned in the Angels’ favor, and Anderson clubbed his second long ball of the series off Mussina in the Game 5 clincher at the Big A. Thankfully, the Yankees never had to face Anderson in the postseason again, as by the time they got their vengeance on the Angels in the 2009 ALCS, he and the club had parted ways, finishing out his career with the Braves and Dodgers.

But there’s one last Anderson/Yankees story to tell. Do you know the answer to the trivia question, “Who has the most runs batted in against the Yankees in a single game?”

By now, you probably have a sneaking suspicion, and it’s correct: Garret Anderson. On August 21, 2007, he laced a two-run double off Mussina in the first, drove in Vladimir Guerrero in the second with another double to right off Moose, drilled a three-run shot off Edwar Ramírez in the third, and deposited a grand slam into the right field seats in the sixth off Sean Henn.

By the time the game had mercifully ended in an 18-9 Angels victory, Anderson had accrued 10 runs batted in — a pretty decent month all in one day! To this day, he is one of just 16 players in MLB history since 1900 with a 10-RBI day, just like 2005 Alex Rodriguez.

When Anderson finally retired ahead of the 2011 season, the Yankees were certainly glad to see one of their greatest pests leave the field for the final time — the ultimate sign of respect you can give an opposing player. He was voted into the Angels Hall of Fame in 2016, and it probably felt fitting that the ceremony took place before a game against those same Yankees.

Rest in peace, Garret; we wish your family the best.

Mets Daily Prospect Report, 4/18/26: Wenninger and Mauricio have big nights for Syracuse

PORT ST. LUCIE, FL - MARCH 19: Jack Wenninger #92 of the New York Mets pitches during the game between the Tampa Bay Rays and the New York Mets at Clover Park on Thursday, March 19, 2026 in Port St. Lucie, Florida. (Photo by Scott Audette/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Triple-A: Syracuse Mets (9-9)

SYRACUSE 5, SCRANTON/WILKES-BARRE 3 (BOX)

Ronny Mauricio had himself a day in Buffalo, going 3-4 with a dinger and a stolen base. Jack Wenninger continued to build his case as a future big leaguer, tossing five and a third innings of one-run ball, giving up just three hits and two walks against five strikeouts.

Double-A: Binghamton Rumble Ponies (6-6

BINGHAMTON 4, AKRON 1 (BOX)

Jacob Reimer and Eli Serrano III both collected big hits as the Rumble Ponies evened the season at 6-6. The Binghamton pitching staff struck out ten while giving up four hits and six walks in the win.

High-A: Brooklyn Cyclones (3-9)

GREENSBORO 3, BROOKLYN 2 (BOX)

Hoss Brewer gave up two runs in the Cyclones loss to the Grasshoppers. Mitch Voit hit a home run, but the rest of the Brooklyn offense was more or less asleep, with just two hits on the day.

Single-A: St. Lucie Mets (6-7)

ST. LUCIE 6, DAYTONA 4 (BOX)

St. Lucie jumped out to an early lead, but had to claw back after Joel Lara gave up three earned runs in the bottom of the third. Conner Ware was the star of the bullpen, tossing five innings of relief while allowing just one run on two hits and four walks, while striking out seven.

Rookie: FCL Mets (0-0)

NO GAME (SCHEDULE)

STAR OF THE NIGHT

Ronny Mauricio

GOAT OF THE NIGHT

Colin Houck