Yankees Birthday of the Day: Sterling Hitchcock

UNITED STATES - OCTOBER 10: New York Yankees' reliever Sterling Hitchcock winds up in the fifth inning against the Oakland Athletics after taking over for Roger Clemens, who left the game with a tight right hamstring. The A's went on to win Game 1 of the American League Division Series, 5-3, at Yankee Stadium. (Photo by Linda Cataffo/NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images) | NY Daily News via Getty Images

Often, we hear about those who contributed to the New York Yankees’ best years in franchise history. Those names are etched not just on the walls of Yankee Stadium, but also on some in Cooperstown through the Baseball Hall of Fame and, of course, in the videos of their work in the biggest moments.

But quite a few who departed the organization prior to their winning ways would help them reach greatness in a roundabout fashion. And we’ll talk about one of those players today, who not only left before the best years of the club, but also found the best years of his career along the way with another.

Sterling Alex Hitchcock
Born: April 29, 1971 (Fayetteville, NC)
Yankees Tenure: 1992-95, 2001-03

Sterling Hitchcock was born in North Carolina and attended Armwood High School in Seffner, Florida. Selected in the ninth round of the 1989 MLB Amateur Draft by the Yankees out of Armwood, despite initially committing to the University of South Florida to play ball he signed with the club instead, earning himself a $50,000 signing bonus.

Hitchcock had a quiet confidence about him, and scouts loved the lefty’s approach, ultimately earning him multiple appearances on Baseball America’s Top 100 Prospects list. He worked his way up the ranks of the minor leagues before jumping from Double-A Albany-Colonie straight to the majors, making his MLB debut in pinstripes at the age of 21 on September 11, 1992. He tossed six innings against 39-year-old George Brett’s Kansas City Royals, allowing six hits, one walk, and three earned runs, though he only fanned a couple batters and took the loss. That was one of three games he pitched for the Yankees that season, and the other two didn’t go nearly as well. Hitchcock only saw seven innings across the two, giving up 12 earned runs in 13 total innings pitched with six walks and six strikeouts to his name. He finished with an 0-2 record and an 8.31 ERA.

Hitchcock spent most of 1993 at Triple-A Columbus and was only solid, but he did have a much better showing when he was tapped for another look at the big-league level. In 31 innings pitched, he struck out 26 batters and walked only 14 with an ERA of 4.65 in the six starts — including shutting out an up-and-coming Cleveland lineup through seven in his season debut on August 26th.

By overall ERA, Hitchcock’s 1994 was better, but it was honestly a year he’d probably have preferred to forget. He got himself in hot water by criticizing the Yankees’ organizational development strategies in spring training, and while he did appear in 18 games for New York in the first half, they were all out of the bullpen. Hitchcock never fully found his rhythm as a lefty reliever and was eventually optioned to Triple-A with a 6.27 ERA. At Columbus, he built back up as a starter, and he did have a 2.93 ERA across five starts for New York when given another chance in late July, but the players’ strike cut that season short on August 11th with the rebuilding Yankees holding the AL’s best record.

Manager Buck Showalter entrusted Hitchcock with a rotation spot in 1995, and he acquitted himself nicely at age-24, starting 27 games with 168.1 innings of league-average ball, recording 2.2 bWAR. He shined brightest down the stretch when the Yankees couldn’t really afford to lose any games as they desperately hunted down a Wild Card berth with a 22-6 final month. Hitchcock threw a complete game in a 2-1 victory over the Blue Jays on September 20th and followed it with seven innings of two-run ball in a win in Milwaukee on September 26th.

Given the ball for the regular-season finale in Toronto on October 1st, Hitchcock knew that if the Yankees won, then his team would snap its 14-year postseason drought. Rubén Sierra and Pat Kelly helped give him a 4-0 lead by the bottom of the second, and the lefty made it hold up with 5.1 innings, striking out six while allowing one run on five hits and two walks. He ran into some jams but mostly escaped them, and reliever Bob Wickman induced a double-play ball to escape his last hurdle in the sixth. The bullpen kept the Jays at bay and the Yanks — and Don Mattingly — finally had their playoff spot.

Alas, there was no room for Hitchcock in the playoff rotation, thanks to former Cy Young Award-winning starters David Cone and Jack McDowell, the surging Scott Kamieniecki, and another young southpaw by the name of Andy Pettitte, who outpitched him. Hitchcock was ineffective in relief in both of his ALDS appearances, and the Seattle Mariners won a New York heartbreaker in five games.

Following the 1995 campaign, the Yankees underwent some upheaval on and off the field and Hitchcock was deemed expendable for the right cost. Indeed, he was traded to those same Mariners as part of a package that brought over a legend of the late ’90s Yankees: Tino Martinez. He started 35 games for the M’s and racked up a 5.35 ERA before Seattle sent him to the San Diego Padres in a deal for Scott Sanders, a right-handed pitcher. The 1997 season was somewhat forgettable for the left-hander, but it was 1998 when Hitchcock really shone, not just in the regular season but in the playoffs as well.

Hitchcock pitched in 39 games (and started 27) for the pennant-winning Padres in 1998. He threw 176.1 innings and finished with 158 strikeouts and a 3.93 ERA, the lowest of his career for one season where he pitched at least 10 games with one team. But in the postseason, he received his flowers. Hitchcock not only won both of his starts in the NLCS with a 0.90 ERA, but also overall in the 1998 playoffs, he was 3–0 with a 1.23 ERA and 32 strikeouts. (As an amusung aside, whenever Hitchcock struck anyone out, the fans at Qualcomm Stadium would hang Alfred Hitchcock silhouettes instead of K’s.) He was awarded the National League Championship Series MVP Award as a result of his heroic performance against a favored, All-Star-filled Atlanta Braves team.

In an absolute David vs. Goliath matchup in the Fall Classic against Hitchcock’s old club, the Padres were swept by the Yankees. Hitchcock gave it his best effort in Game 3 in San Diego, going pitch-for-pitch with former teammate Cone and only really getting burned by eventual World Series MVP Scott Brosius (as did Trevor Hoffman).

Hitchcock pitched for the Padres up until 2001. He dealt with injuries, including Tommy John surgery in June of 2000 when he only threw 11 games for the team. Shortly after returning to the team the next season, he was dealt back to the Yankees for a couple of minor-league players. New York wanted better rotation depth and was interested in seeing what the 30-year-old had to offer. His 4-4 record belied how he actually pitched (6.49 ERA) across 10 games, and once again he ended up near the back of the Yankees’ playoff depth chart.

Unfortunately, Hitchcock had rejoined the Yankees just in time to see their championship run come to a close, Luis Gonzalez’s World Series Game 7 heroics ending dreams of a fourth consecutive title. Hitchcock, at least, could lightly console himself with the fact that he’d won one of the games during the Yankees’ furious mid-series comeback in New York. After Brosius’ ninth-inning heroics tied Game 5 against Byung-Hyun Kim, the Yankees and Diamondbacks battled into the night. Manager Joe Torre called on Hitchcock in the 12th, and he smoothly retired the side in order on 10 pitches.

Rookie Alfonso Soriano walked it off in the home half of the 12th, and Hitchcock got the win to give New York a 3-2 series lead. If only it wasn’t the Yankees’ last of 2001.

Re-signed to a two-year deal that December, the Yankees ultimately decided in a hurry that they weren’t actually that interested in Hitchcock. A lower back injury delayed the start of his 2002 campaign, and he wasn’t given a spot in the rotation upon his return — only occasionally being given spot starts. Acknowledging that it’s hard to find consistency when you’re not pitching much, Hitchcock didn’t earn time either. In 47 games from 2002-03, he had a 5.46 ERA across 89 innings.

Hitchcock was traded to the Cardinals down the stretch in August 2003, and though he was solid in St. Louis, a swan song in San Diego turned sour in 2004. He hung up the spikes that September after just four MLB appearances. Hitchcock has appeared at Yankees Old-Timers’ Day in retirement but has otherwise led a pretty quiet life away from the game. We hope that includes a happy 55th birthday!


See more of the “Yankees Birthday of the Day” series here.

Tuesday’s Brotherhood Playoff News & Links

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - APRIL 24: Jayson Tatum #0 of the Boston Celtics shoots the ball against Tyrese Maxey #0 of the Philadelphia 76ers in the third quarter during game three of the Eastern Conference first round playoffs at Xfinity Mobile Arena on April 24, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Celtics defeated the 76ers 108-100. 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 Mitchell Leff/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In Tuesday’s Brotherhood Playoff Action, Philadelphia mauled Boston, 113-97, New York hammered Atlanta, 126-97, and San Antonio eliminated Portland, 114-95.

Jayson Tatum finished with 24 points, 16 rebounds, 4 assists and three steals for the Celtics. Boston is still up 3-2, but they could have closed the Sixers out. Too bad.

The Knicks are up 3-2 over Atlanta as well. Jalen Johnson finished with 18 points, 10 rebounds, and 5 assists, but Jalen Johnson had 39 in a brilliant performance for the Knickerbockers.

Meanwhile, the Spurs moved on to the next round, sending Portland back home, 4-1. Mason Plumlee got a DNP.

On Wednesday, Paolo Banchero and Wendell Carter lead Orlando aginst Detroit. Up 3-1, the Magic have a great opportunity here.

RJ Barrett and Brandon Ingram lead Toronto against Tyrese Proctor and Cleveland. That series is tied up 2-2.

Finally, Luke Kennard and Los Angeles hope to eliminate Houston.

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Rays vs Guardians Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today's MLB Game

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The Tampa Bay Rays' starting pitching has dominated the Cleveland Guardians through the first two games of this series.

My Rays vs. Guardians predictions call for a series sweep for Tampa, with Drew Rasmussen on the mound. 

Read on for my MLB picks for Wednesday, April 29. 

Who will win Rays vs Guardians today: Rays (+105)

Drew Rasmussen is pitching like an ace with an 88th-percentile xERA, 96th-percentile walk rate, and the Cleveland Guardians are hitting .167 against him career, with zero extra-base hits in 36 career at-bats. 

The Guardians have scored just seven runs in their previous four games, while the Tampa Bay Rays offense scores just enough to win and owns a career 1.070 OPS in 34 career at-bats against Gavin Williams

The Rays' pitching in this series has been outstanding. Tampa Bay is hot, and Cleveland can’t string two hits together. Back the Rays to sweep. 

Covers COVERS INTEL:The Rays are hitting a seventh-best .275 with runners in scoring position. 

Rays vs Guardians Over/Under pick: Over 6.5 (-114)

Williams looks great on paper, but Tampa Bay has tattooed him. 

Yandy Díaz is hitting .500 against him in 12 ABs, and the righty has walked more Rays hitters than he has struck out. 

Once Rasmussen exits, the Tampa bullpen becomes a liability that Cleveland might exploit. 

One crooked number from the Rays early and a few runs against the pen late make this total very reachable. Back the Over.

Phil Naessens' 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets: 4-8, -3.20 units
  • Over/Under bets: 5-6, -1.16 units

Rays vs Guardians odds

  • Moneyline: Rays +104 | Guardians -108
  • Run line: Rays -1.5 (+194) | Guardians +1.5 (-203)
  • Over/Under: Over 6.5 | Under 6.5

Rays vs Guardians trend

The Tampa Bay Rays are riding a six-game winning streak heading into today’s contest with the Guardians. Find more MLB betting trends for Rays vs. Guardians.

How to watch Rays vs Guardians and game info

LocationProgressive Field, Cleveland, OH
DateWednesday, April 29, 2026
First pitch1:10 p.m. ET
TVRays.TV, Guardians.TV
Rays starting pitcherDrew Rasmussen
(2-0, 2.45 ERA)
Guardians starting pitcherGavin Williams
(4-1, 3.28 ERA)

Rays vs Guardians latest injuries

Rays vs Guardians weather

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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Cubs vs Padres Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today's MLB Game

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The Chicago Cubs and San Diego Padres have split the first two of their three-game set and will play the series finale at Petco Park on Wednesday, April 29.

My top Cubs vs. Padres predictions and MLB picks are calling for Chicago to put too many crooked numbers on the scoreboard for San Diego to keep up this afternoon.

Who will win Cubs vs Padres today: Cubs moneyline (-108)

The Chicago Cubs are rolling at the dish during their 14-6 heater with the highest wOBA in baseball and an average of 6.2 runs per game.

Facing San Diego Padres knuckleballer Matt Waldron shouldn’t be too high a hurdle on Wednesday afternoon, either. He sports a career 5.19 ERA and 4.53 xFIP across 201 1/3 innings in the majors.

Finally, I particularly value the sustainable surface of the Chicago offensive success, with the Cubbies sporting the fifth-highest walk rate and fifth-lowest strikeout percentage during the 20-game stretch.

Covers COVERS INTEL: The Cubs have a 60% Pythagorean winning percentage, matching their 18-12 record, and showing that their success is sustainable.

Cubs vs Padres Over/Under pick: Over 9 (-105)

In addition to Chicago being positioned to put runs on the board, San Diego is set up to chip in offensively as well.

Cubbies veteran Jameson Taillon is sporting a 4.55 ERA and 4.80 xFIP through five starts, and his fastball velocity is down to a career-low 91.5 mph

Chicago has also played to the Over in 16 of its past 23 games (+9.40 units / 37% ROI), and there have already been 27 runs through the first two games of this series.

Neil Parker's 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets: 13-8, +6.29 units
  • Over/Under bets: 5-6, -1.94 units

Cubs vs Padres odds

  • Moneyline: Cubs -115 | Padres -105
  • Run line: Cubs -1.5 (+140) | Padres +1.5 (-170)
  • Over/Under: Over 9 (-105) | Under 9 (-115)

Cubs vs Padres trend

The Chicago Cubs have won 11 of their last 14 games (+8.75 Units / 53% ROI). Find more MLB betting trends for Cubs vs. Padres.

How to watch Cubs vs Padres and game info

LocationPetco Park, San Diego, CA
DateWednesday, April 29, 2026
First pitch4:10 p.m. ET
TVMARQ, Padres.TV
Cubs starting pitcherJameson Taillon
(1-1, 4.55 ERA)
Padres starting pitcherMatt Waldron
(0-1, 12.46 ERA)

Cubs vs Padres latest injuries

Cubs vs Padres weather

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

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Dodgers notes: Shohei Ohtani, Kyle Tucker, Roki Sasaki

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 28: Shohei Ohtani #17 of the Los Angeles Dodgers reacts in the first inning against the Miami Marlins at Dodger Stadium on April 28, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Meg Oliphant/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Dodgers offense let down Shohei Ohtani after another dominant start as he suffered his first loss of the season on Tuesday against the Miami Marlins.

While Ohtani dazzled on the mound over six solid innings, the Dodgers didn’t give him any run support and just narrowly avoided being shutout by scoring their lone run of the game in the bottom of the eighth inning. Ohtani’s bat was desperately missed on Tuesday, as he had six hits over his last two games at the plate and had reached base 10 times over his last three games.

Dave Roberts explained that just because Ohtani was not in the lineup isn’t enough reason as to why the Dodgers couldn’t manufacture runs on Tuesday, per Sonja Chen of MLB.com.

“I don’t think that is going to play in my math. I think the main thing is to do right by Shohei,” Roberts said. “Even without him tonight in the lineup, we should’ve won the game. I feel good about it. I’d do the same thing again.”

As far as whether Shohei Ohtani will continue to remain out of the lineup on start days will vary week to week, but Ohtani is determined to do whatever he and the team feel is best for keeping him healthy throughout the season, per Bill Plunkett of the Orange County Register.

“I’m going to prepare the best I can with whatever the team expects is best for me and for the team,” Ohtani said through his interpreter. “We’re only going to find out in the totality if it’s a plus or a minus. I think for players who want to do two-way and want to DH, they should get the option to do DH. But at the same time, it’s hard to tell now. We’ll see how it goes at the end of the season.”

Links

Monday was a feel-good moment for Kyle Tucker, as he delivered his first-walk off hit as a Dodger in their come-from-behind victory on Monday. In what has been an early season slump, Tucker described the walk-off hit as a “huge moment” for him, per Maddie Lee of the Los Angeles Times.

“I was like, ‘OK, sweet, this is sick,’” Tucker said after the Dodgers’ 5-4 victory… “That was a huge moment right there,” Tucker said.

Is it time for Roki Sasaki to move to the bullpen, or should the Dodgers keep him in the rotation? That’s what Huston Mitchell of the Los Angeles Times attempts to solve in the latest edition of Dodgers Dugout.

Ex-Canadiens First-Round Pick Has Huge Playoff Moment

The Minnesota Wild defeated the Dallas Stars by a 4-2 final score in Game 5. With this, the Wild now have a 3-2 series lead over the Stars and need only one more win to advance to the second round. 

A former Montreal Canadiens first-round pick certainly played a role in the Wild's overtime winner, as Michael McCarron scored the game-winning goal for Minnesota. 

At the 7:47 mark of the third period, McCarron gave the Wild a 3-1 lead with a nice goal. After skating hard to get a loose puck, the former Canadiens forward beat Stars goaltender Jake Oettinger five-hole. 

With this clutch performance, McCarron now has two goals and a plus-1 rating in five games for the Wild this postseason. The former Canadiens forward has proven to be a nice addition to the Wild's roster, and this big moment in Game 5 only proves that. 

McCarron was selected by the Canadiens in the first round of the 2013 NHL Entry Draft with the 25th overall pick. In 69 games over three seasons with the Habs, McCarron had two goals, six assists, eight points, 110 penalty minutes, and 185 hits. 

Bright Side Baller of the Year: Devin Booker

PHOENIX, AZ - APRIL 27: Devin Booker #1 of the Phoenix Suns dribbles the ball during the game against the Oklahoma City Thunder during Round One Game Four of the 2026 NBA on April 27, 2026 at PHX Arena in Phoenix, Arizona. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Kate Frese/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

During the 2024-25 season, I tried something a little ambitious. After reading Liberty Ballers, the SB Nation site for the Philadelphia 76ers, I noticed they let their community vote on a player of the game after every matchup. It felt like something that could work at Bright Side.

I watch every game, and lord knows I always have thoughts. So I leaned in. It meant long nights, sure. After recording the podcast, I then sit down for another 45 minutes to an hour to write, pull the stats, and build the survey. It was a grind, but it was also worth it. It gives the community a perspective that the game recaps don’t, and I’m sure many of you woke up, put on a pot of coffee, and read the Bright Side Baller columns after each game.

Two seasons in, the value shows. It gives a clear picture of who the community believes showed up most often. It’s not a consistency rating, although it does serve somewhat in that capacity. Season-long stats tell part of the story. Bright Side Ballers tells another. It tracks night-to-night impact and who owned the moment when the game ended.

The Bright Side Baller for the 2025-26 season, for the second straight year, is Devin Booker.

The timing is interesting. It comes after a rough postseason and a Play-In that did not go as planned for the 11th-year player. Booker’s stats were down, although based on this, his consistency was up. After all, Booker won it last year as well, doing so by earning the Bright Side Baller a total of 19 times. This year, he did it with 21 despite playing 11 fewer games. That is 33%.

In 67% of his games, someone else earned that nod. There are reasons for that. Turnovers, outcomes, and the way the community views a loss. Booker carries the weight of expectations (and the weight in his wallet), so when the team loses, Booker can become more of a lightning rod for what went wrong rather than an acknowledgment of what he did right. A turnover late in the game can negatively affect your Bright Side Baller vote count, despite the fact that the team wouldn’t be in the game without you. ‘Tis a fickle system, one based on bias and emotion.

The larger point remains. Devin Booker is the best player on the Phoenix Suns. That part is not up for much debate. This exercise reinforces it, while also adding texture to how often he carried that title on a given night.

Appreciate everyone who voted all season. Truly. I am also looking forward to getting a few nights back. Writing until midnight or later, night after night, it adds up. Still, it produced exactly what I hoped for. Clarity.

The Raptors’ subtle adjustment that has the Cavs on the ropes in NBA Playoffs

TORONTO, CANADA - APRIL 26: James Harden #1 of the Cleveland Cavaliers dribbles against Scottie Barnes #4 of the Toronto Raptors during Game Four of the Eastern Conference First Round NBA Playoffs at Scotiabank Arena on April 26, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. 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 Cole Burston/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs can be an overwhelming time for analysts. With eight series taking place, you can’t possibly keep up with and do thoughtful analysis on all of them. So, you need to narrow down which ones require the most focus.

After the Cleveland Cavaliers took a 2-0 series lead over the Toronto Raptors, I thought I could put this series to bed. The Cavaliers only needed to win two of the final five games, the Raptors have struggled against top ten teams all year (7-22 against those groups, per Cleaning the Glass), and Toronto’s best spacer, Immanuel Quickley, was ruled out for the rest of the round. 

Fast forward to today and the series is currently knotted up at two games a piece and the Raptors have completely flipped the script on the Cavaliers. The Cavs might be an 8.5-point favorite as they return home for Game 5 according to FanDuel, but it truly feels like this series is still up for grabs.

The Key Adjustment That Saved The Raptors’ Season

After two games of being demolished by James Harden and Donovan Mitchell in the pick-and-roll, the Raptors said, ‘hey, we were the fifth-best regular season defense and we are not going to stand for this anymore.’

In Game 1, the Raptors went with some pretty standard matchup assignments. RJ Barrett on Harden, Jamal Shead on Mitchell, Brandon Ingram on Dean Wade, Scottie Barnes on Evan Mobley, and Jakob Poeltl on Jarrett Allen. Juxtapose those matchups with what we saw at the start of Game 4: Barnes on Harden, Ja’Kobe Walter (now starting in place of Shead) on Mitchell, Ingram on Wade, Poeltl on Mobley, and Barrett on Allen. 

What this does is take away the pick-and-roll with Allen as the screener, as any time Harden or Mitchell try to initiate this action, the Raptors can nullify it with a simple switch – since Barrett, Barnes, and Walter are all long and athletic enough to handle a multitude of different player types. 

So, if Harden and Mitchell want to hunt Poeltl (the weak link defensively in Toronto’s starting five), they have to use Mobley as a screener. This may not seem like a big deal, but look how little separation Mitchell is able to generate on Mobley screens:

The Raptors also did a great job of enhancing their gap help to clog up driving lanes, mitigate passing windows, and force Cleveland’s sketchier shooters to vanquish them (as a team, the Cavaliers shot just 25 perect from downtown in Game 4). 

Cleveland should still be able to pull this one out. They have home court advantage, superior closers, and a lot of fat they can cut out of their process (they had 18 turnovers in Game 4). But credit goes to Toronto for turning what should have been a clean sweep into an instant classic.

New Jersey Devils RFA Profile: Arseny Gritsyuk

The 2025-26 season for the New Jersey Devils is in the books, and the time has come to shift our attention from what’s going on on the ice to off the ice.

New general manager Sunny Mehta has plenty of business to handle this summer as he inherits a talented, but flawed roster from Tom Fitzgerald. The Devils have several restricted free agents that need to be addressed, and in the first part of our annual series where we profile the pending RFAs and UFAs on the roster, we will begin with Arseny Gritsyuk.

Who is Arseny Gritsyuk?

Arseny Gritsyuk is a 25 year old winger who was drafted in the 5th round way back in 2019. The former 129th overall selection was one of Ray Shero’s final draft picks as an NHL general manager.

Like many Russian prospects before him, Gritsyuk continued his development in his homeland, playing for clubs such as Omskie Yastreby, Izhevsk Izhstal Ustinov, and Novokuznetsk Metallurg before winding up with Omsk Avangard of the KHL for three seasons. While there, he represented the Russian Olympic Committee in the Olympics in 2022, winning a silver medal. He would play two more seasons with SKA St. Petersburg before finally making his way to the NHL prior to the 2025-26 season. He scored 68 goals and added 84 assists in 216 KHL games over five seasons.

Gritsyuk is represented by agent Shumi Babaev of the Shumi Agency. According to PuckPedia, he has 4 other NHL clients aside from Gritsyuk, with the most notable ones being Penguins winger Yegor Chinakhov and Avalanche center (and former Devils draft selection) Zakhar Bardakov among them.

What has Gritsyuk done as a Devil?

Gritsyuk has only played one season in New Jersey, but its safe to say he’s made a good first impression and he’s someone Devils fans want to see more of moving forward.

Gritsyuk started out this season on the Devils fourth line, but with his responsible two-way play, high hockey IQ, and a sometimes lethal shot, he gradually earned more ice time. He eventually settled into a third line role for the majority of the season and earned ice time on the second power play unit.

After tallying a few assists over his first few NHL games, Gritsyuk scored his first career NHL goal in the Devils 4-1 win over the Wild back on October 22. And it was a snipe.

Unfortunately for Gritsyuk, he was like many Devils players this season who just went ice cold offensively in the middle of the campaign. He did rebound post-Olympic break with 4 goals and 4 assists before a shoulder injury ended his season. All in all, he finished his rookie campaign with 13 goals and 18 assists in 66 games. His 31 points placed him 13th among all rookies, and while he won’t win the Calder Trophy, he may wind up earning a few down ballot votes as recognition for the campaign he had.

Now that the season is in the rear-view mirror though and looking back on it, I think there’s a lot to like when it comes to Gritsyuk’s game. He’s a much better defensive forward than I think anyone could’ve hoped for. He’s a good skater. He gets in there on the forecheck. And of course, he has one of the better shots on the team.

He also now has a season’s worth of NHL experience under his belt, which is key. We know what his floor is. He can carve out a role as a defensively responsible bottom six winger who can drive offense. But I think he’s versatile enough as a player where he could play anywhere in the lineup and not look out of place. He got some time with Jack Hughes post-Olympics and looked fine, but I could see him fitting in with Nico Hischier as his wingman as well. Chris alluded to this when he said Gritsyuk deserved a bigger role, and I think one could argue he was just as good as Timo Meier or Dawson Mercer were this past season, if not better.

Gritsyuk is also willing to fight everybody to protect Jack Hughes, which you love to see.

Gritsyuk’s ELC concluded at the end of this Devils season. He will have arbitration rights as a pending RFA, assuming the Devils qualify him (spoiler alert: they will). The Devils will maintain his NHL rights until he becomes eligible for UFA following the 2027-28 season.

What will Gritsyuk do going forward?

This is a difficult question to answer, as there are a lot of unknowns moving forward.

We don’t know if Sheldon Keefe will be back as the coach, nor do we know who Sunny Mehta is planning on keeping from the roster he inherited. We also don’t know how Mehta will value Gritsyuk, as we just have the one NHL season under his belt to go off of. And even assuming Gritsyuk is back, what will his role be? Will he be shoehorned into the Top Six? Will he continue his third line role alongside Cody Glass? Can he earn more time on the power play unit?

That said, I could see Gritsyuk being better in his second full NHL season now that he’s been around the league once. He’s now familiar with the speed at which the NHL game is played. He knows he’ll have to get stronger to get to those tougher areas of the ice more consistently. The defensive game is already there for him, but the next step for him as a goal scorer will be picking up on those little nuances and creating separation to get his shot off.

I don’t know what his ceiling will ultimately be as an NHL player, but I do think he has the potential to be a Top-Six caliber winger who scores 20-25 goals a season and contributes around 50 points.

Who are Gritsyuk’s comparables and what is his value?

My natural inclination was to compare Gritsyuk’s rookie NHL season to the rookie season of other players who played multiple seasons in Russia and debuted in their 20s. But I also don’t think you can really compare Gritsyuk to Kirill Kaprizov or Artemi Panarin. Both of them had significantly better rookie campaigns than Gritsyuk did, and both have stood the test of time as elite-level NHL wingers. I’d be thrilled if Gritsyuk was half the offensive force that they are.

The next player that came to mind was a former Devils draft pick out of Belarus that we should all be familiar with in Yegor Sharangovich. But it’s another imperfect comparison.

Yes, they do share some similarities as players. Sharangovich is a little taller but they have similar frames as players. They both possess what can be termed a lethal shot. And when their shot is going well, they can pump in goals as a reliable source of secondary offense.

But I view Gritsyuk as more of a complete two-way forward, despite Sharangovich regularly seeing time on a penalty killing unit. I also view Sharangovich as a player who almost has to be shooting well above expected to have positive value in your lineup. Calgary gave him 5 years and $5.75M after a 31 goal season where he shot over 17%, but he has struggled enough the last two years where that contract doesn’t look like the greatest investment after the fact.

Part of why I bring up Sharangovich as a potential comp though is the contract he signed in between that deal and the $2M AAV for 2 year deal he signed out of his ELC. As a 25 year old, he signed a $3.10M AAV deal for 2 years shortly after being traded to Calgary in 2023. Sharangovich would’ve been eligible for UFA at the end of that deal but Calgary moved to sign him to an extension after his career year and buy out five UFA years. I do think that $3.10M AAV is in line with Gritsyuk’s production at that age, and even accounting for the growing cap ceiling and inflation, it makes his AFP analytics projection of $3.55M for 2 years on a bridge seem reasonable.

I did struggle to come up with other comparables for Gritsyuk though, so I decided to reach out to Chris and see what he thought and he threw out a few interesting names. He noted that Gritsyuk had similar scoring rates to Alex Tuch and Adrian Kempe at the same age. Both of those players obviously had far more NHL experience through their age 25 season than Gritsyuk does, but they also both found another level and developed into top line scoring wingers. He also mentioned Jake DeBrusk, but that would be the opposite end of the spectrum as he’s never really proven to be anything more than a 20-ish goal, 40-ish point winger.

After tallying 52 points with the Golden Knights in 18-19. Tuch signed a long-term deal for $4.75M AAV over 7 years. That deal has proven to be an exceptional value as he has three 30+ goal seasons in Buffalo and is set up nicely to cash in as THE premier free agent of this year’s class on July 1.

Kempe is finishing up 4 year deal worth $5.5M AAV that he signed after his breakout season in 21-22 when he scored 35 goals with the Kings. He has since signed a new deal with the Kings to bypass free agency, extending for $10.63M AAV over the next 8 seasons.

DeBrusk signed a series of bridge deals with the Bruins, beginning with a 2-year, $3.68M AAV deal after a 35 point campaign in 2019-20. He followed that up with another 2-year deal, this time for $4M. DeBrusk cashed in on a long-term deal with the Vancouver Canucks when he hit free agency in 2024.

I’ve rattled off a bunch of names, but I don’t think there’s a perfect comp unfortunately. His fellow countrymen in Panarin and Kaprizov are simply better players, and just because guys like Tuch and Kempe have similar scoring rates doesn’t mean they’re similar players. But I did want to cover a wide base of guys with similar numbers and what they ultimately received.

What would I do with Gritsyuk and what do I think the Devils will do?

According to AFP analytics, Gritsyuk is projected for either a 2-year bridge deal worth $3.55M AAV or a 5-year longer-term deal worth $6.58M AAV.

On the surface, both of those projections might seem a little high given Gritsyuk’s lack of experience. But I’m also still operating of the mindset that yesterday’s prices should be today’s prices and that’s not the case. The cap is continuing to increase and contracts that might’ve been good 2 years ago might not be today. I can’t blame Gritsyuk for looking to cash in when athletes only get so many opportunities to do so. The proverbial pie is getting bigger and he wants his fair slice of it.

I’m not sure I love the idea of a long-term deal though given his relatively small track record. Especially at a time where the Devils simply don’t have a ton of salary cap flexibility. I’m not saying they should get rid of Gritsyuk but the cap is something to consider, especially if he doesn’t take those next steps in his development. And I think if I were Gritsyuk, I wouldn’t want to sign long-term yet if I think I have much more to give as a player.

I think the approach that might make the most sense for now is something similar to what the Flames did with Sharangovich. A bridge that locks in his AAV for the next two years, and if he has a good season in 2026-27, we can talk about a longer-term deal next summer when we have a better idea of who the player is.

We don’t know how Sunny Mehta will manage the salary cap, but I can’t imagine that he’s going to be on board with paying so many guys market rate like Fitzgerald did before him. Then again, given the aforementioned salary cap situation, Mehta might be content to get Gritsyuk locked in at as low an AAV as possible for the next two seasons while money is tight and worry about 2028 when it gets here. Especially if he has any grandeurs of completing the Hughes triforce next summer or trying to land another big fish on top of a potential Nico Hischier extension.

I do wonder if one potential option that makes sense for the Devils is to try to meet Gritsyuk somewhere in the middle with a 3 or 4 year deal in the $5.5M AAV range that buys out one year or two of his UFA years. The reason I bring that up is because we’re seeing more and more players sign shorter-term deals. Not only does it keep pressure on the team to put a winner around them, but it gives the player an opportunity to test the market again sooner at a time where the salary cap ceiling is exploding. Gritsyuk could sign a 4 year deal this summer and still be in a position to sign a long-term deal when he’s 29 and there’s a larger body of work and more proof of concept with him. Like I said, I don’t think it makes a ton of sense for Gritsyuk to want to max out on term right now.

With cap space at a premium though, I think the most likely move is a bridge. My contract prediction is 2 years at $3.5M AAV.

Recap: Pastrnak’s OT winner extends series

BUFFALO, NEW YORK - APRIL 28: David Pastrnak #88 of the Boston Bruins celebrates his game winning overtime goal against the Buffalo Sabres in Game Five of the First Round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at KeyBank Center on April 28, 2026 in Buffalo, New York. Boston won, 2-1. (Photo by Bill Wippert/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

After a pummeling on home ice in Game 4, Bruins fans headed into last night’s elimination game in Buffalo hoping for, if nothing else, some pride, some effort, and a team that would show up, rather than go out with a whimper.

They got that and more, as the Bruins recovered from an early one-goal deficit to beat Buffalo, 2-1, via a David Pastrnak breakaway goal midway through overtime.

The goal was Pastrnak’s second of the series and the second playoff OT goal of his career.

Jeremy Swayman was the reason the Bruins even had a kick at the can in OT, as he made 28 saves, including eight in the third period and four in OT, to earn the win.

Elias Lindholm scored the other goal for the B’s, a game-tying goal 9:24 into the second period.

This was a tightly played game throughout, a completely different showing from Game 4, as the Bruins still struggled with Buffalo’s forecheck at times but managed to not completely implode in their own zone.

Buffalo started the scoring 3:35 into the game, with Rasmus Dahlin finishing a beautiful Jason Zucker pass on the power play to make it 1-0 Sabres.

That would remain the score until 9:24 into the second period, when Lindholm collected a loose puck in the slot and beat Alex Lyon with the ol’ “turn and shoot” to make it a 1-1 game.

Swayman played a huge role in keeping the game tied through the rest of the second and third periods, making a number of big stop — including this doorstep save on Tage Thompson.

After the teams traded a couple of chances in OT, Pastrnak sent everyone home unhappy, beating Lyon with a great deke and giving the Bruins the win.

Pastrnak did an excellent job avoiding going offside, staying on by THISMUCH:

Screenshot of David Pastrnak’s skate hanging over the blue line as the puck enters the zone prior to his goal

Bruins win, 2-1!

Game notes

  • The lopsidedness of Game 4 was always a bit of an outlier, but the Bruins deserve a lot of credit for a bounce-back effort on Tuesday. It would have been relatively easy to let your standards slip after a deflating home loss, but the Bruins showed up.
  • We’ve been saying “I’m not sure how sustainable this is” all season, but tonight’s game followed a season-long formula for the Bruins: take your chances when they come and hope Swayman can come up big when called upon. This wasn’t a “Bruins have no business being in it, Swayman stole the game” night, but he made some huge saves to both keep it a one-goal game and to keep the game tied down the stretch.
  • Looking at the screenshot above, you can see that the linesman is about 15 feet behind that play, so I give him credit for calling that onside live. I’m not sure how you make that judgment at full speed. Very fast eyeballs.
  • Marat Khusnutdinov, who had a very solid game overall, played a huge role in Pastrnak’s OT winner. His decision to attack Peyton Krebs as he crossed the blue line not only caused the turnover that led to the goal, but prevented what looked like it would have been a hashmarks-in breakaway for Buffalo, as you could see where Krebs was looking with the puck.
  • The Bruins briefly had a “did we win?” moment earlier in OT, when Sean Kuraly poked the puck out from Lyon and into the net. The whistle technically didn’t go until after the puck went in, but the referees ruled that the play was dead. It looks like it ended up being the right call, but it was close.
  • The giveaways stat is always kind of a toss-up, but the NHL’s scorekeepers credit the B’s with having one fewer giveaway than Buffalo (21 vs. 22). The B’s also outhit the Sabres 43-27 and won the face-off battle handily, 60%-40%.
  • The Bruins came up empty on the power play again tonight, going 0-for-3. That included a pretty big opportunity five minutes into the third period, but all’s well that ends well, I guess.
  • Noah Ostlund, who has been great for Buffalo since entering the lineup, left the game and didn’t return after getting injured in a board battle with Casey Mittelstadt. Lindy Ruff wasn’t optimistic about his status after the game.
  • Sturm leaned heavily on Pavel Zacha and Pastrnak tonight, with the Czechs skating 24:19 and 25:15, respectively. Those totals were second and third highest among all skaters on the B’s, only behind Charlie McAvoy’s 26:24.

The NHL announced after the game that Friday’s Game 6 will begin at 7:30 at TD Garden.

Enjoy an extra day off between games!

‘Pinnacle of art and culture’: Europe’s media on nine-goal PSG-Bayern thriller

Champions League semi-final first leg was described as ‘pure madness’ and ‘football in its finest essence’

French media were in thrall to a victory hailed as a milestone performance, calling Paris Saint-Germain’s 100th win in the Champions League as “one of the finest” in the club’s history.

Bayern Munich will be hoping for a repeat of their goal bonanza when they host the holders in the semi-final return leg next Wednesday, with Tuesday’s 5-4 loss in Paris breaking the competition record for most goals in a last-four game.

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Game Preview: Pittsburgh Penguins @ Philadelphia Flyers, Round 1 Game 6, 4/28/2026

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - FEBRUARY 25: Tyson Foerster #71 of the Philadelphia Flyers battles for the puck along the boards against Erik Karlsson #65 of the Pittsburgh Penguins at the Wells Fargo Center on February 25, 2025 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Len Redkoles/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Who: Philadelphia Flyers (3-2) @ Pittsburgh Penguins (2-3) in Game 6 of the best of seven series

When: 7:30 p.m. ET

How to Watch: Locally broadcast on Sportsnet Pittsburgh and NBC Sports Philadelphia, nationally on TNT and truTV, streaming on HBO Max

Pens’ Path Ahead: The Penguins need to win tonight in order to extend the series to a winner-takes-all Game 7, which would take place Saturday in Pittsburgh at a time to be determined.

Opponent Track: The Flyers are looking to snap their losing streak after dropping two straight. The home team is still one win away from earning the chance to take on the Carolina Hurricanes in the second round.

Hidden Stat: Just 12 percent of NHL teams that have gone down 0-3 in a best-of-seven Stanley Cup playoff series have gone on to force a Game 6.

Getting to know the Flyers

Projected lines

FORWARDS

Travis Konecny – Christian Dvorak – Porter Martone

Denver Barkey – Trevor Zegras – Owen Tippett

Alex Bump – Noah Cates – Tyson Foerster

Luke Glendening – Sean Couturier – Garnet Hathaway

DEFENSEMEN

Travis Sanheim / Rasmus Ristolainen

Cam York / Jamie Drysdale

Nick Seeler / Emil Andrae

Goalies: Dan Vladar and Samuel Ersson

Potential scratches: Matvei Michkov (?), Oliver Bonk (?), Helge Grans, David Jiricek, Garrett Wilson, Nikita Grebenkin, Oscar Eklind, Noah Juulsen, Hunter McDonald, Jacob Gaucher, Carl Grundstrom, Aleksei Kolosov, Carson Bjarnason

Injured Reserve: Rodrigo Abols (fractured ankle), Nikita Grebenkin (upper body)

  • Defenseman Emil Andrae, who missed time after suffering an injury in Game 1, returned to the third pairing in Game 5 in place of Noah Juulsen.
  • The Flyers scratched Matvei Michkov ahead of Game 5 in favor of Alex Bump, who celebrated his return to the lineup by scoring one of Philadelphia’s two goals.
  • If Michkov draws back into the lineup tonight, it sounds like it won’t be in place of Tyson Foerster, who has been held without a point this series. Flyers head coach Rick Tocchet said Tuesday the Flyers would “try to stick with” Foerster.

 “It’s just not him; we’ve got some other guys there that we need a little bit more from,” Tocchet said Tuesday. “But it is tough, hitting the wall, to be able to play at that pace and all that sort of stuff, maybe he has hit the wall a little bit. But 24 hours or 36 hours off, reset your brain, all that stuff can do wonders for the guy.”

  • There could still be some changes coming to the lineup. Tocchet said the Flyers have been discussing potentially slotting 21-year-old Oliver Bonk, who has one game of regular-season experience at the NHL level, in for Game 6.
  • When asked if Pens’ ability to adjust to the Flyers’ defense in Games 4 and 5 had impacted his game plan going forward, Tocchet said his emphasis ahead of Game 6 would be not on changing his team’s structure but on encouraging players’ “determination” to get the puck.

“They’ve adjusted. I’ve got to give their staff and their players credit. But there’s some stuff there that we’re not doing, that we can expose them,” Tocchet said Tuesday about the Pens. “And I’m not going to get into that part, but there’s a lot of skating and wanting the puck. There’s got to be a little bit more want and determination, and you’ll get pucks.

“I don’t think, me personally, it’s X and O’s. I think it’s determination, on some of these players, to wanting that puck.”

And now for the Pens

Projected lines

FORWARDS

Rickard Rakell – Sidney Crosby – Bryan Rust

Egor Chinakhov – Tommy Novak – Evgeni Malkin

Elmer Soderblom – Ben Kindel – Anthony Mantha

Connor Dewar – Blake Lizotte – Noel Acciari

DEFENSEMEN

Parker Wotherspoon / Erik Karlsson

Sam Girard / Kris Letang

Ryan Shea / Ilya Solovyov

Goalies: Arturs Silovs and Stuart Skinner

Potential Scratches: Connor Clifton, Justin Brazeau, Kevin Hayes, Ryan Graves, Jack St. Ivany, Sergei Murashov

IR: Filip Hallander, Caleb Jones (season-ending shoulder surgery)

  • The Penguins canceled practice Tuesday, so the first look at any changes to the lineup will come before tonight’s game.
  • Elmer Soderblom’s goal on Monday seems like a good indication he’ll be back in the lineup for Game 6, which could mean Justin Brazeau will remain out.
  • Another positive in Game 5 was the Penguins’ fourth line. Goalscorer Connor Dewar, when asked Monday whether he felt the momentum in the series had shifted, answered: “We’re just fighting to stay together. Every win is a few more days together, so that’s the way I’m thinking about it.”
  • From Pens PR: Arturs Silovs is the first Penguins goaltender since Frank Pietrangelo in 1991 to win his first two playoff starts while facing elimination both times.
  • Kris Letang also joined Silovs in history as the first defenseman since 1971 to score back-to-back Stanley Cup playoff game winners when his team was facing elimination, per Pens PR.

Flailing Astros envision alternate ending: 'There's a hundred wins in this room'

BALTIMORE — Sometimes, an incomplete grade is just that.

Red ink can fill the margins, pointing out the pupil’s many failings, yet it’s possible to understand that this is a rough draft and not, hopefully, the final product.

That concept has been increasingly harder to grasp across Major League Baseball in the past 72 hours.

Alex Cora is out in Boston, the Red Sox deeming a 10-17 start cracking open a window to fire their highly respected manager, who indeed needed less than 24 hours to find another job offer.

That came from Philadelphia, as club president Dave Dombrowski flirted with Cora even as his own manager, Rob Thomson, skippered the club Sunday in Atlanta. Nothing personal, Thomson said after he, too, was fired. Just an underachieving $283 million club needing a scapegoat.

That brings us to Houston, where a once-perennial playoff club has sputtered to an 11-19 start, with both a manager, Joe Espada, and a general manager, Dana Brown, working without contracts this season.

It is natural to wonder if the Astros will be the next to issue a pink slip to their manager. Yet as Brown noted to USA TODAY Sports: It is very early.

And there is an alternate reality the Astros imagine themselves experiencing this season.

“I know there’s a lot of talent in this room. There’s a hundred wins in this clubhouse right now,” says first baseman Christian Walker.

Crazy? Maybe.

Yet as the managerial death watch spreads from coast to coast, assigning culpability to the Astros’ last-place showing illustrates how complicated that can be.

An MVP, and a roster on the IL

Cora and Thomson’s dismissals hit home particularly for Espada, who counts both of them as good friends. Cora is a fellow Puerto Rican, and Espada was on the New York Yankees staff with Thomson from 2015-2017.

“Just good people,” he says.

Both Cora and Thomson did not deal with the litany of injuries Espada’s faced: Fifteen Astros are on the injured list. Espada’s pregame comments as the Astros began a six-game road trip included the detail that closer Josh Hader faced shortstop Jeremy Peña in live batting practice back in Houston.

Certainly, those guys would help the squad right now.

So, too, would starting pitchers Hunter Brown and, perhaps, Tatsuya Imai, who made a rehab start in Class AAA and should return soon, hopefully for the Astros as sound of mind as body. Brown, who finished third in AL Cy Young voting last year, could return by June as he recovers from a right shoulder strain.

Yet the Astros do have the planet’s greatest hitter at the moment on their side.

Yordan Alvarez has rebounded from an injury-plagued season with what might prove to be his greatest one yet, among the league leaders in homers (11) and RBI (26), and leading the majors in OPS (1.199). Carlos Correa – Astros version 2.0 – is showing well thus far and Walker has continued a resurgence that began in the second half of 2025, with seven homers and a .299 average.

Yet the lineup hollows out in the bottom half. On Tuesday, April 28, the Astros gave Kai-Wei Teng the first start of his career, and he did well to complete three innings with just two runs given up.

The guys in the infirmary are undoubtedly missed.

“That’s one of the hardest parts of going on the IL, whether you’re the guy getting hurt or you’re trying to hold the ship steady until these guys come back – it’s adversity,” says Walker. “I’ve had enough time on the IL in my career to know you feel bad. Whether out of your control or in your control.

“You feel like there’s something more you could do to help the team. And it’s not true – injuries are a part of what we do.”

Little help on the farm

In a perfect world, the Astros would have the depth to backfill those holes. Yet it’s been a long time since the club had so many good players in its system, it didn’t know what to do with them: Talents like Teoscar Hernández, Ramon Laureano, J.D. Davis and Joe Musgrove went on to become starters, or stars, somewhere else.

But that was more than one front-office regime ago. Mike Elias, the club’s scouting director who laid the groundwork for their talent overload in their glory years is now the GM in Baltimore.

Eight consecutive playoff appearances means an awful lot of drafting at the back of the first round, with a diminished bonus pool. Yet after Elias’s 2018 departure and the 2020 firing of former GM Jeff Luhnow as the club’s sign-stealing scandal was revealed, the groups that followed have not produced talent like their peers.

From 2019 through 2024, Astros drafts yielded 20 major leaguers – but 11 of them have produced negative Wins Above Replacement. Brown, the ace currently on the IL, has produced a 10.5 WAR, the only one higher than a 1.2 WAR.

The other 19 have combined for -0.4 WAR.

That pales in comparison to clubs like the Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Yankees, who like the Astros were perennial playoff contenders (the Yankees missed in 2023).

The Dodgers produced 17 major leaguers, three fewer than Houston, but seven are at least one win above replacement and they’ve totaled 19.5 WAR. Homegrown arms like Emmet Sheehan and Justin Wrobleski have fortified a rotation that’s also benefited from their huge spending on aces like Yoshinobu Yamamoto.

As for the Yankees? There are 17 major leaguers in their recent draftees totaling 36.8 WAR, including a burgeoning ace, Cam Schlittler, drafted in the seventh round and slugger Ben Rice, picked in the 12th round in 2021.

Not that the story’s been totally written for all those Astros draftees.

Houston Astros manager Joe Espada looks out at the field before the start of a game against the Baltimore Orioles at Camden Yards on April 28, 2026.

'Just gotta weather the storm'

Brice Matthews, an area kid from Humble, Texas, was picked 28th overall out of Nebraska in 2023. He had a 13-game cameo in 2025, but now, with center fielder Jake Myers ailing, has been getting regular starts in center and left. He brought six hits in 44 at-bats – a .136 average, a .224 OBP – into Tuesday’s series opener at Baltimore.

He proceeded to open eyes, tallying a career-best three hits and lashing a 97-mph Shane Baz fastball 387 feet to the opposite field for a home run that halved the Astros’ deficit.

They’d eventually lose, 5-3, but modest steps forward can occasionally lead to better days.

“This was something I always thought I could do. It wasn’t a surprise for me,” says Matthews. “Honestly, I feel like I could do it each and every night.

“But it’s baseball. It’s not going to go your way each and every night. You just have to keep competing.”

Which is what Espada and Co. will do. His first year as manager started disastrously, with a 12-24 record in his first 36 games. That club eventually figured it out, buoyed by the subtraction of slumping slugger Jose Abreu in June, and once again won the AL West.

This time around, the division is better. The pitching is a little thinner. Stalwart Jose Altuve turns 36 in a week. The standings are what they are.

“Just quantifying people’s worth and all that on just a record can be tough sometimes,” says Walker. “There’s a lot that goes into it. You ask the players, it’s on us. You ask a coach, they feel like they need to be doing better in some ways to prepare us.

“Everybody wants to be accountable. I think the reality is, fan bases get impatient and feeling like you’re going out and losing every night can be hard to swallow.

“The players feel like, it’s just a matter of time. It’s coming. We just gotta weather the storm. But I guess the optics of that can be tricky sometimes.”

A couple years ago, the tincture of time proved restorative and the Astros eventually sprayed champagne. Cora and Thomson didn’t get that luxury, not this year.

What the Astros do have is 132 games, and an apparent aversion to panic.

“I do wish, sometimes, everybody seeing the game of baseball could take the long approach,” says Walker. “We play 162 games for a reason.

“And I think that matters.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Astros remain optimistic despite sitting last in the AL West

Islanders & NHL Playoff News: Bridgeport memories

Quarter century. | CT Post via Getty Images

In the NHL playoffs Tuesday night, the two trailing teams won to extend their series, while Minnesota broke the 2-2 tie to pull ahead of Dallas, 3-2. But before that, a bit of Islanders fodder…

Islanders News

  • In the latest Islanders Anxiety, Dan and Mike talk about the Bridgeport finale, some extra season thoughts, upcoming schedule and more. [LHH]
  • They also reference this, a must-read sign-off from Michael Fornabaio, who covered so much Sound Tigers history and kept us entertained the whole time. Really missed his coverage the last several seasons. You can’t properly cover minor pro hockey without a Slap Shot sense of humor, and he had that in spades. [MFornabaio]
  • Two of the bigger holes this past season — the season-ending injuries to Kyle Palmieri and Alex Romanov — will theoretically fill themselves with their returns. But coming back from major injuries is not always a straight line. [Post]
  • Simon Holmstrom, Emil Heineman and Mat Barzal will represent their countries at the World Championship. [THN]
  • The Islanders will host the next All-Star Game, and of course Gary Bettman says travel to the arena and parking is improving and great. [Newsday]

NHL Playoffs

  • The Bruins extend their series in Buffalo with a dramatic OT win on a David Pastrnak breakaway where he just barely stayed(?) on side. [NHL]
  • The Oilers woke up and dominated the Ducks, extending that series at 3-2. [NHL]
  • And Kirill Kaprizov picked up three points as the Wild pushed the Stars to the brink in Dallas. [NHL]
  • Remembering John Garrett, goalie, good guy and longtime Canucks announcer. [Sportsnet]
  • With mouth-breathing attention seekers like Paul Bissonnette saying Brady Tkachuk is as good as gone this summer, rumors will persist until the Senators captain’s next extension. [Sportsnet]
  • Bruce Cassidy appeared on TNT to reflect on getting fired by Vegas with eight games left. [Sportsnet]

Tonight, someone will take a 3-2 lead in the Lightning-Canadiens series, while the Penguins will look to make the Flyers reaaaly uncomfortable in their effort to erase the 0-3 deficit.

Pens Points: Can they bring it back home?

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - APRIL 22: Travis Konecny #a11 of the Philadelphia Flyers and Sidney Crosby #87 of the Pittsburgh Penguins exchange words after their match in Game Three of the First Round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Xfinity Mobile Arena on April 22, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Flyers defeated the Penguins 5-2. (Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Here are your Pens Points for this Wednesday morning…

Are you hyped for Game 6 tonight? How’s this for a stat on the Penguins’ resilience? The Penguins have already beaten the odds by forcing a Game 6 after trailing the Flyers 3-0. Eighty-seven percent of NHL teams in that position never make it that far. While Pittsburgh still faces a steep climb, the pressure has shifted to Philadelphia as the Penguins try to become just the fifth team in league history to complete a comeback from a 0-3 deficit. [PensBurgh]

The Penguins’ power play remains unfinished and inconsistent, with coaches and players still trying to build chemistry and improve execution despite having a strong group of talent on the ice. [Trib Live]

Former Penguins forward Dominik Uher (there’s a ‘Remember a guy.’) has signed a two-year contract with Lowen Frankfurt of Germany’s Deutsche Eishockey Liga. [Trib Live]

Unlike the Penguins’ chaotic 2012 comeback attempt against the Flyers, this year’s team needs sharper starts and early leads to have a real chance of completing the monumental feat. [Trib Live]

Veterans Kris Letang and Sidney Crosby have recently helped drive Pittsburgh’s push, with Letang scoring consecutive game-winning goals (even if one was a stroke of luck) and Crosby contributing key offense and late-game leadership. [Penguins]

Pittsburgh’s fourth line of Connor Dewar, Blake Lizotte, and Noel Acciari has rediscovered its chemistry after injuries disrupted the trio late in the season. [Penguins]

News and notes from around the NHL…

Edmonton Oilers captain Connor McDavid, San Jose Sharks forward Macklin Celebrini, and Tampa Bay Lightning forward Nikita Kucherov have been named the finalists for the 2025-26 Ted Lindsay Award. [Sportsnet]

Fans in attendance at Buffalo’s KeyBank Center joined together to finish the pregame rendition of “O Canada” before Game 5 on Tuesday night after anthem singer Cami Clune’s microphone cut out. [NHL]

There is still no definitive timetable for Tampa Bay Lightning captain Victor Hedman’s return to the lineup after he left the team March 25 for personal reasons. However, all signs indicate that the 35-year-old is making steady progress toward that eventual return. [NHL]