PHOENIX — Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Quinn Priester expects to miss at least the first month of the season as he recovers from a nerve issue.
Priester had been dealing with an apparent wrist problem for much of the spring. Brewers manager Pat Murphy told reporters that Priester received a diagnosis indicating it was at least partially related to thoracic outlet syndrome.
The right-hander discussed with MLB.com and other reporters on Friday a potential timeline for his return.
“I think in my head late April or May, but I certainly think I’m on the optimistic side — as a player, I want to be back as quick as possible,” Priester said. “Ultimately I’ll trust whatever the scheduling is there to make sure we do it right, so then we don’t run into anything else trying to rush it back.”
Priester, 25, said he was relieved that he finally knew exactly what was bothering him.
“I feel like we’ve kind of been dancing around what some of these issues were,” he said. “Just to have a clear path forward I think is really good.”
Priester had a breakthrough season last year after the Brewers acquired him from the Boston Red Sox in early April. He went 13-3 with a 3.32 ERA in 29 appearances, including 24 starts. Priester won 12 straight decisions at one point, and the Brewers won 19 straight games (16 starts and three appearances following an opener) in which he pitched.
He couldn’t get out of the first inning of a Game 3 NL Division Series loss to the Chicago Cubs but pitched four scoreless innings against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the NL Championship Series.
Now he will have to wait a while before getting back in a game again.
“It’s a long season,” Priester said. “It’s a marathon. So get back as fast as possible –- but as smart as possible.”
Fletcher pitcher Malachi Witherspoon throws during a game with University, Tuesday, May 10, 2022. University Baseball12
While the prep pitchers have dealt with injury, the Detroit Tigers continue to do well in the college ranks. Outside of Jackson Jobe, most of their pitching success on the farm has come from finding undervalued college arms like Troy Melton, Jake Miller, Andrew Sears, Lucas Elissalt, and Jaden Hamm. Other than Melton, the group hasn’t quite broken through at the major league level yet, and the Tigers dealt away a pair of solid young prospects in Josh Randall and Micah Ashman, both college draft picks, in trades last July. For the first time in Scott Harris’ tenure running the club, the Tigers took a college pitcher in the top two rounds last summer when they selected Oklahoma right-hander Malachi Witherspoon with the 62nd overall pick. We’re excited to see his pro debut this spring.
Witherspoon and his twin brother Kyson were both notable prep pitchers and they went to Oklahoma together, eventually heading up the Sooners rotation in their junior seasons. Kyson was the more successful of the two, but Malachi has huge stuff and simply hasn’t been able to refine his command enough. He spent his junior year striking out plenty of batters when he was on, and falling behind too often and giving up walks and homers when he wasn’t. It was a disappointing junior season with an ERA over 5.00 for him, and his draft stock slipped out of the top rounds as a result. The Tigers were apparently confident they could make him a much more consistent strike thrower, and drafted him in the late second round last summer. They paid him full slot value at $1,448,700, so it wasn’t as though they got a discount either. We’ll see if this minor gamble pays off.
The powerfully built, 6’3” right-hander certainly has the stuff to be great. Witherspoon has routinely hit 98-100 mph while sitting comfortably in the 95-96 mph range as a starter. The fourseamer has good riding action with a little cut, and the Tigers, as we mentioned in Michael Massey’s scouting report, seem to be hunting for that shape a bit these days. Tarik Skubal himself is a prime example of a pitcher who can really jam opposing handed hitters with a riding fastball that looks like it should tail back into the strike zone, but never quite does. Thrown inside to right-handers, Witherspoon’s heater does feature a bit more late tailing action that ties hitters up and generates a good whiff rate. The problem remains commanding it, and this has been Witherspoon’s issue since the Jacksonville, Florda native’s days in high school, when his raw stuff was already getting him some notoriety.
Witherspoon backs up the gas with a plus slider in the upper 80’s with a traditional shape. He’ll also throw a cutterish version around 90 mph, and can snap the slider off into more of a sharp, downward diving version for whiffs when he wants it. He also has a good 12-6 power curveball in the lower 80’s. He throws with a really sound delivery and a pretty standard three-quarters look, but doesn’t seem built to turn over circle changeups or sinkers very well. He might be a splitter candidate, or perhaps the beneficiary of seam-shifted changeup like Skubal’s, because otherwise his changeup is well behind his main offerings and shows no signs of developing into a major league caliber pitch.
The big issue here is command, and there isn’t really an obvious flaw in his delivery to pin it on. Oklahoma has a pretty good pitching program, and couldn’t really crack the case in two seasons of working with him after Witherspoon transferred there after a freshman season at the JUCO level. His stride direction can sometimes get a bit out of whack, but otherwise it just seems like rhythm and timing issues that may be tricky to correct. He shows pretty good balance and a nice clean arm path. He gets solid extension and resists well with his lead leg to help generate velo without excessive upper body effort. From the wind-up he does raise his arms up head high and has a pretty high leg kick as well. Perhaps just trimming those moves down a little could make the whole delivery a little more consistent in terms of timing.
If the command doesn’t improve significantly, it may be that Witherspoon ultimately has to simplify his pitch mix and work in relief. So there’s certainly some real relief risk despite his durability and pretty ferocious pitch mix. However, the upside here is definitely as a frontline major league starting pitcher. If he’d thrown more strikes last year the stuff alone would’ve made him an easy first round pick in the draft. If he figures it out he’ll be a top 100 prospect by season’s end.
All his issues have been present for a while and he had plenty of eyes on him in his junior year, so the Tigers must have a plan to help him spot the fastball and avoid the occasional bouts of spiked sliders that plagued his junior year. If they can get him sorted, this is going to look like a steal and Witherspoon could move very quickly toward the major leagues. Presumably he’ll be starting for West Michigan this season as an advanced college starter. If things come together he’ll be in the upper minors by year’s end and could be ready for a debut sometime in 2027.
LAKELAND, FL - FEBRUARY 17: Tarik Skubal #29 of the Detroit Tigers poses for a photo during the Detroit Tigers photo day at Publix Field at Joker Marchant Stadium on Tuesday, February 17, 2026 in Lakeland, Florida. (Photo by Mike Carlson/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
When a team — say, the Detroit Tigers — has, arguably, one of the best pitchers on the planet — maybe someone like Tarik Skubal — and their control of that pitcher is in its last season, it would make sense to seize the moment and try to win it all.
Further, let’s posit that said team is coming off back-to-back playoff appearances, which indicates some organizational momentum. The only reasonable choice, then, would be to move heaven and earth and build around that player for one last run.
For most of the offseason, Tigers president of baseball operations Scott Harris seemed relatively tame as the team was inactive in the free-agent market while rumors flew that the Tigers might be open to trading Skubal. And then Harris began building seriously for 2026 — as in signing Framber Valdez to a three-year, $115 million contract and bringing back fan favorite Justin Verlander, along with a series of other moves designed to fortify the Tigers as they push their chips to the center of the table.
The question now is whether they did enough.
2025 Record: 87-75 (1st in the AL Central)
Projected FanGraphs 2026 record: 86-76 (1st in the AL Central)
What did they do during the offseason? Well, the Tigers went to work this winter despite a slow start. Besides the aforementioned additions, they extended manager A.J. Hinch, brought back Jack Flaherty (well, he exercised his player option) and Gleyber Torres (accepted a qualifying offer), and made some interesting signings, such as relievers Kyle Finnegan and Kenley Jansen, plus KBO sensation Drew Anderson.
Other minor moves included trading righty Chase Lee for lefty Johan Simon and flipping outfielder Justyn Henry-Malloy for cash.
So, how good are the 2026 Tigers? Well, despite the fact that they did their best to irritate the best and most consistent pitcher in the league with lowball offers, they can actually compete.
Skubal, winner of the last two AL Cy Young awards, remains with the team despite the record gap in arbitration negotiations and the endless trade rumors, so the Tigers begin with a significant advantage. Plus, they’ve added Valdez to an already solid rotation, which also projects to have Flaherty (3.85 FIP last year), Casey Mize (3.87 ERA), and Verlander. Anderson is around in case there’s an injury, and he just put up a 2.25 ERA in 171.2 innings in Korea with 245 punchouts.
Detroit will miss Reese Olson in 2026 after he underwent right shoulder labral repair surgery, but waiting on the farm will be Troy Melton, Keider Montero, and Sawyer Gipson-Long; plus, Jackson Jobe is expected to return from Tommy John surgery in the second half of the season.
Long story short, the Tigers have a deep rotation.
As for the bullpen? The Tigers are mostly solid on this front. They have Jansen, Finnegan, Will Vest, Anderson, Tyler Holton, Brenan Hanifee, Brant Hurter, and Beau Brieske. That group should hold its own.
While there were some clear upgrades acquired in the pitching department, the same can’t be said about the offense. This is largely the same group that ranked 12th last year with a 103 wRC+, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing.
Detroit had nine guys with above-average offensive performance in 2025 in a minimum of 150 plate appearances: Jahmai Jones (159 wRC+), Riley Greene (121), Spencer Torkelson (118), Kerry Carpenter (115), Zach McKinstry (114), Torres (113), Dillon Dingler (109), and Colt Keith (109).
Of course, they also have the jewel of the crown: shortstop prospect Kevin McGonigle, who posted a 182 wRC+ last year in the minors and is at 172 in spring training play. He should be able to break camp with the team and projects as a future star.
The Tigers’ offense is full of steady, above-average guys but lacks one true, difference-making talent. Greene is close, but he is not a superstar. If McGonigle develops as expected, he could fill that void and give Detroit a true star in the position player department.
As things stand right now, the Tigers will fight with the Guardians and Royals for the AL Central and a place in the postseason. If they consider themselves out of it, there is a chance they ultimately flip Skubal for prospects ahead of the deadline, but they should be good enough to make one last run with their ace before he hits free agency.
More Pinstripe Alley MLB team season previews can be found here.
CLEARWATER, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 26: Dylan Moore #25 of the Philadelphia Phillies throws to first during the first inning of a spring training game against the Washington Nationals at BayCare Ballpark on February 26, 2026 in Clearwater, Florida. (Photo by Mark Taylor/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The final two weeks of camp are way more important than the first two but the heat is on between Dylan Moore and Bryan De La Cruz for the final spot on the 26-man roster.
The 13th position player may not play much at all with how Rob Thomson has the roles aligned. Edmundo Sosa acts as the backup infielder who might platoon with Bryson Stott. Otto Kemp is probably platooning in left field with Brandon Marsh and is the primary fourth outfielder. Rafael Marchán will have the hardest job in baseball, being the backup catcher to JT Realmuto.
So there isn’t much wiggle room for the final position player. The Phillies carried Kody Clemens for the first three weeks of 2025 and appeared in seven games with just six plate appearances. Things could always change injuries occur of course.
A good way to measure a hitter’s performance in spring training is by looking at their average exit velocity and launch angle. The limited sample size against questionable competition doesn’t allow for massive conclusions, but it can at least tell you who’s seeing the ball well. Raw results can also get weird in a sample size this short.
Bryan De La Cruz has crushed the ball in camp with a 97 mph average exit velocity and 15 degree launch angle. He has made consistent hard contact even if there are a few too many strikeouts in there. The results have been there with a .478 slugging and batting average over .300.
Dylan Moore is not getting the same results but has hit the ball hard too with a 93.9 mph exit velocity and optimal launch angle. There have been less strikeouts but he hasn’t seen the ball drop too often.
With both having good springs, it will make for an interesting final two weeks to see who’s still hot.
Roster fit and path to least resistance probably favor Moore here. If the Phillies want Kemp to be the primary platoon partner for Brandon Marsh in left field, it would make more sense to send De La Cruz to AAA. Moore gives them more positional versatility with being able to play seven different positions.
Bowlan’s performance has been mixed through Grapefruit League games but there are two main takeaways. The first is that the fastball looks really tough to hit. He will throw it at the top of the strike zone but his delivery makes it hard for hitters to pick up while having good velocity.
This was the big reason the Phillies traded for him. In 2025 with the Royals, Bowlan’s four-seam fastball generated a whiff rate of 43.5% in a limited, but not super small sample size.
The other is that the way he pitches might leave for a bit of variance. His fastball is going to often miss high, which might be easier for hitters to take. He also might tend to miss high with his breaking balls which could cause some damage problems. Spencer Jones crushed a hanging slider from him on Tuesday.
It wouldn’t be correct to say he has terrible control because Bowlan can throw strikes but there could be a home run problem going from Kauffman to Citizens Bank Park.
JUPITER, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 26: Ethan Frey #95 of the Houston Astros at bat during a spring training game against the St. Louis Cardinals at Roger Dean Stadium on February 26, 2026 in Jupiter, Florida. (Photo by Rich Storry/Getty Images) | Getty Images
In a recent post by MLB Pipeline, they made predictions for every farm system heading into the 2026 season, and their outlook for the Houston Astros system was fairly bullish.
The Astros enter the 2026 season without a Top 100 prospect on Pipeline’s list for the third time in the last five years, but that doesn’t mean the system lacks talent.
Their bold prediction is that the Astros will have three Top 100 prospects by the end of the 2026 season. The three players they project to make the list are:
Kevin Alvarez – Alvarez was signed by the Houston Astros this past winter for $2 million, one of the largest international bonuses the organization has ever handed out. Just 17 years old, Alvarez was widely regarded as one of the top pure hitters in the 2025 international signing class. A left-handed hitter with an advanced approach at the plate, he projects for above-average power and stands out as a well-rounded athlete with a strong arm and solid defensive instincts. Alvarez backed up the hype in his first professional season, hitting .300 with 12 doubles, three triples, two home runs, 33 RBIs, and 11 stolen bases over 47 games.
Ethan Frey – Frey was selected by the Houston Astros in the third round of the 2025 MLB Draft, with the team going over slot to secure his signing. The former LSU Tigers baseball standout broke out during his junior season, batting .331 with 15 doubles, 13 home runs, and 50 RBIs over 62 games. Standing 6’6”, Frey combines impressive size with surprising athleticism and speed. He offers above-average raw power and currently has the tools to handle center field. The 21-year-old impressed in his professional debut, hitting .330 with five doubles, three home runs, and 17 RBIs while drawing 20 walks against 25 strikeouts.
Xavier Neyens – Neyens was selected by the Houston Astros in the first round of the 2025 MLB Draft and signed for $4.12 million, the organization’s largest signing bonus since Alex Bregman received $5.9 million in 2015. A left-handed hitter out of Mount Vernon High School in Washington, Neyens possesses some of the most impressive raw power in the 2025 draft class. Standing 6’4″ and weighing 210 pounds, Neyens projects as a potential middle-of-the-order bat thanks to his powerful swing and advanced hitting ability.
If these three prospects take the steps forward that MLB Pipeline predicts, the Houston Astros farm system could quickly gain more national attention. While the system may lack a current Top 100 prospect, the talent is there for a few players to break out in 2026. A strong season from this group could reshape the perception of the Astros’ pipeline.
The overwhelming majority of those who voted in the survey said the Cubs will win at least 90 games:
Eighty-five percent of you said the Cubs will win between 90 and 99 games, with the plurality (47 percent) saying the sweet spot is between 90 and 94.
The Cubs, as you know, won 92 games last year — and that was after a 59-39 start. That’s a winning percentage of .602. If the Cubs had continued to play at that percentage the rest of 2025, they’d have won 98 games. Personally, I think the 2026 Cubs are a better team than last year’s and I was in the “95 to 99” group.
Of course, there are a lot of variables here — injuries, unexpected good or bad years, luck, etc.
But the Cubs, in my view, go into this year as the clear favorites to win the NL Central.
Here are the two national questions asked in this week’s survey:
I think there should be some concern, especially after Atlanta outfielder Jurickson Profar tested positive for the second time and is facing a suspension for all of 2026. I think it’s in between “not at all” and “it’s a major problem.”
I would agree with this vote. Profar’s first suspension cost him half of last year, now he’s likely going to miss all of this year (he’s appealed, but it’s unclear whether he can do that under MLB’s Joint Drug Agreement with the MLBPA).
Bristol City equalise in sixth minute of added time at Boro
In-form Southampton ended Coventry’s six-match winning run with a 2-1 victory at the CBS Arena. Flynn Downes pounced on a rebound to open the scoring shortly after half-time before Kuryu Matsuki doubled Southampton’s lead with five minutes remaining.
Victor Torp’s stoppage-time penalty gave the leaders hope but they fell to their second home defeat of the season and Southampton extended their unbeaten run in all competitions to 12.
SAN DIEGO, CA - SEPTEMBER 09: Zack Littell #52 of the Cincinnati Reds pitches during the game between the Cincinnati Reds and the San Diego Padres at Petco Park on Tuesday, September 9, 2025 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Ryan Levy/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
After signing with the club a few days ago, Zack Littell made his first start of the spring last night. His three innings of work gave Nats fans a taste of what they should expect from him. There was some hard contact, but he pounded the zone, was efficient and fired three innings of one run ball.
Three solid innings for Littell. Some loud contact in the first but did a nice job avoiding the barrel after that. Velo was down a tick but given the fact this is his first start of the spring, that is not a surprise
For a guy who signed just a few days ago, Littell looked sharp. His velocity was down by about a tick, but that is not very surprising to me. He signed late and still needs time to build up.
Littell is confident that his velocity will be in a good spot by the time the season is under way. He said, “As I continue to get everything in sync, the timing gets better, the body continues to organize itself better, everything should continue to get sharper”. The way he talked about his mechanics and getting his body aligned is very interesting to me. It shows the importance of mechanics and the way a pitcher moves.
From talking to him, it is clear that Littell is very hard on himself. Despite using his splitter effectively last night, he was not happy with his signature pitch. He actually thought the splitter was his worst pitch last night. Littell thought his command of the pitch was solid, but he did not love the movement profile of his splitter.
That splitter is a big part of why Littell transformed from a middling reliever to a solid middle of the rotation starter. The Rays had him bump up the usage of the pitch, and it has become his best offering. He does a great job killing spin and getting that downward tumble.
Zack Littell, 30, agrees to a deal with the Nats
Landing in TB in 2024 was a turning point. They increased his Splitter usage, while decreasing his FF usage. The mix change increased the effectiveness of his FF, allowing him to more easily finish batters with the FF (Highest%… pic.twitter.com/5V0p5gduLN
— Baseball Unstitched (@BaseUnstitched) March 8, 2026
For his part, Blake Butera thought Littell “threw the ball well”. Butera loved how much his right hander was pounding the zone and getting ahead of hitters. After all, those are the attributes that make Littell such a solid pitcher. However, Butera knows that Littell’s mind-set, calling him “A perfectionist who expects really good stuff out of himself”.
While Littell may not have been satisfied, I think this was a good first start. He got through three innings and threw 15 more pitches in the bullpen to continue his ramp up. As we get closer to the season, I would also expect his stuff to keep ticking up. It can be tough to sign late, but I think Littell came just in time to have at least a somewhat normal spring.
Honestly, Littell is an optimized version of what the Nats want in their pitchers. He can throw any pitch in any count and has a deep arsenal. Last year, Littell’s two most used pitches were his slider and splitter. That matches well with the Nats new pitching approach.
Littell actually got his two strikeouts on those offerings. He struck out the first batter he faced by freezing him on a slider. There is actually a cool video I found from behind home plate of that pitch.
By the deadline, Littell may be trade bait, but he should stabilize the rotation while he is around. He is a no-nonsense righty who pounds the zone with a variety of different pitches. Littell got through three innings on just 39 pitches, which is something I love. Being efficient and getting deep into games is something he excels at despite being a reliever only a couple years ago.
Of his 39 pitches, 28 were strikes. He did not walk anybody and only got into one three ball count. Littell may give up some extra base hits, but he will give the Nats length while keeping them in the game. That is exactly what this team needs and why I think he is a great signing for the Nats.
Team Italy has been the surprise of the World Baseball Classic.
The Italians upset Team USA in pool play, putting the Americans' chance of advancement at risk before Italy's own rout of Mexico helped keep Team USA alive on a tiebreaker.
The Italians are one of the three classic teams remaining unbeaten. That might end, however, against a Puerto Rican team that has the potential to shut them down.
Puerto Rico vs Italy best bet: Puerto Rico -1.5 (+140 at DraftKings)
Italy has not scored fewer than seven runs in its four WBC games. Puerto Rico has allowed a total of six in its four games. Team P.R. has a WBC-low 1.22 ERA so far.
The Puerto Ricans are starting 10-year MLB veteran Seth Lugo, who is 1-0 in the WBC and 1-0 in two pre-WBC spring games with a strikeout per inning. He should help keep a Team Italy order that has hit 12 home runs in check.
Puerto Rico has been to the knockout round of all six WBCs. Italy is making its first trip.
Team Puerto Rico has not had a WBC game with more than seven total runs scored and is averaging a run total of 5.5 in its games. Including two MLB exhibition games against the Twins and Red Sox, Puerto Rico has averaged 6.5 runs per game in six games.
Team Italy has been tearing it up, but has been slowed somewhat when facing pitchers with MLB experience. They strike out 9.75 times per 9 innings compared to 6.75 and score nearly a full earned run less, with five and a half fewer hits.
Lugo had four innings of three-hit ball in the WBC opener against Colombia. He's not a big strikeout pitcher, but he should be able to hit five against an Italian team making its first appearance in the knockout stage.
Heliot Ramos star player prop
Heliot Ramos best bet: Anytime home run (+550 at DraftKings)
Heliot Ramos has 43 home runs over the last two seasons. He had a 1.836 OPS in six pre-WBC spring games but has struggled in the classic so far.
Facing Italian starter Sam Aldegheri, who allowed 2.0 home runs per nine innings for the Angels last year, should help light a fire.
Puerto Rico vs Italy opening odds
Moneyline: Puerto Rico -110 | Italy -115
Run line: Puerto Rico -1.5 (+140) | Italy +1.5 (-175)
Over/Under: Over 8.5 (-110) | Under 8.5 (-110)
How to watch Puerto Rico vs Italy and game info
Location
Daikin Park, Houston, TX
Date
Saturday, March 14, 2026
First pitch
3:00 p.m. ET
TV
FS1
Puerto Rico starting pitcher
Seth Lugo
Italy starting pitcher
Samuel Aldegheri
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.
HOUSTON, TEXAS - MARCH 13: Aaron Judge #99 of the United States in action during the 2026 World Baseball Classic Quarterfinals game between the United States and Canada at Daikin Park on March 13, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Kenneth Richmond/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Diamondbacks News
Burnes Takes Next Step in Recovery Arizona’s ace starter made 15 throws in the bullpen yesterday, with results being promising. Burnes could return to the mound for the team around the break. if things continue to go well.
Gabriel Moreno Scratched, Undergoing Imaging Arizona Diamondbacks catcher Gabriel Moreno was scratched from the lineup on Friday with right forearm tightness, manager Torey Lovullo said before first pitch against the Kansas City Royals in Cactus League. Lovullo added that Moreno would undergo imaging Friday evening. Reports are that Moreno has had discomfort for a few days now and played through it. But things have come to the point where it is time to find out what is wrong.
Team USA Defeats Canada to Punch Ticket to WBC Semi-Finals Team USA held off a late rally to defeat Canada 5-3 in the quarterfinals of the WBC. Next up is the Dominican Republic in the semi-finals on Sunday, with Paul Skenes taking the mound for Team USA.
Clayton Kershaw Replaced by Jeff Hoffman for Semis Retired lefty Clayton Kershaw will not make an appearance for Team USA in this tournament, having been replaced by reliever Jeff Hoffman on the roster. The injured Kershaw will still travel with the team, despite no longer being rostered.
Hiromi Itoh, Teruaki Sato Expected to be Posted for 2027 One of the NPB’s better right-handed starters and a slugging third baseman are both expected to be posted by their clubs in advance of the 2027 season – if there is one.
The Miami Heat have won seven straight games, their longest win streak in 28 months, while also covering in all seven games.
The Orlando Magic, who visit Miami on Saturday, have won six in a row, going 4-2 ATS. Orlando has also won four straight over Miami, all this year, covering the last two.
Our Magic vs. Heat predictions and NBA picks like the Heat to continue their streak while stopping the Magic's.
Magic vs Heat prediction
Magic vs Heat best bet: Heat -3.5 (-115)
Both teams enter on win streaks, but the schedules tell a different story. The Orlando Magic's run came mostly against struggling teams, including three games against Washington, two each against Brooklyn and Milwaukee, and one against Dallas.
The Miami Heat's stretch includes wins over top-seed Detroit and No. 3 Houston, stronger opponents than Orlando has faced.
Miami could get Tyler Herro (quad) and Norman Powell (groin) back after recent absences, though Andrew Wiggins remains out. Orlando will be without Franz Walker, Anthony Black, and Jonathan Isaac.
Miami is 8-2-0 ATS in their last 10, and I like them to cover tonight.
Magic vs Heat same-game parlay
Miami plays at the fastest pace in the NBA, and, despite Orlando's attempts to slow things down, the four games they've played head-to-head have actually been even faster paced than Miami's season average.
Orlando has gone Over in its last three games and on four occasions during its winning streak.
So, Bam Adebayo has had himself a week. His 83-point outburst earned plenty of attention, and the notoriety he gained probably cost us in the odds on this prop. He's stepped up his scoring, however, averaging 24 ppg over the last 22.
Magic vs Heat SGP
Miami -3.5
Over 236.5
Bam Adebayo Over 22.5 points
Our "from downtown" SGP: Bane Damage!
With Adebayo scoring on the increase and the potential of getting Herro and Powell back for the game, look for Jaime Jaquez to concentrate even more on distributing the ball to the scorers. He's had seven or more dimes in four of the last five games, including the last three.
Desmond Bane has scored 30 or more in two of the last four games. He's boosted his scoring average by 1.4 ppg since being dealt from Memphis at the deadline. Look for him to take on an even larger scoring role, with leading scorer Paolo Banchero tasked with at least helping out defending Adebayo.
Magic vs Heat SGP
Over 236.5 points
Bam Adebayo Over 22.5 points
Jaime Jaquez Jr. Over 4.5 assists
Desmond Bane Over 22.5 points
Magic vs Heat odds
Spread: Magic +3.5 (-110) | Heat -3.5 (-110)
Moneyline: Magic +136 | Heat -162
Over/Under: Over 235.5 (-115) | Under 235.5 (-105)
Magic vs Heat betting trend to know
This is just the second time the Heat has been favored in the last seven head-to-head matchups with the Magic. Miami is 4-2 ATS so far in those games. Find more NBA betting trends for Magic vs. Heat.
How to watch Magic vs Heat
Location
Kaseya Center, Miami, FL
Date
Saturday, March 14, 2026
Tip-off
8:00 p.m. ET
TV
FDSN
Magic vs Heat latest injuries
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.
The Colorado Avalanche have been on a season-long tear, and today they aim to keep that momentum as they visit the Winnipeg Jets at Canada Life Center to finish a two-game road swing.
Avalanche Coming Off a Statement Win
Colorado enters today’s matchup fresh off a 5-1 rout of the Seattle Kraken at Climate Pledge Arena. Nathan MacKinnon returned after a major penalty and a rescinded game misconduct stemming from a collision with Edmonton’s Connor Ingram, channeling any frustration into a four-point performance (1G, 3A), including the game-winner.
The NHL has RESCINDED Nathan MacKinnon's goalie interference major penalty. 😳
Doing this will stop MacKinnon from getting an automatic suspension per NHL rules if he were to get another major penalty soon. 👀 pic.twitter.com/OUza6Qn726
Martin Nečas scored his 30th goal of the season, and Nazem Kadri notched his first regular-season goal for Colorado since April 29, 2022. Scott Wedgewood stopped 28 of 29 shots for his 25th win, a new career high.
The Avalanche maintain a five-point lead over the Dallas Stars and hold a key game in hand.
This game marks the first of two visits to Winnipeg in a two-week span. Colorado beat the Jets 3-2 on December 19 at Ball Arena, with Parker Kelly scoring the game-winner. Tonight, Mackenzie Blackwood is expected to start in net after a shaky outing Tuesday.
Thursday’s lineup featured 11 forwards and seven defensemen, debuting Nick Blankenburg, acquired from Nashville. The seventh defenseman logged 9:31, the lowest among the blueline, but will likely get another chance in Winnipeg.
MacKinnon’s four-point night keeps him just behind Connor McDavid for the league scoring lead (108 points to 111), though his 44 goals remain first in the NHL. Nečas is tied with Brock Nelson for second on the team with 30 goals, and Cale Makar is one goal shy of a fourth consecutive 20-goal season.
Nathan MacKinnon with 1 goal & 3 assists in the Colorado Avalanche’s 5-1 win against Seattle tonight!
This is subject to change as Ross Colton's status remains unknown as he continues to recover from an upper-body injury. He suffered the injury on Tuesday when the Avalanche suffered a 4-3 loss to the Edmonton Oilers. Colton exited the game in the second period and did not return.
Defense
Devon Toews – Cale Makar
Josh Manson – Brent Burns
Brett Kulak – Sam Malinski
Nick Blankenburg
Goalies
Mackenzie Blackwood
Scott Wedgewood
Jets Fighting for Playoff Spot
After winning the Presidents’ Trophy last season and seeing Connor Hellebuyck earn the Vezina and Hart, Winnipeg entered 2025-26 with high expectations. But a slow start, injuries, and inconsistent play have left them seven points out of the second Western Conference wild card.
Hellebuyck missed three weeks after knee surgery in November, and Winnipeg lost eight of ten games without him, then 11 of 12 after his return. The Jets are fighting to avoid sinking to the bottom of the Central Division.
Trade deadline moves included sending Logan Stanley and Luke Schenn to Buffalo for Isak Rosen, Jacob Bryson, and draft picks, as well as trading Tanner Pearson for a 2026 draft pick. Despite these moves, closing the gap on playoff contenders remains a steep climb.
Winnipeg is in the middle of an eight-game homestand. Today’s game kicks off a back-to-back set, with the St. Louis Blues visiting Sunday. The Jets have lost their last two games, 4-1 to Anaheim and 6-3 to New York. Hellebuyck, fresh off Olympic gold with the U.S., is expected to start again.
The blue line will be depleted, with Neal Pionk and Colin Miller out, along with Vladislav Namestnikov and Nino Niederreiter.
Mark Scheifele leads Winnipeg with 30 goals, 49 assists, and 79 points; Kyle Connor is second in all three categories (29G, 43A, 72 PTS). Josh Morrissey leads all defensemen with 11 goals, 33 assists, and 44 points.
Projected Jets Lineup
Forwards
Kyle Connor – Mark Scheifele – Alex Iafallo
Cole Perfetti – Adam Lowry – Gabe Vilardi
Gustav Nyquist – Jonathan Toews – Isak Rosén
Cole Koepke – Morgan Barron – Brad Lambert
Defense
Josh Morrissey – Dylan DeMelo
Dylan Samberg – Elias Salomonsson
Haydn Fleury – Jacob Bryson
Goalies
Connor Hellebuyck
Eric Comrie
Colorado looks to extend their dominance and maintain a stranglehold atop the Central Division, while Winnipeg hopes a strong home stand can spark a playoff push. Expect a fast, technical showdown in Winnipeg.
SURPRISE, ARIZONA - MARCH 12: Willie MacIver #47 of the Texas Rangers congratulates Wyatt Langford #36 after hitting a three-run home run against the Athletics during the second inning of the spring training game at Surprise Stadium on March 12, 2026 in Surprise, Arizona. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Good morning, LSB.
Evan Grant’s observations include Josh Smith’s hot streak and the fifth starter competition coming down to the wire.
DETROIT, MI - MARCH 12: VJ Edgecombe #77 of the Philadelphia 76ers drives to the basket during the game against the Detroit Pistons on March 12, 2026 at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit, Michigan. 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 Chris Schwegler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
Aside from it being the Josh Minott career game, the Nets’ matchup with the Atlanta Hawks was a pretty forgettable bout. With the absence of Michael Porter Jr., Ziaire Williams, and Nolan Traore, Brooklyn was pretty much doomed from the start, especially with Atlanta on a surge to take the eighth seed of the Eastern Conference standings.
Oddly enough, the team they are competing with for said seed is the very opponent Brooklyn will face in this early afternoon I-95 matchup. Today, the Nets will take on the Philadelphia 76ers as they will look to avenge their 22 point loss against the Detroit Pistons and play a matinee in the City of Brotherly Love.
Where To Watch
Catch the early action today at 1:00 p.m. ET on the YES Network and NBA League Pass, as well as streaming on the Gotham Sports App.
Injury Report
Nic Claxton (rest), MPJ (right ankle sprain), Drake Powell (left knee management) will all be out tonight. Egor Demin and Day’Ron Sharpe (left thumb UCL tear) are of course out for the season. The two-ways should be available and we may see the NBA debut of combo guard Malachi Smith, called up from Long Island Friday. He’ll be wearing No. 18. If he plays, he’ll be the eighth Nets player to make his NBA debut this season, following the Flatbush Five, Grant Nelson and Chaney Johnson.
Bad news for the 76ers as well.
Joel Embiid (oblique), Tyrese Maxey (right pinkie finger), Kelly Oubre (left elbow sprain) will be out. Adem Bona (back) and old friend Andre Drummond (back) are questionable.
The Game
Today will be yet another Nets game where there is an injury fest. With most of the X factors unavailable, the quality of basketball that both teams play will determine the winner. Early weekend afternoon games are usually not so great either
The 76ers have been under immense pressure as of late with the amount of losses they have accumulated at this point of the season, as well as the decisions of the front office.
Most recently, the President of Basketball Operations decided to let go of former first round draft pick Jared McCain and send him to the Thunder. That decision has led to McCain averaging 11.2 PPG (five points higher) and a higher three point percentage 42.3 % compared to 37.8% earlier this season.
Meanwhile, the tank — excuse us, playing the probabilities — continues. The Nets are two and a half games out of the top spot in the Draft lottery. If they lose to Philly, they’ll be tied once again with the Wizards for third, at least until this evening when Washington plays Boston starting at 6:00 p.m. ET. Brooklyn has 16 games left.
Player to Watch
Even though his light is not as bright as it was in the beginning of the season and both Cooper Flagg and Kon Knueppel have taken the spotlight, V.J. Edgecombe is still a name that must be talked about in this rookie class. With averages of 15.3 PPG, 5.5 rebounds, and 1.5 steals per game, Edgecombe just has that “it” factor you can’t teach. Blessed with extraordinary athleticism and feel for the game, Edgecombe also has a competitive nature that allows him to rise to the moment, hence All Star Weekend.
VJ Edgecombe wins MVP of the Rising Stars tournament 🏆👏
Nobody celebrates losses, let alone ones in the dog days of March. But if you’re looking for signs about where this Celtics team is headed, this road trip provided plenty of those.
The Celtics beat Cleveland to kick off the road trip, but then fell to the top two teams in the West. They gave one away in San Antonio after Jaylen Brown’s ejection and fell two points short in Oklahoma City without Jayson Tatum and Derrick White. Nikola Vučević continues to recover from his right ring finger fracture, so he missed both games as well.
In the standings, these are just two losses. Zoom out, though, and this was about as encouraging an 0–2 stretch as Boston could have produced. The road trip won’t satisfy anyone’s appetite for wins, but this time of year is more about figuring out what you actually have, and whether it will be enough when the games start to really matter.
If the point of this trip was to learn how Boston stacks up against the best of the West, the Celtics came away with plenty to like. They were short-handed, still integrating Tatum back into the mix versus San Antonio, and asking a lot of role players and young guys in high-leverage spots. Even so, they looked competitive, deep, and annoyingly resilient against two teams that could absolutely be playing in June.
The Celtics did not leave San Antonio and Oklahoma City with wins, but they did leave with evidence that this group might be sturdier and deeper than many of us thought — and capable of making elite teams uncomfortable even when the circumstances are far from ideal.
San Antonio tested the Celtics’ composure
The Spurs game could have unraveled in a dozen different ways, none of which would have involved Jaylen Brown being ejected.
Jaylen Brown lost his cool with the refs and got ejected, then tried to charge at an official and tried to push through his own security for a while before eventually heading back to the locker room pic.twitter.com/xoD382pags
Boston was already without Payton Pritchard and Vučević, then lost Brown in the second quarter on a double technical that everyone in green seemed to find absurd. Joe Mazzulla had his principal-versus-hall monitor line ready postgame. Derrick White called the second tech “bulls—.” Jayson Tatum made it clear he thought the officials were too eager to make themselves part of the show.
That might have been the most useful takeaway from the Spurs loss. Not that Brown got a rough whistle or that Victor Wembanyama is still a basketball glitch. Not even that White had a season-high 34 and Ron Harper Jr. dropped a career-high 22. It was that Boston got hit with a game-altering event against one of the hottest teams in the league and still made San Antonio work for everything.
Despite the early chaos, the Celtics were tied 58-58 at halftime. White then detonated for 19 points in the third quarter just to keep Boston within reach while Wembanyama kept answering everything with another three, another dunk, another reminder that he is somehow both enormous and fluid. Tatum, still on a minutes restriction and still feeling his way back into game shape, had a personal 7-0 run in the fourth that briefly made it feel like Boston might pull it off.
The loss exposed the margin for error against elite teams, sure, but it also showed how Boston tends to respond when things go sideways.
This group did not get shell-shocked or turn inward when they got thrown a curveball. They did not start playing like a team waiting for somebody else to save it. White kept cooking. Harper kept firing. Tatum kept competing. Mazzulla kept searching for answers, even if some of those answers involved getting weird with matchups and asking more from Garza, Walsh, and the rest of the rotation.
There was also something instructive in how Boston chose to defend Wembanyama. Mazzulla admitted afterward that, “against a player like that, you are constantly deciding what you can live with”. The Celtics clearly decided that if Wembanyama was going to beat them, they preferred him doing more damage away from the basket. That gamble burned them because he hit eight threes, but it wasn’t a crazy gamble. Sometimes a seven-foot-five alien buries your process anyway.
The bigger takeaway was that Boston stayed connected enough to make the game matter into the final minutes even after losing Brown and dealing with Wembanyama with his chaos dial turned up to eleven.
Yes, there was plenty of frustration afterward about the officiating and how the game unfolded. That was unavoidable, and arguably warranted. But underneath that frustration was something else: the Celtics sounded like a team that believed they had let a winnable game slip away.
That’s actually a pretty healthy sign.
Oklahoma City showed how real Boston’s depth might be
If the Spurs game felt like a bar fight, the Thunder game felt more like a high-speed chess match.
Boston went into Oklahoma City without Tatum, without White, and still without Vučević. The Thunder were also missing pieces, but they still had Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Chet Holmgren, Lu Dort, and the best record in the league.
The Celtics still came within one missed Payton Pritchard three of stealing the game entirely.
In fact, that might be the biggest reason this road trip felt so encouraging. The Thunder game turned into a showcase for all the players Boston will need when the games start to tighten up later in the spring. Brown was excellent, pouring in 34 points and seven assists while basically dragging the offense through long stretches. Pritchard looked like exactly the kind of bench guard every contender wishes it had, fearless and twitchy and apparently born to attempt impossible late-clock shots. Baylor Scheierman kept knocking down big threes. Hugo Gonzalez gave meaningful minutes, as did Jordan Walsh. Garza stretched the floor. Queta battled. Ron Harper Jr. kept doing Ron Harper Jr. things.
Payton Pritchard was asked what he’s learning about some of the young Celtics coming off the bench:
“We’re not learning anything. You guys have already seen it. They come ready to play and play winning basketball. So it’s nothing new.”
That’s a lot of useful contributions from a lot of different places.
For most of the season, Boston’s depth has been discussed as a nice story. Against Oklahoma City, the ‘young wolves’ looked more like a bunch of useful playoff assets. Not because Mazzulla is going to run 10 deep in a Finals game, but because the Celtics have a real collection of players who can hold up when a matchup or injury situation demands it. In last year’s playoffs, we saw just how severely injuries can change things in an instant.
Boston led 59-56 at halftime largely because the bench had 27 points and the ball was popping. They were up 83-80 after three, with the young guys continuing to make winning plays against one of the league’s most disciplined teams.
Oklahoma City is not the kind of team that accidentally lets role players feel good. The Thunder pressure every decision, make simple actions feel crowded, and turn “decent” into “a little rushed”. That slight rush is often enough to throw a wrench into any offense, but Boston handled it better than I expected.
Not perfectly, of course. The fourth quarter got sloppy and the turnovers were an issue all game. Shai got to his spots and looked, as always, like a man operating under different laws of physics. But the larger point remains: Boston looked like it belonged in that game, and it looked that way while missing two starters.
There is another layer to this, too. The Thunder seemed relieved to survive. Their fans were talking about a Finals preview, while their players and commenters were praising Boston’s shooting and toughness. That is usually a decent clue – great teams know when another great team has made them feel uncomfortable.
The Celtics did that.
OKC WINS A THRILLER ON SHAI'S RECORD-SETTING NIGHT!
SGA for the lead with 29.6 to play. JB ties it with 21.9. Chet gets fouled with 0.8. Makes both free throws. OKC holds on. pic.twitter.com/nlo8nZOIgX
And they did it while still very clearly having room to grow. Tatum, White, and Vučević were all out, meaning Brown had to do too much at times. Pritchard had to create more than usual. The rotation bent in ways that probably will not be necessary in a healthier, more settled playoff version of this team.
But Boston still nearly won anyway, and for a loss, that is about as useful as it gets.
Two losses, one pretty good reminder
Maybe the cleanest way to put it is this: the Celtics did not look overmatched against the Spurs or the Thunder.
San Antonio and Oklahoma City are two wildly different problems. One can throw Wembanyama at your entire offensive ecosystem and dare you to solve advanced geometry in real time. The other makes every possession feel sped up and slightly cruel.
Boston lost both games, but never looked out of place. In March, when you’re trying to figure out what kind of team you actually have before the playoffs arrive, that matters.
Because if these two games showed anything, it’s that the Celtics still look like a team nobody is going to enjoy having to beat four times out of seven.