Bruins 2026 Stadium Series RECAP: B’s can’t overcome penalty-laden 2nd half in 6-5 SO LOSS

TAMPA, FLORIDA - JANUARY 30: The Boston Bruins logo is seen behind a skeleton prior to the 2026 Navy Federal Credit Union NHL Stadium Series game between the Boston Bruins and Tampa Bay Lightning at Raymond James Stadium on January 30, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Brian Babineau/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Oy.

1st Period

Things did not start well at all. Brandon Hagel ended up getting the opening goal within the first 11 seconds of the game after beating his defender clean on body position, and put the puck straight past Swayman for the Lightning to go up 1-0.

Mercifully, the Bruins managed to take advantage of their foes being a bit off-kilter, and Alex Steeves got a centering feed from Michael Eyssimont to tie the game up! 1-1 Everybody.

Then, Morgan Geekie tipped in a goal that seemingly got by everybody, including the commentators on ESPN. 2-1 Bruins!

Then, Viktor Arvidsson decided that he wanted to get in on that, and got a tip-in of his own! 3-1 Bruins!

No further scoring, and we head to the 2nd period!

2nd Period

Oh boy.

Let’s start with the positives. To begin with, that Matthew Poitras kid is back! Let’s see what he’s got!

Nice backhander, kid! 4-1 Bruins!

Then, Morgan Geekie got a two-on-one with David Pastrnak, and hammered it home to make it 5-1 Bruins!

Not too long after this, a significant amount of nonsense occured. There were mass scrums, there was a goalie fight after Jeremy Swayman decided he needed to take out Brandon Hagel…

…and there were penalties. Oh man, were there penalties.

Those penalties came up big for the Lightning. Very big.

First, Oliver Bjorkstrand got a rebound out of a net-front scramble…

…then Darren Raddysh put a missile on from the point…

…and then Nick Paul, who seems to be an eternal haunt of the Bruins, got a tip-in goal. Bringing the period to an end with a 5-4 Bruins lead.

Third Period

While there will be much discussion of the second period and the validity of the penalties called, the sad reality is that the Bruins had plenty of opportunity at even strength during this period to respond, and unfortunately the team that met the moment was the Lightning, and Nikita Kucherov in specific. No penalties, no man disadvantages, just a great pass and a good shot. 5-5 Everybody.

Onto overtime we go.

Overtime

Tampa got another power play in the middle of all this but let’s be real, the Lightning had every shot.

That’s gonna come back to bite you.

Shootout

Jake Guentzel finally completed the steal by scoring on Jeremy Swayman in the Shootout.

6-5, Bruins Lose the Stadium Series.

Game Notes

  • Your TOI Leader was Charlie McAvoy, who logged 30:19 tonight.
  • This was a winnable game that the Boston Bruins got suckered into giving away. The Bruins got up big thanks to good hard work and an early command of the unusual ice, which seemed to flummox the Lightning and seemingly caused Vasilevskiy to have trouble with tracking the puck. Things were looking really, really good, and then the Lightning started drawing some attention, and that attention turned into violence, which turned into a series of penalties that were either inexplicable to call or completely avoidable. Regardless of what you think of the Lightning, they are still full of extremely talented players, and those talented players made mincemeat of the B’s 5-on-3 PK, which allowed them a chance to get back into this one, and for all the hemming and hawwing we’ve done and will continue to do about those penalties, the game tying goal and the game-starting goal were even strength tallies made by forwards beating the backcheck in front of them fair and square and in extremely inconvenient times. OT wasn’t much better, and while Swayman did what he could in the shootout, Jake Guentzel was just too much. Boston falls to 4-2-0 in Outdoor games.
  • The refereeing in this game was, to put it nicely, complete and total buttcheeks. Granted, and given how unhappy we are right now I think we can admit some of the penalties that Boston got through the 2nd and 3rd period were genuine, reckless, and frankly idiotic to take, others were just bizarrely enforced or late whistled or just missed entirely. The Lightning went 3-for-8 tonight where Boston only went 1-for-3 on the power play, and Tampa was only short-handed during the 1st period. That should say everything.
    • I will stop short at calling this game rigged or something like that. Boston made a hard pivot towards a more conservative, defensive shell game after the nightmarish 2nd period and allowed the Lightning to slowly find cracks in their defense; not exactly hard to do given the talent on display. They might’ve been let back in after a major kerfuffle, but the refs are just bad at their jobs, and the Lightning are great at gaming bad refs. Sometimes this becomes enormously apparent like tonight. Right now, the Bruins aren’t good enough to overcome that. The longer term goal is getting to the point where you can. B’s
  • Jeremy Swayman faced almost 45 shots tonight; a vast majority of which happened in the second half of the second period. That’s as much an indictment on the defense in front of him as it is the fact he had a truncated version of that defense in front of him for most of the 2nd period. That .891 SV% does not even begin to tell the whole story; he made some heroic saves to keep this team in a truly frustratingly wonky game. He also fought Andrei Vasilevskiy tonight, which I’m sure he enjoyed. Maybe if you wanna goalie fight you should have a couple of practice rounds in your pads at Warrior. Just to get the form.
  • I had to watch the NHL in ASL broadcast and I highly recommend it; the ESPN broadcast was miserable as it usually is, and the ASL broadcast by comparison was nothing but crowd noise, basic information, and only occasionally some missed shots but that was a function of the main camera. I can’t vouch for the ASL commentators’ performance, but they both seemed pretty engaged with what was going on and updated the viewer frequently.
  • Tonight, the Bruins lost. They played out on dogs#!t ice, got up big, lost it all thanks to bad penalties and even worse refereeing, and still pulled a point off of the division leaders and are rapidly coming for Colorado’s hide in the race for the President’s Trophy. Last time, the B’s were the ones to come back and nearly make it an extra time game. They now know they can at least hang, at least for a little bit. Now they have to start thinking about whether or not they can survive a playoff series against this team; because if things hold as they are, the Bruins will face the Lightning again in April; both in the regular season and playoffs. Plenty of decisions to be made; pre-Olympic deadline is almost here, and the post-Olympic deadline isn’t that far off afterwards. Much to consider here, and let’s hope Don Sweeney is ready to make the best decision for the long-term health of this squad.
  • Still just two points at the beginning of February. The game was dramatic and stupid but you gotta get on the bus to Sunrise anyway.

The Bruins have their final game before the Olympic break on Wednesday, when they take on the Florida Panthers. That game drops the puck at 7pm EST. It’s a TNT/HBO game, so adjust your watching accordingly.

We’ll see you there. Go B’s.

New York faces Washington on 6-game win streak

New York Knicks (31-18, second in the Eastern Conference) vs. Washington Wizards (13-35, 14th in the Eastern Conference)

Washington; Tuesday, 7 p.m. EST

BOTTOM LINE: New York is looking to continue its six-game win streak with a victory over Washington.

The Wizards are 8-19 against Eastern Conference opponents. Washington averages 15.2 turnovers per game and is 7-6 when it wins the turnover battle.

The Knicks are 21-11 in conference games. New York ranks sixth in the Eastern Conference with 26.8 assists per game led by Jalen Brunson averaging 6.1.

The Wizards are shooting 45.8% from the field this season, 0.4 percentage points lower than the 46.2% the Knicks allow to opponents. The Knicks average 15.0 made 3-pointers per game this season, 1.2 more made shots on average than the 13.8 per game the Wizards allow.

The teams square off for the second time this season. The Knicks won the last meeting 119-102 on Nov. 4, with Karl-Anthony Towns scoring 33 points in the win.

TOP PERFORMERS: Kyshawn George is shooting 44.6% and averaging 15.5 points for the Wizards. Bub Carrington is averaging 2.7 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games.

Mikal Bridges is scoring 15.7 points per game and averaging 4.2 rebounds for the Knicks. OG Anunoby is averaging 18.8 points and 5.2 rebounds over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Wizards: 3-7, averaging 110.4 points, 43.2 rebounds, 25.7 assists, 9.7 steals and 5.3 blocks per game while shooting 44.4% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 116.8 points per game.

Knicks: 6-4, averaging 110.3 points, 48.5 rebounds, 26.3 assists, 8.8 steals and 4.0 blocks per game while shooting 45.8% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 100.9 points.

INJURIES: Wizards: Tristan Vukcevic: out (hamstring), Cam Whitmore: out for season (shoulder), Tre Johnson: out (ankle), Alex Sarr: out (calf), Trae Young: out (quad).

Knicks: Miles McBride: out (ankle).

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Milwaukee takes on Chicago, looks to break 5-game slide

Chicago Bulls (24-26, ninth in the Eastern Conference) vs. Milwaukee Bucks (18-29, 12th in the Eastern Conference)

Milwaukee; Tuesday, 8 p.m. EST

BOTTOM LINE: Milwaukee heads into the matchup against Chicago after losing five in a row.

The Bucks are 14-17 in Eastern Conference games. Milwaukee averages 13.8 turnovers per game and is 8-8 when it has fewer turnovers than its opponents.

The Bulls are 3-8 against Central Division teams. Chicago ranks fifth in the league scoring 17.9 fast break points per game. Ayo Dosunmu leads the Bulls averaging 3.6.

The Bucks' 14.5 made 3-pointers per game this season are just 0.7 more made shots on average than the 13.8 per game the Bulls allow. The Bulls average 14.5 made 3-pointers per game this season, 0.5 more makes per game than the Bucks give up.

The teams meet for the third time this season. In the last matchup on Dec. 28 the Bucks won 112-103 led by 29 points from Giannis Antetokounmpo, while Coby White scored 16 points for the Bulls.

TOP PERFORMERS: Ryan Rollins is scoring 16.5 points per game with 4.6 rebounds and 5.5 assists for the Bucks. Bobby Portis is averaging 14.1 points and 7.6 rebounds while shooting 46.9% over the past 10 games.

Nikola Vucevic is averaging 16.9 points, nine rebounds and 3.8 assists for the Bulls. White is averaging 3.1 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Bucks: 2-8, averaging 103.0 points, 41.5 rebounds, 25.4 assists, 7.0 steals and 4.3 blocks per game while shooting 44.6% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 115.6 points per game.

Bulls: 5-5, averaging 116.2 points, 44.3 rebounds, 30.4 assists, 6.3 steals and 5.1 blocks per game while shooting 47.5% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 116.0 points.

INJURIES: Bucks: Giannis Antetokounmpo: out (calf), Gary Harris: day to day (hamstring), Kevin Porter Jr.: out (oblique), Taurean Prince: out (neck).

Bulls: Noa Essengue: out for season (shoulder), Zach Collins: out (toe), Kevin Huerter: out (back), Tre Jones: out (hamstring), Josh Giddey: out (hamstring), Jalen Smith: out (calf).

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Dallas plays Boston on 3-game home slide

Boston Celtics (31-18, third in the Eastern Conference) vs. Dallas Mavericks (19-30, 11th in the Western Conference)

Dallas; Tuesday, 8 p.m. EST

BOTTOM LINE: Dallas aims to end its three-game home slide with a win against Boston.

The Mavericks have gone 14-14 in home games. Dallas leads the Western Conference with 35.0 defensive rebounds per game led by Anthony Davis averaging 8.0.

The Celtics are 15-10 on the road. Boston is ninth in the Eastern Conference scoring 116.1 points per game and is shooting 46.9%.

The Mavericks average 11.0 made 3-pointers per game this season, 3.2 fewer makes per game than the Celtics allow (14.2). The Celtics are shooting 46.9% from the field, 0.8% higher than the 46.1% the Mavericks' opponents have shot this season.

TOP PERFORMERS: Cooper Flagg is scoring 19.8 points per game with 6.6 rebounds and 4.1 assists for the Mavericks. Naji Marshall is averaging 18.0 points and 6.0 rebounds while shooting 54.4% over the last 10 games.

Payton Pritchard is scoring 16.8 points per game and averaging 4.3 rebounds for the Celtics. Jaylen Brown is averaging 26.1 points and 8.0 rebounds over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Mavericks: 5-5, averaging 118.4 points, 46.8 rebounds, 25.6 assists, 7.7 steals and 4.7 blocks per game while shooting 48.2% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 114.5 points per game.

Celtics: 7-3, averaging 114.1 points, 47.2 rebounds, 24.3 assists, 7.2 steals and 5.0 blocks per game while shooting 45.3% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 105.1 points.

INJURIES: Mavericks: Dereck Lively II: out for season (foot), P.J. Washington: day to day (head), Brandon Williams: day to day (leg), Kyrie Irving: out (knee), Dante Exum: out for season (knee), Anthony Davis: out (hand).

Celtics: Jayson Tatum: out (achilles).

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Gilgeous-Alexander and Oklahoma City take on the Magic in non-conference play

Orlando Magic (25-23, eighth in the Eastern Conference) vs. Oklahoma City Thunder (39-11, first in the Western Conference)

Oklahoma City; Tuesday, 8 p.m. EST

BOTTOM LINE: The Oklahoma City Thunder host the Orlando Magic in non-conference play.

The Thunder are 21-5 in home games. Oklahoma City is the league leader allowing just 108.0 points per game while holding opponents to 43.3% shooting.

The Magic are 10-14 on the road. Orlando has a 13-14 record against opponents over .500.

The Thunder average 120.3 points per game, 4.7 more points than the 115.6 the Magic give up. The Magic average 7.5 more points per game (115.5) than the Thunder give up (108.0).

TOP PERFORMERS: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is scoring 32.0 points per game with 4.4 rebounds and 6.4 assists for the Thunder. Chet Holmgren is averaging 16.3 points and 9.1 rebounds while shooting 53.7% over the past 10 games.

Desmond Bane is scoring 19.4 points per game with 4.4 rebounds and 4.3 assists for the Magic. Paolo Banchero is averaging 23.6 points and 9.3 rebounds while shooting 47.2% over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Thunder: 6-4, averaging 115.9 points, 41.9 rebounds, 24.4 assists, 7.8 steals and 7.1 blocks per game while shooting 49.0% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 106.6 points per game.

Magic: 4-6, averaging 111.2 points, 39.8 rebounds, 26.1 assists, 8.4 steals and 4.6 blocks per game while shooting 44.9% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 117.1 points.

INJURIES: Thunder: Ajay Mitchell: out (hip), Nikola Topic: out (groin), Jalen Williams: out (thigh), Alex Caruso: out (adductor), Thomas Sorber: out for season (knee).

Magic: Franz Wagner: out (ankle), Colin Castleton: out (thumb).

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Trail Blazers face the Suns on 5-game losing streak

Phoenix Suns (30-20, seventh in the Western Conference) vs. Portland Trail Blazers (23-27, 10th in the Western Conference)

Portland, Oregon; Tuesday, 11 p.m. EST

BOTTOM LINE: Portland will try to end its five-game slide when the Trail Blazers take on Phoenix.

The Trail Blazers have gone 18-14 against Western Conference teams. Portland has a 9-12 record in games decided by 10 or more points.

The Suns are 20-14 against Western Conference opponents. Phoenix is third in the Western Conference with 15.7 fast break points per game led by Devin Booker averaging 3.4.

The Trail Blazers average 14.0 made 3-pointers per game this season, 1.9 more made shots on average than the 12.1 per game the Suns allow. The Suns average 113.8 points per game, 4.1 fewer than the 117.9 the Trail Blazers give up to opponents.

The teams square off for the second time this season. In the last meeting on Nov. 19 the Suns won 127-110 led by 19 points from Booker, while Shaedon Sharpe scored 29 points for the Trail Blazers.

TOP PERFORMERS: Donovan Clingan is shooting 51.8% and averaging 11.1 points for the Trail Blazers. Sharpe is averaging 22.9 points over the last 10 games.

Dillon Brooks is scoring 21.1 points per game and averaging 3.6 rebounds for the Suns. Collin Gillespie is averaging 3.3 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Trail Blazers: 4-6, averaging 110.1 points, 47.8 rebounds, 21.6 assists, 8.6 steals and 4.8 blocks per game while shooting 44.5% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 114.0 points per game.

Suns: 6-4, averaging 109.7 points, 41.0 rebounds, 23.1 assists, 9.5 steals and 4.4 blocks per game while shooting 44.9% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 108.3 points.

INJURIES: Trail Blazers: Deni Avdija: out (back), Scoot Henderson: out (hamstring), Matisse Thybulle: out (knee), Jrue Holiday: out (personal), Vit Krejci: out (ankle), Kris Murray: out (back), Damian Lillard: out for season (achilles).

Suns: Jalen Green: out (hip), Devin Booker: out (ankle).

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Johnson and the Hawks take on conference foe Miami

Atlanta Hawks (24-27, 10th in the Eastern Conference) vs. Miami Heat (27-24, seventh in the Eastern Conference)

Miami; Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. EST

BOTTOM LINE: The Atlanta Hawks visit Bam Adebayo and the Miami Heat in Eastern Conference action Tuesday.

The Heat are 14-14 against Eastern Conference opponents. Miami is second in the Eastern Conference with 54.7 points per game in the paint led by Jaime Jaquez Jr. averaging 10.5.

The Hawks are 12-18 in Eastern Conference play. Atlanta has a 12-19 record against teams over .500.

The Heat's 13.4 made 3-pointers per game this season are just 0.2 more made shots on average than the 13.2 per game the Hawks allow. The Hawks average 14.5 made 3-pointers per game this season, 0.7 more makes per game than the Heat give up.

The teams play for the second time this season. The Heat won the last matchup 126-111 on Dec. 27, with Norman Powell scoring 25 points in the victory.

TOP PERFORMERS: Andrew Wiggins is shooting 46.8% and averaging 15.6 points for the Heat. Adebayo is averaging 22.1 points over the last 10 games.

Jalen Johnson is averaging 23.1 points, 10.5 rebounds and eight assists for the Hawks. Nickeil Alexander-Walker is averaging 19.4 points over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Heat: 6-4, averaging 122.4 points, 51.2 rebounds, 30.2 assists, 9.0 steals and 3.7 blocks per game while shooting 44.3% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 117.9 points per game.

Hawks: 4-6, averaging 112.6 points, 42.9 rebounds, 28.5 assists, 9.4 steals and 4.2 blocks per game while shooting 44.7% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 118.2 points.

INJURIES: Heat: Tyler Herro: out (toe), Nikola Jovic: out (hip), Norman Powell: out (personal).

Hawks: Onyeka Okongwu: day to day (face), Kristaps Porzingis: out (achilles), N'Faly Dante: out for season (knee), Duop Reath: out for season (foot).

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Phils 'pen built on different looks — why the relief mix works

Phils 'pen built on different looks — why the relief mix works originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Phillies bullpen has long lacked identity. And commitment.

It starts with the ninth inning. The last Phillie to post multiple 30-save seasons with the club was Jonathan Papelbon in 2012 and 2014. The last 30-save season, period, came from Jeanmar Gómez in 2016.

The Phillies tried to change that narrative two seasons ago when they acquired closer Carlos Estévez from the Angels at the trade deadline. At the time, he had 20 saves paired with a 2.38 ERA. Pairing him with a group that included Matt Strahm and Jeff Hoffman gave Philadelphia its deepest relief unit in years.

Estévez was solid across 20 regular-season appearances, but his season ended with a series-clinching grand slam allowed to Francisco Lindor in the NLDS. The right-hander then left for Kansas City that offseason, and the late-inning picture quickly returned to feeling fluid.

Until now.

Dombrowski and the front office made another deadline move last season, this time targeting a lockdown reliever with years of team control. The Phillies sent two of their top five prospects — catcher Eduardo Tait and pitcher Mick Abel — to Minnesota for Jhoan Duran.

Duran’s routine triple-digit fastball and closer entrance immediately played at Citizens Bank Park. The production matched the buzz: a 2.18 ERA in 23 appearances and 16 saves — the same total he recorded in 49 games with the Twins.

Bolstering the back end remained a priority into the winter. The Phillies signed Brad Keller to a two-year, $22 million deal, a move that reads as a setup-man investment. It also stood out historically as the first multi-year, double-digit annual value deal the Phillies handed out since the 2011–12 offseason, when they landed Papelbon.

The organization still views pitching as a strength. The difference now is how much of that responsibility sits in the bullpen.

Over the past two seasons, Phillies relievers have posted a 4.06 ERA, ranking 19th in baseball.

What makes this group more compelling, however, is how the pieces fit together. This unit can win matchups without being locked into a single lane because the looks are genuinely different.

Two lefties, two different profiles

The bullpen still begins with two southpaws, but the approach has shifted. With Strahm traded, the Phillies are leaning further into matchup usage — and the two left-handers who remain offer entirely different problems.

José Alvarado is coming off a turbulent 2025, but the raw traits remain intact. His sinker averaged 99.1 mph and ranked in the 99th percentile in fastball velocity. It wasn’t even his most effective pitch.

Alvarado leaned heavily on his cutter, which has long been a foundation of his success. Excluding the COVID-shortened 2020 season, opponents have hit .181 or lower against the pitch. It’s not a finesse approach — it’s built on tunneling the two kinds of fastballs.

Tanner Banks offers the contrast. The softer thrower of the pair, Banks made his biggest leap in 2025 by limiting free passes. He leaned into his strengths, mixing a slider/sweeper and four-seamer as part of his five-pitch mix, with the sweeper continuing to improve year over year.

Among left-handers who faced at least 110 left-handed hitters last season, Banks allowed the fewest earned runs in the majors (five) and posted a 1.47 ERA. There may be another layer coming. His changeup averaged 36.6 inches of vertical drop, giving it the shape to develop into a late-count swing-and-miss option if he leans on it more in 2026.

Why Keller’s 2025 relief jump sticks out

Part of what fueled the 30-year-old’s breakout in relief in 2025 — a 2.07 ERA across 68 appearances — was nearly a four-mph jump in his average four-seam fastball, which sat at 97.2 mph. Keller also used the pitch the most since 2018. He became a Statcast standout for a reason.

That fastball success (opponents slugged .295 against it) allowed the rest of his arsenal to play up. His sweeper–sinker–changeup combination produced significant soft contact, contributing to a 30.6 percent hard-hit rate (99th percentile) and a groundball rate that ranked in the top five percent of the league.

Strahm’s calling card in Philadelphia was neutralizing right-handed hitters. Keller did that even better last season, which helps explain why the Phillies felt comfortable dealing Strahm to Kansas City.

Against righties, Keller held opponents to a .466 OPS. The usage tells the story: despite the fastball’s overall effectiveness, he primarily threw it to left-handers (57 percent usage). Against righties, his sinker–sweeper combination accounted for 50 percent of his pitches and allowed just two extra-base hits combined.

If the Phillies are serious about building a bullpen that thrives in multi-dimensional matchups, Keller is central to that vision. He can absorb leverage innings without needing a narrowly defined pocket of hitters.

Kerkering’s look still plays

The end of Orion Kerkering’s season is easy to remember — for the wrong reasons. But he’s 24 years old and has just over two years of major league service time. Across three seasons with the Phillies, he owns a 2.79 ERA.

In 2025, Kerkering leaned less on his most trusted pitch, the sweeper. The result was a groundball rate that dipped by roughly 10 percent, but the quality of contact held steady. His look continues to disrupt swings, largely because of his arm slot.

Kerkering’s arm angle sits at 31 degrees. Paired with the arm-side run on his sinker and four-seam fastball, it creates a shape no other right-hander in the bullpen offers.

Assuming the NLDS ending is behind him, Kerkering should remain a key matchup piece, particularly in right-on-right situations alongside Keller.

Duran ties it together

Duran is the connective piece. His 100.6 mph average fastball — in the 100th percentile leaguewide — grabs attention, but it isn’t even his most-used pitch. He leaned more heavily on his split-finger last season, and that pitch led all of baseball in run value (12).

While it’s tempting to credit his swing-and-miss profile solely to velocity, the curveball is where most of the empty swings come from. Among pitchers who threw at least 200 curveballs, Duran’s 41.8 percent whiff rate ranked seventh among relievers.

Even then, there’s more ceiling. His 2025 swing-and-miss rate on the curveball was a career low, underscoring how effective he remains regardless of usage patterns.

A 30-save season for the “Durantula” is well within reach in 2026. More importantly, his presence finally gives the bullpen a defined end point — and the rest of the roles stop feeling like monthly experiments.

Under-the-radar names

A quieter but important part of the Phillies’ bullpen construction has been how they’ve filled out the 40-man roster, setting the stage for real competition in Spring Training.

That group includes optional arms and veterans with big-league experience, such as right-hander Zach Pop. Two trade acquisitions, however, add real intrigue.

Jonathan Bowlan, acquired in the Strahm deal, features a five-pitch mix highlighted by a four-seam fastball that is exceptionally difficult to square up. In 2025, among 357 pitchers who threw at least 200 four-seamers, Bowlan generated the highest swing-and-miss rate on the pitch (43.5 percent).

The next closest was Oakland’s Elvis Alvarado at 39.6 percent — nearly four points lower. That rate would have also led all 362 qualified pitchers in 2024 by a similar margin.

Bowlan’s sinker could also take on a larger role in 2026. Among pitchers who threw at least 100 sinkers last season, he ranked third in opponents’ hard-hit rate (10.7 percent). Keller ranked second, and the two new Phillies produced identical run values on the pitch (five).

Another acquisition, left-hander Kyle Backhus, brings a completely different look. The 6-foot-4 southpaw features a low-velocity, three-pitch mix and delivers from the fourth-lowest arm angle among left-handed pitchers. What separates him from others near that slot is extension.

Backhus releases the ball 7.2 feet from the rubber, ranking in the 96th percentile leaguewide. That extension can make his 91 mph sinker play quicker than the radar gun suggests. Despite a 4.62 ERA with Arizona in 2025, he profiles as a potential matchup left-hander capable of limiting barrels and disrupting timing with his sidearm delivery.

The identity isn’t tied to one arm or one role. It’s built on contrast and different looks. For the first time in a while, the pieces connect without having to force matchups.

Takeaways from the Ducks 4-3 Win over the Golden Knights

Following a five-game road trip, the Anaheim Ducks returned to Honda Center on Sunday to host the Vegas Golden Knights in a Pacific Division matchup, Anaheim’s penultimate game before the extended Olympic break.

The Ducks were hoping to return to the win column, as they’ve dropped out of a playoff spot entering Sunday and following back-to-back losses against the Vancouver Canucks and Edmonton Oilers.

Game #55: Ducks vs. Golden Knights Gameday Preview (02/01/26)

Takeaways from the Ducks 2-0 Loss to the Canucks

This game was Vegas’ second in as many days, and they came in with their top spot in the Pacific on the line, desperate for a win, having gone winless in their previous four games, and having only won one of their previous seven.

The Ducks saw the return of a pair of star forwards, as Troy Terry re-entered the lineup after missing 11 games with an upper-body injury, and Mason McTavish re-entered after missing five.

Leo Carlsson remains out with a thigh lesion and was placed on IR earlier on Sunday. Ryan Strome, Sam Colangelo, and Drew Helleson served as the Ducks' healthy scratches, and they lined up like this:

Killorn-Granlund-Sennecke

Kreider-Poehling-Terry

Viel-McTavish-Harkins

Johnston-Washe-Harkins

LaCombe-Trouba

Mintyukov-Moore

Zellweger-Gudas

Lukas Dostal got the start in the Ducks’ net and saved 28 of the 31 shots he faced. He was opposed by Adin Hill in the Knights’ crease, who stopped 19 of 22.

“Across the board, I thought we did a lot of good things, Dosty was solid in net, and we got that good start in the first period,” Ducks head coach Joel Quenneville said after the game. “Then you see some of the plays they (Vegas) can make. It’s a heck of a test and a good challenge for us, and we knew we had to be at our best. We played hard and eliminated some of their possession game. When you see what they can do at the end of the game, we’ll take it.”

Game Notes

Anaheim set the tempo early, controlling game flow and possession time, and generating quality chances off the rush and cycle. Vegas pushed back heavily in the second and even more heavily in the third, but the Ducks’ lead was too great, their defense stingy in the hard areas of the ice, and Dostal rose to whatever challenge he was presented with.

The last two periods didn’t favor the Ducks in any respect, as a combination of them sitting on their lead and Vegas’ push flipped possession numbers. It wasn’t likely a sustainable way to tally standings points, but a big two points went their way nonetheless.

Defensive Zone Coverage: With the return of two potent offensive players in Terry and McTavish, there was a question of whether the Ducks would or could continue to play the same brand of detailed, relatively conservative, defense-first hockey that they’d established and had success with without them.

Remarkably, against an offensive powerhouse, they were able to (for the most part) pressure along the perimeter without overcommitting. When they found themselves drifting too far from the middle of the ice and vulnerable, they tracked back through the middle and broke up several seam pass attempts.

Centers, especially, stayed low in coverage, reading when to support defensemen and wingers, allowing teammates to pressure, and covered to tie up opponents or pounce on rebounds around the crease.

Penalty Kill: An area of weakness on the penalty kill this season, until recently, had been the awareness of the weak side forward to cover the crashing flank toward the back post. Vegas attempted several backdoor, cross-crease passes on their two power plays, but that weak-side forward broke them up deftly.

Ryan Poehling: During the absence of Leo Carlsson, Poehling has been centering lines with more offensive talents than he’d been early in the season, when the roster was at full strength. It’s allowed him to have the puck on his stick more, and in this game with Terry and Kreider, he was afforded more time and space with it. He’s gained noticeable confidence, both on the rush and cycle, even driving play during several shifts. If this continues, the Ducks will have a rare luxury on their roster: a bottom-six center who can provide instant and consistent offense.

Chris Kreider: “Chris Kreider’s made a living being in front of the net,” Troy Terry said of his linemate after this game. Three of Anaheim’s four goals (two of which went to Kreider) came with him parked right in front of Adin Hill, taking away visibility, getting tips on perimeter shots, and crashing while on the rush. He’s more than just a body at the blue paint; he is a distinguished communicator, often directing linemates where to go or where to place pucks from his spot in front of the opposing goal.

The Ducks will play their last game before the extended Olympic break on Tuesday, when they’ll host the Seattle Kraken in yet another critical Pacific Division bout.

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Carlos Alcaraz plans a kangaroo tattoo to remember his Australian Open victory

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Carlos Alcaraz thinks he might get a small kangaroo tattooed on one leg.

It would be a lasting memento of his win over Novak Djokovic in the Australian Open men's final Sunday which made him the youngest male player at 22 to complete a career Grand Slam.

“I already know it’s going to be a kangaroo. I just don’t know the place,” Alcaraz said. “I’m just thinking about the leg but I don’t know which calf, whether it will be the right or left one.”

Alcaraz posed for photographers Monday with the ornate Australian Open trophy, looking casually stylish in black, in loafers and no socks. The photo shoot took place at the Royal Exhibition Building among gardens in central Melbourne.

The women's singles winner Elena Rybakina was photographed with her trophy Saturday on the banks of the Yarra River, which runs through Melbourne.

According to Australian media reports, Alcaraz spent the night after his victory with his family in his hotel suite, ordering pizza, beer and champagne.

In a social media post to fans during the photo shoot, Alcaraz said “I still can't believe that I just made it.

“A dream come true for me, a career Grand Slam. I'm enjoying this amazing moment. I can't forget the support and the love I've received.”

After completing a 2-6, 6-2, 6-3, 7-5 over Djokovic, a 10-time Australian Open champion, Alcaraz admitted “I hate to lose.”

He explained his mindset at the moment of victory.

“Before the last point ... a lot of things came to my mind, to be honest,” Alcaraz said. “I was really nervous, I was shaking almost. So once I saw the ball go out, I was like ‘alright, I made it.’

“It was a great feeling, thinking about my family and my team as well.”

Chasing completion

He has now set his sights of winning every major prize in tennis: three Masters 1000 titles that have eluded him, a season-ending championship and a Davis Cup with Spain. He has won six of the nine Masters 1000 crowns but has yet to win the Canadian Open, Shanghai and the Paris Masters.

“I hate to lose, so that’s my motivation. Trying to lose as less as I can,” Alcaraz said. “Yeah, there are some tournaments that I really wanted to win at least once. A few Masters 1000 I just really wanted to complete all the Masters 1000, trying to win each one at least once.

“Obviously the ATP Finals and the Davis Cup is a goal as well. I really wanted to achieve that for my country, for Spain. I set up some other goals for the season and I will try to be ready for, or to try to get those goals.”

Joining the greats

Alcaraz joined Don Budge, Fred Perry, Roy Emerson, Rod Laver, Andre Agassi, Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Djokovic as only the ninth man to win all four Grand Slams. He was younger than Budge by 91 days and considerably younger than Nadal who was 24 and three months, Federer almost 28 and Djokovic 29.

“I’m going to say tennis really beautiful but the bad part of tennis is we have tournaments week after week after week and sometimes you don’t realize what you’ve been doing lately,” he said. “Because once you finish a tournament, you’ve got to be prepared and your mind is about going to the next tournament.

“What I’ve learned this year is to appreciate and enjoy every single second of the moment you’re living. Not only lifting the trophies but playing tournaments, playing tennis, getting victories, getting losses. Whatever it is, just enjoy and appreciate the life you’re living.”

While Alcaraz has acknowledged the 38-year-old Djokovic as an inspiration, he's not sure he will be as durable.

“You know, let’s see how long I will be playing. Hopefully being in such a great shape at 38, competing and challenging the young players, and playing finals of grand slams.”

___

AP tennis: https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

Spurs Push Through Delays, Outlast Magic 112–103

Photo by Ronald Cortes/Getty Images | Getty Images

The day began with uncertainty, stretched into frustration and ended, finally, with resolve.

After winter weather and travel complications pushed tipoff more than five hours past its scheduled start, the San Antonio Spurs shook off the chaos and delivered a 112–103 victory over the Orlando Magic on Sunday night at the Frost Bank Center — a win that reflected not just talent, but resilience.

When the ball finally went up, the Spurs played as if eager to reclaim control of a day that had refused to cooperate. San Antonio burst out of the gate, scoring 37 points in the first quarter, fueled by crisp ball movement and an aggressive defensive effort. Victor Wembanyama immediately imposed his will on both ends of the floor, blocking shots, finishing in traffic and energizing a crowd that had waited all evening to see their beloved Spurs.

For a moment, it appeared the long day would fade quietly into a comfortable win, but Orlando had other plans.

The Magic flipped the game in the second quarter, outscoring the Spurs 40-23 and exposing the fatigue that inevitably crept in. San Antonio’s shots stopped falling, turnovers piled up, and the early lead vanished as Orlando seized momentum before halftime. What once looked routine had turned into a test.

It was in that moment — after the delays, after the lost rhythm — that the Spurs steadied themselves and took control for good.

“Heck of a response by those guys and they’ve proven that quite a bit this year,” Spurs Head Coach Mitch Johnson said. “I am very pleased with the effort and the response. The defense in the second half was nails.”

San Antonio opened the third quarter with renewed purpose, stringing together stops and launching a 10-2 run that reclaimed control. The pace slowed, the defense tightened and the Spurs began to impose their will inside, winning the rebounding battle and repeatedly earning trips to the free-throw line.

“I think it was more challenge and yelling,” Johnson said of his team’s defense in the second half. “We saw what happened in Charlotte where one quarter cost us the game. So I was pleased with the response in the second half.”

De’Aaron Fox guided the offense with patience, finishing with 14 points and 10 assists, while Dylan Harper provided 15 points off the bench to keep Orlando from gaining traction. And hovering over it all was Wembanyama, whose 25 points, eight rebounds, five blocks and four steals told only part of the story. His presence altered possessions, changed decisions and anchored San Antonio when the game hung in the balance.

The Magic made their final push in the fourth quarter, cutting the deficit and briefly threatening to turn the night on its head. Each time, the Spurs answered — a stop here, a free throw there — refusing to let the game slip back into chaos.

When the final horn sounded, the frustrating issues of the day no longer mattered.

“It was a great day,” Harper said with a smile. “This is what comes with the game, but if we’re going to play — we’re going to play hard. We are here for the fans and we poured our energy into it.”

What remained was a victory earned the hard way, one shaped by patience and grit. On a night delayed by travel issues and defined by uncertainty, the Spurs found clarity where it mattered most — on the scoreboard.

Game Notes

  • With the Oklahoma City Thunder’s victory over the Denver Nuggets, Coach Johnson has been named a head coach for the 2026 NBA All-Star Game. Johnson and his staff will coach one of the three All-Star teams in the new U.S. vs. World format.
  • Despite the win, the three-point woes continue to be an issue for the Spurs. San Antonio shot just 8-for-29 (27%) from beyond the arc. The good news? Orlando wasn’t much better, shooting just 33% from distance.
  • With Stephon Castle out with abductor tightness, Harrison Barnes made his return to the starting unit and finished with seven points. What will be interesting to see if Coach Johnson puts HB back on the bench once Castle returns from injury.
  • I’m not sure why Desmond Bane was so angry at Wembanyama and Carter Bryant, but he clearly had some issues after fouling both players hard in the second half. Maybe he needs a Snickers.

Luka Doncic flips off ex-teammate Jalen Brunson in funny exchange after Knicks-Lakers

Luke Doncic flipped off Jalen Brunson after the Knicks defeated the Lakers on Feb. 1.
Luke Doncic flipped off Jalen Brunson after the Knicks defeated the Lakers on Feb. 1.

Luka Dončić had a parting gift for Jalen Brunson before the pair of former Mavericks teammates walked off the Garden court Sunday night.

As Knicks and Lakers players embraced following the Knicks’ 112-100 victory, Dončić flashed his middle finger after the star point guard finished another postgame exchange and walked over.

Dončić appeared to be joking with the gesture, as Brunson appeared to crack a smile as he got closer.

Brunson and Dončić’s paths intersected back in 2018, when the former was selected at No. 33 overall in the second round and the latter was taken No. 3 overall by the Hawks — before getting shipped to Dallas in a trade that night.

They then overlapped for four seasons before the Mavericks allowed Brunson to walk in free agency and sign with the Knicks, where he has since become their captain and one of the league’s best players.

Luke Doncic flipped off Jalen Brunson after the Knicks defeated the Lakers on Feb. 1. Screengrab via X/@MrBuckBuckNBA

That left Dončić as the cornerstone in Dallas for the next two-plus seasons, until the Mavericks stunningly sent him to the Lakers last season — a deal that has since backfired for them and led to general manager Nico Harrison being fired.

“Definitely weird,” Brunson told reporters postgame when asked about seeing Dončić in a Lakers jersey. “I think we all expected him to be in Dallas for the longest time. But yeah now he’s a Laker and he’s playing great and still doing the things he does.”

Luke Doncic defends Jalen Brunson during the Knicks’ game against the Lakers on Feb. 1. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Brunson and Dončić both played integral roles in the Mavericks’ run to the Western Conference finals in 2022, where they were eliminated by the Warriors in five games before Brunson’s pivotal decision in free agency followed.

When they overlapped at the Garden on Sunday, Dončić, who’s averaging 33.7 points per game and could win the MVP award if he maintains that production pace, poured in 30 points for Los Angeles, while Brunson struggled by going 4-for-15 from the field — though he managed to dish out 13 assists, allowing the Knicks’ role players to flourish.

The victory extended the Knicks’ winning streak to six games, and the Lakers have dropped two of their last three entering Tuesday’s match against the tanking Nets.

Lightning’s historic four-goal comeback stuns Bruins in NHL Stadium Series

NHL: Stadium Series-Boston Bruins at Tampa Bay Lightning

Feb 1, 2026; Tampa Bay, Florida, USA; Boston Bruins goaltender Jeremy Swayman (1) makes the save on Tampa Bay Lightning right wing Nikita Kucherov (86) during overtime in the 2026 Stadium Series ice hockey game at Raymond James Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images

Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images

TAMPA, Fla. — Nikita Kucherov scored the tying goal in the third period, Jake Guentzel scored the only goal in the shootout, and the Tampa Bay Lightning rallied from a four-goal deficit to beat the Boston Bruins 6-5 in front of 64,617 fans at an NHL Stadium Series game at Raymond James Stadium.

Kucherov finished with a goal and three assists, Brandon Hagel had a goal and two assists, while Oliver Bjorkstrand, Darren Raddysh and Nick Paul all scored power-play goals after Tampa Bay fell behind 5-1 in the second period.

Andrei Vasilevskiy finished with 29 saves.

Tampa Bay’s four-goal comeback is the largest in NHL outdoor game history and the largest comeback victory in franchise history.

Morgan Geekie had a pair of goals and three points for the Bruins. Viktor Arvidsson, Alex Steeves and Matthew Poitras also scored for Boston, which improved to 10-1-2 in the past 13 games. Charlie McAvoy had a pair of assists while Jeremy Swayman finished with 41 saves.

Kucherov completed Tampa Bay’s comeback with a one-timer from the left circle with 8:10 left in the third period.

The game featured the first goalie fight in outdoor game history when Vasilevskiy and Swayman exchanged blows at center ice in the second period. The Lightning pointed to the goalie fight as a spark to their comeback when they were down 5-2.

“That was a game-changing moment for our team, and that’s what we needed,’’ Guentzel said. “That was definitely cool to watch.’’

With an opening puck drop temperature of 41.8 degrees Fahrenheit (5.44 Celsius), Hagel fired up the crowd with a goal just 11 seconds in — the fastest goal in NHL outdoor game history and tying a franchise history for fastest goal to start a game.

The Bruins scored the next five as Steeves, Geekie and Arvidsson all scored within a span of 7:39 to give Boston a 3-1 lead after the first. Poitras scored on a backhander at 2:22 of the second period while Geekie notched his second of the game at 8:18.

“We came out strong, obviously they scored right away but we got to our game right after,’’ Geekie said.

Bjorkstrand scored at 10:28 to make it 5-2.

The Lightning scored a pair of five-on-three power-play goals 23 seconds apart. Raddysh scored a goal for the fourth consecutive game to set a franchise record for a defenseman. Paul then tapped in a pass from Guentzel to make it 5-4.

“It was the game had everything,’’ Lightning head coach Jon Cooper said. “It had the weather in a state which doesn’t usually get weather like this. It was a phenomenal atmosphere, perfect ice hockey playing conditions. You had goalie fights, you had 11 goals, you had a shootout. It had everything. That one’s going to go in the memory bank. It was a special occasion.’’

Up next

Bruins: At Florida on Wednesday night.

Lightning: Host Buffalo on Tuesday night.

Lightning rally from 4-goal deficit to beat Bruins 6-5 in Stadium Series thriller

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Nikita Kucherov scored the tying goal in the third period, Jake Guentzel scored the only goal in the shootout, and the Tampa Bay Lightning rallied from a four-goal deficit to beat the Boston Bruins 6-5 in front of 64,617 fans at an NHL Stadium Series game at Raymond James Stadium.

Kucherov finished with a goal and three assists, Brandon Hagel had a goal and two assists, while Oliver Bjorkstrand, Darren Raddysh and Nick Paul all scored power-play goals after Tampa Bay fell behind 5-1 in the second period.

Andrei Vasilevskiy finished with 29 saves.

Tampa Bay’s four-goal comeback is the largest in NHL outdoor game history and the largest comeback victory in franchise history.

Morgan Geekie had a pair of goals and three points for the Bruins. Viktor Arvidsson, Alex Steeves and Matthew Poitras also scored for Boston, which improved to 11-1-1 in the past 13 games. Charlie McAvoy had a pair of assists while Jeremy Swayman finished with 41 saves.

The game featured the first goalie fight in outdoor game history when Vasilevskiy and Swayman exchanged blows at center ice in the second period.

HURRICANES 3, KINGS 2, OT

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Sebastian Aho scored early in overtime to lead Carolina to a win over Los Angeles.

Brandon Bussi made 11 saves to continue his dominant rookie season, while Jordan Staal and Alexander Nikishin also scored for the Hurricanes, who have earned at least a point in eight straight games (6-0-2).

Samuel Helenius and Quinton Byfield scored for the Kings and Anton Forsberg made 31 saves. The Kings wrapped up their road trip with a 3-1-1 record with one game (last Monday at Columbus) postponed due to severe winter weather.

A winter storm dumped snow all around North Carolina but Raleigh was mostly spared, which made it easier for about 14,000 fans to make it to the arena for the afternoon start.

A day after squandering a three-goal lead in a 4-3 overtime loss at Washington, Aho made sure the Hurricanes didn’t blow a 2-0 lead against the Kings. He beat Forsberg 1:25 into the overtime period after the Kings’ goalie had made two tough saves on Seth Jarvis.

DUCKS 4, GOLDEN KNIGHTS 3

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — Chris Kreider scored two goals, Lukas Dostal made 27 saves and Anaheim swept their three-game season series with Vegas.

Cutter Gauthier scored and Ryan Poehling added an empty-net goal for the Ducks. Anaheim earned its eighth victory in 10 games overall despite nearly blowing an early 3-0 lead during a third period dominated by Vegas.

Mitch Marner and Ivan Barbashev scored goals in their third straight games for the Golden Knights, who have lost five straight and seven of eight. Vegas has gone on two five-game skids since Christmas, with an 8-2-0 surge sandwiched between them.

Tomas Hertl scored with 6 seconds to play and Adin Hill stopped 19 shots for Vegas.

Kreider put Anaheim up 2-0 with his first multigoal game since Nov. 6 for the Ducks, who acquired him last June from the New York Rangers.