News Analysis: LeBron James won't return to the Lakers. Now what?

Lakers guard Luka Doncic, left, and forward LeBron James celebrate after Doncic sank a three-pointer during a 51-point effort
It's offiically the Luka Doncic (77) era for the Lakers, who learned LeBron James will be looking to play elsewhere next season. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

The LeBron Era is over. The Lakers can start their Luka Era.

LeBron James informed the Lakers on Tuesday he will sign with another team this offseason, extending his career to an unprecedented 24th season, but taking his talents elsewhere. James is an unrestricted free agent and the early timing of his decision allows the Lakers to approach free agency, which officially began Tuesday afternoon, with an almost clean slate.

The Lakers have up to $51 million in salary cap space, among the most of any team in the league, depending on how they spend it. And they need every dollar to fill out a bare cupboard.

The Lakers have nine players under contract and only four who were in the regular rotation last year. Behind Luka Doncic, the Lakers took care of Austin Reaves by agreeing to a four-year, $185-million contract that will be officially signed toward the end of the offseason to help the Lakers preserve maximum cap flexibility.

Center Deandre Ayton opted into a $8.1 million player option. Forward Jake LaRavia, who played in all 82 regular-season games before struggling during the postseason, is back for the second season of a two-year deal.

Jarred Vanderbilt, Dalton Knecht, Bronny James, Adou Thiero are the only other players officially under contract with the Lakers and newly drafted first-round pick Cameron Carr soon will join.

Read more:Plaschke: LeBron James got out before Lakers could throw him out

Here’s a look at how the Lakers can approach this offseason without James:

What kind of team do the Lakers want to build?

When Doncic played for the Dallas Mavericks and led them to the 2024 NBA Finals, his two centers — Derek Lively and Daniel Gafford — were exceptional in their roles as lob threats, blocking shots and rolling to the rim. Those are the sort of players with whom Doncic has thrived. He also had wing players such as Derrick Jones Jr., P.J. Washington and Tim Hardaway Jr., all of whom were athletic, three-point shooters and good defenders. Again, the sort of players with whom Doncic has thrived.

So, according to NBA executives not authorized to speak on the matter, the Lakers have to build that sort of team around Doncic and Reaves, a backcourt many see as one of the most dynamic in the league — at least offensively.

“You know with Bron, you know Bron can get you 50 wins,” a West Coast executive said. “Luka can still get you 50 wins, but you just know when Luka misses games, I got Bron and Reaves. It’s a little bit different now. If Luka misses a game, it’s just Austin Reaves now. It’s a little bit different.

“But they just lost an All-Star. So, you are not going to be able to replace him with an All-Star. You got to replace him with two good role players.”

Which players could be back?

Kevin Durant, left, is forced to pass the ball while defended by the Lakers' Rui Hachimura, center, and Jaxson Hayes.
Forward Rui Hachimura (28) and center Jaxson Hayes (11) force Houston's Kevin Durant to pass instead of shoot during a game last season. Hachimura and Hayes are both unrestricted free agents. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

A midseason move to the bench appeared to threaten Rui Hachimura’s free agency this summer, but the forward’s hot postseason shooting could turn him into a hot free-agent option. Hachimura’s 51.6% (81 for 157) career three-point shooting in the postseason is the best in league history, and he made 33 of 58 shots from beyond the arc during the playoffs for the Lakers last season while averaging 17.5 points per postseason game. Now an unrestricted free agent, Hachimura could draw interest from teams including the San Antonio Spurs and Brooklyn Nets, according to league executives not allowed to discuss personnel matters publicly.

Luke Kennard’s potential return has already been dashed. The NBA’s leading three-point shooter who was traded midseason to the Lakers agreed to a two-year, $13-million deal with the Phoenix Suns on Tuesday.

Guard Marcus Smart opted out of his contract, turning down $5.4 million to pursue a long-term deal after he reinvigorated his career with the Lakers. He turned into a trusted defensive stopper, timely three-point shooter and steady leader for the team.

Centers Maxi Kleber and Jaxson Hayes are also unrestricted free agents. Playing mostly in a backup role, Hayes averaged 7.5 points and 4.1 rebounds on career-high 75.6% shooting last season and developed such a strong relationship with Doncic that the Cincinnati native became a naturalized Slovenian citizen to hopefully play with Doncic on the national team.

Which new players could the Lakers target?

The Lakers are shopping for a center, but the store isn’t stocked with options.

In a weak free-agency class, centers Robert Williams III (Portland) and Mark Williams (Phoenix) are already off the market, each reportedly agreeing to return to their current teams.

The Lakers also have been linked to Mitchell Robinson, who is coming off an NBA championship with the New York Knicks, and Toronto’s Sandro Mamukelashvili. The Georgian center declined a $2.8-million player option to become an unrestricted free agent. Mamukelashvili is coming off career highs in points (11.2), rebounds (4.9) and shooting (52.3%) while starting 13 games out of 80 appearances. The 26-year-old also shot 38.9% (115 for 296) from three-point range.

Raptors forward Sandro Mamukelashvili looks to pass while being defended by Cavaliers guard Sam Merrill during a playoff game
Raptors forward Sandro Mamukelashvili looks to pass while being defended by Cavaliers guard Sam Merrill during a playoff game in April. Mamukelashvili is an unrestricted free agent. (David Dermer / Associated Press)

On the perimeter, the Lakers have been connected with Quentin Grimes and Ziaire Williams. Grimes scored 13.4 points with 3.6 rebounds and 3.3 assists for the Philadelphia 76ers last season. Brooklyn declined a $6.25-million option on Williams, a 6-foot-9 Sierra Canyon alumnus who averaged 10.2 points, 2.4 rebounds and 1.4 steals per game last season.

What’s the difference between unrestricted and restricted free agents?

The Lakers have been linked to Utah center Walker Kessler and Detroit’s Jalen Duren, but both are restricted free agents, meaning any offer the Lakers present could be matched by each player’s current team. If a restricted free agent gets an offer sheet from a new team during the negotiating period from June 30 to July 6 during which players can discuss but not sign new deals, their original team has until 8:59 p.m. PDT on July 7 to match. During that moratorium period, the new team must maintain enough salary cap room for the offer sheet, presenting a potential risk for the Lakers if they flirt with restricted free agents because they could lose out on other potential free agents during that multi-day waiting period.

Duren, 22, is coming off the best regular season of his career, averaging 19.5 points and 10.5 rebounds and earning All-NBA third-team honors. But he did not live up to the billing during the postseason, averaging only 10.2 points and 8.5 rebounds while the top-seeded Pistons were eliminated in the conference semifinals.

The 7-2 Kessler missed most of last season because of a shoulder injury. Two seasons ago, Kessler averaged 11.1 points, 12.2 rebounds and 2.4 blocks while leading the NBA with 4.6 offensive rebounds per game.

Denver guard Peyton Watson is another restricted free agent who was connected to the Lakers. The UCLA alumnus could be an ideal fit on the perimeter for a team desperate for defense, athleticism and shooting, but he struggled with injuries last season and could return to the Nuggets, where he won a championship in 2023.

What about Bronny?

Lakers guard Bronny James, right, dribbles past Warriors guard Pat Spencer during a game in April.
Bronny James, driving against Warriors guard Pat Spencer, is playing under a guaranteed contract worth $2.2 million this season. It's his third season with the Lakers. (David M. Barreda / Los Angeles Times)

One day before his father ended his time in L.A., Bronny James’ contract became fully guaranteed, locking the third-year guard in for $2.2 million.

The younger James, who was drafted in the second round in 2024 to form the first father-son duo in NBA history, showed steady improvement during his second season. He even played important playoff minutes, helping fill in for the depleted backcourt during Doncic’s and Reaves’ injuries. James scored his first career playoff points, totaling 12 during eight postseason appearances last season, with seven assists. He was two-for-six shooting from three-point range.

While bouncing between the G League and the NBA, James worked with coaches on developing his shooting confidence, quick decision-making and defensive ability. He played in 42 regular-season games last season compared to just 27 during his rookie season. Coaches were impressed with his growth while playing under an intense spotlight.

“When we drafted Bronny, Bron and I had one conversation very early on that I was going to coach Bronny,” Lakers coach JJ Redick said during the postseason. “I was not going to coach LeBron’s son. … Bron was great, that’s what he wanted.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Which Yankee is facing the most pressure to turn it around?

NEW YORK, NY - JUNE 21: Ali Sánchez #39 of the New York Yankees looks on from the dugout before the game against the Cincinnati Reds at Yankee Stadium on June 21, 2026 in New York, New York. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Welp. Last night was more of the same for the suddenly-helpless Yankees, who closed out June with their sixth loss in a row — appropriately their longest skid since … last June. The Aaron Boone Era Yankees are nothing if not consistent in their frustrating patterns.

For last night in particular, nothing went right. Their ace got bombed, they weren’t crisp in the field, and their offense was held to two hits until the ninth. It ain’t swell around these parts.

There’s plenty of pressure to go around, but who do you think bears the most right now? Ben Rice is a candidate, as until a solo shot yesterday, the likely All-Star had been very quiet with the bat in the past week and change. Could he be feeling the heat to keep up his torrid production from the first few months, given the wider struggles of the offense of late? Might it be Cody Bellinger, a likely fellow All-Star who has cooled off as well and carries a big contract that comes with responsibilities, particularly with Aaron Judge out? Or maybe it’s someone else, like impending free agent Jazz Chisholm Jr., one of the starting pitchers trying to keep the opponent at bay, or the bleakly anemic Austin Wells. There’s no shortage of options, unfortunately.

Today on the site, it’s a rapid-fire schedule before the matinee this afternoon. Peter will run our monthly GM poll, Madison will tackle the Rivalry Roundup, John remember the extremely mysterious Jack Quinn for our Yankees Birthday series, and then he and Kento will do the monthly check-ins on the AL Central and AL West, respectively.

Today’s Matchup*

New York Yankees vs. Detroit Tigers

Time: 1:35 p.m. EST

TV: YES, Detroit SportsNet

Venue: Yankee Stadium, Bronx, NY

*This is not the matchup, and feel free to ignore me if you don’t care about the World Cup. But the soccer fan in me is compelled to mention that Team USA faces Bosnia and Herzegovina in Santa Clara, CA tonight on Fox. Check it out and see if the USMNT win a game in the knockout round for the first time in 24 years!

Around the Empire: Aaron Judge targeting August return

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JUNE 17: Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees celebrates with teammates after defeating the Chicago White Sox at Yankee Stadium on June 17, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images) | Getty Images

MLB.com | Bryan Hoch: After almost a month of uncertainty, the Yankees have finally provided a return timetable. Judge indicated that he is targeting an August return, but first has to undergo follow-up imaging in a couple weeks. Judge last played on May 31st and was diagnosed with a fractured first right rib on June 4th, the team then only setting a four-to-six week timetable for re-imaging, but no indication of a return to play. The captain has not been doing any baseball activities but has gotten in lower body weight training. Hopefully the upcoming imaging reveals healing and a potential ramp-up in rehab given the way the Yankees offense has slumped in the second half of his absence.

AP News | Larry Fleisher: Max Fried faced live hitters for the first time since suffering a bone bruise in his pitching elbow. He threw 30 pitches in a 20-minute, two-inning simulated game at Yankee Stadium on Tuesday. Fried faced fellow IL inhabitants Trent Grisham and Ryan McMahon and tallied a pair of strikeouts while throwing all the pitches in his arsenal. Fried was among the AL’s best starters at the time of his injury on May 13th against the Orioles (departing that game after three innings with his velocity noticeably down), pitching to a 3.21 ERA in his first 10 starts. The 32-year-old lefty’s return will be a huge boon to a rotation that regressed significantly in June.

Also contained within are injury updates on a trio of Yankees position players. Grisham and McMahon are both expected to be activated from the IL on Friday, Grisham out since June 12th with a strained right hamstring and McMahon absent since June 21st with a throat infection. Grisham would be a significant reinforcement to their struggling offense while McMahon would shore up what has been a defensive train wreck at third in his absence. Finally, we received confirmation that Jazz Chisholm Jr. has cleared concussion protocol and was available off the bench in their loss to the Tigers on Tuesday, Jazz departing Monday’s game in the fourth after colliding with Jasson Domínguez’s elbow on a shallow fly ball.

New York Post | Jake Nisse ($): Yovanny Cruz was called up on Tuesday to reinforce the bullpen as the corresponding move for Yerry De los Santos’ optioning to Triple-A. Cruz flashed tantalizing stuff in his two game cup of coffee in May, striking out three in 2.1 scoreless innings with a fastball that touches triple digits and a wipeout slider. However, the Yankees have opted to keep him in Triple-A to work on his strike throwing, and indeed his walk rate improved from 12.2-percent to 7.1-percent with Scranton/Wilkes-Barre since getting sent back down at the end of last month.

Cruz got into last night’s blowout at the hands of the Tigers and threw two scoreless innings, striking out three.

Aaron Judge ‘starting to feel better’ but is weeks away from scan on rib

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows A dejected Aaron Judge looks on during the Yankees' ugly 9-3 loss to the Tigers on June 30, 2026 at the Stadium

Aaron Judge is “starting to feel better,” Aaron Boone said, though that feeling has not yet translated into concrete progress toward a return.

Thursday will mark four weeks since the Yankees announced their captain had suffered a stress fracture of a rib and would undergo additional medical imaging in “approximately four to six weeks.”

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He will not be reexamined on the shortest end of the given spectrum, Boone saying Tuesday that Judge is weeks away from a scan that would check for healing.

But in his dealings with Judge, Boone said the feedback has improved.

“He was uncomfortable there for a while,” the Yankees manager said before his team’s 9-3 blowout loss to the Tigers on Tuesday at the Stadium, their sixth consecutive defeat. “It seems like the normal stuff is starting to feel better, so hopefully that’s a good sign of hopefully some healing.”

Judge believed he suffered the stress fracture during a dive in Houston on April 26, and he struggled for weeks trying to play through it before opting for tests in early June.

Since then, the best hitter in baseball has not been “able to do much,” Boone said, “and certainly not able to do any baseball activities.” Judge has been able to work out in the weight room and strengthen his lower body.

A dejected Aaron Judge looks on during the Yankees’ ugly 9-3 loss to the Tigers on June 30, 2026 at the Stadium. Robert Sabo for New York Post

Any return timetable remains elusive.

“It does seem like this week he is starting to feel better, which is encouraging,” Boone said.


After crashing into Jasson Domínguez a day prior, Jazz Chisholm Jr. said he felt better and believed he would be available off the bench, though Boone said the second baseman only would be used in an emergency.

Chisholm believed he would be cleared from the concussion protocol. Boone said he didn’t know whether Chisholm would play Wednesday, and José Caballero started at second base Tuesday.

Chisholm left Monday’s loss in the fourth inning after he chased a shallow fly ball and was clotheslined by Domínguez, who made the catch.

“Felt like I got punched in the face,” Chisholm said.


Cody Bellinger, who had played in 83 of the first 84 games this season, sat for a second time amid a deep slump.

In his previous 12 games, Bellinger had gone 5-for-41 (.122) with a .396 OPS.

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“He’ll get corrected and get it going here,” Boone said. “Hopefully giving him at least the start off tonight kind of lets him take a step back for a second and hopefully get it going.”


Call-up Yovanny Cruz pitched two perfect innings with three strikeouts.

He threw five pitches above 100 mph and maxed out at 101.5 mph.


Against lefty Tarik Skubal, Max Schuemann started in left field, Spencer Jones in center and Domínguez in right.

Why free agent LeBron James could opt to chase new NBA history with Warriors

Why free agent LeBron James could opt to chase new NBA history with Warriors originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

When LeBron James decides where he will play next season, he will not repeat the lie frequently told at introductory news conferences.

He can say, with all sincerity, that “it’s not about the money.”

Because it’s not.

That’s why the Golden State Warriors know they have a legitimate chance to sign James in free agency.

James’ announcement Monday that he was ready to leave the Los Angeles Lakers, who could have paid him more than any other NBA team, is a commentary on his state of mind. A 41-year-old billionaire is exercising his power and privilege to choose his next destination. With the sun setting on his legendary career, he is granting himself the freedom to pursue his personal joy.

If LeBron decides to join the Warriors, bitter rivals a few years ago, it will satisfy his abiding curiosity about playing with Stephen Curry, Draymond Green, Jimmy Butler III — three men he respects on and off the court. This would be an opportunity for James to nourish his basketball soul in ways he no longer could alongside Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves in LA.

At this point in his career, James needs something new to chase. Something he has not already captured. Though he was professional enough in the 2025-26 NBA season with the Lakers, a new chapter with Golden State’s alluring circumstances could be invigorating.

LeBron to the Warriors would meet all the conditions for tremendous theater. They would be, depending on one’s point of view, lovable protagonists or a show limping past its expiration date. LeBron would be positioned to inject fresh energy into a franchise that, over the years, has devolved from contender, if not favorites, to a play-in tournament perennial. He could stand alongside Curry, Green and eventually Butler to face the howling crowd of doubters with a unique goal of doing something unheard of, much less realized.

No NBA team with its core four players all past their 35th birthday has won a championship. Or even reached the NBA Finals. 

History tells us that very good young teams traditionally run very good mature teams off the floor and toward their epilogue.

But it is instructive to know that James, Curry and Green have built fabulous careers on their desire to silence skeptics. To prove they can do what others say they can’t. Their careers are so richly decorated that they firmly believe no feat is impossible.

The Lakers could have paid James exponentially more than what he could get from the Warriors. James could have stayed in Los Angeles, close to his family, in the nest of his various business ventures. He could have remained teammates with his son, Bronny, whose contract for the 2026-27 NBA season was guaranteed on Monday.

James can now chase everything that moves his spirit, because there is nothing left to prove. The NBA record book is an ode to his individual greatness. All-time leading scorer. Most games played. Most minutes. Most All-NBA selections. Most All-Star Games. Four MVP awards, with 10 other top-five finishes. And four NBA Finals MVP awards.

The Warriors surely realize adding James alone would not automatically vault them toward the top of the Western Conference. To even have a chance at threatening the likes of the Oklahoma City Thunder and San Antonio Spurs, they would need to support the veteran core with impact talent.

Which would further entice LeBron.

The Warriors have long admired James’ skill and, moreover, his savant-like processing of the game. Coach Steve Kerr, a longtime admirer, raves about LeBron’s basketball IQ and coachability, getting a first-hand feel during their time with Team USA. The relationship between Curry and James has evolved from testy to one of mutual appreciation. Golden State CEO Joe Lacob, an inveterate chaser of superstars, is an unabashed fan.

Then, too, no one has a better nose than Lacob for the potential financial and promotional impact of 1) adding James and 2) pairing him with Curry.

Ultimately, though, LeBron’s decision will be the one that best suits his innate desire.

What might a man who has everything want for himself? A chance to do what no one has done before — and the possibility of sharing such an astonishing achievement with people who are brothers from the same hoop generation.

A moment like that might well be priceless.

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Clay Holmes near returning to mound but still weeks from Mets return

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Clay Holmes throws a pitch during the Mets' loss to the A's on April 10, 2026 at Citi Fields

TORONTO — Clay Holmes is progressing to a mound in his rehab, but still weeks away from rejoining the Mets.

The right-hander will throw a bullpen session this week, according to interim manager Andy Green, in his rehab from a broken right fibula.

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“I would love to say he’s ahead of schedule, but I don’t want to get ahead of myself and make that declaration,” Green said before the Mets beat the Blue Jays 3-0 on Tuesday at Rogers Centre. “But it’s going well and we’re encouraged by that.”

Holmes, who can opt out of his contract after this season, is among the pitchers the Mets could like to deal before the Aug. 3 trade deadline.

Holmes was the Mets’ most effective starter before his injury, pitching to a 2.39 ERA in eight starts.

Clay Holmes throws a pitch during the Mets’ loss to the A’s on April 10, 2026 at Citi Fields. Robert Sabo for New York Post

Luis Robert Jr. began a minor league rehab assignment with Triple-A Syracuse, where he joined rehabbing Jorge Polanco.

Green was asked what the Mets lineup could become with Robert and Polanco as options. Both players have been sidelined since April.

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“In Robert’s case it’s a right-handed bat that we have missed pretty obviously against left-handed pitching,” Green said. “It would be great to have Polanco — he really rounds out a lineup with an ability to hit from both sides, so the lineup gets lengthened.

“I think some of the at-bats we have had late in games, when you have those guys you have more options, even if they are on the bench on a given day you have got more choices that work really well and I think it’s just a longer, more diverse lineup.”

Though A.J. Ewing has taken grounders, Green downplayed the idea the rookie could shift to the infield following Robert’s return.

“You are talking about somebody adjusting to the big leagues and being locked in out in center field right now, which is where he’s been,” Green said.


The Mets signed outfielder Christopher Morel to a minor league contract, according to an industry source.

Morel, 27, had a .425 OPS in 22 games with the Marlins this season.

Winners, Losers from Kawhi Leonard trade to Toronto Raptors

There are some NBA trades that, if you had brought the idea up six months earlier, it would have gotten you laughed out of the room.

Trade ideas like Kawhi Leonard returning to Toronto. If someone had said that to you at your work Christmas party last year, you would have said "sure, buddy" as you slowly started to back away. Yet here we are. Kawhi Leonard is returning to Toronto in a blockbuster trade that sends an All-NBA wing back to the place he last won a ring.

Who were the winners and losers in the Leonard trade? Actually, I'm not sure there were any losers — not everyone is a winner, and there is some "meh," but trying to find a real loser was a stretch. Let's break it all down, and we'll start with a reminder of what this trade entails.

Toronto receives: Kawhi Leonard
The LA Clippers receive: Brandon Ingram, Gradey Dick, two unprotected first-round picks (2031 and 2033), a 2027 first-round pick swap, two second-rounder picks (2030 and 2033).

Winner: Kawhi Leonard

More than staying home in Southern California, what Kawhi Leonard really wanted was to get paid. The Los Angeles Clippers would not give the 35-year-old with a lengthy injury history the extension he wanted. Part of that was the Clippers were looking to pivot to a younger team, James Harden and Ivica Zubac were traded at the deadline. So if Leonard wanted to stay with the Clippers, he was going to do it on their terms. The sides were well apart.

Leonard went out and found someone who wanted to pay him. The Raptors and Leonard will work out a two-year contract extension, but at a number he likes a lot more than what the Clippers offered.

Toronto also is somewhere he can compete at a high level — if he stays healthy and everything goes right.

Winner*: Toronto Raptors

* = Leonard is healthy.

On paper, there's a lot to like about the Raptors' roll of the dice on Leonard.

Defensively, pairing Leonard and Scottie Barnes gives the Raptors two perimeter players who can match up with nearly anyone in the league. On offense, the Raptors struggled with consistent shot creation last season, especially in the halfcourt, which was particularly evident when they ran into the Cavaliers in the playoffs. Leonard fixes that. He is almost impossible to keep off his spots and never seems to miss once he gets there. He is a genuine three-level scorer. Last season, he averaged a career-best 27.9 points per game, shooting 38.7% from beyond the arc. As he draws defenders to him, shooting space and driving lanes open up for Barnes, RJ Barrett and everyone else. Leonard fits with what the Raptors need.

But there is the asterisk.

This only works if Kawhi Leonard is healthy, and that has been very hit-and-miss in recent years. He played 65 games last season, but in his seven seasons in Los Angeles, he reached that number twice. That is the big risk the Raptors are taking, that he will stay healthy and play, making everything else worth it.

If Leonard can't stay healthy, the Raptors' big swing misses, and they strike out as losers in the deal.

It's a risk, but one worth taking for a good but not great Raptors team that needs what Leonard can offer.

Beige Flag: LA Clippers

How I feel about the Clippers in this trade is how I felt about Memphis in the Ja Morant deal: It's not a great haul in return, but it was a move that needed to be made. It was time for the Clippers to move on from the Leonard/Paul George era.

The reason I almost made this a win for the Clippers is the draft pick haul. Two unprotected firsts are a very good return for a 35-year-old (although part of it was for taking on those contracts the Raptors wanted off their books). Those picks especially matter to a team that very well may lose some of their own future draft picks as part of the punishment in the Aspiration/cap circumvention investigation, whenever that lands (the Clippers deny any wrongdoing, but in league circles the sense is the investigators found something and Adam Silver will bring the hammer down, although on the team, not really Leonard).

On the court, Ingram, paired with Darius Garland, gives the team some shot creation and will make the Clippers respectable, even in the deep West.

(As a side note, I am not tagging the Clippers as losers in this because the Leonard/George era didn't result in a ring or even a trip to the Finals — you take that swing 10 times out of 10. Bringing in Leonard and George made a former laughing stock franchise relevant. The Clippers made good moves, it just did not work out.)

Winner: Sam Presti and the Thunder

Guess who controls the Clippers' first-round pick next year? You guessed it, the team that seems to own every pick, the OKC Thunder.

With a solid Clippers' roster in a deep West, there is a reasonable chance the Clippers are headed to the lottery, but not likely the bottom three — they have too much talent — and so Oklahoma City could well have an 8.1% chance of getting the No. 1 pick next year, the best odds any team can get under the new lottery system. You know, the system that is supposed to keep the rich from getting richer.

Cam Schlittler miffed by nightmare inning that put Yankees in early hole: ‘Not encouraging’

Yankees pitcher Cam Schlittler reacts after giving up a two-run home run.
Yankees pitcher Cam Schlittler (31) reacts on the mound after giving up a two-run home run to Tigers first baseman Spencer Torkelson (20) during the first inning,

Cam Schlittler’s night started off badly, and it quickly got even worse.

The Yankees ace coughed up three home runs in a nightmare first inning, and another in the third, as he was ultimately charged with six earned runs and put his team in a hole against Detroit’s reigning Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal.

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The hole he dug was too deep for a team with a struggling offense, resulting in a 9-3 loss.

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“It’s my job to come in here and try and stop that bleeding, and I couldn’t get that done,” Schlittler said as the Yankees slumped to a sixth consecutive defeat and nearly had a franchise record fifth straight game with three or fewer hits before a pair of ninth-inning singles spared them that infamy.

“So [to] put the team down four [runs] in the first — it’s not encouraging, especially against a guy like that [Skubal].”

Schlittler retired the first two batters he faced but saw an attempted home run robbery by Spencer Jones on Kerry Carpenter bounce off the outfielder’s glove and over the center field wall.

From there, Schlittler unraveled, even if manager Aaron Boone later insisted there was no mental letdown from the slightly unlucky start.

Yankees pitcher Cam Schlittler Bill Kostroun/New York Post

Homers by Riley Greene and Spencer Torkelson followed despite Schlittler getting them both to two strikes, and the normally steady arm looked deflated after finally getting out of the inning.

He was taken deep again by Greene in the third inning and was finally removed from the firing line in the fifth after a double off the center field wall by Dillon Dingler.

“If he’s not good with his location, he doesn’t usually necessarily pay like that,” Boone said, as he also credited Torkelson for battling during a long at-bat prior to his bomb. “Confident that with Cam, he’ll grow from this, and this will be something that kind of fuels him and allows him to see where he can make adjustments, too, moving forward.”

The 25-year-old has admittedly fared slightly worse against lefties this season (which Carpenter and Greene both are), but this blowup was plain uncharacteristic for Schlittler, who has generally been dominant dating back to his days in college and in the minors.

That success has translated to the majors, where he still has a 2.08 ERA this year even after Tuesday’s blip.

Schlittler was unsurprisingly critical of his performance but found a positive spin — he established his curveball in his second time through the Tigers’ order.

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“It’s taken a while to experience an outing like that,” he said. “So I just got to take what I can from it and get ready for next week.”

Steph Curry named finalist for Muhammad Ali Humanitarian Award

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - DECEMBER 08: Steph and Ayesha Curry arrive at the 2022 Sports Illustrated Sportsperson of the Year Awards at The Regency Ballroom on December 08, 2022 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Miikka Skaffari/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Steph Curry has watched the NBA rearrange itself like furniture in someone else’s house. Meanwhile he didn’t move; he didn’t have to. While the whole league has been playing musical chairs at the superstar table, the guy with four rings has been right where you left him. Golden State. The Bay. His throne built from splash, from suffering, from seventeen years of institutional trust that almost nobody in professional basketball has ever matched. LeBron packed up Los Angeles. Kawhi circled back to Toronto. Giannis headed to Miami. LaMelo came west. Ja is now in Portland. Somewhere along the way the NBA woke up looking like somebody had shaken a snow globe. But Steph never changed his address.

Here’s the thing about watching someone stay put while everything moves around them: it can look passive until you understand what it costs. Patience through chaos with a mind to solve it is what Curry exhibits year after year, and it produces a different kind of player, and a different kind of legacy. Loyalty at this level isn’t sentimental. It’s sacrificing optionality when optionality is the most valuable currency in the sport. It means absorbing rebuilding years without manufacturing drama to speed up the timeline. It means watching Klay Thompson leave, watching Draymond Green keep his options open, and trusting the foundation anyway. That’s a foundation he helped build after all, something that translates off the court as well.

That’s why it’s pretty cool that Curry has been nominated as a finalist for the Muhammad Ali Sports Humanitarian Award. renamed in 2017 to honor Ali’s legacy of using his platform for principle. Steph and his wife Ayesha Curry have been building their own way to that since founding “Eat. Learn. Play.” in Oakland since 2019.

We’re talking thirty-five million nutritious meals delivered to children and families facing food insecurity. Also, more than $20 million committed to literacy programs across Oakland public schools, including high-impact tutoring, teacher coaching, restocked libraries, and free book fairs at 47 elementary schools. Additionally, that’s over one million books placed directly into the hands of Oakland students. And before I forget, I gotta mention there’s also twenty-four schoolyards and six gyms physically transformed into safe spaces where kids can move, compete, and just be kids.

And the detail that separates “Eat. Learn. Play.” from the average celebrity foundation: Steph and Ayesha personally cover every operating expense. Every donated dollar goes directly to Oakland’s kids.

We’ve spent all summer talking about Steph as the fixed point while the NBA reshuffled itself around him. Turns out basketball was only part of the story. The same instinct that kept him anchored to one franchise also kept him anchored to one community. Oakland didn’t get the version of Steph Curry who was passing through. It got the version who decided this place was worth investing in long after the cameras stopped rolling.

news: Guardians Check All Their Usual Boxes In 4-2 Loss

Jun 30, 2026; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Cleveland Guardians pitcher Tanner Bibee (28) reacts after a run scored on an error by left fielder Cooper Ingle (not pictured) during the seventh inning against the Texas Rangers at Progressive Field. Mandatory Credit: Ken Blaze-Imagn Images | Ken Blaze-Imagn Images

✅ Cleveland Guardians score runs in just 1 of 9 innings
✅ Tanner Bibee gives up the exact number of earned runs he leads by
✅ Bibee gets ridiculous and completely undeserved Loss
✅ Shawn Armstrong enters and allows home run

It was another infuriating game of baseball for Guardians fans to watch last night. 2 runs for Grant Fink’s offense. Both in the 1st inning. Bibee gave them back in the third. Cooper Ingle blew the lead in the 7th by not knowing how many outs there were. And Armstrong gave up the dinger in the 8th.

On the bright side, Chase DeLauter looked awesome against Jacob deGrom.

And Braylon Doughty got promoted to AA. My favorite pitching prospect since Biebs.

How bad is that Guardians offense?

• The pitcher who shut them down on Monday night, Chris Paddack, was immediately DFA’d after he completed the only task Texas signed him for. They know Paddack sucks—he has an ERA near 10 against the rest of baseball—but he consistently dominates Cleveland because Grant Fink’s offense never adjusts to anything.

I expect another team to employ this same strategy before the season ends. Could the White Sox do it this weekend?

Avalanche Reunion Watch: Could Jonathan Drouin Return to Denver?

An unexpected option may have just emerged for the Colorado Avalanche as they continue navigating NHL free agency.

Veteran forward Jonathan Drouin is once again available after the St. Louis Blues placed him on unconditional waivers Tuesday for the purpose of buying out the final season of his contract. With the NHL's buyout window now officially closed, Drouin becomes one of the more intriguing unrestricted veterans still on the market—and a familiar name for Colorado.

Drouin's stint in St. Louis proved to be brief. Acquired from the New York Islanders in a March trade that sent Blues captain Brayden Schenn to New York, the 31-year-old appeared in just nine games, recording one goal and two assists before the organization elected to move on. He had one year remaining on a contract carrying a $4 million cap hit.

Before arriving in St. Louis, Drouin spent two productive seasons with the Avalanche, where he revitalized his NHL career alongside longtime friend Nathan MacKinnon. The pair first became teammates with the Halifax Mooseheads in the QMJHL before reaching the NHL together years later, and their chemistry translated immediately in Denver.

Over 122 regular-season games with Colorado, Drouin totaled 30 goals and 63 assists for 93 points, becoming a reliable top-six contributor and an important part of one of the league's highest-scoring offenses. His playmaking ability and familiarity with head coach Jared Bednar's system made him a seamless fit throughout his time with the Avalanche.

Following the 2025-26 season, Drouin made it no secret that he hoped to remain in Colorado, expressing a desire to continue his career with the organization. Instead, he ultimately landed in St. Louis, where his stay lasted less than three months before ending with Tuesday's buyout.

Originally selected third overall by the Tampa Bay Lightning in the 2013 NHL Draft, Drouin has appeared in 671 NHL games, compiling 111 goals and 287 assists over his career.

Colorado's offseason priorities remain centered on improving its roster, with the front office still expected to explore additional help up front and potentially add another defenseman. But with Drouin suddenly back on the open market—and his history with both the organization and MacKinnon well established—the circumstances have changed.

Whether that opens the door for a reunion is another question entirely, but one that has suddenly become much more interesting.

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From the Pocket: Footy faces an existential threat in CTE. The AFL’s words are wholly inadequate

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Monday’s ABC Four Corners episode looked at the life and death of Nick Lowden, who at 23 was the youngest footballer to be diagnosed with chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE). CTE affects participants in collision and combat sports – having been first identified in boxers nearly a century ago – as well as soldiers and domestic violence victims. “Why am I like this?” Lowden asked his mother. “What’s wrong with me? What’s wrong with my brain?”

The worst of these stories end up in the flat, neutral tone of coroner’s reports. In 408 subheadings, John Cain’s inquest into the death of Shane Tuck documented what CTE does to the brain, the lives of athletes and their loved ones. The Tuck and Lowden families spoke of young men who didn’t understand what was happening to them, who drew on their athlete’s instinct to fight, and who eventually retreated. Nothing I have read about a footballer has been so crushing as Cain’s detached description of the final 24 hours of Tuck’s life.

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The Utah Mammoth Have Found Their Goaltender of the Future

The Utah Mammoth have made it clear that their trade for Sebastian Cossa was about more than adding organizational depth.

Just days after acquiring the former first-round pick from the Detroit Red Wings in exchange for the 23rd overall selection in the 2026 NHL Draft, Utah announced Wednesday that the 23-year-old goaltender has signed a two-year contract carrying an average annual value of $2 million. The deal immediately solidifies Cossa as a central piece of the organization's long-term plans between the pipes.

Cossa arrives in Utah after spending the past four seasons developing with the American Hockey League's Grand Rapids Griffins, where he established himself as one of the league's top young goaltenders. He owns a career 70-33-19 record with a 2.46 goals-against average, a .911 save percentage and eight shutouts across 123 regular-season appearances.

His strongest campaign came in 2025-26, when he posted a 26-8-4 record, a 2.33 goals-against average and a .915 save percentage while recording five shutouts in 39 games. The performance earned him his second consecutive selection to the AHL All-Star Game after also receiving the honor in 2025.

Although most of his professional experience has come in the AHL, Cossa has already made his NHL debut. He appeared in his first game with the Detroit Red Wings on Dec. 9, 2024, stopping 12 of 14 shots to earn his first career victory against the Buffalo Sabres.

Before beginning his professional career, Cossa emerged as one of the premier goaltending prospects in junior hockey with the WHL's Edmonton Oil Kings. He compiled a 71-16-7 record with a 2.12 goals-against average, a .921 save percentage and 14 shutouts over 98 games from 2019 through 2022.

His dominance was particularly evident during the 2020-21 season, when he led the WHL with a 1.57 goals-against average and a .941 save percentage. One season later, he backstopped the Oil Kings to a league championship, finishing the postseason with a 16-3 record, a 1.93 goals-against average, a .919 save percentage and five shutouts in 19 playoff appearances.

That championship run also carries a familiar connection for Utah. Cossa spent all three of his WHL seasons alongside current Mammoth forward Dylan Guenther, giving the two an opportunity to reunite as teammates at the NHL level.

Internationally, the Hamilton, Ontario, native captured a gold medal with Team Canada at the 2022 IIHF World Junior Championship after previously representing Team Canada White at the 2018 World Under-17 Hockey Challenge.

Originally selected 15th overall by the Red Wings in the 2021 NHL Draft, Cossa now joins the Mammoth with a proven track record of success at every level he has played. By following last week's trade with a new contract, Utah has made an early statement that it views the towering netminder as an important part of the franchise's future.

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Pedro Martinez believes Mets can turn it around — but lack ‘leadership’ and ‘identity’

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows New York Mets' Francisco Alvarez (4) and Francisco Lindor (12) celebrate after defeating the Toronto Blue Jays during a baseball game in Toronto on Tuesday, June 30, 2026. (, Image 2 shows Man in a blue suit and light pink shirt with a blue tie speaking
metsmets

Baseball great and former Mets pitcher Pedro Martinez weighed in on the current state of affairs of the Amazins’, who have been in a free fall this season even after grabbing a 3-0 win on Tuesday over the Blue Jays on Tuesday night in Toronto. 

While the Hall of Fame hurler was optimistic the Mets still could turn their season around, he said the biggest issue for his former ballclub was that it lacks any sort of identity. He also believes there’s no leadership among the group. 

The Mets’ ugly season cost manager Carlos Mendoza last week, and the team has had a number of embarrassing moments, which included giving up a Little League home run to George Springer on Monday. 

“The Mets lack personality, they lack identity, they lack leadership. The Mets must find their identity,” Martinez said on TNT on Tuesday. “It gets me mad, because when I was there from 05 to 08…our team was recognized by probably unity, and that’s what made us be successful. We did not achieve our goal, which was to win the World Series, but we were pretty good.

“We were giving the Philadelphia Phillies and the Atlanta Braves a lot to think about every time we took the mound, whether we were hurt — a little bit hurt — or a little banged up, but we were all together, and we played together.” 

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Martinez’s tenure with the Mets produced just one playoff appearance, which was the team’s run to the NLCS in 2006. 

The Mets famously lost to the Cardinals in seven games in the NLCS and fell out of the playoff race on the final day in each of the next two seasons after squandering division leads. 

“We were going at it in the best way possible,” Martinez continued. “You don’t see that with the Mets. It’s like everybody’s playing their own game on their own. They need to be together in order for them to be successful. Everybody can achieve a little bit, anybody can give a little bit of something positive for the next guy coming up.”

Francisco Alvarez (left) and Francisco Lindor (12) celebrate after the Mets’ 3-0 win over the Blue Jays on June 30, 2026 in Toronto. Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press via AP

The baseball great did add that the Mets have the talent that should make them a competitive team, but again pointed to the need for accountability. 

“They need to find their own identity, and they need to be accountable and responsible for the money they’re being paid,” he added.

Mariners rack up eight runs without a homer, defeat Angels 8-3

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - JUNE 30: Julio Rodríguez #44 of the Seattle Mariners celebrates an 8-3 win over the Los Angeles Angels at T-Mobile Park on June 30, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Olivia Vanni/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Like a rollercoaster built by a particularly unimaginative person, tonight’s Mariners game was slow and boring for the first two-thirds, then suddenly rocketed into being fun late. By the time it was over the score was 8-3 and the Mariners offense had somehow not only blown past their former three-run-per-game cap (Rest in Pieces, hopefully never to be seen again), but managed to score all those runs without a homer for the first time in four years. For a team that’s built on on-base and slug, tonight was a lot of death by papercuts inflicted on the Angels bullpen, appropriately ending what’s been a weird June in a weird way – and yet also not, because with this win the Mariners end June at 13-14 for the month, the exact same way they ended June of 2025. Could this boring back-loaded rollercoaster metaphor bear out over the whole season? Reader, we shall see.

Bryan Woo turned in another solid start in what’s been a fairly uneven season for him so far, bobbing and weaving through some bad-luck BABIP hits and fielding miscues behind him; he didn’t have to deal with more than one baserunner until the fifth, when perpetual thorn in Mariners side Jo Adell reached on a throwing error from Colt Emerson and then Woo , maybe shaken, walked his next hitter, Josh Lowe, who is currently running a robust 4% walk rate. Woo rebounded to get out of trouble, getting three straight weakly-hit outs, and then roared through the sixth with a quick 1-2-3 inning against the top of the Angels lineup.

But the Mariners offense limped through those first five innings, tonight missing both Luke Raley and Dominic Canzone, both getting in an extra day of rest before tomorrow’s off-day. The Mariners couldn’t get anything going off Jose Soriano, putting him in a time machine and transporting him back to his early dominant days of the 2026 season despite some wandering command. Soriano struck out nine Mariners over five innings, as they chased after both cutters up and curveballs down, scattering just three hits across the first five frames.

The Mariners finally broke the deadlock in the sixth, finally stringing together some hits against Soriano, and we’re saying finally twice (thrice!) because that’s how finally it felt. Julio Rodríguez, leading off the inning, jumped on the first pitch he saw, a slider, for a single. Josh Naylor then worked a slightly longer at-bat before getting a fastball he could dump up the middle for a single of his own. The Mariners got their first run of the day – and the first run of the game – on a third consecutive single from Randy Arozarena, who took Soriano’s splitter and scorched it into left field, bringing in Julio from second easily.

That * explosion of offense * caused Angels manager Kurt Suzuki (curséd sentence) to call upon Chase Silseth, who sounds like if a Star Wars character went to a fancy boarding school, to face Cal Raleigh. It’s been a struggle for the Big Dumper, and while we would have loved to see a refreshing rainmaking Dump in the form of a home run, Cal’s smug face here on an overturned strike three that flipped to a walk – a challenge that risked what would have been the Mariners’ last challenge of the day after an ill-considered challenge by Naylor in the first – is pretty sweet succor.

Cole Young was the hero of last night’s game with his two-homer effort and he continued to produce at the plate today, smoking a splitter from Silseth (say that three times fast) at 101 mph into right field, bringing in Naylor from third. A wild pitch brought home another run and suddenly the Mariners had hit their three-run cap. After the next two batters made outs – Colt Emerson struck out on a borderline pitch challenged by Angels catcher Logan O’Hoppe, and Victor Robles struck out on seven pitches, nary a one of which approached the plate – it seemed like that’s where the inning, and possibly the run-scoring, would grind to a halt, with Weston Wilson – owner of two strikeouts already on the day – due up. But Wilson got a sinker on the plate and was able to just knock it over the head of a leaping Nolan Schanuel to bring in another pair of runs.

It’s a good thing the Mariners did add on, because the Angels did their own version of breaking the game open in the seventh after Bryan Woo exited the game with one out, having given up another bad-luck leadoff single on a changeup to Wade Meckler and, a batter later, losing a nine-pitch battle to pesky Josh Lowe that ended in a single on the slider.

Eduard Bazardo was called upon to stop the bleeding and he did not, giving up an RBI single to the first batter he saw, Logan O’Hoppe, on a poorly-located sinker. Bazardo then worsened the situation by walking nine-hole hitter and former Mariner Donovan Walton, bringing up Zach Neto, who tattooed a sinker right back up the middle for a two-RBI single, drawing the game to 5-3. Sinkers? More like stinkers on this part of the rollercoaster (bad, pejorative, creaky).

Things could have gotten worse from there, as Vaughn Grissom dunked a pitch shallowly into right field that Weston/Wilson – who has played some outfield but almost exclusively in left field – couldn’t quite get to, diving but having the ball pop out of his glove. WesWil smartly came up firing, though, and was able to get the ball in for a force on Neto, caught between second and third as Walton remained at second, having to hold up to see if the ball was caught. Bazardo was able to get Schanuel to fly out harmlessly to end the inning, but things were considerably tighter than they had been, with just two runs left to ensure that another strong start from a Mariners starter wouldn’t be squandered.

However, here’s where the rollercoaster (fun, complimentary, whoo-hoo-hands) gets cranking again. The Mariners were able to open up the lead again the seventh against veteran lefty Brent Suter. Julio led off with a hard-struck single up the middle, moving to third on a one-out double by Arozarena. But Cal had a tough at-bat against Suter, going down on three pitches for the second out, putting the onus on the two young lefties at the bottom of the lineup – Cole and Colt, whose ages combined are a mere six years older than Suter. Cole started off by working an excellent ten-pitch plate appearance culminating in a walk, fouling off pitch after pitch and refusing to expand against the veteran. Hooray for Cole. Then Colt, not to be outdone, parachuted a little fly-ball single on the first pitch he saw into left field for another two runs of insurance.

It was a particularly nice moment for Emerson, who struggled yesterday, going 0-for-3 with two strikeouts. But Emerson immediately gave all the credit to his teammate Young for working a long at-bat and forcing Suter to show his hand.

“Cole Young having the 10-pitch at-bat against Suter – that’s a really great pitcher, and seeing him do that gave me all the confidence in the world to go up there and be myself,” Emerson said. “Kind of saw everything Suter had to throw at that point – Cole got multiple changeups, you know no one practices lefty-lefty changeups, so seeing that fitght was just outstanding. I’m so happy for him.”

With a five-run lead, Dan Wilson opted to give Michael Rucker a chance at redemption against the middle part of the Angels order. Rucker walked the first hitter he saw, Jorge Soler, and then fell behind his next hitter 1-0, but was able to get Meckler to ground into a double play on the second pitch, a well-located four-seamer at the top of the zone, and then got another ground ball out off the bat of Adell for a scoreless inning. Andrés Muñoz, in to get a little work before the off-day, shut the door in the ninth with authority, and that was that. A solid team win, and they didn’t even have to homer about it. Now the calendar flips to July, and the All-Star Break, and hopefully some hotter Mariners hitting to go with the warmer temperatures.