Jake LaRavia, at only 23, fits right into Lakers' future plans

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - NOVEMBER 13: Jake LaRavia #3 of the Memphis Grizzlies warms up for a game against the Los Angeles Lakers at Crypto.com Arena on November 13, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images) NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)
Jake LaRavia is a career 42.9% three-point shooter, averaging 6.9 points and 3.3 rebounds per game. (Harry How / Getty Images)

When LeBron James was asked about how a former defensive player of the year and a former No. 1 overall pick could elevate the Lakers roster, the superstar instead offered a different offseason addition’s name first.

“And Jake,” James added quickly during his Lakers media day news conference after a question about center Deandre Ayton and guard Marcus Smart.

Jake LaRavia’s signing came with less fanfare than the moves that brought Smart and Ayton to the Lakers, but the 6-foot-7 wing hopes he can be equally as influential in a quiet connector role behind some of the league’s biggest stars.

“We got a lot of dudes on this team that can score, a lot of dudes on this team that can put the ball in the bucket,” LaRavia said Wednesday at Lakers training camp. “So I'm here to complement those players, but to also just bring energy every day on both sides of the ball.”

Read more:LeBron James looking at slow ramp-up to Lakers season

The 19th overall pick in 2022, LaRavia is a career 42.9% three-point shooter, averaging 6.9 points and 3.3 rebounds per game. After beginning his career with the Memphis Grizzlies, he was traded to the Sacramento Kings last season, playing in 19 games. His team option wasn’t picked up, putting the 23-year-old on the free agency market.

The Lakers, in need of three-and-D players to pair with Luka Doncic, were quick to call.

“To get a young player — a young player in free agency for a team that is trying to win a championship — it’s an incredible opportunity for myself and our player development department to have him continue to grow,” coach JJ Redick said last week. “Jake, I’m very high on him. His level of commitment to what we’ve asked of the guys this offseason has been very high.”

Two days into training camp, LaRavia said he’s been asked to guard four different positions. He’s played often with Doncic’s group and marveled at the five-time All-Star’s impressive array of shots. One of his main objectives during training camp will be to understand how to best to space the court when the ball is in Doncic’s hands.

“It's gonna make my life so much easier playing with someone like that,” LaRavia said.

LaRavia, who was born in Pasadena but moved to Indianapolis as a child, grew up rooting for the Lakers. Following his father’s fandom, LaRavia said he idolized Magic Johnson.

Read more:'Angry' Deandre Ayton not taking his 'last chance' for granted with Lakers

Now sporting the purple and gold himself, LaRavia is realizing that the team is bigger than just basketball, he said. Compared to his experiences in Memphis and Sacramento, it is obvious the Lakers brand stretches globally.

While suddenly in the spotlight, LaRavia has tried to keep a low profile. He was married a few days before training camp started. He relishes the chance to go unnoticed at local restaurants.

He wants to be recognized only for his wins on the court.

“I understand what this organization wants every year, which is championships,” LaRavia said at media day. “It's a winning organization, and my one goal being here is just to continue to provide rings.”

Gabe Vincent fully participates in practice

James was held out of practice for the second straight day Wednesday, but still participated in individual drills, Redick said. Guard Gabe Vincent, who missed the first day of training camp, returned to practice and appears to still be on track to play in the Lakers’ first preseason game in Palm Desert on Friday against the Phoenix Suns.

Smart (achilles tendinopathy) and rookie Adou Thiero (knee) remained out, although Smart stayed on the court after practice for extra shots. Redick said Tuesday he expected the 31-year-old guard to be fine by the end of the week.

Forward Maxi Kleber sat out as a precaution after tweaking his quad during conditioning Tuesday and will get an MRI exam, Redick said. Kleber, who missed almost all of last season with a foot injury after being traded to the Lakers in February, said at media day he was entering the season fully healthy.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Flyers Should Consider Reunion with Recently Waived Defenseman

(Photo: Eric Hartline, Imagn Images)

If the Philadelphia Flyers want to solve their issues on defense, they may have to get creative by using the NHL waiver wire.

On Wednesday, it was announced that former Flyers defenseman Louie Belpedio was placed on waivers by the Metropolitan Division rival Washington Capitals, making him available to Philadelphia for a reunion.

Also on waivers is former Flyers forward Jakob Pelletier; the Flyers themselves cut newcomer Lane Pederson, who suffered an upper-body injury in the first preseason game against the New York Islanders.

Flyers fans may remember Belpedio, 29, as the steady but unspectacular right-shot defenseman who spent the last three seasons with the organization, primarily in the AHL with the Lehigh Valley Phantoms.

Belpedio did, however, play 12 NHL games for the Flyers in the 2023-24 season, scoring two goals, two assists, and four points while accumulating zero (yes, zero) penalty minutes and a +6 rating. That's not half bad!

Flyers Roster Prediction 1.0: Nikita Grebenkin Secures Big OpportunityFlyers Roster Prediction 1.0: Nikita Grebenkin Secures Big OpportunityFollowing multiple roster cuts on Tuesday, the Philadelphia Flyers have only a handful of decisions to make before they reach their final roster for the start of the regular season.

Belpedio also spent the entirety of last season with the Phantoms, scoring five goals, 23 assists, and 28 points in 66 games while wearing an 'A' on his sweater for the second year in a row.

The former third-round pick is under contract for two seasons at a $775k cap hit, and his salary is reduced to $575k if and when he plays in the AHL.

The Flyers know the player well, and assistant GM Brent Flahr was the assistant GM of the Minnesota Wild when Belpedio was drafted in 2014.

Should the Flyers truly be completely underwhelmed by the race to the bottom for a roster spot on defense between Adam Ginning, Egor Zamula, Dennis Gilbert, and Noah Juulsen, they could take a free flier on Belpedio and see if they can land him on waivers.

Things will change once Rasmus Ristolainen returns from his triceps injury, but until then, it wouldn't be the worst idea to give Belpedio another shot wearing the Orange and Black.

Warriors sign Seth Curry; De'Anthony Melton out to start season recovering from ACL surgery

Seth Curry and his brother Stephen Curry are together for the first time. Eventually.

As had been expected, the Golden State Warriors officially signed Seth Curry, a move that had been on hold while the Jonathan Kuminga contract drama played out. With that settled, the Warriors made a series of moves official — such as signing Al Horford and De'Anthony Melton (more on him below) — and Seth was part of that.

Curry signed an Exhibit 9 deal, which means he will be with the Warriors through all of training camp, then be waived before the season starts. The Warriors can re-sign him after Nov. 15. The reason is that with the Kuminga contract, plus the ones for Horford and Melton, the Warriors are getting close to the second apron, where they are hard-capped (due to using the taxpayer mid-level exception on Horford). After Nov. 15, the Warriors will have the space to sign a pro-rated minimum contract for the rest of the season, which Curry is expected to get.

Seth, 35, may not be on the level of his older brother, but he is an elite shooter, a career 43.3% 3-point shooter who hit 45.6% of his attempts last season with Charlotte. He averaged 15 minutes a night across 68 games for the Hornets last season, averaging 6.5 points a game. His shooting will fit in great with the Warriors, once they re-sign him.

It's also going to be November (at least) before Warriors fans see De'Anthony Melton on the court.

The veteran guard is recovering from tearing his ACL last December and while the Warriors are signing him now he's not ready to return to the court and will be re-evaluated in a month.

The Warriors have the depth to withstand the absence of Curry and Melton for a while. Stephen Curry and Buddy Hield likely start in the backcourt, with Brandin Podziemski, Moses Moody and Gary Payton II behind them.

NHL 26 Patch Notes 1.1.2

 A new patch has gone live in NHL 26. 

This update consists largely of visual refreshes and tunings.

The lone gameplay issue that was fixed was an issue in Ones Eliminator where idle players were not kicked out of the match.

These edits occurred across all leagues. The Minnesota Wild and Philadelphia Flyers had their scoreboards updated, while the two along with the Calgary Flames and Anaheim Ducks, had their center ice artwork updated.

Center ice artwork was also updated for ECHL and CHL teams.

New jerseys were added to the Carolina Hurricanes, Seattle Kraken, Ottawa Senators, and Chicago Blackhawks. 

The ECHL's Greensboro Gargoyles had their new jerseys added, while multiple teams in Liiga, the SHL, and the NL had jerseys updated.

Artwork changes related to the Boston Bruins logo on hats in WoC and a missing pixel in the jersey number 8 were addressed. 

Crashes, UI and chemistry issues, and missing text were addressed in Franchise Mode. 

An injury symbol not showing up at appropriate times and crashing issues were fixed in World of Chel. 

A full list of changes can be seen on EA's official post here

For more NHL Gaming news make sure you bookmark The Hockey News Gaming Site or follow our Google News Feed.                 

What we learned in Red Sox' Game 2 loss: Critical mistakes from Duran, Rafaela

What we learned in Red Sox' Game 2 loss: Critical mistakes from Duran, Rafaela originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Red Sox let a very winnable game get away from them on Wednesday night. And now, their season will be hanging in the balance on Thursday night.

The whiplash of consequences in the Wild Card Round is just that severe.

And while Alex Cora’s bold decision to yank Brayan Bello with one out in the third inning may be the headline coming out of New York’s 4-3 win, the game was lost in the smaller moments of the game.

To wit: Top of the seventh inning, tie game, two on, nobody out after an absolute gift from Aaron Boone to leave Carlos Rodon in the game after the starter’s tank had clearly hit E. Ceddanne Rafaela digs in against reliever Fernando Cruz with one of the most basic assignments in sports: Bunt the baseball.

Rafaela couldn’t do it.

After reaching out and fouling off a splitter that was well off the plate, Rafaela … did it again. This time he popped it up to pitcher Fernando Cruz, returning the favor for Boone’s managerial mistake by gifting the Yankees a free out.

Cruz, with the help of a Jazz Chisholm diving stop and the helping hands of baseball’s BABIP gods, pitched out of the inning without allowing the Red Sox to take a lead after the Rafaela mishap.

Rafaela, who did walk in his first plate appearance after his 11-pitch walk in Game 1, also chased a pitch two feet off the plate with two outs in the ninth inning to put himself in an 0-2 hole against David Bednar.

Yet that bad baseball may pale in comparison to what Jarren Duran did — or didn’t do — in the fifth inning. Because all Duran had to do was catch the baseball. He did not.

Despite the dive, and despite the official scorer’s ruling that it was a hit, that was a routine play at any level of baseball, let alone the majors. Yet Duran kicked it, allowing the Yankees to take a 3-2 lead in the fifth.

Duran is 1-for-7 at the plate over the first two games of the series, too, making for a frustrating series thus far.

Getting a bunt down. Making a routine catch. These are plays that have to be made for a team to win playoff games and playoff series. Yet they weren’t in Game 2, and they’re major reasons why the Red Sox will be facing elimination on Thursday night in the Bronx.

Here’s more of what we learned from what was another postseason classic played by the Red Sox and Yankees.

Alex Cora is a madman

Point-blank, period. Alex Cora is crazy.

How often does a manager, in a game where his team can’t be eliminated, pull his No. 2 starter after just 28 pitches in a 2-2 game? The answer, dear reader, is NEVER. Yet Cora, who simply carries himself differently in October, didn’t hesitate to make the move in the third.

And you know what? It worked. Barely. Justin Wilson entered in relief and, after getting Cody Bellinger to fly out harmlessly to left, served up an absolute cookie to Ben Rice.

Rice, who homered in his first at-bat, actually hit this one harder, but the 109.4 mph liner was hit directly at right fielder Nate Eaton, who made the catch to end the threat.

But technically, it worked. And after the bullpen essentially got Monday and Tuesday off (except for closer Aroldis Chapman), Cora knew he had everybody at his disposal in this one. The quartet of Wilson, Justin Slaten, Steven Matz and Zack Kelly would have given him three scoreless inning, if not for Duran’s gaffe in left. And Garrett Whitlock giving up the game-winning run in the eighth certainly wasn’t the manager’s fault.

While the Yankees had only scored on Rice’s first-inning homer, Cora watched Bello and didn’t like what he saw. He made an executive decision that came with tremendous risk, and it proved to be a good one.

Double plays were a killer

Nothing kills momentum in the playoffs more than an ill-timed double play. The Red Sox had three of them.

Top of the third, tie game, two on, one out: After Trevor Story singled home two runs to tie the game at 2-2, Alex Bregman had the chance to open the floodgates. Instead, he sent a 1-1 changeup to second base, starting a routine 4-6-3 double play.

Top of the sixth, tie game, one on, one out: After Trevor Story homered to tie the game (sensing a theme there) to lead off the inning, Bregman walked. Aaron Boone visited the mound but kept Carlos Rodon in the game. The starter was vulnerable. Romy Gonzalez, though, popped out, before Carlos Narvaez grounded to third base for a 5-4-3 double play, on the first pitch of his at-bat. That could have been the inning that Boston won the game. Instead, the threat was quickly extinguished.

Top of the eighth, tie game, one on, nobody out: After Bregman put in a professional at-bat and led off with a single against Devin Williams, Nathaniel Lowe entered as a pinch hitter with the go-ahead run on base. Lowe, though, chased a changeup well off the plate, weakly grounding back to the mound to start a 1-6-3 double play. Another rally ended before it could even begin.

Obviously, they’re not trying to ground into double plays, but the results are what they are. In Game 2, they were devastating for the Boston offense.

Red Sox infield defense: Strong

Nick Sogard made a very nice play in the third inning, moving to his left, going into a slide, fielding the ball, and pivoting to make a strong throw to second base to gun down the lead runner.

(Sogard can also execute a sacrifice bunt, by the way.)

Alex Bregman also made a few plus-level plays at third, though that’s nothing new at this point. His night included inning-ending assists in the second (5-4-3 double play), fourth and sixth. Trevor Story looks to have moved past his late-season throwing issues, too.

It didn’t help win them this game, but it’s been sharp, and it will be a factor if they are able to advance with a win on Thursday.

Nate Eaton should have scored

I actually changed my mind on this, because it’s absurd to have expected Nate Eaton to busting it around third base on a ground ball behind second base with the hopes of scoring on an infield hit and errant throw to first base. Lots of premonition would have been necessary for Eaton to have pulled that off and scored the go-ahead run in the seventh inning.

Yet after looking at it again, there are some very simply reasons for thinking Eaton should have scored.

This took place, of course, when Masataka Yoshida delivered a pinch-hit, infield single. Jazz Chisholm made a diving stop, which prevented runs from crossing the plate, but his throw to first skipped away from first baseman Ben Rice, opening the door for one of baseball’s fastest players to make a run for home.

Initially, I felt Eaton should not have been expected to score, as everything took place behind him. If a throw to first base was simply late but not errant, then Eaton would have been a dead duck whipping around third and heading to home. The tag play at the plate would have been deflating for the Red Sox and sent Yankee Stadium into a delirium.

But watching the high-home camera, it’s clear that Eaton and third base coach Kyle Hudson should have been more prepared to pounce on the opportunity.

Eaton was at third base and looking at Chisholm when the second baseman made the throw. Meanwhile, third baseman Ryan McMahon was almost standing in the shortstop position, paying no attention to Eaton. With speed and base running being major factors of Eaton’s game, he should have known that he had plenty of room to get frisky by bouncing off third base toward home plate, knowing that there was nobody at the bag to tag him out if a throw came that way.

Yet instead of aggressively bouncing down the line, Eaton stopped and watched the throw, and he was actually moving back to third base when the ball skipped away from Rice.

Eaton should have been 20-25 feet down the line when the ball skipped away, but he lacked awareness of where the third baseman was, and he didn’t innately sense the opportunity to put himself in position to make a game-changing play on the bases.

Cora didn’t appreciate hearing such a suggestion in his postgame press conference.

“That’s their opinion,” Cora said when told the broadcast suggested Eaton could have scored. “I think it’s easy from up there to say that he could score. They’re not down there with us.”

They’re not … but they’re right. That was a major missed opportunity.

Fernando Cruz used up his World Series celebration

In the unlikely event that Fernando Cruz finds himself in the position to close out the World Series, and in the just-as-unlikely event that he pulls it off, the 35-year-old won’t be able to debut his top-level celebration. He used that one up in Game 2 of the Wild Card Series after giving up a 100-plus mph line drive that managed to find some leather on the warning track in center field.

It was A LOT.

Trevor Story came up about 15 feet shy of making this, officially, The Trevor Story Game™. A grand slam, after already driving in the first three runs of the game, to eliminate the Yankees in their stadium would’ve been one for the ages. But not on this night.

It’s just a shame that the broadcast didn’t have the WHOOP heart rate monitors that we saw in the Ryder Cup for Cruz. He might’ve made that thing shatter.

Reliever Fernando Cruz celebrates after the last out of the seventh inning in Game 2 of the Wild Card Series between the Red Sox and Yankees in New York. Photo: Brad Penner-Imagn Images

(It was a cool moment. But celebrating Trent Grisham for making a great play instead of celebrating yourself for giving up a laser would have been the better move.)

Garrett Whitlock getting ‘tired’ isn’t great news for Boston

From June 29 until Sept. 26, Garrett Whitlock allowed two earned runs across 32 innings in 33 appearances. He had a 0.875 WHIP and a 0.56 ERA in that span. He was as lights-out as light-out gets for a long time.

And for the first six batters he faced, he looked like that guy. He did surrender a double but also struck out three batters and welcomed weak contact. With two outs in the eighth, this thing was going to the ninth tied.

But then … Whitlock got “tired.”

“Felt good. Got tired towards the end, but thought I made some good pitches, and they did a good job,” Whitlock said. “I definitely lost command. And unfortunately that happened.”

“That” was a seven-pitch walk to Jazz Chisholm, an at-bat where none of the four balls was anywhere close to the strike zone, followed by the game-winning double by Austin Wells.

That ball getting swallowed up by the angled fence in foul ground was a stroke of bad luck for Whitlock, but that’s baseball. From there, Whitlock gave up another single and then a truly wild walk, ending his night after 47 pitches.

Whitlock indicated he wants to pitch if needed in Game 3, but if he was tired in Game 2, a trip back to the mound one night later doesn’t seem to be in the cards.

Sometimes, you’ve got to appreciate a great photograph

And this is one of them.

Jazz ChisholmBrad Penner-Imagn Images
Jazz Chisholm dives into home to score the winning run in Game 2 of the Wild Card Series between the Red Sox and Yankees. Photo: Brad Penner-Imagn Images

It probably won’t end up hanging in any Boston bars, but hey: Art is art.

Unknowns abound in Game 3

Connelly Early made his MLB debut in a minor league park in West Sacramento less than a month ago. On Thursday night, he’ll be given the ball and asked to keep the Red Sox’ season alive in a raucous Yankee Stadium.

No pressure there.

Cam Schlittler may be an old veteran by comparison, having made his MLB debut all the way back on July 9, but the rookie is every bit of the wild card that Early is for Boston.

Schlittler is from Walpole and pitched at Northeastern (as well as Harwich in the Cape League), so get ready for plenty of that from the broadcast. But as for his performance, he’s been great in his 14 big league starts, posting a 2.96 ERA and 1.219 WHIP, striking out 84 batters in 74 innings.

Early posted a 2.33 ERA and a 1.086 in his four big league starts, but obviously, none of those compare to the one that awaits him on Thursday night.

As was the case in Game 1 and again in Game 2, the Red Sox will have the advantage at the manager spot in Game 3. That one’s a blowout in favor of Alex Cora over Aaron Boone.

Everything else, though? None of it can properly be predicted — though, based on the first two games of this series, chaos and tension feel like safe bets to show up at Yankee Stadium for the finale.

2 Former Canadiens Defenders Hit Waivers

Kale Clague (© Jerome Miron-Imagn Images)

The NHL had many players hit the waiver wire on Oct. 1. While no current Montreal Canadiens were placed on waivers, two of their former players were.

This is because former Canadiens defensemen Kale Clague (Winnipeg Jets) and William Lagesson (Detroit Red Wings) have been placed on waivers by their current clubs.

Clague signed a one-year, two-way contract with the Jets this off-season. This comes after the 2016 second-round pick recorded 10 goals, 29 assists, 39 points, and a plus-3 rating in 69 AHL games with the Rochester Americans this past season. 

Clague appeared 25 games for the Canadiens during the 2021-22 season, where he recorded two goals, three assists, five points, 14 hits, and a minus-8 rating. 

Lagesson, on the other hand, signed a two-year contract extension with the Red Wings this summer. This was after the 6-foot-2 defenseman recorded one assist, six hits, seven blocks, and a minus-1 rating in seven games with Detroit in 2024-25. He also had three goals and nine points in 23 AHL games with the Grand Rapids Griffins in 2024-25. 

Lagesson played in three games with the Canadiens during the 2021-22 season, where he posted one assist, four blocks, and a plus-2 rating. 

Former Blue Jacket Christián Jaroš Rumored To Be Signing In Europe

Well, it didn't take long for Christián Jaroš to get a job. 

According to Russian Hockey Insider Artur Khairullin, Christián Jaroš will be signing with HC Spartak Moscow of the KHL. 

Per Khairullin, "Defenseman Christián Jaroš, whom Columbus placed on waivers to terminate his contract, will continue his career at Spartak." Jaroš and the Blue Jackets mutually agreed to him being places on waivers just today. 

Blue Jackets Place  Christián Jaroš On Waivers To Terminate Contract Blue Jackets Place Christián Jaroš On Waivers To Terminate Contract The Columbus Blue Jackets have placed Christián Jaroš on waivers for the purpose of contract termination.

Jaroš has played in 94 NHL games, recording 14 points. In the AHL, he has suited up for 90 games and collected 34 points. 

Before signing in Columbus, Jaroš played the last three seasons in the KHL. He played for Avangard Omsk, CSKA Moskva, and Severstal Cherepovets. He totaled 8 goals and 33 points. 

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Rocchio, Naylor power 5-run eighth inning as Guardians beat Tigers 6-1 to even AL Wild Card Series

CLEVELAND (AP) — Rocctober has returned to Cleveland.

Brayan Rocchio came up with another clutch hit in the postseason with the go-ahead homer in the eighth inning as the Cleveland Guardians evened their AL Wild Card Series against the Detroit Tigers with a 6-1 victory in Game 2 on Wednesday.

“It was huge, an 0-2 count and he was ready to fire,” manager Stephen Vogt said of Rocchio’s blast. “For us, it was a frustrating day offensively for us. Two hits leading into the 8th. For our guys to explode and get separation felt good.”

Bo Naylor also went deep in the eighth as the Guardians put up five runs to take control of the game.

George Valera also homered to force a deciding game in the best-of-three series.

The winner Thursday faces the Seattle Mariners in a Division Series. No team has lost Game 1 of a Wild Card Series and advanced since the expanded round began in 2022.

Javier Báez had two hits and an RBI for the Tigers, who were 1 for 15 with runners in scoring position and stranded 15 runners.

Detroit had the bases loaded with two out in the ninth inning, but Cade Smith got Dillon Dingler to line out to first baseman C.J. Kayfus.

“They made the most of their opportunities and we left 15 guys on. I think that paints the picture that it was today,” Tigers manager A.J. Hinch said. “The score doesn’t really indicate how the game was. But we kept giving ourselves a chance.”

The game was tied 1-1 with one out in the eighth inning when Rocchio connected on a 99.9 mph fastball from losing pitcher Troy Melton and drove it 379 feet into the right-field stands for his second homer in three games. He had a three-run drive in the 10th inning on Sunday to give the Guardians a 9-8 victory over Texas in the regular-season finale.

“I’d been lucky to face him a couple times in Triple-A. In these situations, you have to tone it down a little bit and keep it simple. José’s recommendation was look for the fastball. That’s what I was trying to do,” Rocchio said through an interpreter.

The 24-year-old Venezuelan infielder has a .308 batting average (12 for 39) in 12 postseason games with two homers, two doubles and three RBIs, hitting .333 in last year’s playoffs.

Guardians teammates have referred to it as “Playoff Rocchio” mode.

“It speaks to his confidence. It doesn’t matter what the regular season holds, he comes out in these moments and he’s really confident and puts off a great swing. And you saw what happened,” outfielder Steven Kwan said,

Rocchio’s .257 batting average since being recalled from Triple-A Columbus on July 1 was second on the team to José Ramírez (.258). Rocchio also was third on the club in RBIs (36) and doubles (15).

“Like I said in a couple interviews, I don’t think about it. I try to keep my mind focused and competing. This is competing time. There’s no self-awareness. It’s being competitive as you can,” Rocchio said of the postseason.

Daniel Schneemann added an RBI double before Naylor golfed a sweeper from Brant Hurter over the right-field wall for a five-run lead.

Jakob Junis got the win as the Guardians bullpen held Detroit scoreless over 5 1/3 innings.

Cleveland took the lead in the first when Valera drove a 94.1 mph fastball on the upper half of the strike zone from starter Casey Mize over the wall in center field. The homer came on a full count and the seventh pitch of the at-bat.

Detroit tied it in the fourth and nearly took the lead. Báez had a base hit up the middle to drive in Riley Greene and Dingler after Zach McKinstry appeared to beat José Ramírez’s tag at third on a great throw by Chase DeLauter, who was making his big league debut. A video review overturned the safe call by umpire Stu Scheurwater and Dingler’s run came off the board.

The Tigers had runners at the corners with no outs in the seventh after Gleyber Torres was hit by a pitch and advanced to third on Kerry Carpenter’s hit. Hunter Gaddis retired Spencer Torkelson on a shallow flyout, and Tim Herrin struck out Jahmai Jones and Wenceel Pérez.

Up Next

Detroit RHP Jack Flaherty (8-15, 4.64 ERA) makes his eighth postseason start Thursday and Cleveland RHP Slade Cecconi (7-7, 4.30 ERA) gets his first playoff start.

Machado and Miller star as the Padres beat the Cubs 3-0 in Game 2 of their NL Wild Card Series

CHICAGO (AP) — Manny Machado hit a two-run homer, Mason Miller dominated again, and the San Diego Padres beat the Chicago Cubs 3-0 on Wednesday, sending their NL Wild Card Series to a decisive third game.

Jackson Merrill hit an early sacrifice fly as San Diego avoided elimination after losing 3-1 on Tuesday. Dylan Cease struck out five in 3 2/3 innings before handing the ball to his team’s hard-throwing bullpen.

The finale of the best-of-three series is back at Wrigley Field on Thursday.

The playoff-tested Padres are looking for a repeat of 2020, when they dropped Game 1 in the special pandemic wild-card round before advancing with two straight victories against St. Louis. Machado also homered in Game 2 of that series.

Chicago finished with four hits. The franchise is making its first appearance in the playoffs in five years, and it hasn’t advanced since it eliminated Washington in a 2017 NL Division Series.

San Diego jumped in front on Merrill’s flyball to right off Andrew Kittredge in the first, driving in Fernando Tatis Jr. Kittredge started for Chicago as an opener, and the right-hander was replaced by left-hander Shota Imanaga in the second.

The Cubs threatened in the fourth, putting runners on first and second with two down. Adrian Morejon then came in and retired Pete Crow-Armstrong on a bouncer to first.

The Padres added two more runs on Machado’s 404-foot drive to left off Imanaga in the fifth. Tatis reached on a leadoff walk and advanced on a sacrifice ahead of Machado’s 12th career playoff homer.

The three runs were more than enough for San Diego’s bullpen, with Miller and Robert Suarez combining for 14 pitches of over 100 mph.

Morejon pitched 2 1/3 perfect innings before Miller showed off his electric stuff while striking out five consecutive batters. The 6-foot-5 right-hander reached 104.5 mph on a called third strike to Carson Kelly in the seventh that was the fastest pitch in the postseason since Statcast started tracking in 2008.

Miller, who was acquired in a trade with the Athletics on July 31, struck out the side in the seventh in his postseason debut on Tuesday. The eight straight Ks tied the postseason record set by Josh Hader in 2022.

Miller was pulled from Game 2 after he hit Michael Busch with a slider with two oust in the eighth. Suarez retired Nico Hoerner on a liner to right before a one-hit ninth for the save.

Up Next

Yu Darvish will get the ball for San Diego on Thursday. There was no immediate word on Chicago’s starter.

Darvish played for the Cubs for three seasons before he was traded to the Padres in December 2020. The right-hander said he enjoys pitching at Wrigley.

“Yeah, this place did me good,” he said through a translator. “The organization, the fans did me good, too.”

Canadiens And Senators Set The Stage For A Season-Long Duel

As Tuesday's contest between the Ottawa Senators and Montreal Canadiens showed, even pre-season NHL games can be intense and emotional.

Even if there's a potential risk of injury in rivalry friendlies, anyone who argues pre-season games should only be between non-rivals should compare the attendance in the Senators' two games in Quebec City.

Sunday's matchup between the Senators and New Jersey Devils at Videotron Centre drew in 12,159 fans. Tuesday's game had 18,259 fans, even though most of them wore the Bleu, Blanc et Rouge and were happy to see a 5-0 win over the"home team" Senators. The intensity of a game between two teams that really don't like each other should often sell more tickets.

That said, it was obvious why emotions were running high between Ottawa and Montreal. These teams will be duelling all season long, whether it's on the ice, in the standings or in the trade market.

Playing in the Atlantic Division – arguably the NHL’s toughest division – the Sens and Habs are essentially in the same boat this season. Both teams wanted the other to know they won't lay down and roll over for their opponent.

Indeed, only six points separated fourth-place Ottawa and fifth-place Montreal last season, and many pundits have the Senators and Canadiens finishing in the same vicinity this season. That’s only the equivalent of three wins that was the difference between the two teams. One bad week could be the difference between these longtime rivals. 

2 Senators Fined For Actions vs. Canadiens2 Senators Fined For Actions vs. CanadiensThe Montreal Canadiens faced off against the Ottawa Senators on Sep. 30 in a preseason contest. While it may have been a preseason game, there is no question that tempers flared during this matchup in Quebec City, as there was plenty of fightning and nastiness.

Here’s something else to picture: if these two teams meet in the playoffs, watch out. You’re going to get two passionate fan bases in close geographical locations, with a healthy hate-on for each other. We already saw it in 2012-13 when the Sens and Habs had a line brawl and in 2014-15 when Montreal got revenge for their first-round loss two years earlier.

Given that the NHL has long been trying to develop and maintain divisional rivalries, we should expect that the league would be thrilled to have Montreal and Ottawa squaring off in the first or second round.

And above and beyond the four regular-season games the Habs and Sens will play against one another this season, the rivalry between the two franchises will manifest in other areas.

Depending on how the regular season plays out, the Senators and Canadiens could be vying for the same players on the trade market. Ottawa has $3.5 million in salary cap space at the moment – a number that could swell to $16 million by this year’s trade deadline. Meanwhile, Montreal has $4.5 million in cap space, which could balloon to $20.8 million by the deadline. So both teams have the financial flexibility to do big things via trades this season, with Montreal potentially wanting a second-line center and Ottawa looking wherever it can for upgrades.

It could well come to pass that the Canadiens and Senators could be wrapped up in an arms race that has a significant effect on their bottom line.

In any case, we should never be surprised to see ill feelings between the Sens and Habs, no matter what time of year it is. It’s true that the pre-season proves nothing to anyone, but the NHL needs its divisional rivalries to thrive for the league to succeed – and in that regard, the Canadiens and Senators have nothing to worry about.

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Championship roundup: Haji Wright strikes twice as Coventry thrash Millwall to go second

  • Wright inspires 4-0 win for Frank Lampard’s side

  • Josh Maja goal gives West Brom 1-0 win at Norwich

Haji Wright added two more goals to his early-season collection as Coventry dismantled Millwall 4-0 at the Den to move second in the Championship table. The USA international Wright is the top scorer in the Championship with seven goals after his double against a Lions side who became the latest to feel the power of the Sky Blues’ rampant attack this season.

Frank Lampard’s side remain unbeaten in the league and closed to within two points of pacesetters Middlesbrough after taking their goal tally to 22 goals in eight matches.

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Edmonton Oilers Get Great Insurance Option For Their Shaky Goalie Picture

Only Sergei Bobrovsky and the Edmonton Oilers' Stuart Skinner and Calvin Pickard can say they've backstopped their teams to the Cup final in each of the last two years.

Of course, Bobrovsky is the two-time Cup champion, and Skinner and Pickard form a tandem that's raised doubts about Edmonton's netminding.

Starter Skinner and understudy Pickard played well enough to give Edmonton a chance of winning the Cup. But there was still an overriding anxiety about them this past summer. Pickard had the higher save percentage in the regular season at just .900, while Skinner had the higher stat in the playoffs at an ugly .889.

More than a few observers thought Edmonton GM Stan Bowman would address his team’s goaltending by acquiring a proven veteran between the pipes.

While it took Bowman almost to the start of the 2025-26 regular season to tweak his goalie situation, he did exactly that Wednesday when he acquired veteran goaltender Connor Ingram from the Utah Mammoth. Utah is retaining $800,000 of Ingram’s $1.95-million cap hit.

Bowman did well considering who was available at this point. He wasn’t going to get a bona fide starter on the trade market, let alone in free agency.

But while Ingram’s stock has fallen from its peak a couple years ago, the Oilers clearly felt this was a low-risk gamble that could pay off.

You can see why Ingram was an attractive-enough option. In 102 career games over four NHL seasons with the Nashville Predators, Arizona Coyotes and Mammoth, Ingram generated a record of 39-44-15 with a 3.14 goals-against average, .902 save percentage and seven shutouts. From 2022-23 to 2023-24, Ingram posted an SP of .907. He was thriving on the ice at the times, which makes him an excellent insurance option in net.

Oilers Acquire Goaltender Ingram From Utah With Retained SalaryOilers Acquire Goaltender Ingram From Utah With Retained SalaryThe Edmonton Oilers acquired goaltender Connor Ingram from Utah Mammoth, the team announced on Wednesday.

There’s no rush to get Ingram on the NHL roster in Edmonton. He'll play for the AHL's Bakersfield Condors for the time being, which will be good for Ingram to get back in form. But of course, if Skinner or Pickard struggle out of the gate this year, there’s a distinct possibility the Oilers will fast-track Ingram’s return to hockey’s top league.

Ingram has had personal issues that led him to receive care from the NHL/NHLPA Player Assistance Program from March to August of this year. He now deserves a chance to re-establish himself as an NHL-caliber goalie. It may take a while before he gets that opportunity, but the Oilers see enough in him to roll the dice and see what he can do behind what will be a stacked Edmonton lineup.   

Ingram is still only 28, giving him more than enough time to solidify a spot at the NHL level. If he thrives, he could be the final piece of a championship puzzle for the Oilers. And if he doesn’t – well, let’s just say Edmonton won’t be the final spot in his playing career.

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Flyers’ Final Cut Looms: Abols, Luchanko, and the Unfairness of Roster Math

The Philadelphia Flyers have reached the point of preseason where the decisions get messy.

Training camp is designed to clarify the picture, to sort the hopefuls from the keepers, to separate potential from reality. Yet, as Philadelphia stares down its final roster cut before the regular season, the picture feels less like a clear photograph and more like a painting in progress—strokes of promise here, smudges of frustration there.

Two players—Rodrigo Abols and Jett Luchanko—stand at the center of the conversation, each with very different résumés but equally compelling cases to stay.

Two others—Alex Bump and Emil Andrae—are already on the outside looking in, victims of timing, circumstance, and the unforgiving math of NHL roster building.

This is the part of camp that no one romanticizes: the part where good players get sent down, where bright flashes of potential are dulled by pragmatism, and where “deserving” doesn’t always mean “staying.”


Rodrigo Abols: The Case Closed

At this point, it feels less like a roster battle and more like a foregone conclusion. Rodrigo Abols has not just survived camp—he’s owned it.

The Latvian forward is the only Flyer to play in all five preseason games so far, logging five appearances in nine nights, a workload usually reserved for fringe players the coaching staff isn’t quite sure about. But instead of wilting under that grind, Abols thrived. He didn’t just hold up under the fatigue—he made himself indispensable.

Rodrigo Abols (18). (Megan DeRuchie-The Hockey News)

He scored a goal against Boston, showed poise in transition, and most importantly, never looked overwhelmed. Even in games where the minutes were lighter, he made himself noticeable with smart, mistake-free hockey.

Rick Tocchet has been clear about what he values in players like Abols: “It’s hard to play tired, and he can still contribute. He’s been practicing, he’s playing, and he had a tired night against Washington… but he was effective. That’s the key. Sometimes you just don’t feel great. Sometimes you can play neutral—just don’t make those mistakes.”

Abols has embodied that lesson to perfection. He’s shown that he can deliver with his A-game and survive with his B-game, the mark of a professional who belongs in the league. Add in his positional flexibility—equally comfortable at center or wing—and the verdict is in. At this point, it would be shocking if Abols wasn’t on the roster come opening night.


Jett Luchanko: Talent Meets Time

If Abols is the sure thing, Jett Luchanko is more of a question mark.

The 19-year-old forward turned heads last season when he became the youngest player to ever debut for the Flyers after making the roster out of camp mere months after he was drafted. While this camp hasn’t been dazzling, it has been revealing. Luchanko hasn’t forced the Flyers’ hand with spectacular plays, but he has quietly shown the qualities that make him such a special prospect: maturity beyond his years, confidence building on last season’s foundation, and a willingness to do the little things coaches love.

The problem is context. Luchanko is in that strange, frustrating in-between zone: too advanced for juniors, but not quite ready to prove he can be an everyday NHLer. (He is not eligible to be assigned to the AHL.) Sending him back to juniors risks stunting his development. Keeping him in the NHL risks asking too much, too soon.

The Flyers have been clear that they want to keep an eye on him, to give him more runway to grow. But growth takes patience, and patience is a tricky commodity when roster spots are scarce.


Alex Bump: The One That Got Away (for Now)

If there was a player who probably deserved a longer look, it’s Alex Bump. The young winger put together a good overall camp, showing impressive creativity and confidence with the puck. But hockey can be cruelly unforgiving, and a tough outing against the Bruins on Saturday may have sealed his fate.

It wasn't treated as the end of the world, but it was enough to remind the coaching staff that he’s still developing. That doesn’t mean he’s out of the Flyers’ plans—it just means the timing wasn’t right. Bump remains very much on the radar, and if his trajectory continues upward, it’s only a matter of time before he gets another crack at NHL ice.


Emil Andrae: Stuck in the Numbers Game

And then there’s Emil Andrae, whose situation is less about performance and more about profile.

The Swedish defenseman has done almost everything right. His camp was fine, but he's already proven that he can handle life in the big leagues. His NHL call-ups last season were extremely encouraging, and his skill set—calm with the puck, creative offensively, and deceptively tough—suggests he can be an everyday NHL defenseman.

But hockey, as much as it celebrates talent, often defaults to archetypes. Andrae’s archetype is working against him.

With Cam York and Jamie Drysdale already on the roster, the Flyers are reluctant to ice three smaller, offensively tilted defensemen. The preference is for size and balance, which means players like Adam Ginning or Helge Grans (though he’s currently with the Phantoms) hold more appeal. Andrae, through no fault of his own, is the odd man out.

It’s a frustrating reality because Andrae has proven his game isn’t best suited to the AHL. He’s too polished for the minors, too skilled to be simply a call-up option. Yet unless there’s an injury to York or Drysdale, he’s stuck in purgatory—ready, but without a role.


The Unfairness of the Cut

This is the paradox of preseason. Success doesn’t always guarantee survival. Sometimes the math just doesn’t work. 

For the Flyers, the final cut may come down to a choice between security and potential: Abols, the known quantity who has earned his spot with sweat and steadiness, or Luchanko, the high-upside teenager whose ceiling screams “future cornerstone.” It’s a decision that says as much about the Flyers’ short-term priorities as it does about their long-term vision.

What’s certain is this: camp has revealed that the Flyers are richer in depth and options than they’ve been in years. And as painful as the final cut may be, it’s the kind of problem an organization should want to have.

Florida Panthers captain Sasha Barkov spotted on crutches visiting Miami Heat training camp practice

Florida Panthers captain Sasha Barkov is currently in the recovery phase after having major knee surgery.

It was five days ago that Barkov went under the knife to repair a torn ACL and MCL on his right knee, an injury he suffered the day before during a training camp practice at the Baptist Health IcePlex in Fort Lauderdale.

According to the Panthers, Barkov is expected to miss anywhere from seven to nine months due to the surgery.

On Wednesday, with the NBA’s Miami Heat were taking part in their own training camp practice on the campus of Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton.

Barkov, who apparently felt that five days post-surgery was more than enough time to wait, was seen using crutches on the court of FAU’s Eleanor R. Baldwin Arena while paying a visit to the Heat players and coaches.

Over the years, Barkov has been spotted at plenty of Heat games and he hasn’t been shy about saying he’s a big fan of local basketball squad.

The feeling is apparently mutual.

Just ask Miami Heat Head Coach Erik Spoelstra, who has gotten to know Barkov a bit over the past couple decades.

“He’s so inspiring,” said Spoelstra. “I love for all the guys to see him over there. It’s been an electrifying run that they’ve had the last three seasons, and he’s a major part of it. Yes, he has the talent, but when you start diving into what everybody says about his character, his leadership, his mentorship, about all the right things. He moves a locker room because of what he’s about. That’s real talent.”

As Barkov stood on the sideline, watching practice while leaning on his crutches, several Heat players, coaches and executives, including Alonzo Mourning, came over to say hello and wish him their best.

To his credit, and to the surprise of no one who knows him, Barkov was all smiles, full of positivity.

“It is heartbreaking to see him on crutches, but then you talk to him and he’s saying, ‘Oh, no worries. I’ll be back in five or six months,’” Spoelstra said, adding that while he loves Barkov’s spirit regarding his recovery, he joked that the Panthers’ medical staff would probably not want Barkov giving out timeline estimates just yet.

“I love that guy,” said Spo. “I love everything he’s about.”

Barkov’s Panthers will play their final two preseason games against the Tampa Bay Lightning – Thursday in Tampa and Saturday in Sunrise – before hosting the Chicago Blackhawks for Opening Night on Tuesday at Amerant Bank Arena.

As for the Heat, their preseason slate begins on Saturday when they meet the Orlando Magic in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

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Photo caption: Jun 22, 2025; Fort Lauderdale, Florida, UNITED STATES; Florida Panthers center Aleksander Barkov (16) speaks to the fans during the Stanley Cup championship parade and rally. (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)

Quentin Grimes picks up one-year, $8.7 million qualifying offer to return to Philadelphia

Quentin Grimes is betting on himself.

Grimes picked up the $8.7 million qualifying offer to return to the Philadelphia 76ers this season, a one-year contract that comes with a no-trade clause and makes him an unrestricted free agent next summer, a story first reported by Shams Charania of ESPN.

While the Sixers and Grimes' representatives discussed a deal all summer, they never came close to a final agreement. Grimes' agent, David Bauman, told ESPN that the team's first formal offer came only a week ago and was for four years, $39 million, which is well below the closer to $20 million a season that Grimes was seeking (Sixers officials pushed back on that number). Philadelphia retains Grimes' Bird rights and can re-sign him next summer, but after this negotiation there will be bridges to repair.

Grimes was one of the few bright spots in Philadelphia last season. After coming over at the trade deadline, Grimes averaged 21.9 points, 5.2 rebounds, and 4.5 assists a game. Pairing him in a backcourt with Tyrese Maxey, Jared McCain and No. 3 pick VJ Edgecombe could be the backcourt for the next decade, but also has the potential to be expensive (Maxey is already making $38 million this season). Add in having to pay Joel Embiid and Paul George more than $50 million each this season and the 76ers were not looking to go big on Grimes.

Grimes is betting that after a strong season, another team will (or at least there will be enough interest to pressure the Sixers to pay up).

With this signing, Philadelphia is $7 million over the luxury tax line with 14 roster players heading into the season (they are about $1 million below the first apron). As noted by ESPN’s Bobby Marx, this is a top-heavy payroll, with the top three players (Embiid, George, and Maxey) accounting for 74% of the salary cap.