SF Giants Videos: Giants FAQ

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 05: A detailed view of the cap and Rawling baseball glove belonging to Willy Adames #2 of the San Francisco Giants sitting in the dugout in the bottom of the second inning of a major league baseball game at Oracle Park on April 05, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good morning, baseball fans!

The San Francisco Giants continue their local road trip later today when they take on the Arizona Diamondbacks. In the meantime, I thought we’d take a moment to watch a video that the team’s social media crew put out last week on their YouTube channel.

In the video, Giants players answer some of the most frequently asked baseball questions. I’ll admit, I didn’t have the highest hopes upon beginning the video and seeing Harrison Bader reading his own name off the queue cards. But his first answer was an absolute lock, so I’ll let it pass.

Anyway, it’s not a long video but it’s pretty fun to see everyone’s answers. So grab a coffee, settle in, and enjoy!

What time do the Giants play today?

The Giants begin their three-game road series against the Diamondbacks tonight at 6:40 p.m. PT.

Kansas City Royals News: Kris Bubic hits IL

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - MAY 14: Kris Bubic #50 of the Kansas City Royals delivers a pitch during the first inning against the Chicago White Sox at Rate Field on May 14, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Jayden Mack/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Kris Bubic heads to the IL.

“It’s frustrating,” Bubic said. “I want to be available. A big goal of mine, I don’t set many numericals, but in terms of just being available, I wanted to make a full season of starts this year. And the goal is to keep this at a couple weeks, which we should. But yeah, it’s frustrating. I’m not gonna lie.”

This is the fourth straight season Bubic has been placed on the IL. He missed part of the 2023 and ‘24 seasons after having Tommy John surgery. A year ago, a strained left rotator cuff ended his season early.

Anne also details Bubic’s trip to the IL.

If Bubic’s recovery goes the way he and the Royals expect it to, though, it will be a short stint on the IL before he slots back into the rotation.

“Very mild in nature,” Bubic said. “It’s not something I want to push, given my history and given the timing of the year. So for me, this is good news in a sense. I’ll talk to [Dr. Vincent Key] when he’s here later, but I expect this to be pretty minimal IL, just a few weeks, and we should be back. That’s the expectation in my head.”

Kevin O’Brien at Royals Keep takes a look at Vinnie Pasquantino’s struggles.

There’s a lot to be said about Pasquantino, who launched 32 home runs, collected 113 RBI, hit .264, posted a 116 wRC+, and accumulated a 1.5 fWAR in 682 plate appearances last year, a career-high. The Royals agreed to a modest extension with him for the 2026-2027 seasons ($11.1 million), and it seemed like Pasquantino was going to continue to be a force in the Royals lineup this year. 

Unfortunately, that’s been far from the case for Pasquantino.

In 189 plate appearances, Vinnie is hitting .201 with a .627 OPS. He also has five home runs, 18 runs scored, 22 RBI, and a wOBA of .278. When it comes to his Statcast percentiles, they haven’t been impressive, though he has been walking more (10.8%) than he did a season ago.

Jac Caglianone talks about recent lineup choices and how he’s sometimes not in them (video interview).

The Sports Business Journal named Kansas City as a top-10 sports city.

Caleb Moody at Kings of Kauffman takes a look at ESPN’s recent mock draft.

Kari Anderson at Yahoo Sports gives a little more detail on Blake Snell’s surgery. Max linked to a story yesterday on this topic; this story just expands it a bit.

Kyle Teel will remain out with a sprained LCL for a bit longer after suffering a setback in rehab.

The Mariners are promoting top prospect Colt Emerson to MLB.

DraftKings is closing its in-person sportsbook at Wrigley Field.

Gio Urshela announces his retirement.

KU Baseball won its first conference championship since 1949.

The KC Streetcar extension to the KC Current stadium is now open.

How John Michael-Gyllenborg could make the Chiefs roster.

The Montreal Canadiens beat the Buffalo Sabres in Game 7 Overtime last night to advance to the Eastern Conference finals against the Carolina Hurricanes.

Pep Guardiola is expected to leave Manchester City.

Sports Illustrated is in hot water once again for AI plagiarism accusations.

Urban Meyer lost his arbitration case against the Jacksonville Jaguars.

Ranking the musical guest performances of SNL’s 51st season.

Your song of the day is That’s How I’m Feeling by Jack White.

Orioles minor league weekly recap: Keys sweep the week, Dzierwa moves up

SARASOTA, FL - MARCH 20: Ethan Anderson and Joseph Dzierwa of the Baltimore Orioles celebrate after the game between the Boston Red Sox and the Baltimore Orioles at Ed Smith Stadium on Friday, March 20, 2026 in Sarasota, Florida. (Photo by Vincent Mizzoni/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The promotions have begun. If you were waiting to go see this year’s possible breakout pitching prospect Joseph Dzierwa in Frederick, tough luck, because he’s headed to Double-A. You’ll have to find him now in Bowie, where the team that once called itself Bowie and now calls itself Chesapeake plays its home games. We can hope this is the start of a summer full of prospects playing so well that they practically have to be promoted. Dzierwa may just be the first to go from Frederick to Chesapeake within this season.

These weekly updates focus on the team’s top prospects, particularly those on Camden Chat’s composite top 20 Orioles prospect list from before the season. They also include other guys who interest me who might develop into prospects over time. I do not tend to spend much time on non-prospect journeymen, though one never knows who might turn into the next Jeremiah Jackson. Or even, over the long haul, whether someone turning into Jackson is worth all that much to the franchise.

Here’s how things went this week:

Triple-A Norfolk Tides

  • Last week: 3-3 at Charlotte (White Sox)
  • Coming week: at Jacksonville (Marlins)
  • Season record: 18-27, last place (9 GB) in International League East

Norfolk has been simultaneously playing host to the rehab assignments of Jackson Holliday and Heston Kjerstad. The infielder may finally be settling back in to a good groove on this latest assignment; though he had 4-17 hitting, that included a triple and a homer, plus three walks, so it was a good OPS. Kjerstad, on the other hand, had 6-22 batting, with only one double, and no walks, so at .591 his OPS looks much worse.

Tougher to find real prospects in this lineup, particularly with Enrique Bradfield not having played since April 21. One other outfielder made his way back from the IL over this week. That’s Reed Trimble, who is on the 40-man roster right now. Trimble was back for two games and that was enough time for him to hit two home runs. Offseason acquisition Payton Eeles batted 15 times across five games, picking up five hits and five walks. Eeles is now sitting at a .327/.465/.364 line for the season. Gotta like the OBP, even if you also gotta be skeptical he’ll do anything like that at the next level when hitting for so little power.

More interesting are Norfolk’s pitching prospects, or at least they would be if they were pitching well. The trio of Nestor German, Trey Gibson, and Levi Wells each pitched four innings this week. Of these, only Gibson’s approximated something like acceptable, as he gave up one run on three hits and four walks. The others were much worse.

Others of interest

  • C/1B Creed Willems – Not a great week for Creed, 5-19 with no walks, but he’s still OPSing .842 in 37 games.

Norfolk season-to-date stats.

Double-A Chesapeake Baysox

  • Last week: 1-5 at Akron (Guardians)
  • Coming week: vs. Somerset (Yankees)
  • Season record: 15-23, fifth place (13 GB) in Eastern League Southwest

Not a good week for the Baysox as a team, but it was a good week for my guy Aron Estrada, so I’m going to tell you about him first. Eight hits in 19 AB, plus a couple of walks and a couple of stolen bases. These were his first two steals of the year. He’s got a .672 OPS after that hitting, so, I’d like to see more hot weeks. Mostly light-hitting infielder Griff O’Ferrall got in on the party as well, batting 6-19 with a pair of doubles, five walks, and three stolen bases. Don’t look at his season batting average. Dang it, I told you not to look.

It was mostly the offense that dragged the Baysox down this week, as they lost four games where they scored 3, 3, 2, and 1 runs apiece. Among pitching prospects worth following, things were mixed, with some decent things if you look only at the earned runs column. My honorary hyphenated cousin Juaron Watts-Brown tossed four scoreless, though he did walk four batters. Lefty pitching prospect Luis De León also had a zero in the ER column, though there were three unearned over a 3.1 inning start. This team has a 5.43 ERA. It’s not great.

Others of interest

  • OF Thomas Sosa – 5-21 hitting for the week included a double and a homer. Now a .666 OPS for the season, which is nothing to be superstitious about except that it’s way below a number where he’d be more exciting.
  • C/1B Ethan Anderson – Not one of his better weeks so far this season, batting 4-21, also with a double and a homer. Season OPS remains at .816 after 31 games.

Chesapeake season-to-date stats.

High-A Frederick Keys

  • Last week: 6-0 at Hudson Valley (Yankees)
  • Coming week: vs. Greenville (Red Sox)
  • Season record: 25-13, first place (0.5 games ahead) in South Atlantic League North

There is one affiliate in the Orioles system that has been playing good baseball, and one affiliate only. It is this one. The Keys are winners of seven games in a row and 12 of their last 13. That’s good stuff. They will have to do it going forward without Joseph Dzierwa, since he got the promotion – certainly a deserved one. Dzierwa allowed two runs over five innings in his start this week, picking up six strikeouts. That almost feels disappointing compared to some of his earlier games. Over eight games with the Keys, he had a 2.21 ERA and 0.811 WHIP.

Hopefully they don’t have to do it without Ike Irish; this wasn’t a good week for last year’s first round pick anyway, but also he was removed from the last game of the week after being hit by a pitch on the hand. That is the kind of luck the Orioles are having in 2026. Geez.

Fellow high 2026 draft pick Wehiwa Aloy did not add to his double-digit home run total this week. He still had an excellent week at the plate overall, with nine hits, including a pair of doubles, across 21 at-bats. Leading the way for Frederick on the week, though, was Braylin Tavera. Still just 21 years old, this outfield prospect hit three homers and stole four bases this week, raising his season OPS to .792. Heading in the right direction there.

Dzierwa wasn’t the only Keys pitcher worth following over this past week. Twine Palmer, the pitcher from last July’s Ramón Urías deal, threw another scoreless game, allowing two hits and two walks over four innings. Boston Bateman from the Padres trade also had a zero in the earned run column, though he managed to walk five batters and gave up one unearned run over 4.2 innings.

Others of interest

  • OF Vance Honeycutt – This week’s “How many times did Vance Honeycutt strike out?” answer is 11. Eleven times in 21 at-bats! I wanted that spring training stuff to mean something good for the future. It’s just not looking that way.
  • 1B/DH Victor Figueroa – 6-22 hitting with nine runs driven in for the week. This big dude from the Padres trade last July is slugging .600 through 32 games. He’s 22, which is old to be a prospect at this level, but I’m keeping an eye on him anyway.
  • RHP Yeiber Cartaya – This 6’5” Venezuelan righty is 23, old to be a pitching prospect at this level, but he’s got an 11.3 K/9 and sub-1 WHIP and it’s possible there’s some late blooming going on here.

Frederick season-to-date stats.

Low-A Delmarva Shorebirds

  • Last week: 1-5 vs. Fayetteville (Astros)
  • Coming week: at Wilson (Brewers)
  • Season record: 14-25, last place (13 GB) in Carolina League North

It’s the 18- and 19-year-olds on this roster who are probably the ones worth watching; hopefully enough of them can actually do good things. For the youngest guy, outfielder Stiven Martinez (turns 19 in August), this was a good week, as he hit two home runs to give him three on the season. After 25 games in his first taste of a full-season affiliate, he’s hitting .242/.308/.411. A tougher week for another young guy, DJ Layton, who struck out 10 times in 20 AB.

The pitching prospect on this roster who came into the season with the most hype was Esteban Mejia. Like Keeler Morfe before him, I’m just not seeing it in the actual results so far. Mejia walked three guys in a 3.2 inning start where he gave up four earned runs, and has now walked 25 batters in 22.1 innings. No, really, that’s more walks than innings pitched. That takes some work.

Others of interest

  • LHP Caden Hunter – A sixth round pick from USC last year, Hunter is old for this level, so it’s only worth so much, but still: Two starts this week, just one hit and three walks allowed over 8.2 innings. 0.95 ERA and 0.842 WHIP for the season.

Delmarva season-to-date stats.

Player of the week

With the option to create polls in The Feed, we are able to once again proclaim a fan-voted minor league player of the week.

Last week, you voted Aloy to be the player of the week. No surprise! He hit five homers. Irish was the choice in the first poll the week before that. Maybe a player from somewhere other than Frederick will win this week? The choice is yours. Vote below:

Tuesday’s Scheduled Games

  • Norfolk: at Jacksonville, 7:05. Starter: TBD
  • Chesapeake: vs. Somerset, 6:35. Starter: TBD
  • Frederick: vs. Greenville, 6:00. Starter: JT Quinn
  • Delmarva: at Wilson, 7:05. Starter: Esteban Mejia

Is Yaxel Lendeborg the steal of the draft?

INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA - APRIL 06: Yaxel Lendeborg #23 of the Michigan Wolverines reacts during the second half of a game against the UConn Huskies in the National Championship of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at Lucas Oil Stadium on April 06, 2026 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images) | Getty Images

When talking about the 2026 NBA draft, everyone knows about the top 4.

But there is a player who will almost certainly be available when the Mavericks pick at 9 who matches all of the top 4 statistically, so why isn’t he viewed with the likes of AJ Dybansta and Cam Boozer?

Well, he’ll be 24 when the season starts.

The basics

Yaxel Lendeborg was born Sep. 20 2002 in Puerto Rico, before moving to Ohio when he was 2 years old. He attended Pennsauken High School in New Jersey, but only played in 11 varsity games in his high school career.

This unusual circumstance was caused by his bad grades, which kept him from playing on the varsity squad. This began his roundabout basketball career, as Lendeborg would commit to Arizona Western, a junior college school, where he would play for 3 seasons.

He would be recognized as the NJCAA and ACCAC player of the year in his 3rd season, averaging 17.2 points and 13 rebounds per game. After this season he would transfer to the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

He would again dominate this level, where he would win back-to-back American Athletic Conference (AAC) defensive player of the years, where he averaged 17.7 points 11.4 rebounds, 4.2 assists, 1.8 blocks and 1.7 steals per game in his final season.

Following this season Lendeborg would enter the transfer portal, while also attending the NBA draft combine. After the combine, Lendeborg would choose to return to school, where he would transfer to the Michigan Wolverines.

This decision proved to be the right one, as Lendeborg and the Wolverines would cap off a dominant season with a National Championship.

Lendeborg would have a tremendous season, being named the Big 10 National player of the year, as well as a consensus first team All-American.

Lendeborg averaged 15.1 points, 6.8 rebounds, 3.2 assists, and 2.3 stocks per game.

The good

  • Lendeborg’s biggest strength is his combination of size and athleticism. He measured in at 6’8.75 barefoot, and weighed in at 241 pounds, with a 7’3 wingspan. These measurables are absolutely outstanding, as Lendeborg should be able to play the 3-5, giving him supreme positional versatility. He also has a fluidity that is rare for his size. This shows itself both as a driver, and as a defender, as he’s able to guard both speedy wings, and powerful big-men. This frame is also NBA ready, as he should have the strength to battle with almost any player in the league.
  • Lendeborg also possesses elite efficiency across almost all play-types. He shot 72% at the rim, and 37% from three, both being great numbers for his playstyle. He was also efficient in every context: attacking the rim, posting up smaller defenders, or popping off of a screen for a three. He’s able to effortlessly switch between off and on-ball play-types, capable of creating his own shot, or playing off of others. His shot diet is also nearly perfect, as almost all of his shots come at the rim or three point line. While he may not posses the self-creation ability of the truly elite prospects, his versatility allows him to be impactful whether he has the ball or not.
  • Perhaps the most NBA ready part of Lendeborg’s skillset will be his defense, as he projects to become an elite backline menace. Lendeborg doesn’t necessarily have one skill that sets him apart defensively; rather, it is his ability to slot in wherever a team is lacking. He can perform as a great secondary rim-protector next to a center, a wing stopper, or even a small-ball five. His long arms and thick frame lead to a high number of steals and blocks. Lendeborg also could become a volume rebounder, as he has shown the ability to grab double digit boards during his college career. While those numbers dipped last season, it can be chalked up to playing alongside Morez Johnson Jr. and Aday Mara. Overall, Lendeborg will immediately become one of the more versatile defenders in the NBA, and has the potential to truly wreck games.
  • An underrated part of Lendeborg’s game is his playmaking, which could have the potential to be truly great. While his raw assist numbers may be lackluster, the advanced metrics paint a different story. Lendeborg posted an 18% AST%, 3.1 AST/TO, and 2.9 rim AST a game, all numbers in the 85th percentile or better. While these numbers could suggest hidden upside as an on-ball creator, he will more than likely be limited due to his scoring ability. At the very least, he should be an effective connective passer who always makes the right play.
  • Finally, Lendeborg’s advanced impact metrics cannot be ignored, as he has some of the best in this class. Lendeborg posted the second best BPM in the class, only behind Cameron Boozer. This impact felt on both sides of the ball, as he was second best in both metrics. This level of impact usually translates to the NBA, even if it’s inflated due to his age.

The bad

  • Simply put, Yaxel Lendeborg’s age is the only reason he isn’t discussed as a top 5 prospect in this class. Lendeborg will be 24 years old when the 2026-2027 NBA season begins, a truly outrageous age for a rookie. To put this in perspective, he is older than Paolo Banchero, who will be entering his 5th NBA season. His age is a nuanced topic, as many have claimed that the only reason he has the impact that he showcased in college was due to his age. While this is a bit extreme, the cause for concern is not fully without merit. While Lendeborg’s raw BPM was 15.1 (second best in the class), his BPM+ (which accounts for factors such as age) was only 5.1, which is 15th in the class. His age also means that his potential is capped at being a role player, as teams can expect very few physical changes for Lendeborg at this point in his career.
  • When it comes to his game the biggest concern is the three-point shot. While Lendeborg shot 37% from three last season at Michigan, it was the first season in his long college career where the 3-ball was a legitimate weapon. His form is solid, but I do have concerns about whether he will have real three-point gravity at the next level.

Fit with the Mavericks

While many Mavericks fans would hate this draft selection, his fit would be incredibly seamless. Lendeborg could immediately start at the 4 next to Cooper Flagg, helping him on both sides of the ball.

The issue is that the Mavericks already have a player that is very similar to Lendeborg, while only being 3 years older.

That being P.J. Washington Jr.

The other problem is Flagg’s timeline. Lendeborg is ready to help a contending team win now, and while the Mavericks should be feisty next year, winning is not a priority. Furthermore, Lendeborg will be 30 years old before Flagg turns 25, and will be on the decline before Flagg hits his prime years.

Player comparison

The most obvious comp for Lendeborg is Aaron Gordon with slightly less athleticism. This comp is mainly rooted in their shared physical traits and defensive versatility. While Gordon is not a star, he routinely has been one of the most impactful players in the entire league, and is vital to the Nuggets system. Lendeborg’s low end comp is the aforementioned P.J. Washington Jr.

P&T Round(ball) Table: Predictions for the Knicks-Cavaliers Eastern Conference Finals.

CLEVELAND, OHIO - APRIL 02: Jalen Brunson #11 of the New York Knicks talks with Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers after the game at Rocket Arena on April 02, 2025 in Cleveland, Ohio. The Cavaliers defeated the Knicks 124-105. 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 Jason Miller/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s been a million years since the New York Knicks last graced a basketball court. But the playoffs haven’t stopped and our beloved Knickerbockers are back it, starting on Tuesday, and hooping in the Eastern Conference Finals for the second year and row.

After beating a pesky Atlanta Hawks squad and vaporizing the Philadelphia 76ers, the Knicks are facing a much tougher matchup on paper against the Cleveland Cavaliers. Can they keep it rolling? Can they extend their ongoing seven-game winning streak? Will the vibes stay the same as they’ve been for the past few weeks and into the depths of June!?

As usual, the Posting & Toasting crew has squeezed back around the round(ball) table to cut through the noise and tackle the juiciest questions surrounding New York’s EFC showdown with their Cleveland foes. Our panel of basketball geniuses tackled the following questions:

How many games will the Knicks-Cavaliers ECF last, and who makes the Finals?

Antonio: I failed miserably predicting Embiid/Maxey to have an unwinnable game each against the Knicks. I’ll put my reputation on the line once again cause I don’t think it’s that risky. I refuse to believe Donovan Mitchell won’t at least have one of those ridiculous 50-burger outings he puts together here and there, and the Cavs have a bunch of very solid starters, so as not to combine for another victory. Give me Knicks in six and I’d be pleased.

Miranda: Knicks in five. The Cavs won two Game 7s to get this far, and that has to mean something. But those wins were over two teams still learning to rub two sticks together on offense, so how much those Cavs wins matter is pro’ly more eye-of-the-beholder than usual.

Zeno: I gave the Sixers way too much credit last round, and that’s my bad, but I would truly be shocked if the Cavs looked as bad as they did, even with the grueling postseason they’ve endured so far. There are a lot of key matchups in this one, but I lean the Knicks to win a war of attrition and wear down a fatigued Cavs squad in six games to advance to the NBA Finals for the first time in 27 years.

Kento: The Cavaliers will be the best team the Knicks have played. They, even more so than the two previous teams the Knicks played, pose some unique challenges, but they aren’t hurt, and they aren’t inexperienced. The Cavaliers have a lot of talent, and are more versatile in the ways they can play than the Hawks, and 76ers too. I also think the Knicks’ offense, partly because of how the Cavaliers will defend them, will come back down to earth. But I still think they have the depth, talent, home-court advantage, and rest to take them over the top. Knicks in six.

Beyond Jalen Brunson, who is the most important Knick in the ECF?

Antonio: Everybody’s talking about OG—both health- and talent-wise—but I just can’t go with anyone else than Mitchell Robinson. Yes, bench guy. Yes, awful at the line. Yes, a limited-minutes, strategical advantange for the Cavs. But when Mitch is on, he’s a menace, and the Knicks will need all of it to deal with the Mobley-Allen pairing in the paint. Robinson already dominated Cleveland’s bigs in 2023. Let’s have a re-do.

Miranda: OG Anunoby. Specifically, his hamstring. Both these teams feature multiple quality big men. Both feature elite combo guards. Both are led by coaches whose CV would be gussied up quite a bit with the addition of an NBA title. And while I agree with Joe Vardon that Max Strus looks a little beefier than in the past, maybe the biggest difference between the teams is one has an 80-inch, 240 pound two-way monster who was the Eastern playoffs MVP before hurting his hamstring, and the other has Strus. If OG is anything close to what he was the first two rounds, Cleveland has no chance.

Zeno: The longest tenured Knick, Mitchell Robinson. In 2023, he and Isaiah Hartenstein brutalized Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen to a pulp on the boards. iHart is gone, and Karl-Anthony Towns does more than enough on the boards to replace him, but I truly believe this series needs to have a gigantic performance from Big Mitch on the boards. In two games against Cleveland this year, he grabbed 29 rebounds (16 offensive) in 36 total minutes. More of that, please.

Kento: Josh Hart. The Cavaliers have the defensive personnel to guard Hart with a center-something that has long stifled the team’s offense. The Knicks have found some workarounds, but still lack a consistent enough counter to when opponents do that. If Hart is a willing, and effective enough shooter, it won’t matter. But if he becomes hesitant, or goes completely cold, this series could get uncomfortable. I also think his offensive rebounding, and defense on Harden and or Mitchell will be imperative to winning this series as well.

What must New York do to win this series and represent the East in the Finals?

Antonio: Drag the series into a seven-game affair so the Cavs wave the white flag. No, seriously, they simply have to do what they earned in the regular season and Cleveland helped them get for the third consecutive round: play to their home-court advantage, start the ECF going up 2-0, and go from there. There’s no way the Cavs pull off the miracle if they go two games behind to start the conference finals, coming off playing 14 games in a month, let alone with New York having nine days off. If we’re going Xs & Os, be mad quick and jump all possible passing lanes. Yes, you’ll get caught here and there, but the Cavs turn the ball over like madmen, so more often than not, those mistakes and an active D should do wonders for the Knicks.

Miranda: The Cavaliers barely beat a Raptors team with RJ Barrett as a leading scorer and a Pistons team whose best scorer after Cade Cunningham was Tobias Harris, who shot 39% in the series. So they’re obviously leveling up taking on the scoring Xanadu that is these Knicks. But the surest way for the Knicks to win the series is to pick their poison on defense and stick with it: either play Donovan Mitchell pretty straight-up and ensure none of his teammates get going, or refuse to let Mitchell beat them and leave it to the rest of the Cavs to make shots. The Cavs are by far the best scoring side the Knicks have seen this postseason, but I don’t think they have enough players capable of going off. After Mitchell, I don’t think they have any.

Zeno: Make Cleveland’s offense uncomfortable. They lead all the teams in turnovers and points allowed off turnovers as Donovan Mitchell and James Harden are trading bad performances. It’s hard to shut the water off on both of them, but even making one extremely frustrated can disrupt their offensive flow and allow you to score in transition.

Kento: Win the possession battle. Throughout the ups and downs, and the craziness of the Cavaliers’ postseason run, a few things remain a constant. They’ve actually been a good offensive rebounding team, but still struggle with keeping opponents off the offensive glass, and they have not only been turnover prone, but have been abysmal in transition defense. Thankfully, the Knicks have been great at rebounding the ball on both ends of the floor, and while they don’t force a ton of turnovers, they’ve been among the best in the league at converting their limited opportunities into points. If the Knicks can win the possession battle against an already fatigued team, it could be the ultimate difference-maker.

What concerns you most about the Knicks entering the ECF?

Antonio: Rust. If you frequent the comment section of P&T, you’ve read me mentioning it since the day the Knicks clinched their spot in the ECF, let alone each passing day the Cavs-Pistons series extended for yet another game. Having a few days off might help, but being out for damn nine days is unheard of, so we don’t even know how that might or might not work out in favor of or against New York. That said, once both teams settle into the series, and the longer they last, it’s fair to assume the Knicks should have a sizable fresh-legs advantage.

Miranda: Madison Square Garden is as big a homecourt advantage for a Game 7 as there is in the Association, but earlier in playoff series it can feel more the opposite. I think that’s more about how fandom has evolved over time than anything specific to MSG, but I suspect that as players have become more like comrades than enemies (which I don’t mind) and every team is now a billionaire vanity project, the little things that used to differentiate between the haves and have-nots don’t really apply anymore, including homecourt advantage.

When the Bad Boys won back-to-back titles in the late 1980s, owner Bill Davidson made them the first team to have their own private charter, Roundball One. If the Pistons were flying private during a playoff series and whoever they were beating up on was still flying commercial, that was a big advantage. A year ago Forbes estimated Cavs’ owner Dan Gilbert’s “worth” as $22.5 billion. That’s par for the course nowadays. My biggest worry, at least earlier in the series, is whether playing at home with all the pressure to win that there is on this group, for the first time ever, could build to an uncomfortable point.

Zeno: The long time off might be an obvious answer, but I’ll go with Cleveland’s 3-point shooting. The biggest advantage you had in a potential series against Detroit was their lack of it, but the Knicks will have to not only guard Mitchell and Harden closely, but stay home on guys like Max Strus, Dean Wade, and Sam Merrill on the perimeter. This team is very capable of pouring it on offensively.

Kento: As mentioned above, the Cavaliers defense, and more specifically, how they defend Hart. Dean Wade has boasted great individual defensive numbers against Brunson this year, but seeing as he averaged damn near 30PPG against VJ Edgecombe, who had similar success, I’m not as worried there. But the Knicks’ worst offensive droughts often come when teams put their centers on Hart. When, not if, the Cavaliers deploy that strategy, how will Hart, the rest of the Knicks, and Brown respond? And just as importantly, if the offenses starts to struggle, can Brown pull the plug, and not only make the necessary adjustments, but do so quick enough to avoid becoming the next Thibodeau?

Heading into the ECF, what gives you the most confidence about New York amid its postseason run?

Antonio: It took them more than 90 games and a few locker room discussions amid the Hawks series, no less (welp) to get their excrement together, but the Knicks have finally blossomed into the uber-killing machine we envisioned in August and watched win the winter tourney. Seriously, there is just no realistic scenario in which the Cavs catch such a massive break as the Pacers did last year—injuries, bounces, whatnot—to kick the Knicks out of contention. I just refuse to believe it.

Miranda: They’ve never lost a playoff series against Cleveland. Plus, after their last four ECFs dating back to 1994 came against Indiana, the Knicks’ mirror nemesis, it will be refreshing not to face the dark chaos magic that is every f***ing Pacers team ever.

Zeno: Two things, actually. The rest advantage and the way they’ve been playing. The Cavs have played 14 games in 30 days leading into this series and could play as many as 21 in 44 days. In the regular season, players will load manage, and the games are less intense, but it’s a whole different beast in the playoffs. They were exhausted against the Pacers last year, and the Knicks can do the same thing to them. Secondly, we just watched the most dominant seven-game stretch in Knicks history. I’m not going to doubt them until I see them deviate from this winning formula on both ends of the floor.

Kento: I’ll cheat and go with two. One is Brunson. I tend to believe that in the postseason, when the talent level is close enough, the team with the best player usually wins. That should give the Knicks the advantage. But I’ll echo what everyone else is saying and also go with the trajectory of both teams. I get that every series is a new series but the Cavaliers have played four more games, needed seven games to beat a solid, but mediocre Raptors team, and a Pistons team who’s second best offensive player was…. Tobias Harris? Meanwhile, the Knicks are rested, are more prepared, and have been playing the best basketball of the season, and overall look as focused as they ever have.

The next NBA MVP born in America will be one of these 14 players

DALLAS, TEXAS - DECEMBER 18: Cooper Flagg #32 of the Dallas Mavericks dribbles the ball while defended by Cade Cunningham #2 of the Detroit Pistons in the second half of a game at American Airlines Center on December 18, 2025 in Dallas, Texas. 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 Gunnar Word/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s almost impossible to predict which players will one day turn into a possible NBA MVP. As the league takes steps to address its purported tanking crisis, the last No. 1 overall pick to win the MVP is still Derrick Rose, who taken in 2008. After Rose, you have to go back to LeBron James (2003) and Tim Duncan (1997) for the last No. 1 overall picks to win MVP. Victor Wembanyama will almost certainly break this drought in the next year or two, but the looming ascent of Wemby opens up another question: When is the next time an American-born player will win MVP?

The last American-born MVP was James Harden in 2018. Since then, Giannis Antetokounmpo won twice, Nikola Jokic won three times, Joel Embiid won once, and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander has won twice. Embiid was the only one of those players who was drafted in the top-10. It feels like Wembanyama could win the next seven MVP awards even if it’s unlikely because of the 65-game rule of award eligibility. It could be a long, long time before the next American MVP.

When thinking about the next American MVP, a long-term horizon needs to be considered. Given the gap between SGA, Wembanyama, Luka Doncic, and everyone else, it’s totally possible that the next NBA MVP born in America isn’t even in the league yet. Let’s go through some options.

Missed their window already, and never really got close

Donovan Mitchell: Mitchell is in the discussion for the best American-born player in the NBA right now. He’s also never finished top-5 in MVP voting, and he turns 30 in September. It’s not happening.

Jalen Brunson: It’s more likely that Brunson wins NBA Finals MVP than NBA MVP, even if that’s also a long-shot. Brunson is obviously terrific as a scorer and shot-creator, but he only has one fifth-place MVP finish to his name, and he’s not getting any better on the brink of his 30th birthday.

Jaylen Brown: He deserves a mention after the year he just turned in, but he’s not even the best player on his own team, let alone the best in the league.

Young veterans with a chance

Anthony Edwards: Edwards is one of the front-runners for this honor. He’s already a top-10 player in the league at 24 years old, and he’s also likely going to have a big marketing push behind him as the face of American basketball if he can continue to ascend as a player. Is there a world where the Timberwolves trade Rudy Gobert, Edwards suddenly has more space to drive and create, and he takes a big leap? What if he eventually changes teams? The fact that Edwards has improved so much since being drafted as a hyper-athletic ball of clay — just look at his three-point shooting from college to now — gives him a real shot to keep getting better and eventually win an MVP one day.

Jayson Tatum: Tatum is 28 years old and already has two fourth place MVP finishes on his resume. He looked fantastic returning from a torn Achilles this season, so it’s totally possible he can regain his level of play prior to the injury. Tatum was probably a long-shot MVP candidate even before the injury, since younger players have already passed him. It will be even harder with a reconstructed Achilles. Given that the Celtics consistently churn out great teams and Tatum remains their franchise player, there’s still a chance it happens one day if the other contenders miss the games played cut-off.

Cade Cunningham: Cunningham led his team to 60 wins in his age-24 season to fulfill the promise he showed as the No. 1 overall pick in the 2021 NBA Draft. He’s already a borderline top-10 player, and there’s so much low-hanging fruit to clean up in his game. Cunningham can go up another level if he cuts down the turnovers and improves his scoring efficiency, and it’s possible that playing in better spacing one day will get him there. It feels like Detroit might be better served to put another ball handler next to Cade and let him work as more of a wing than a point guard, but who knows if they will actually go in that direction. He’s one of the top candidates on this list …. but he’s nowhere near Wemby, while being 2.5 years older.

Evan Mobley: I would have ranked Mobley higher on my list of the next American MVP candidates a couple years ago, but he really hasn’t gotten much better lately. Does he have another big leap in him? He’s obviously a special defensive player and a good offensive player, but he’s a world away from MVP level.

LaMelo Ball: My toxic trait is that I never stop believing in LaMelo Ball. I had Ball ranked No. 1 in the 2020 NBA Draft, and he finally put it all together this season to both have a big impact on winning and grade out as a top-20 player in some metrics. The Hornets had the best net-rating in the NBA after Jan. 1. If Charlotte keeps that up and finishes at the top of the East next year (a big if, I know), Ball could sneak into MVP conversations.

Chet Holmgren: Holmgren is the closest thing we have to an American Wemby. He already feels like a top-10 player in the world to me, and just celebrated his 24th birthday. I really do think Holmgren can get up another level offensively, but not that’s not the role he’s been asked to play yet on the Thunder, and it’s hard to see a scenario where he’s the best player on his own team if he stays in OKC.

Tyrese Haliburton: Haliburton looked like an MVP-caliber player last time we saw him healthy in the 2025 NBA Finals. Can he get back to that level after a torn Achilles? It will be difficult, but not impossible. The Pacers point guard could be a Steve Nash-like candidate where he gets most of the credit of his team’s success if Indiana emerges as a contender again next season.

The 2006-2007 Generation

Cooper Flagg: Flagg was the youngest player in the NBA as a rookie, and he put together a terrific season despite being asked to play de facto point guard for the first time in his life. If an NBA player’s prime is ages 24-28, Flagg won’t hit that rank until the 2030-31 season. There have been eight players in league history to win MVP before they turned 24, and Flagg will be on an all-time trajectory if he can do that. I would like to see the Mavs star get back to his roots and reassert himself as a dominant defensive player after being …. fine on that end of the floor as a rookie while shouldering a huge offensive creation burden. Flagg has the talent to win MVP. No one else born in this country has his defensive ceiling while also being carrying this big of a usage load. It just feels like it will be hard for the Mavs to build a good enough team around him in the West in the near future.

Cameron Boozer: Boozer is the best player in the 2026 NBA Draft for my money. I’ve been touting him a future NBA superstar since he was in high school, and all he did at Duke was win national player of the year with a near-unanimous vote despite being basically the youngest player in the country. Concerns about his athleticism are overblown, but to get to MVP level Boozer would probably have to turn into an excellent pull-up three-point shooter or flirt with averaging a triple-double.

Darryn Peterson: It was only 18 months ago when Peterson was dropping 58 points on A.J Dybantsa in a 40 minute high school game. He never looked healthy at Kansas, but still showed that he can be a deadly three-point shooter. If his bizarre injury issues are over now and he’s really this good of a shooter, there’s a pathway for DP to be one of the most complete scoring guard prospects to hit the draft in recent memory.

A.J. Dybantsa: Dybantsa is an extremely gifted shot-creator for such a gigantic wing. I don’t think he’s really a complete player, but put a team full of dirty work guys around him and it’s possible he could emerge as a superstar engine of an elite team. He would need to take a big leap as a three-point shooter, defender, or both to get to MVP level, but there’s a world where that could happen.

Tyran Stokes: Stokes is the front-runner to go No. 1 overall in the 2027 NBA Draft right now as a jumbo shot-creator who stockpiles steals and blocks. There are some questions around his mentality. I asked an NBA scout at the combine if they thought Stokes had enough going on upstairs to eventually be a great player, and they responded by saying he’s currently a one-floor apartment. It’s more likely that he never makes an All-Star team than wins MVP, but he’s still a super talented player with plenty of time to learn winning habits.

Let’s get crazy

Rhys Robinson: Robinson is a 16-year-old who won’t be eligible for the NBA Draft until 2029. He’s a tall, high-feel point guard who has played up three years in international competitions and still performed well. He’s in the international pipeline right now but was born in California. I can’t believe I’m putting someone born in 2010 on this list, but the specter of Wemby’s long run of dominance will do crazy things to a man.

Joaquim Boumtje Boumtje: Enrolling at Duke as a 17-year-old this year, JBB won’t be eligible for the draft until 2028. The Florida native is reportedly close to 7-feet tall with the skill to play on the perimeter. He’s more of a forward than a center, and can get hot as a three-point shooter. He could be really good 10 years from now in 2036, if the world still exists at that point.

Predicting the next American-born NBA MVP

Who will be the next American-born NBA MVP? Here’s how I’d rank the candidates.

7. Darryn Peterson

6. LaMelo Ball

5. Chet Holmgren

4. Anthony Edwards

3. Cade Cunningham

2. Cooper Flagg

1. Cameron Boozer

Let us know who you think will be the next American-born NBA MVP below in the comments.

Season in Review: Dillon Brooks was the “Villain” we all desperately needed

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - APRIL 07: Dillon Brooks #3 of the Phoenix Suns reacts during the second half of the NBA game at Mortgage Matchup Center on April 07, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Welcome to our Phoenix Suns Season in Review series, where we revisit every player who suited up during the 2025–26 campaign through the lens of expectation, reality, and what it ultimately meant.


Player Snapshot

  • Position: SF/PF
  • Age: 30
  • 2026-27 Contract Status: $20.0 million
  • SunsRank (Preseason): 3
  • SunsRank (Postseason): 2

*SunsRank is based on Bright Side writers’ ranking.

Season in One Sentence

Dillon Brooks provided the exact edge and high-intensity defensive resistance that Phoenix desperately needed, even if his occasional boundary-testing on offense left the coaching staff pulling their hair out.

By the Numbers

GPMINPPGRPGAPGSTLFG%3PT%FT%OFFRTGDEFRTG+/- (TOTAL)
5630.420.23.61.81.043.5%34.4%84.2%113.7114.8-49

The Expectation

The ask was simple, at least on paper. Give Devin Booker a break from the toughest nightly assignments. Bring physicality to a wing rotation that had been getting pushed around for two years. Hit enough corner threes to stay on the floor in crunch time. Phoenix did not need Brooks to reinvent himself. They needed him to show up and be exactly who he already was.

We knew what came with all of that. The technicals. The mind games. The staredowns. The relentless trolling. Sometimes it could cost you points in critical moments, but you have to take the good with the bad when it comes to Dillon Brooks. You don’t get the Villain without it.

The Reality

Dillon Brooks had a breakout season for the Phoenix Suns. He averaged a career-high 20.2 points per game on 43.5% shooting from the floor. It wasn’t just his scoring that set the tone of the Suns; it was what he did on the other end of the court.

Brooks was the one guy on this roster who genuinely looked forward to guarding the other team’s best player. He did not rotate off, did not take plays off, and did not flinch when the assignment got ugly. He’d mix it up and get in the head of the opponent’s top option.

His catch-and-shoot numbers held at a respectable 36.8% from deep, which kept defenses from sagging off him entirely and gave the offense legitimate spacing to work with. He shot 34.4% from deep overall, and 49.2 on two-point field goals.

Here is where it gets complicated. Brooks has never been a guy who stays in his lane for 48 minutes, and this season was no different. There were several times he decided to create off the dribble, and possessions died. Ball movement stopped. Jordan Ott’s offensive structure evaporated. The team went from executing to watching one guy hunt a mid-range look with 14 seconds left on the shot clock. And look, some of those possessions were warranted or “heat checks” but we all know the harmful overdribbling Dillon Brooks experience was a thing last year.

What It Means

For two years, this franchise has talked about needing a tough, physical wing who takes pride in the dirty work. Brooks is that guy. He does not need to be reminded. He does not need to be motivated. He shows up ready to compete every single night, and that quality is genuinely rare in a league full of players who pick their spots.

There are plenty of Suns fans who would love to see an extension for Brooks this summer, but the math has to make sense. There are so many different priorities both short and long-term for this team to figure out. But make no mistake… Dillon Brooks, Collin Gillespie and Jordan Goodwin are the dogs that led this team’s culture change. All three need to be here for a while.

Defining Moment

It’s tough to pick any one defining moment from Brooks, as he was a constant meme generator and hit so many big shots over the course of the season.

The career-high 40-point outburst in a win vs. the Pistons in late January has to be my overall pick. He took over this game and carried the Suns to a win with Devin Booker sidelined. It was an efficient 40-piece on just 22 shot attempts. He mixed it up quite a bit with the Pistons throughout as he led the Suns to the convincing win against the number one seed in the East.


Grade: A-

Brooks did his job and then some. To me, he earns a very solid “A minus” because he is largely responsible for this season’s success and overacheiving.

He defended, he competed, and he gave this team an identity on the perimeter that it genuinely lacked before he arrived. The iso tendencies docked him a little bit, but agian, you take the good with the bad with Dillon Brooks. The talent and the toughness were never in question.

The bottom line is there are 29 other teams that would kill to have their own version of Dillon Brooks. He is a tough player to find, and the Suns should not take what he brings to the table for granted. Even if he gives Jordan Ott the ocassional anxiety attack.


Cleveland Cavaliers vs. New York Knicks series preview, predictions: Is this the Knicks' year?

Is this the year the New York Knicks return to the NBA Finals?

Have the up-and-down Cleveland Cavaliers finally figured it out?

Before the season began, it was a popular pick for Cleveland and New York to face off in the Eastern Conference Finals… and then the season started. It did not look for long stretches like the Cavaliers would be able to reach their potential, while the Knicks fought through the season with fans saying something usually reserved for NHL teams — they're better built for the playoffs.

Here we are: Jalen Brunson vs. Donovan Mitchell. Karl-Anthony Towns and Mitchell Robinson vs. Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen. Two good benches (which actually could decide this series). On paper, these teams match up well, but for two seasons now, the Knicks have shown toughness, grit, and the ability to live up to that potential under pressure. Cleveland still has to prove that. It makes for a fascinating series.

Here's everything you need to know about the Eastern Conference Finals.

Cleveland vs. New York Playoffs Schedule 2026

All times are Eastern (* = if necessary).
Game 1: Cleveland at New York, Tuesday, May 19 (8 ET, ESPN)
Game 2: Cleveland at New York, Thursday, May 21 ((8 ET, ESPN)
Game 3: New York at Cleveland, Saturday, May 23 (8 ET, ABC)
Game 4: New York at Cleveland, May 25, (8 ET, ESPN)
*Game 5: Cleveland at New York, May 27 (8 ET, ESPN)
*Game 6: New York at Cleveland, May 29, (8 ET, ESPN)
*Game 7: Cleveland at New York, May 31 (8 ET, ESPN)

Player to watch: Donovan Mitchell

From Raphielle Johnson, NBC Sports fantasy basketball lead writer
Outside of Game 6, Mitchell had a very good second round, averaging 28.1 points, 5.6 rebounds, 3.6 assists and 2.4 three-pointers per game while shooting 45.1 percent from the field and 84.0 percent from the foul line. He didn't shoot the three as well as he could, but Spida's ability to get to the foul line helped compensate for those struggles. To advance to the NBA Finals, the Cavaliers will need Mitchell to be as productive as he was in the second round, if not better.

Unlike Detroit, the Knicks don't have major spacing issues on offense, which means the Cavaliers will need to be more effective on both ends of the floor. Mitchell will have plenty of help in this series, but the storylines of him facing the Knicks because of the proximity to his hometown (Greenwich, CT) and the trade that wasn't consummated between Utah and New York mean he'll be in the spotlight.

Keys to watch for in Cavaliers vs. Knicks

From Kurt Helin, lead NBA writer

Is James Harden up for the moment?

In previous matchups, the Knicks put their best perimeter defender — OG Anunoby — on Donovan Mitchell. That puts extra pressure on Harden, who will have to step up and just flat-out win a couple of games for Cleveland in this series for the Cavs to have a chance. He's also fully capable of that. For all his postseason duds (including Game 7 against Detroit, it just didn't matter because Mitchel and Evan Mobley stepped up), Harden also has had dominant postseason outings.

Mikal Bridges likely draws the Harden assignment for New York, and he was impressive against Tyrese Maxey in the last round. Cleveland needs Harden to step up despite the defense — this is why they traded for him at the deadline.

Evan Mobley vs. Karl-Anthony Towns

New York's run of six straight wins began when the team started using Karl-Anthony Towns in the high post as a hub rather than a go-to scoring option. His gravity and passing opened up lanes for cutters, or for plays that got the ball to Jalen Brunson in a mismatch or already moving downhill.

Evan Mobley — or, more specifically, the combination of Mobley and Jarrett Allen — has the ability to disrupt that flow. Mobley was fantastic against the Pistons, and the front line of him and Allen made life difficult for Jalen Duren. Mobley and Allen are a good matchup vs Towns and Mitchell Robinson, and whoever comes out on top in that matchup is much closer to winning the series.

OG Anunoby’s health

Hamstrings are tricky, and while this was supposed to be a minor injury — he was always listed as day-to-day and might have returned if the series against the 76ers was not a sweep — one never knows for sure. Anunoby is probable to play in Game 1. If Anunoby isn't right, the Knicks perimeter defense gets a lot worse, plus he's averaging 21.4 points a game and shooting 53.8% from 3-point range these playoffs. He's probably fine, but it's something to watch.

Predictions

Kurt Helin (NBA lead writer): Knicks in 6

Cleveland has the talent on the roster to beat New York, but it also does not play with the consistent urgency or toughness to do it four times out of seven games. We know New York is going to bring it every game, and Mike Brown will make the needed adjustments. Plus, when James Harden has an off game — as he did in Game 7 against Detroit — the Cavaliers are not going to be able to cover for him like they did against the Pistons or Raptors. If the Cavs are going to make this a real series, they need to steal Game 1 on the road against a rusty Knicks team that has been off for a week.

Raphielle Johnson (fantasy basketball lead writer): Knicks in 6

While I understand the "rest vs. rust" conversation, I don't believe that it will apply as much in this series. New York entered the second round in a similar scenario, and even though Cleveland is much better than Philadelphia, that experience should help the Knicks in the early part of this series. Also, the time off was needed for OG Anunoby and Josh Hart, both of whom were either sidelined by injuries or played through them in the second round. With Karl-Anthony Towns playing as well as he has, Mikal Bridges regaining his confidence, the bench stepping up and Jalen Brunson being Jalen Brunson, I like the Knicks to earn their first NBA Finals appearance since 1999.

Jay Coucher (NBA lead betting analyst): Knicks in 6

When the Cavs play with force and intent like they have in both of their Game 7s this playoff run, their ceiling is incredibly high, with elite creation paired with outstanding rim protection and a roster loaded with shooting. But this team is too inconsistent to be fully trusted (why did they completely no show Game 6 against Detroit?) against a Knicks team that has been consistently locked in lately and has far fewer glaring weaknesses than Detroit or Toronto that Cleveland can prod at.

Tuesday’s Brotherhood Playoff News & Links

OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA - MAY 18: Jared McCain #3 of the Oklahoma City Thunder and Stephon Castle #5 of the San Antonio Spurs compete for a loose ball during the second quarter in Game One of the NBA Western Conference Finals at Paycom Center on May 18, 2026 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. 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 Alex Slitz/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Western Conference Finals started with a bang Monday night as the San Antonio Spurs took out the Oklahoma City Thunder, 122-115 in double overtime.

Mason Plumlee did not get off the bench again, but he’s 36 now and his role is limited: he’s a reliable big man for spot duty as needed. His career is winding down, but he’s not going to do stupid things if called upon.

As for Jared McCain, he got 18 minutes, scored 7 points, 3 rebounds, and an assist.

On Tuesday, Tyrese Proctor and the Cleveland Cavaliers open the Eastern Conference Finals against the New York Knicks.

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The Islanders Can’t Keep Chasing The Same Free-Agent Archetype

The New York Islanders will be looking to add this summer, both up front for scoring and on the right side of their defense.

Often, the easiest way to add to the roster in the summer is through the July 1 Free-Agent Frenzy.

It's no secret the Islanders could covet the top available players like Alex Tuch and Darren Raddysh, but it's very rare to land the top guy on the board for any team in the NHL.

Instead, the second wave of players usually is where most of the NHL gets its business done, including the Islanders.

The Islanders have been competitive in the free-agent market the last two years for forwards, most notably with Brock Boeser this past July 1.

Instead, Boeser extended at the very last minute with the Vancouver Canucks.

The Islanders tried to improve their roster, signing Jonathan Drouin to a two-year deal that did not pan out as hoped, ultimately trading him to the St. Louis Blues as part of the Brayden Schenn trade.

The year before, 2024, the Islanders' ambitions were hidden in the famed Lou Lamoriello Cone of Silence, but it's likely they'd have had major interest in the likes of Steven Stamkos, the top UFA.

Instead, he signed with Barry Trotz and the Nashville Predators. 

The Islanders then turned around and signed Anthony Duclair to a four-year deal that has not panned out as hoped. They will be looking hard to move the player off the roster this summer.

Both Drouin and Duclair were clear adds to the middle-six of the Islanders, with hopes they could even be a fit on New York's top line alongside Bo Horvat and Mathew Barzal, before the latter returned to center.

The Islanders need a clear top-line winger, not another stop-gap winger, especially with Victor Eklund looking like a strong bet to be a day-one NHLer next season.

If the Islanders do wish to improve the forward group, the best way to do so this summer could be via trade, with one target being Eklund's older brother, William.

This year's forward free agency class behind Tuch is an extremely thin class.

In recent days, the Islanders have been linked with Boston Bruins forward Viktor Arvidsson.

Arvidsson, 33, had a great year in Boston, scoring 25 goals and 54 points in 69 games, skating on Boston's second line.

Arvidsson then scored two goals in three playoff games before suffering a season-ending broken rib and punctured lung early in Game 4.

On paper, adding Arvidsson's 25 goals (a pace of 29.7 goals over a full 82 games) could make sense for the Islanders.

It's also only the second time in the last six seasons that Arvidsson has scored that many goals. He scored 26 in 2022-23. Then he played only 18 games in 2023-24, dealing with major injuries. 

In 2024-25 with the Edmonton Oilers, Arvidsson scored 15 goals and 27 points in 62 games.

Aside from this past season (2025-26) and the 2022-23 season, Arvidsson has been hampered by injuries and a lack of consistent production.

If that sounds familiar, it's similar to the way Drouin and Duclair were described before signing with the Islanders.

It's not a mistake the Islanders can afford to make for a third-straight summer.

Wolves’ Joe Ingles signs with Melbourne United

It didn’t take long for the Minnesota Timberwolves roster to change going into the offseason.

Wolves veteran guard Joe Ingles announced that he is signing with Melbourne United in the NBL, returning to his native Australia after a 12-year stint in the NBA with the Utah Jazz, Milwaukee Bucks, Orlando Magic and the past two seasons in Minnesota.

“Coming home to Melbourne feels incredibly special,” Ingles said via ESPN.

“To return to where my professional career began almost 20 years ago is something I don’t take for granted.

“So much has happened since then, but Melbourne has always felt like home.

“We’re really excited to reconnect with the community here, and to be closer to family and friends again. After so many years overseas, that part means a lot to us.”

While Ingles did not play much for the Wolves during his tenure with the team, he was a valuable veteran for a group on the rise. During the season, Jaylen Clark spoke to Ingles’ importance of being one of the last players on the roster.

That speaks to why the Wolves brought Ingles back last summer despite hardly playing in his first season with the team.

With Ingles gone, it opens up a spot on the roster for a younger player, possibly Enrique Freeman or Rocco Zikarsky from the two-way slots, or the Wolves could bring in another veteran to occupy a veteran minimum deal.

Canis Hoopus community, what do you make of Ingles’ departure? Who should the Wolves bring on board in free agency to fill his spot? Chime off in the comments section below.

Dan Vladar's Next Flyers Contract Should Exceed $20 Million

When the Philadelphia Flyers inevitably sign starting goalie Dan Vladar to a contract extension, the new deal will come with some sticker shock. That is to be expected with the goalie market the way it is these days.

Vladar, 28, bet on himself last summer when he signed a two-year, $6.7 million ($3.35 million AAV) contract with the Flyers, parlaying some boilerplate seasons with the Calgary Flames into an opportunity to become a No. 1 goalie in the NHL.

The Czech netminder did that in 2025-26, going 29-14-7 in 52 games for the Flyers while posting a 2.42 GAA and .906 save percentage.

Notably, Vladar's 52 games played were greater than his 2023-24 (20) and 2024-25 (30) totals with the Flames combined. For the Flyers, the signing was, admittedly, a bit of a risk, but it paid off.

Now, once July 1 arrives, the Flyers can move to extend the backbone of their team, and while we all expect that to happen, the deliberation focuses more on how long the new contract is for, and how much it will pay.

NHL Analysts Predict Contracts for Flyers' Key Free AgentsNHL Analysts Predict Contracts for Flyers' Key Free AgentsEvolving-Hockey's NHL data model predicts the next contracts for key Philadelphia Flyers free agents like Trevor Zegras and Jamie Drysdale.

You can expect it to be something like five years and $25- to $30 million (between $5- and $6 million AAV).

That seems rich for an older goalie coming off a career year, right? Well, it is, and that is also invariably going to be the market for him and any other established goalie held in high regard by an organization.

For recent precedent, we can look to the Vancouver Canucks, who are just one year removed from having Flyers head coach Rick Tocchet behind their bench.

On Feb. 21, 2025, while Tocchet was still with the team, the Canucks signed backup goalie Kevin Lankinen to a five-year, $22.5 million ($4.5 million AAV) deal with the Finn admirably filling in for an ailing Thatcher Demko.

Last season, Lankinen finished the year 25-15-10 in 51 games, posting a 2.62 GAA and .902 save percentage in an expanded role.

In his previous two seasons with the Nashville Predators, Lankinen had played a combined 43 regular season games. See the similarities?

An easy counterargument against the Lankinen comparison would be that Lankinen was a paltry 11-27-5 this past season with a 3.70 GAA and .875 save percentage, but no religious or spiritual deity is saving what was the 2025-26 Canucks, who finished last in the NHL by a comfortable 14-point margin.

Flyers Can't Get Sentimental When Evaluating Sam Ersson's FutureFlyers Can't Get Sentimental When Evaluating Sam Ersson's FutureIf the Philadelphia Flyers keep Sam Ersson as Dan Vladar's backup, they need to do it for the right reasons.

The Flyers, like the Canucks when they signed Lankinen, are in no position to mess about with their future in goal. Demko's injury issues have, obviously, proven to be problematic, while the Flyers just suffered through two dire seasons at the expense of their goaltending before Vladar came along.

If Vladar pulls in a contract that exceeds $20 million, as he very well should, he'll be making a bit less than a good starter would be elsewhere in the NHL.

In a few years, when the salary cap goes up, the 28-year-old will probably just be making decent money to be an upper-tier backup, which the Flyers should hope he will be.

By extending Vladar, the Flyers, quite literally, buy themselves more time to patiently develop goalie prospects like Aleksei Kolosov, Egor Zavragin, Carson Bjarnason, and any other netminders they may select in 2026 and future drafts.

There is a price to pay, just as there was with Christian Dvorak, Owen Tippett, and Travis Konecny, but the Flyers are in no position to do otherwise.

For Vladar, the next contract will be a well-earned raise that rewards him for all the work he put in to address the weaknesses in his game and become a better goalie.

Open Thread: Spurs steal home court advantage from OKC in Game 1 of the Western Conference Finals

May 18, 2026; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA; San Antonio Spurs center Victor Wembanyama (1) celebrates with San Antonio Spurs guard Stephon Castle (5) after defeating the Oklahoma City Thunder in double overtime against during game one of the western conference finals for the 2026 NBA playoffs at Paycom Center. Mandatory Credit: Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images | Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images

Just before the tip off of Game 1 Western Conference Finals, the Oklahoma City crowd was treated to their super star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander receiving his MVP trophy. At the other end of the court, Victor Wembanyama was warming up. The question on the minds of many was exactly what Wemby’s response would be.

In a thrilling double-overtime Spurs victory, the question was answered. Wembanyama tallied a 41-point, 24 rebound game. Comparatively, SGA put up a 24-point game, starting slow with only four points in the first half.

This was the Thunder’s first loss of the postseason. Not something they are used to, but then this wasn’t their usual game.

In fact, if not for the hot shooting of Alex Caruso’s 31-point night, the Thunder spent the evening on the outside looking in. At the end of the third quarter, Caruso and Jalen Williams, in his first game since contracting a hamstring injury, owned nearly half of the Thunder’s scoring output.

The game took its toll as the five starters all tallied more than 40 minutes apiece. Vassell had 51 while Wemby and Castle each played 49.

The Spurs led most of the game, and though the Thunder looked out of sorts, they remained within striking distance throughout. Toward the end of regulation, the momentum shifted slightly giving the Thunder a brief lead.

If not for Wemby’s timely 3-point shot, there might not have a second overtime.

Game 2 of the Western Conference Finals takes place on Wednesday night in Oklahoma City. Expect the Thunder to play with some desperation. Expect they will smooth the rough edges of their Game 1 performance.


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2025-26 Season in Review: Artūrs Šilovs

PITTSBURGH, PA - APRIL 27: Pittsburgh Penguins goaltender Arturs Silovs (37) makes a save during the first period in Game Five of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs First Round between the Philadelphia Flyers and the Pittsburgh Penguins on April 27, 2026, at PPG Paints Arena in Pittsburgh, PA. (Photo by Jeanine Leech/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Vitals

Player: Artūrs Šilovs
Born: March 22, 2001 (25 years old)
Height: 6’4”
Weight: 208 pounds
Hometown: Riga, Latvia
Catches: Left
Draft: 2019, Vancouver Canucks (Sixth round, No. 156 overall)
2025-26 Statistics: 39 games played (38 starts), 19-12-8 record, 3.07 GAA, .888 SV%. Playoffs: 3 GP (3 starts), 2-1 record, 1.52 GAA, .939 SV%.
Contract Status: Pending restricted free agent on July 1, completed a two-year, $1.7 million contract ($850,000 cap hit)

Monthly Splits

via Yahoo!

Šilovs was an NHL rookie who saw the most ice time of any Penguins goaltender in 2025-26, remaining a regular member of the rotation whether it was Tristan Jarry, Sergei Murashov or Stuart Skinner on the other side of the tandem.

Story of the Season

Penguins general manager Kyle Dubas acquired Šilovs amid a flurry of free agency moves last July by sending former Wilkes-Barre/Scranton forward Chase Stillman and a 2027 fourth-rounder to the Vancouver Canucks.

Šilovs, who had never made more than nine starts in a season during his tenure with the Canucks, went on to make his debut on opening night of the 2025-26 season.

He took advantage of getting the nod over Jarry by recording his first career regular-season shutout of his career.

Šilovs spent the first two and a half months of the season trading starts with either Jarry or Murashov, right up until the Penguins traded Jarry to the Edmonton Oilers for a package including Skinner on Dec. 12.

Skinner and Šilovs spent the rest of the regular season mostly alternating starts. Skinner got the nod for the start of the postseason, although the Penguins ultimately turned to Šilovs after falling into an 0-3 first-round deficit to the Philadelphia Flyers.

Šilovs posted three strong postseason performances to help the Penguins push the series to Game 6 before the team’s elimination 1-0 overtime loss.

The netminder told reporters in his exit interviews he had been playing through a knee injury for the last three to four weeks of the regular season.

Regular season 5v5 advanced stats

Data via Natural Stat Trick.

HDSV%: .800
HDGAA: 1.40
GSAA: -6.74
Shots Against/60: 27.13
Saves/60: 24.22
HD Shots Against/60: 7.02
HD Saves/60: 5.62
Rush Attempts Against/60: 0.9
Rebound Attempts Against/60: 5.35
Average shot distance: 33.92 feet
Average goal distance: 21.36 feet

Both Šilovs and Skinner struggled this season when faced with shots from dangerous areas, a task given to them fairly often amid the Penguins’ defense collapses. Those two netminders ranked 34th and 33rd, respectively, in high-danger save percentage out of 42 goaltenders who played at least 1,500 minutes last season.

It’s impossible to talk about Šilovs’ season without talking about his .409 save percentage in shootouts. The Penguins lost eight of them with him in net.

Charts n’at

Via Advanced Hockey Stats and NHL Edge

Šilovs remains a work in progress as far as WAR metrics go. His save percentage in the bottom right corner is starting to catch up to the expected, which is a good sign. It’ll be interesting in the future if he can draw out strong performances and boost his quality and excellent starts and bring down the totals of what is considered ‘bad’.

Šilovs has an interesting breakdown by zones. According to the NHL Edge data, he struggled in high danger moments but then again he had to face his fair share of them in front of a defense that struggled at times. Šilovs was at his best from mid-zone shots, especially to his right side (.943 save%), which came in handy since that location was the area the second highest amount of shots he faced came from (116 saves, 123 shots).

Goals in the NHL are often times the result of going to the net, being stronger in that situation is an opportunity for improvement. Šilovs gave up 64 goals from the high danger zones on 285 shots, had he been able to give a league average performance (.811%) that would have meant 10 fewer goals allowed on the season. That alone would have lowered his season GAA from 3.07 to 2.74 (a difference of being 41st place as he was, up to 25th) and raised his save percentage from .888% to .898%. Whether that comes from his performance, help from defense or a combination of both is a growth area that player and team should strive for next season.

When you talk Šilovs, you have to mention his small but impressive sample in the playoffs for Games 4-6. He raised his game across virtually all areas, save for that fateful shot from the right point that ended the Pens’ season courtesy of traffic in front of the net. While you couldn’t expect this type of performance over the long haul, it’s data to support the narrative that Šilovs is capable of playing his best games in the moments that matter the most – a growing trend in his young career.

Highlights

Questions to ponder

Is Murashov ready for regular-season NHL action after shining in the AHL last season? If so, does Šilovs return next season?

Should Šilovs return, will he be able to improve on his numbers from last season and get closer to the ceiling he showed this postseason he’s capable of reaching?

Šilovs capped off the campaign with a strong playoff run, but some of his numbers down the stretch of the regular-season were less than ideal.

Examples: Šilovs went a nine-game stretch without posting a save percentage over .900 from Nov. 21 to Jan . 4 (3.8 goals against average over that span).

He allowed at least four goals against in seven of his last 11 appearances of the season (.850 save percentage, 3.6 goals against average over the stretch). It should be noted that, according to Šilovs’ exit interviews, he would have been playing through a knee injury around that time.

Can stronger defensive play and improvements from Šilovs help limit those stretches in a second season as a regular starter? How much was Šilovs’ injury impacting him down the stretch?

What Dubas feels those answers are could impact what the goaltending rotation looks like next season in Pittsburgh.

Ideal 2026-27

Šilovs is a 25-year-old with a relatively limited sample size of regular-season action (56 career starts) and time to potentially improve in high-danger situations.

An ideal 2026-27 for the Penguins could look like Murashov taking the next step toward the AHL with a stronger Šilovs as his tandem partner should Skinner walk in unrestricted free agency.

Bottom line

Šilovs’ best stretch of the season came when it mattered most. His strong play helped the Penguins win two elimination contests to push the Flyers to Game 6.

This isn’t the first strong playoff run of Šilovs’ young career. He also made 10 playoff starts while helping the Canucks come within one win of the Western Conference Finals in 2024, and he was named Calder Cup MVP after leading the Canucks’ AHL affiliate to a title in 2025.

Šilovs’ ability to step up in the clutch could help make his case for the Penguins to re-sign him this offseason.

Final Grade

B

Šilovs struggled at times to limit scoring, especially when faced with high-danger chances or shootouts, during the regular season. He also helped the Penguins make the playoffs in his first season as an NHL starter, and he was a key reason his team exited the postseason with two wins under their belts.

What grade do you think Šilovs earned in his first season with the Penguins ahead of his upcoming restricted free agency?

NHL Trade Rumors: Ducks with some players to keep an eye on

PITTSBURGH, PA - DECEMBER 9: Ben Kindel #81 of the Pittsburgh Penguins moves the puck in front of Olen Zellweger #51 of the Anaheim Ducks at PPG PAINTS Arena on December 9, 2025 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

The dust is still settling on the Penguins’ season. Kyle Dubas gave his end of season press conference last week and the team will be mostly inactive until the end of June. They might have the occasional re-signing, like recent moves to bring back Connor Dewar and Ilya Solovyov in the short-term but the rhythm of the season will be mostly quiet for a while longer.

Nothing, however, stops the rumors and whispers about. The recently eliminated Anaheim Ducks were a natural talking point for national reporters like Elliotte Friedman to discuss.

The Penguins and Ducks have been frequent trading partners in the recent past and are natural enough fits since they reside in different conferences. It also seems like that for whatever reason Anaheim often has at least rumors of player availability, like with defenseman Pavel Mintyukov last season. That talk died down permanently after Mintyukov eventually found his way into Anaheim’s top-four and became a focal point of their team.

The talk these days has shifted to situate around McTavish and Zellweger.

Neither are Egor Chinakhov cases where the team that drafted that player is going to cut bait for a relatively low price of a couple of non-first round draft picks. As Friedman notes, there will be significant interest around the league should either one of them move into the realm of serious trade consideration.

That status alone might be enough to chase a team like Pittsburgh away either voluntarily if they don’t want to meet the price set, or perhaps involuntarily if Anaheim is simply receiving better offers from other teams than what the Pens have to give themselves.

However, at this point, both McTavish and Zellweger would be matches and fits for the Penguins. Their reasonable young center depth chart is basically Ben Kindel and nothing else at this point, though Bill Zonnon has been doing well in the AHL playoffs in his very first pro action. (Zonnon is also playing on the fourth line there, any hopes for an accelerated turn into a full-time NHL player in the very immediate future might be a little too hopeful in timing).

While McTavish fits a need, his status as a former No. 3 overall pick in 2021 and a player who has produced four straight 40+ point seasons in the NHL while barely scratching the surface of meeting his potential might be a stretch for the Pens to reasonably acquire.

That could make Zellweger, or 22-year old Tristan Luneau who played almost all of 2025-26 in the AHL, more precise, realistic options for Pittsburgh. Both are left handed defensemen, where the pipeline of talent within the organization at that position is even more lacking than center. A smooth-skating player like Zellweger who can operate in the offensive zone (scoring seven goals and getting 22 points last season) fits the mold of the style that Kyle Dubas has sought in the past.

The other big question would be if the Pens have what Anaheim might be interested in at this point of their evolution into a playoff team. The Ducks did trade their first round pick away, even though they probably wouldn’t be looking to move a lot of ready or near-ready talent to reload with a prospect, it might make some sense that they would be interested in getting a spot in the 2026 first round considering that they currently don’t have a pick there. On the flip side, whether or not the Pens would move a first round pick for NHL ready talent remains a question to be answered.

This time of year there’s not much more besides wondering at this point. Given Dubas’s nature and history it’s a good bet he’ll be active to at least get the information needed to see if there’s a deal to be struck that both sides would act on. Anaheim and Pittsburgh have long been linked to various degrees in rumors and trades, we’ll have to see this summer if another chapter gets added to that history.