Every game on the same channel? How might MLB sway Dodgers to go along?

MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred, right, is seen on the field before Game 2 of the American League Wild Card baseball playoff series between the Cleveland Guardians and the Detroit Tigers in Cleveland, Wednesday, Oct. 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)
MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred, right, on the field before Game 2 of the AL wild-card series between Cleveland and Detroit. (Sue Ogrocki / Associated Press)

If you want to watch every Dodgers game in 2026, you’ll likely need access to all of these outlets: SportsNet LA, Fox, ESPN, NBC, Peacock and Apple TV.

That is not, shall we say, fan-friendly.

Baseball’s holy grail is this: One place to watch your team, and every team, wherever you are. One price. No blackouts. No need to decide whether to pay up for a subscription to an outlet you may never watch after the game ends.

Rob Manfred, baseball’s commissioner, does not need to persuade fans about this. He does need to persuade the owners of all 30 teams about this.

Since Manfred would like to have this “All the Teams, All The Time” outlet up and running in 2029, he needs to start lining up votes among the owners. Manfred has talked about this goal for years, and I asked him if he can say this is really going to happen.

“I think that there is a lot of acceptance within the industry that, given what’s happened within the media environment, we need to be more national,” Manfred told me before the Dodgers and Philadelphia Phillies met Monday at Citizens Bank Park.

“The idea of centralizing, and getting more games available on national platforms, is really appealing to people. Now, we’ve got some cards to play, still. But I remain optimistic that it can happen.”

So does Stan Kasten, the president of the Dodgers.

Read more:Shaikin: Inside the Mookie Betts play call that won NLDS Game 2 for the Dodgers

“We are supportive of the notion of all fans anywhere being able to watch any game, and doing away with blackouts,” Kasten said. “That takes a lot of steps, and every team has a different situation.

“We have a long way to go, but the goal is an admirable one, one I think all fans will benefit from, and that is what is most important.”

This all sounds lovely so far. But the Dodgers are not about to unconditionally surrender what fans outside Los Angeles consider their greatest competitive advantage: money, and lots of it.

The Dodgers and Milwaukee Brewers are on course to meet in the National League Championship Series. The Brewers make about $35 million in local television revenue this year, according to Sports Business Journal.

The Dodgers make about 10 times that much in rights fees this year from Charter Communications, the parent company of Spectrum — and that annual rights fee will top $500 million by the end of the Charter contract in 2038. And there’s more: the Dodgers also own SportsNet LA.

If the 30 teams pooled their broadcast rights, Manfred believes they could generate interest not only from traditional outlets but from streamers such as Apple, Peacock, Paramount and Netflix. League officials believe the exclusivity of one package would generate more collective revenue than the combination of 30 individual team deals.

In theory, then, the Brewers would get significantly more than $35 million per year if the teams split the pot evenly. The Dodgers would get less, and probably much less. So would Manfred just lean on the Dodgers to go along for the good of the game?

Read more:Hernández: The Phillies are done, and the Dodgers' path to the World Series looks clear

“I don’t think you can make a change like this based on people saying this is for the good of the game,” Manfred said. “I think you make a change like this by people realizing who the buyers are, what they want to buy, and by packaging up a set of changes that make it kind of closer to an economic wash.”

Meaning cash-neutral for teams like the Dodgers — and the New York teams, Boston Red Sox and Chicago Cubs — still reeling in big bucks amid the collapse of regional sports networks outside large markets?

“Yeah, and there are a whole lot of ways to get there,” Manfred said.

He did not lay out his menu of options, but the first one is clear. Collective bargaining negotiations are scheduled to start next year, with the growing likelihood of a lockout after the 2026 season.

If owners can push through a salary cap — a cap that the players’ union insists will remain — then small-market owners could be guaranteed a certain percentage of league revenue. That cost certainty, coupled with the potential of increased revenue from a 30-team broadcast package, probably would win over small-market owners.

And that could be critical, because those owners currently make a fair amount of money from revenue sharing, under which teams are assessed a percentage of such money as ticket sales, concession sales and local media revenue. That money is pooled and shared equally for now, but Manfred could offer the Dodgers and other financial behemoths a chance to keep more of — or all of — that money for themselves.

The league also could offer to buy out SportsNet LA and other such channels, meaning more money for the Dodgers. And, although the Dodgers under current ownership do not appear interested in a salary cap, a cap would decrease player spending and thus increase team profits.

A wild card: With Shohei Ohtani, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Roki Sasaki and Hyeseong Kim on their roster, the Dodgers could ask for greater revenue from international broadcast rights, which are now shared equally among teams.

Those are a lot of balls for Manfred to juggle. Kasten adamantly declined to say what might work for the Dodgers.

“You’re delving into areas that are way too premature for me to discuss, other than for me to tell you we agree with the goal,” he said. “The goal is a good one, and we hope baseball can get there.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

‘I stood on the shoulders of giants’: Josh Walters on scoring the winning try in the Super League Grand Final

Not only did Walters score the key try for Leeds in 2015 – he did it again in the Scottish Grand Final a decade later

By No Helmets Required

Ten years ago this week Josh Walters took a simple pass and plunged over the six-yard line at Old Trafford to score the final try in the Super League Grand Final as Leeds secured their seventh title. There were 73,512 fans inside the stadium and a couple of million more watching at home. He humbly plays down his role in the treble-clinching triumph. “I never say it was the winning try because Kev [Sinfield] still had to kick the two points – my try brought us level and there was still 15 minutes left.”

That was his first winning try in a Grand Final. The second came this summer in Scotland, watched by a few dozen spectators at Penicuik Rugby Club. In contrast to his supporting role at Old Trafford, Walters was West End’s driving force for the whole match. The dramatic golden-point victory brought West End Warriors their first title in their debut season, Walters breaking from halfway to seal a 34-30 win over Edinburgh Eagles. “We wouldn’t have been in that position if it hadn’t been for me,” says the gently spoken Walters. “I was about to score earlier and someone knocked the ball out of my hands. So I had to make up for that.”

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Kings star DeMar DeRozan excited to play ex-team Raptors despite Drake diss

Kings star DeMar DeRozan excited to play ex-team Raptors despite Drake diss originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Despite finding himself in the middle of the biggest rap beef of the past decade last season, DeMar DeRozan says he will hold no ill will toward the city of Toronto, a place he says is dear to his heart, when the Kings kick off their 2025 preseason on Wednesday against the Raptors.

“That’s home,” DeRozan told reporters after practice Tuesday. “That’s where my whole career started. That’s where I became the player I am today. The Raptors organization definitely always going to hold a special place, regardless. 10 years, 20 years, 30 years from now, there’s nothing that can ever replace that feeling that I had in my years there. It’s always cool to see familiar faces that are still there.”

DeRozan, who was born and raised in Compton, Calif. – also the home of Kendrick Lamar —  played the first nine seasons of his career in Toronto – the home of Drake.

The drama unfolded publicly and even included Kings owner Vivek Ranadive getting involved, but still, the 36-year-old star says no diss from Drake can ever come between him and the city.

“I don’t care, what I did there, I put my life on the line every single night that I stepped on that court,” DeRozan said. “Nothing and nobody could ever take that away. I don’t get caught up in shenanigans, all that comes with it.

“At the end of the day, I hoop, I go out there, every true fan and every person who knows me there knows I represent that place more than anybody who ever came through there.”

And when it comes to the on-court aspect, DeRozan believes the Kings can benefit from seeing a team with great length – something Sacramento has struggled with in recent years.

“They’ve always been one of those dynamic teams that had a lot of wings,” DeRozan said. “They’ve got some great talent, to see [Brandon Ingram] back out there playing for them. You’ve got RJ [Barrett], you’ve got Scottie [Barnes], it’s a lot of length out there that we’ve got to be ready for. I’m looking forward to it.”

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Watch Steph Curry ride cable car to his new bourbon bar opening in San Francisco

Watch Steph Curry ride cable car to his new bourbon bar opening in San Francisco originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Steph Curry: four-time NBA champion, two-time MVP, 11-time NBA All-Star, and now, owner of the newest bourbon bar in San Francisco. 

Curry opened his new establishment, Eighth Rule, Tuesday in San Francisco’s Union Square, pairing up with renowned chef Michael Mina’s steakhouse Bourbon Steak. 

Powell Street was shut down Tuesday evening as Curry arrived via cable car, accompanied by Mina and San Francisco mayor Daniel Lurie.

The bourbon bar, located in the Westin St. Francis in Union Square, is Curry’s latest business outside of basketball. The Warriors star launched his own bourbon brand, Gentleman’s Cut, in 2023. 

Curry and Mina have been planning to open a bar together for years, per the San Francisco Chronicle. The two have known each other since 2017, when the chef partnered with Ayesha Curry to open International Smoke.

“I’ve always dreamt of creating my own little haven to bring people together, and now we have the perfect location,” Curry said in a press release when the opening was announced in August. 

The bar opening is Curry’s latest accomplishment heading into the 2025-26 NBA season. Earlier in the offseason, he released a new book, “Shot Ready”

Eighth Rule marks Curry’s first venture into hospitality and creates a new milestone for revitalization efforts in Downtown San Francisco. 

The bar will be open from 4 p.m. to midnight daily. 

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Blue Jays at Yankees – ALDS Game 4 prediction: Odds, expert picks, starting pitchers, trends, and stats

After years of unlimited moments in the regular season, the defending and multi-time American League MVP finally had a moment in the postseason. Tuesday night, Aaron Judge homered to resuscitate the Yankees’ season rallying New York from a 6-1 deficit to win Game 3 of their American League Division series, 9-6. Judge went 3-4 with three runs scored and drove in four to propel the Yankees back into their series with the Jays.

After Judge homered to tie the game at 6 in the 4th off Luis Varland, Jazz Chisholm Jr. went yard against Varland in the bottom of the fifth to give the Yankees a lead and they would roll to a 9-6 win to set up today’s Game 4.

That same Luis Varland whom the Yankees smacked around in Game 3 gets the ball to start Game 4 for the Blue Jays. New York’s Wild Card series hero, Cam Schlittler, gets the ball for New York.

Grab your popcorn. This is now a series.
 
Lets dive into Game 4 and see if we can find a sweat or two.
 
We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on the how to catch the first pitch, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.
 
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Game details & how to watch Blue Jays at Yankees – ALDS Game 4

  • Date: Wednesday, October 8, 2025
  • Time: 7:08PM EST
  • Site: Yankee Stadium
  • City: Bronx, NY
  • Network/Streaming: FS1

Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out.

Odds for the Blue Jays at the Yankees – ALDS Game 4

The latest odds as of Wednesday courtesy of DraftKings:

  • Moneyline: Toronto Blue Jays (+149), New York Yankees (-182)
  • Spread: Yankees -1.5 (+112)
  • Total: 8.5 runs

Probable starting pitchers for Blue Jays at Yankees - ALDS Game 4

  • Pitching matchup for October 8, 2025: Louis Varland vs. Cam Schlittler
    • Blue Jays: Luis Varland (Regular Season: 0-0,2.97 ERA)
      Last outing: 10/7 at Yankees – 1IP, 3.60 ERA, 2 ER, 5H, 2 BBs, 3 Ks
    • Yankees: Cam Schlittler (Regular Season: 4-3, 2.96 ERA)
      Last outing: 10/2 vs. Boston – 8 IP, 0.00 ERA, 0 ER, 5H, 0 BBs, 12 Ks

 
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Top betting trends & insights to know ahead of Blue Jays at Yankees - ALDS Game 4

  • Aaron Judge is 3-6 with 3 HRs in his career against Luis Varland
  • Jazz Chiholm Jr. is 2-3 with 1 HR in his career against Luis Varland
  • The Yankees as a team are batting .394 (13-33) including 6 HRs all-time against Luis Varland
  • Vladimir Guerrero Jr. is 4-5 in his career against Cam Schlittler
  • Vladimir Guererro Jr. is 8-13 (.615) with 3 HRs in this series
  • In 23 ABs all-time the Toronto Blue Jays as a team are hitting .435 (10-23) against Cam Schlittler

 
If you’re looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our MLB Top Trends tool on NBC Sports!

Expert picks & predictions for tonight’s Game 4 between the Blue Jays and the Yankees

Rotoworld Best Bet

 
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Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts.
 
Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.
 

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Wednesday’s game between the Blue Jays and the Yankees:

  • Moneyline: NBC Sports Bet is staying away from a play on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: NBC Sports Bet is leaning towards a play ATS on the New York Yankees -1.5.
  • Total: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the Game Total OVER 8.5.

 
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How Steve Kerr’s ‘secretary’ built a WNBA Finals team with the Phoenix Mercury

How Steve Kerr’s ‘secretary’ built a WNBA Finals team with the Phoenix MercuryPHOENIX — Nick U’Ren sits up as he dives into his story. His sheepish aura is gone.

“So we had gotten done with free agency,” he said, the excitement of this story visible in his stiffened posture, how his hands came alive as he talked.

“We traded for Alyssa Thomas. We traded for Satou Sabally. And I’m exhausted. I told our assistant general manager Fleur McIntyre and Preston Fawcett, he’s our director of player personnel, to ‘invite whoever you want to training camp.’ And they found Monique Akoa Makani — who never stepped foot in this country before she came to our training camp and steps into starting for a finals team — and Kat Westbeld. I wouldn’t have known who they were. They found them.”

He pointed to the other end of the court, watching the Mercury preparing for the WNBA Finals, identifying Fawcett in a white hoodie, then precisely pointed to McIntyre, sitting next to a player. It’s important to U’Ren their names are mentioned and their contributions understood. He wants the focus off him. So he dives into the brilliance of AT. He fawns over the immense talent of Sabally, the pedigree of Kahleah Copper, the heart of coach Nate Tibbetts. All of them veiled story pitches, anything to re-direct the spotlight.

But in doing so, U’Ren underscores the philosophy he employs and the fabric that has the Mercury, surprisingly, in the WNBA Finals. They’re still breathing, courtesy of the new seven-game format, a win from shifting the pressure of this series onto Las Vegas. But that Phoenix is here, in his second season, serves as proof of concept.

“He’s seen a lot of winning,” said Bob Myers, who as president of basketball operations of the NBA’s Golden State Warriors was U’Ren’s boss for five years. “He cares. He was very, very studious. How many people worked on a bench and in the front office? I think it’s kind of a rare combo. So it gives them a great understanding of an organization, how it operates. There’s an authenticity to him that makes him someone people want to follow. And he’s very humble. … It’s really been an awesome kind of validation of his process.”

Home will feel different this time for U’Ren. The arena will look the same, plastered in purple and orange, like it did when he was a diehard Suns fan as a kid. The X-Factor, the Mercury’s boisterous faithful, will bubble with a familiar raucousness, like it did when Diana Taurasi and Cappie Pondexter had the city on tilt.

For U’Ren, the Tempe, Ariz., product and the pride of McClintock High, Wednesday marks a seminal moment. The chills may not last long, as the sense of honor is tempered by the anxiety of the Mercury’s 0-2 hole with one of the all-time greats on the other side for the Las Vegas Aces. But this is why he came home. This is why he gave up his seat in a glory franchise in Golden State, leaving the prestige and opportunity of the NBA. For a moment like this. Game 3 of the WNBA Finals, with his parents in the crowd, in the gym of his childhood, with a team he constructed. For the love of the Valley.

It took him only two years to put together a team, on the court and off, worthy of championship contention. But it took 20 years of development, of grinding, of faith, of soaking up every ounce of wisdom he could from his Hall of Fame senseis. They called him Boy Wonder in Golden State. It’s no wonder the boy from Phoenix has come up golden.

“He’s just so rock solid,” Warriors head coach Steve Kerr said. “His emotional IQ is off the charts. He’s really thoughtful and process-driven. He just does things the right way.”

The recruitment of Alyssa Thomas earlier this year came down to basketball philosophy.

Everything else about Phoenix, Thomas was on board. Mercury legend Jennifer Gillom was one of Thomas’ coaches in Connecticut, so she was well aware of the culture and the legacy of WNBA basketball in Phoenix. Thomas also played with USA Basketball, so she’d seen the fancy new practice digs.

But her primary concern was how she’d fit into the Mercury’s system and their vision for maximizing her talents. U’Ren hired Tibbetts in 2024, in part because of how Tibbetts saw the game. They knew each other from Tibbetts’ days in Portland, a common foe of the Warriors in the Western Conference. Tibbetts also interviewed for a job with the Warriors in 2018. But their philosophies overlap.

Skill over traditional size — with shooting, passing and length being premium traits. U’Ren and Tibbetts want size, but it matters positionally more than just throwing a big out there for the sake of having one. They cherish high-IQ basketball players who can make quick decisions, even while moving. Defensive pressure and intensity cover most ills and, especially important, fuel transition offense.

Oh, and of course, take advantage of the 3-pointer.

“Coming here, one of my very first meetings with Nate, he was like, ‘I need you to get some more up.’ And I don’t think a coach has ever told me that,” Copper said. “I played in the middy, shot a couple of 3s. It wasn’t really my role. But I always wanted to grow my game, and that was the first conversation I had with Nate. … It’s times on the sideline where he’s like, ‘Shoot it!’ And I’m like, ‘All right, bet.’”

U’Ren’s understanding of basketball begins with Kerr, who took a 51-win team in 2014, injected his philosophy of skill and motion into an offense led by Steph Curry, and won four championships. One of the key pieces of his offense was Draymond Green, the highly skilled, undersized big who doubles as a point-forward.

Yeah, they sold Thomas.

“I don’t think he gets enough credit for how he put this team together,” Thomas said of U’Ren.

“From Day 1, they made it clear what they were trying to build. Yeah, it was a match made in heaven for me.”

The construction of this team, and the success it’s endured so fast, is validation for U’Ren. How many people have a dream, get to learn from the best and get to put what they learned into action — and do it at home?

The journey to this point got legs back in 2014. U’Ren was in the weight room of the Suns training facility. As an intern for Phoenix, spending every waking hour in the facility, he was working out when he saw journalist David Aldridge on the screen and Kerr’s name in the headline.

U’Ren put down the dumbbells and affixed his attention to the television. That’s how he learned Kerr was taking the Warriors head coaching job. That’s how the journey began, at least in his mind.

Kerr was the general manager of the Suns when he hired U’Ren as an intern. Kerr was sifting through a stack of resumes, loaded with Ivy Leaguers, but chose U’Ren because he remembered his face and work ethic from the Las Vegas Summer League. Kerr left the Suns in 2010. He said wherever he landed for his next job, he’d hire U’Ren to join him. Four years later, U’Ren wasn’t sure how serious Kerr was or how it would work out. But that day in the weight room, he allowed himself to envision his career starting in earnest.

Kerr honored his word. Taking a cue from his agent at the time, NFL executive-turned-agent Mike Tannenbaum, Kerr knew the perfect job for U’Ren. Tannenbaum told Kerr how former NFL coach Bill Parcells wouldn’t hire a typical administrative assistant but filled that seat with another young football mind. So Kerr hired his former intern with front office aspirations as his “special assistant.”

U’Ren checked emails, answered phones and managed the head coach’s calendar. He also helped with advanced scouting, was in charge of the video room and warmed up Shaun Livingston and others before games.

In his nine-year tenure with Golden State, U’Ren elevated from special assistant on the coaching staff to assistant general manager in the front office. But the ethos that shapes him as a GM, that he’s infused into the Mercury, happened in his first season with Kerr. It informed the perspective he uses to shape the franchise.

After the Warriors lost Game 2 of the 2015 NBA Finals to Cleveland in Oakland, U’Ren was coordinating the film for the staff. He had an idea.

Instead of continuing to match the size of the Cavaliers, who were basically playing two centers in Timofey Mozgov and Tristan Thompson, U’Ren thought the Warriors should go small. Start small forward Andre Iguodala instead of center Andrew Bogut, from the outset, and see if the Cavaliers could keep up.

It wasn’t until the Warriors lost Game 3 that Luke Walton, a Golden State assistant at the time, decided to indulge U’Ren’s thinking. They had a film session, and Walton was on board. He took the idea to Kerr. The Warriors made the lineup change and won Game 4. Kerr told the media after the game the adjustment was U’Ren’s idea.

“He got all that press the next day,” Kerr said. “He was so embarrassed. All the stories were about how young he was. So we started calling him Boy Wonder.”

The Warriors stuck to the lineup and won Games 5 and 6, capturing their first of four championships under Kerr. Iguodala won Finals MVP, and U’Ren was etched into Warriors lore.

That story is important to him. Not because it was his idea. But because it embodies what he learned in his tenure with a dynasty and what he aimed to incorporate in his first time in the big chair.

“I mean this with my whole heart,” he said. “It’s easy for a kid like me to have an idea and throw it out there. But this story is about three things. One, Steve creating an environment where his, basically, secretary felt comfortable coming to the group with that idea. Two, Steve having the guts to do it on the biggest stage. That’s just nuts. And then, three, to shout me out like that. No one’s doing that. No one’s giving some kid credit, you know? That story is way more about Steve than me.”

The first recruitment of Sabally came in 2024, U’Ren’s first free agency as general manager. She was intrigued with Phoenix but wasn’t quite ready to make the change from the Dallas Wings, who drafted her No. 2 in 2020. She also wasn’t thrilled about playing for a first-time head coach. So she wanted to see how Tibbetts did in his first season.

But by 2025’s free agency period, she knew she wanted to leave. She also saw enough from Tibbetts. Most of all, Sabally was in pursuit of something more holistic — a coaching staff that would make her better, a franchise that wanted to win, and a work environment conducive to her mental flourishing.

“I wasn’t happy anymore,” she said. “And with basketball, you just need to have a certain happiness to really be able to perform on the highest level for so long. You need to be able to really come to work and enjoy it. … This was the perfect opportunity for me. It’s a family environment here.”

That’s the best thing U’Ren can hear. Because if he took anything from his time under Myers, it’s to value the people. It’s not only the best way to get them to produce. It’s also the way such a life-consuming, stressful, often-thankless job can be the kind of reward it needs to be.

That’s why U’Ren is pointing again. At forward Natasha Mack, his eyes rolling as he summarizes her incredible story. At guard Sami Whitcomb, and her propensity for being clutch and showing veteran leadership. At center Kalani Brown, who doesn’t play as often but is always ready when she’s called.

This heart-warming version of U’Ren speaks to the meaning of this accomplishment. He’s doling out credit like Oprah Winfrey did audience prizes, mushy about the people he’s come to cherish.

Don’t get it twisted. U’Ren, beneath his unassuming veneer, is an intense competitor. It’s required in the halls of a dynasty.

“I think he vents to me more than anybody of what he’s feeling,” Thomas said with a smile. “He thanks me a lot of times that I just allow him to get what he’s thinking off.”

It’s why the sentimentality may not last long Wednesday because he knows going down 0-3 is a death sentence in a seven-game series. But before he gets lost in competitive fervor, he’ll take a moment to let it all in. He spent nearly a decade in one of the great basketball eras of all time, cutting his teeth and crafting his approach. And he got to bring it all home.

This article originally appeared in The Athletic.

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