The Chicago Blackhawks went a long while without making a selection in the 2026 NHL Draft, but they came back on the clock twice during the seventh round.
With their first of two, they took Russian defenseman Alexander Ivanov with the 194th pick. Ivanov is more of a defensive defenseman with size, standing at 6'1" and 181 lbs.
There is not one part of Ivanov's game that sticks out as NHL caliber, which will have to change if he ever wants to make it, but he is a well-rounded player who knows how to play the position. He has pro experience under his belt already, so it's on him to work his way over to North America.
With the 200th overall pick, the Blackhawks selected William Sorbrand. This was a case of the Blackhawks adding a big forward with their last pick, as Sorbrand of Sweden comes in at 6'4" and 209 lbs.
During his draft year, he spent time with each level of the Swedish Elite League as a member of Timra IK.
That made it five total picks for the Blackhawks over the course of the entire draft, which is the least they've made in the Kyle Davidson era, including no first-round selections for the first time.
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Mets fans, you can expect to see a lot of Jared Young moving forward.
Interim manager Andy Green told reporters prior to Saturday afternoon's game against the Phillies that Young will handle the position “pretty consistently” over this next stretch.
“I’d be a fool to change that one,” he said. “There’s still opportunities for other players, especially against certain types of lefty pitching, to get over to first and play, but he’s locking down kind of the lion’s share of at-bats over there.”
First base, of course, has been a bit of a revolving door for the Mets this season as they’ve attempted to make up for the departure of Pete Alonso over the winter.
Jorge Polanco was brought in on a two-year pact to handle the bulk of the playing time, but injuries quickly limited him to DH duties and then forced him to the injured list since mid-April.
Mark Vientos and Brett Baty received opportunities over there as well, but Baty ended up being utilized elsewhere around the diamond and Vientos struggled mightily on both sides of the ball.
Thus far, Young has taken advantage of the opportunity since returning from an injury of his own.
The lefty slugger continues to serve as a catalyst for an offense that desperately needs it, and has provided an extremely steady glove at first base, both of which were on display Friday.
"I had the opportunity to coach him in Chicago," Green said. "I've always believed the bat is real, it's fun for the rest of the world to get the opportunity to see that -- he's a tremendous teammate, cares about winning, smiles through adversity -- just the kind of guy you love having on a baseball team.
"There's a lot to like and he's really defending the position well, it's been fun watching."
Mar 7, 2026; Eugene, Oregon, USA; Oregon Ducks center Nate Bittle (32) looks to pass the ball around Washington Huskies guard Quimari Peterson (0) during the second half at Matthew Knight Arena. Mandatory Credit: Craig Strobeck-Imagn Images | Craig Strobeck-Imagn Images
What’s up y’all? The NBA draft has come and gone, and unfortunately (but not necessarily unsurprisingly) Nate Bittle was not drafted. He did, however, sign an Exhibit 10 contract with the Toronto Raptors, which is an invitation to Summer League and potentially to training camp in the fall. But it got me thinking, how do y’all think Bittle will fare in his career? Do you think he’ll stick in the NBA? Maybe as a G-League player? Or possibly play overseas? Let me know below!
KANSAS CITY, MO - MAY 27: New York Yankees starting pitcher Gerritt Cole (45) as seen after b being relieved in the seventh inning during a MLB game between the New York Yankees and the Kansas City Royals on May 27, 2026, at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, MO. (Photo by Keith Gillett/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
Everyone can beat the Red Sox at home, right? They can’t hit there. They make costly mental errors. They’ve won won just 15 games at their home ground in the Fens, the lowest number of any team in the league.
All of this makes it grandly hilarious that the one team they apparently can beat at home right now is the New York Yankees.
After beating the Yankees yet again, this time behind Jake Bennett’s clean 6.1 innings, the Red Sox are now on their longest win streak of the season. Yes, three wins is not a very impressive streak. But, again, that just makes it even funnier that those three wins have come at the expense of the Yankees. Let’s all laugh at their pain!
The Sox scored early and often off Gerritt Cole, with Masataka Yoshida and Anthony Seigler picking up the daddy-torch Rafal Devers left in his locker 12 months ago. (Wait, ew, what’s a daddy-torch? I don’t want to think about it. Let’s move on.) Yoshida’s homer came in the first plate appearance of the game for the Sox, setting the tone for a pretty nice day at the ballpark.
The two rivals will go at it again tomorrow as the Sox try to complete 2026’s funniest sweep.
Three Studs
Jake Bennett: The pitching depth, it is for realz. Bennett only struck out three batters, but found a way to keep the Yanks off the basepaths for most of the afternoon, taking his start all the way into the seventh.
Masataka Yoshida: Might this be the start of one of Masa’s patented hey! he’s a pretty good hitter! two-month stretches at the plate? TBD, but he notched two hits today and scored twice.
Anthony Seigler: Ceddanne Rafalea joined Masa in the two-hit club, as he continues to build his case as one of the low-key best outfielders in the game. But Seigler’s bomb was the first of his career, so let’s stud him for that.
One Dud
Jarren Duran: Another 0-4 day and another two strikeouts for a guy who has been an offensive blackhole for most of the season. Is there some kind of rule that says the 2026 Red Sox need to have someone who is hitting worse than everyone else in the league at all times?
Play of the Game
It’s one of the biggest days of Anthony Seigler’s life, folks.
Right-handed pitcher Bryse Wilson was claimed on waivers by the Cubs from the Phillies earlier this week.
And now, he’s on the active roster (Bluesky link):
Wilson had eight years in the major leagues before 2026, with the Braves, Pirates, Brewers and White Sox. He was pretty bad for the Sox last year (6.65 ERA in 20 appearances covering 47.1 innings) and threw in one game for the Phillies this year. That inning for the Phillies, June 18 vs. the Mets, was the last time he threw in a game.
He’s probably stretched out enough to go maybe four or so innings. Between Wilson and Vince Velasquez, I think that’s who we will see throw in tomorrow’s game, presuming, of course, that David Peterson can give the team some length tonight against the Brewers.
I mentioned Wilson had pitched in Milwaukee, and one of those years was 2023, so Craig Counsell has some familiarity with him — Wilson threw well in relief for the Brewers that year, with a 2.58 ERA and 1.070 WHIP in 53 relief appearances. Maybe Counsell can channel some of that. Wilson was once a Top 100 prospect, back in 2019, for whatever that’s worth.
As always, we await developments. Today’s game preview will post at 4 p.m. CT.
The Anaheim Ducks made nine selections in the 2026 NHL Draft over the two-day event in Buffalo, NY on June 26 and 27.
They made two significant trades on Day 1 of the draft, parting with young center Mason McTavish (3rd overall in 2021) and young, budding defenseman Olen Zellweger (33rd in ’21). On the eve of the draft night, the Ducks didn’t have any first-round picks for the first time since 2017, but by trading McTavish, they acquired two: the 15th and 29th overall picks.
Due to the uncertain nature of evaluating draft picks, as they’re incredibly young and likely will take several years to reach the NHL, if at all, it’s difficult to dislike any selection made by any team at any point in the draft. With that said, for this exercise, instead of typical letter grades, I have graded the Ducks' selections in terms of “Cold Stone Creamery” ice cream sizes, which reflect varying degrees of enjoyment: “Like It,” Love It,” and “Gotta Have It.”
15. Nikita Klepov, LW, Saginaw Spirit (OHL)
6-Foot | 187 Pounds
Grade: Gotta Have It
Heading into the draft, Klepov was ranked around this position, with a range of 15 to 25. He led the OHL in scoring with 97 points (37-60=97) in 67 regular season games, and dictates every aspect of play with the puck on his stick. He’s calculating, deceptive, tenacious, and has some of the top pure skill in this entire draft class.
The reason this pick receives such a high grade from me is, in large part, the cost it took to make this selection. The Ducks had Klepov targeted, and general manager Pat Verbeek stated that if he weren’t available at 15, the Ducks wouldn’t have made the deal. Klepov will forever be tied to Mason McTavish for the duration of their careers, and the Ducks put their neck out by trading a former third-overall pick in a trade where he’s the centerpiece coming back.
Other players that Verbeek and Martin Madden, as a duo, have staked their reputation on whether it’s selecting them higher than they were projected or have traded up for in the first round include Leo Carlsson (2nd in ’23), Beckett Sennecke (3rd in ’24), and Stian Solberg (23rd in ’24).
“I think our scouts were super excited, but I was (also) super excited to get to him just because I think he provides what I call a 50-50 player in a sense,” Verbeek told media after the first round. “He's equal part goalscorer, equal part playmaker. He does have creativity, has really good hockey sense, and with an 18-year-old, they need to get stronger.
“And I believe over the next year or so, if we get him stronger, he's going to be in a place that's going to be really good to play in the NHL. We just like his compete level. We like the drive that he has to score goals. And right now, it's just a matter of getting him stronger because there's a lot of really top-notch athletic ability with this player as well.”
Beyond the top ten, for the most part, the Ducks have been relatively safe with the type of player they select in the late-first round and into the second round. They’ve preferred more projectable, potentially lower-ceiling players. However, with this pick and their second first-round pick, they gambled big on upside.
28. Marcus Nordmark, W, Djurgardens IF (U20 Sweden)
6-foot-2 | 187 Pounds
Grade: Like It
This pick was a significant bet on talent for the Ducks, looking to add dynamism to their forward pipeline. Nordmark has every imaginable physical tool aside from skating. His processing speed with the puck on his stick is high-level, his release is quick and heavy, and he’s a plus facilitator.
The question marks surrounding Nordmark’s game appear to be mostly between the ears. He lacks consistency, and with that, his compete level can appear lacking. He has good defensive instincts, but could stand to improve his forechecking and stride-to-stride involvement.
The Ducks clearly believe in their development staff to get the most out of the mental aspects of Nordmark’s game. This is a bet on upside that most followers crave their teams make at this position in the draft.
In an unusual tactic, the Ducks traded up one single spot from 29 to 28 to take Nordmark.
“That's the deal. When you start looking at your board, and you start looking at your list, you don't want to take a chance,” Verbeek said when asked about trading up so minimally. “I didn't feel like we had the chance to do it (at 29th overall versus 28th overall), and I don't like taking chances to hope that that player is going to be there. We like the player a lot, and we want to be aggressive to make sure that we got that player.”
45. Jayden Kurtz, RHD, Rogers High School (USHS-MN)
6-foot-3 | 194 Pounds
Grade: Like It
As has become tradition to an extent, the Ducks went a bit off the board with an early Day 2 pick when they selected Jayden Kurtz from the Minnesota high school hockey circuit. Kurtz is a long, responsible defender who could be classified as a “long-term project” for Anaheim.
Kurtz scored 38 points (13-25=38) in 26 high school games in 2025-26 and added three points (1-2=3) in 16 USHL games in a stint with the Chicago Steel to end the campaign. This selection is reminiscent of when they selected Jackson LaCombe with the 39th overall pick in the 2019 draft.
Kurtz will play his 2026-27 season at the University of Wisconsin in the NCAA.
50. Mathis Preston, RW, Vancouver Giants (WHL)
5-foot-11 | 176 Pounds
Grade: Gotta Have It
This is yet another bet on upside, as Preston is one of the more electric players in the 2026 Draft. He’s the shiftiest, fastest skater in the class with lightning hands and a lightning release. He’s more of a transition expert than a cycle play driver, but his instant offense is a tool that any team could use.
His length is roughly NHL average, but he’ll need to add to his 176-pound frame in the next couple of seasons to round out his toolkit. Preston’s lack of a “B Game” is what likely caused his drop into the second round, but the Ducks can afford to take a gamble on tremendous offensive upside, which is why this is my favorite pick of the draft.
Mathis finished his WHL season with 44 points (18-26=44) in 46 games, split between the Spokane Chiefs and Vancouver Giants, and ended his season playing for Canada at the U18 World Championships, where he scored six points (2-4=6) in five games.
“I think I’m a dynamic skater. I love to attack off the rush, play in-zone,” Preston said after he was drafted. “I think I make my teammates around me better, and I learn people’s games so that I can help them. I know their strengths and where they’re comfortable. I think that helps the team, overall.”
82. Rian Chudzinski, RW, Moncton Wildcats (QMJHL)
6-foot-1 | 191 Pounds
Grade: Like It
After four high-upside potential projects, the Ducks went back to the well of selecting a translatable, responsible, north/south forward in the third round with their selection of Rian Chudzinski.
Chudzinski plays a pacey “meat and potatoes” game, where he makes an impact on the forecheck, provides a physical presence, and gets to the hard areas of the ice. The production will likely never come around, and he projects to top out with a fourth-line toolkit.
He scored 38 points (21-17=38) in 54 games and added 17 (6-11=17) in 21 playoff games during Moncton’s run to the QMJHL final. It’s unclear where he’ll play his hockey in 2026-27.
146. Eric Frossard, LHD, Guelph Storm (OHL)
6-foot-6 | 206 Pounds
Grade: Love It
Frossard’s size, defensive fundamentals, and projectability render it somewhat of a surprise that he was available this late into the draft for the Ducks. His skills aren’t dazzling, but are good enough to retrieve a puck, make a first pass, and feed shots through from the point.
His expertise is defense, specifically eliminating angles and protecting the net front. He likely has bottom pair upside, and it will take him several years of development before he may even sniff NHL action, but certainly a worthwhile gamble in the fifth round.
He scored 14 points (5-9=14) in 51 games for Guelph in 2025-26. He’ll look to round out and develop more of a robust offensive game in 2026-27, again playing for Guelph, but he’ll make the jump to the NCAA in 2027-28 to play for the University of Notre Dame.
“I’m a big defenseman who skates really well, plays a really strong defensive game, use my stick, closes fast, but also has some offensive ability and more of a two-way style,” Frossard said after his selection. “I use my skating to join the rush and try to help the team score as well.”
178. Gleb Peshkov, G, Taifun Primorsky Krai (MHL Russia)
6-foot-3 | 212 Pounds
Grade: Love It
The Ducks rarely exit a draft without selecting a goaltender. This year, it was Peshkov in the sixth round. The Ducks will add him to their goalie pipeline that includes Tomas Suchanek, Damian Clara, Vyacheslav Buteyets, and Elijah Neuenschwander.
Peshkov is reported to be an athletic, but very raw goaltender who managed a .930 SV% in 47 MHL games in 2025-26. Positioning and puck tracking seem to be areas in need of improvement for Peshkov before he potentially makes the transition to North America.
192. Noah Kosick, C, Seattle Thunderbirds (WHL)
6-foot | 160 Pounds
Grade: Like It
The Ducks acquired the 192nd pick in the 2026 NHL draft along with ECHL defenseman Kyle Masters (23) from the Carolina Hurricanes in exchange for the signing rights for veteran defenseman John Carlson. With the pick, the Ducks selected Kosick, a playmaking center from the WHL who has good vision, hockey sense, and puck skills, but needs to round out every other aspect of his game.
He scored 54 points (16-38=54) in 69 games in 2025-26, split between the Swift Current Broncos and Seattle Thunderbirds. He is reportedly heading to the University of Michigan in the NCAA for the 2026-27 season.
210. James Rieber, RHD, Waterloo Blackhawks (USHL)
6-foot-2 | 176 Pounds
Grade: Like It
With their final selection in the draft, the Ducks took a swing on Rieber, who scored 11 points (2-9=11) in 60 regular season USHL games. He’s committed to Miami University (Ohio) in the NCAA for the 2027-28 season and will presumably play another year in the USHL next season.
Ducks defenseman John Carlson speaks to the media during his 2025-26 exit interview.
The writing appeared to be on the wall when it came to John Carlson leaving the Ducks via free agency, but it was confirmed on Saturday afternoon after they traded Carlson’s rights to the Carolina Hurricanes in exchange for defenseman Kyle Masters and the 192nd overall pick in the 2026 NHL Draft. The Ducks used that pick to select forward Noah Kostick from the Seattle Thunderbirds in the WHL.
Carlson was acquired this past March from the Washington Capitals and after a delayed debut due to a lingering lower-body injury that he suffered prior to the trade, he played in 16 regular season games for the Ducks. He scored his first professional hat trick on Apr. 9 against the San Jose Sharks and arguably helped the Ducks reach the playoffs for the first time since 2018.
He helped solidify the right side of the Ducks’ defense behind Jacob Trouba and contributed well during their Round 1 series against the Edmonton Oilers. However, he did not fare as well in Round 2 against the Vegas Golden Knights’ suffocating forecheck and stingy penalty kill.
Following the conclusion of the Ducks 2025-26 season after their Round 2 loss to the Golden Knights, reports began to surface that Carlson was seeking a return to the East Coast. Eventually, Carlson’s agent, Rick Curran, confirmed that Carlson would not be returning to the Ducks.
Saturday’s trade helps Ducks general manager Pat Verbeek recoup a small amount of value for Carlson after initially trading a first-round pick and a third-round pick for him.
Lendeborg hilariously found out where his locker is: next to future Hall of Famer Steph Curry.
Former Michigan star Yaxel Lendeborg found out his Warriors locker is next to Steph Curry’s. Anadolu via Getty Images
During Lendeborg’s introductory news conference with the Warriors this week, he joked about how he grew up hating Curry because the rookie was a big Kyrie Irving fan.
When Lendeborg was shown his locker, he immediately burst into laughter and said, “Did y’all do this on purpose right here?”
Immediately after he questioned his locker location, Lendeborg approached his locker filled with joy because he will be next to one of the greatest shooters in NBA history.
Filled with emotions, Lendeborg was told by someone in the group made up of Warriors officials and friends and family members of his and second-round pick Lajae Jones, “They say if you sit close to someone, their shooting skills will rub off on you.” To which Lendeborg jokingly replied and said, “I need that. I definitely need that.”
Lendeborg grew up cheering for Kyrie Irving and didn’t root for Warriors legend Steph Curry (above). FilmMagic
Regardless of how Lendeborg felt about Curry and the Warriors before, that all seems to be in the past. The young rookie was thrilled to see his locker, with his jersey hanging inside for the first time. He asked if he was allowed to hold it.
Standing in front of his locker with his jersey in his hands for the first time, Lendeborg was emotional and admitted he was about to cry again.
When Jones saw his locker for the first time, he was also in disbelief, as the two young stars realized their dreams were now reality.
NEW YORK – There were no late-inning heroics, no furious comebacks, no eye-popping defensive plays for the Phillies on Saturday.
Their four-game winning streak, built on much of the above, came to an end in a 6-2 loss to the New York Mets at Citi Field.
It all fell apart in the sixth inning when the Mets capitalized on some shaky Phillies’ defense, sent nine men to plate and scored four times to erase a 2-0 deficit.
Bryce Harper was in the middle of it all most of the day.
He clubbed a two-run homer in the top of the third inning to put the Phils ahead.
Alan Rangel, filling the fifth spot in the starting rotation as a bulk reliever, entered the game in the second inning and did a creditable job protecting the lead through five.
In the bottom of the sixth inning, Rangel allowed two one-out singles – one was a soft liner to right that may have been catchable had Gabriel Rincones been more aggressive — before Francisco Lindor smashed a ball past Harper at first base. Harper dived for the 102.4 mph bullet, but it got by him and rolled all the way into the right-field corner for a two-run, game-tying triple.
Before the inning was over, Jonathan Bowlan replaced Rangel and gave up a two-run single up the middle through a drawn-in infield to make it 4-2.
The Mets padded their lead with two more runs against lefty reliever Kyle Backhus in the seventh.
The bottom of the sixth was the decisive frame and it spotlighted a Phillies weakness – defense. It’s not so much the errors with this team. It’s the plays that go unmade, plays that a sharp team makes. The Phils entered the day with a rating of minus-20 Outs Above Average, according to Statcast. That ranked 29th in the majors.
Had Rincones made a play on Juan Soto’s soft liner to right and Harper made a play on Lindor’s hard-hit ball – it went under his out-stretched glove – the Phillies could have gotten out of the inning unscathed.
Manager Don Mattingly wasn’t immediately sure if Rincones could have caught Soto’s ball.
“I haven’t really looked at it yet,” he said. “They’ll have the report, it’ll come out tomorrow, probabilities and things like that.”
As for Lindor’s hot smash past Harper:
“You always have a chance (to make a play),” Mattingly said. “It was over 100 (mph), scorched pretty good and it had a little hook to it. It’s getting by you pretty quick.”
To his credit, Harper said he should have made the play.
“I felt like he top-spun it,” Harper said. “I thought it was going to bounce up and it just kind of got under my glove. Yeah, I was pretty upset about that play. Obviously, it’s a play I think I should have made, but it didn’t happen.”
Independent of the two plays in the sixth inning, Mattingly was asked what he thinks of the team’s defense in the two months he’s been on the job.
“There’s times I like it and times that I don’t feel as good about it,” he said. “That’s kind of day to day. In general, it’s been OK. I like to see us, obviously, always continue to tighten everything up and get better, where we get the outs that we’re supposed to get and not give those guys extra chances.”
Harper’s eventful sixth inning included his being caught trying to stretch a single into a double with no outs.
“I saw the center fielder fall down and thought I could make it,” he said. “It just didn’t happen.”
Despite losing the lead in the lead in the sixth, Rangel gave the Phils some good work in his second outing since being summoned from Triple A to fill the fifth rotation spot. He pitched five innings of one-run ball earlier in the week in Washington and was rolling along until the sixth inning Saturday. With a sharper defense, he might have gotten a win.
“I thought he was good,” Mattingly said. “He had them off balance. Up until the Lindor ball, nothing was scorched.”
Jesus Luzardo will get the ball as the Phillies look to bounce back and win the series on Sunday afternoon. The Mets will use an opener, lefty Cionel Perez.
Jun 27, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Houston Astros right fielder Cam Smith (11) receives congratulations from teammates after he hits a two-run home run in the second inning against the Detroit Tigers at Comerica Park. Mandatory Credit: Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images | Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images
After a nice, solid drubbing of the Houston Astros on Friday night which evened the four-game series at a game apiece, the Detroit Tigers looked to clinch at least a series tie on Saturday afternoon. Despite a lovely grand slam early in the game, the Tiger bullpen couldn’t hold onto this one as the Astros prevailed 8-6.
Framber Valdez’s seventeenth start for the Tigers aimed to build upon two solid, six-inning, one-run outings in a row. Regardless of the start, though, walks have been a problem for him: coming into today he’d walked at least two batters in every start since the middle of May. As the late Jim Price used to bemoan on the radio broadcasts, “Oh, those bases on balls!”
Facing the Tigers today was Kai-Wei Teng, making his tenth start of the season to go along with thirteen relief appearances. He’s found a home in Houston’s rotation after having limited success in San Francisco the past two years. That’s not to say it’s been all sunshine-and-roses lately; to wit, two starts ago he faced these very same Tigers in Houston and didn’t make it through the fourth inning, having given up five runs and a trio of taters. One of those was to Colt Keith, amongst the three he hit that lovely day.
The Astros struck first: in the bottom of the second Christian Walker led off with a double; Kerry Carpenter took a strange route to it and might’ve had a play on it in some parallel universe. That cost the Tigers a run as Cam Smith immediately followed with a sizzling line drive home run to left field.
Meanwhile, the Tigers were getting pretty good swings against Teng, but the line drives seemed to be finding gloves at an annoying rate.
Houston kept coming in the third, with some singles and a double resulting in another run; one of the singles should’ve been an error on Spencer Torkelson making the run unearned, but that’s baseball, I guess.
In the bottom of the inning a walk and a grounder off Jose Altuve’s glove put the first two runners on. After Isaac Paredes made a good play on a foul popup from Riley Greene, Teng hit Torkelson to load the bases and bring Kerry Carpenter to the plate. Teng hung a curveball, Carpenter swung, and the batter absolutely did not miss.
The Astros evened the score in the top of the fourth with a pair of singles, a productive groundout, and another single.
In the bottom of the inning Jake Rogers legged-out an infield single, and with two out Greene singled to right. Torkelson followed with a double that scored Rogers and pushed Greene up to third for a 5-4 lead. That was the end of Teng’s day, and lefty Steven Okert was summoned. Carpenter was due up next… and somehow he was not pulled for a pinch-hitter! Alas, he meekly hit a ground ball to first for the third out — as Jahmai Jones forlonly cried a single tear while sitting on the dugout bench.
With one out in the fifth, Hao-Yu Lee hit a fly ball just above the left fielder’s outstretched glove for his third home run on the year, making it a 6-4 game.
Valdez actually settled down quite nicely from the end of the fourth through the sixth, setting down seven in a row. He was done after six innings — his third straight start of that length — but his final line was lousy: 6 IP, 8 H, 4 ER, 0 BB, 2 K. Tellingly, his settling-down coincided with a whole bunch of Astros hitting ground balls; if he’d only been able to do that earlier in the game, well then, now you’ve got something.
Drew Anderson took over in the seventh, and with two out he walked Paredes and gave up a soft single to Altuve for a bit of a jam, bringing up Walker who hit a line drive single to left, scoring Paredes and narrowing the lead to 6-5. That’d be it for Anderson, and it was a Drew-for-Drew swap on the mound as Somers inherited a two-on, two-out pickle. The lefty faced fellow lefty, pinch hitter Joey Loperfido, and coaxed a soft fly ball from him for the third out.
Will Vest replaced Drew #2 in the eighth, and it didn’t go particularly well. Yainer Díaz led off with a single, and with two outs Christian Vásquez singled as well to put runners on first and second. Jeremy Peña singled weakly to centre, scoring Diaz to tíe the game; the ball was misplayed by James Outman in centrefield, letting the runners advance a base. Paredes followed with a big, two-run, opposite-field double to un-tie the game and put Houston ahead 8-6. With Vest struggling to locate anything it’s hard to tell how much was on Jake Rogers but the pitch selection didn’t make a lot of sense in that series of at-bats. Getting ahead of a light-hitting catcher 1-2 and giving him a pitch in the zone that he could just drop the bat on being the most annoying one. Maybe try expanding the zone or going up where Vasquez is likely to lift a weak fly ball? Still, with Vest’s command a complete mystery bag maybe there were no right answers.
After three quick outs, Jacob Waugespack replaced Vest for the ninth. A single and a sacrifice bunt put a runner on second with one out, and after a groundout a walk put two runners on. But a harmless groundout to shortstop ended the threat and sent the game into the bottom of the ninth.
Josh Hader, who’s back from the Injured List and in top form, got the Tigers 1-2-3 in the ninth, as he has done throughout his career against so many teams. The series finale is at 1:40 pm EDT on Sunday.
I don’t put a huge amount of stock in pitcher wins and losses anymore, but Jack Flaherty leads the American League in losses with eight.
Carpenter’s at-bat against a left-handed pitcher in the fourth inning was his sixteenth against a lefty all season. At that point he’d had 172 against right-handed pitchers.
On this day in 1895, an electric locomotive was used for a passenger train, the first such occurrence in the United States. (It was between Washington and New York on the B&O Railroad, which should sound familiar if you’ve played Monopoly.) Go to any European country and ride their trains, and then come back to North America and wonder why we can’t have nice things like that.
With their final pick in the 2026 NHL Draft, 201st overall, the San Jose Sharks selected 7-foot-1, 280-pound left-handed Moldovan defenseman Alexander Karmanov.
If Karmanov makes it to the NHL, which is seen as a long shot at this point, he'll surpass Zdeno Chara and Curtis Douglas as the tallest player in NHL history. On top of that, he is also the first Moldovan selected in the NHL Draft.
Last season, Karmanov split his time between the North Bay Battalion of the Ontario Hockey League and the Brantford Titans of the Greater Ontario Hockey League. In Brantford, Karmanov scored three goals and tallied a total of seven points in 15 games. Then, during his time with North Bay, he just two assists in 20 games, but was a +6 with 29 penalty minutes.
Karmanov is committed to Penn State University for the 2027-28 season, but he'll spend the 2026-27 season with North Bay once again.
Karmanov is seen as a massive project. His reach is certainly beneficial, but his size does have a number of disadvantages when it comes to skating. He often struggles to get back up to speed and as a result, forwards are able to blow past him.
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Once again, the Yankees got shut down by a lefty, with their bats going silent and offensive woes growing louder in a third straight loss to the last-place Red Sox, this time 4-1 on a fine afternoon at a sold-out Fenway Park.
For a second straight game, Jake Bennett and the Red Sox bullpen held the Yankees (48-34) to just three hits while Gerrit Cole got hit around, resulting in their seventh loss in the past 10 games.
“With the way it’s going, we all expect to be better,” Cody Bellinger said. “They’ve been playing well. We’ve got to show up [Sunday] and take a game here.”
A lineup that had been finding ways to win without the back-to-back AL MVP suddenly looks like it dearly misses Aaron Judge, not to mention Giancarlo Stanton and Trent Grisham, who are also on the injured list. Grisham should return within the week, but Judge and Stanton do not appear anywhere close to coming back, so the Yankees will have to figure out how to snap out of this funk without them.
Yankees’ Gerrit Cole delivers a pitch to a Boston Red Sox batter in the first inning on Saturday, June 27, 2026, in Boston. AP Photo/Steven Senne
More immediately, they will try to avoid a four-game sweep by the Red Sox (35-46) on Sunday night. They will do so against righty Sonny Gray after faltering against three straight lefties in Connelly Early (six innings, two runs), Payton Tolle (seven innings, one run) and Bennett (6 ¹/₃ innings, one run).
“Today I felt like we had some hard contact going, but kind of chasing uphill and a couple chances to get a big hit and weren’t able to do it,” manager Aaron Boone said. “We’ve got to find a way right now. It’s been obviously a rough weekend for us. But a chance to win one [Sunday].”
New York Yankees’ Ben Rice, right, strikes out swinging in front of Boston Red Sox catcher Carlos Narváez, left, in the ninth inning on Saturday, June 27, 2026, in Boston. AP Photo/Steven Senne
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Cole got hit hard for a second straight start, giving up four runs on seven hits, including a pair of solo home runs to Masataka Yoshida (to lead off the bottom of the first) and former Yankees first-round pick Anthony Seigler (in the bottom of the second).
But the bigger culprit was the offense.
Anthony Seigler of the Boston Red Sox reacts after hitting a solo home run in the second inning against the New York Yankees at Fenway Park. Getty Images
After Tolle took a perfect game into the sixth inning against the Yankees on Friday night, Bennett had a no-hitter into the fifth Saturday before Max Schuemann broke it up with a solo home run, which was ultimately the only thing standing between them and a shutout.
Over the first three games of this four-game set, the Yankees have gone just 14-for-94 (.149) with eight walks.
Some of their most dependable batters have contributed to the recent malaise. Ben Rice went 0-for-4 Saturday and is now 2-for-23 over his past six games. Bellinger went 1-for-2 with two walks, improving him to 2-for-19 over his past six games. Amed Rosario, who had been a reliable lefty killer early on, is now 7-for-42 over his past 15 games.
The Yankees started the season 18-6 against lefty starters but have now dropped six of their past seven — including all three games of this series so far.
“I think [Bennett] took the momentum from the last couple lefties that they threw,” Schuemann said. “They’ve all done a good job. … Just pounding the strike zone and having the confidence to pound the strike zone. We try to put good swings together, good at-bats together, it just hasn’t gone our way.”
The only real threat of a rally the Yankees had all day came in the seventh inning, when Rosario and Bellinger led off with back-to-back singles. But Bennett responded by striking out Jasson Domínguez before the Red Sox went to the bullpen for Justin Slaten, who punched out José Caballero (who challenged strike three and was proved incorrect) and pinch hitter Jazz Chisholm Jr. to squash the threat.
“Honestly, those guys are pitching really well right now,” said Austin Wells, who went 0-for-3 and is now batting .160 on the year. “Some young guys who’ve thrown well, who a lot of us don’t have a lot of experience facing before. So I think there’s a little bit of that to it.”
Jun 27, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston Red Sox second baseman Anthony Seigler (48) reacts after hitting a home run during the second inning against the New York Yankees at Fenway Park. Mandatory Credit: Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images | Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images
The thing about June is that it is just June.
The losses the Yankees have suffered at the hands of the last-place Red Sox have been equal parts dull and maddening, but they are ultimately just losses in June. Even after this 4-1 loss on Saturday afternoon, they are at worst in a tie for first place in the AL East. However, it remains remarkable how often the Yankees ship up to Boston in June and seemingly leave all their good bats behind. My colleague Michael Zeno found that this entire decade, the Bombers have gone 1-14 at Fenway in the month as opposed to 19-11 in Beantown every other page of the calendar.
Today’s defeat, like yesterday’s, felt over from the jump. Rookie starter Jake Bennett had the Yankee hitters in a blender and Gerrit Cole gave up a leadoff home run en route to another forgettable start as the Red Sox won the series. They will have to stave off an ignominious four-game sweep at the hands of their last-place archrivals tomorrow night.
The tone was set extremely early on, which is never a good thing for a struggling team. The Yankees went down in order against Bennett in the first inning, then Cole’s second pitch of the afternoon was launched into the Boston bullpen by Masataka Yoshida. The DH has not been a powerhouse this year, as that home run was just his second of the season. And Cole’s pitch wasn’t even in the strike zone. But that’s the way this series has gone.
The second inning brought more of the same. Bennett easily worked around a leadoff walk in the top half, and the Sox got another homer in the bottom half. Former Yankee prospect castoff Anthony Seigler (boy, Boston sure likes collecting those) snuck an opposite-field fly ball just over the Green Monster for a 2-0 lead. These are just solo homers, blips that Cole can usually live with when his offense is hitting. They just are not hitting this weekend.
Oh yeah, and it was Seigler’s first big-league homer. Congratulations to him, I suppose.
Regrettably for Cole, it was not just a pair of solo shots he had to contend with today. Boston put a pair of ducks on the pond in the third, which Willson Contreras was more than happy to call back to the nest. On 1-2, Cole’s fastball caught too much of the plate, and Contreras hit it where it was pitched. The ball easily split the outfielders and reached the left-center wall to plate a pair and double the Boston lead again. All this while the Yankees hadn’t managed a single hit of their own through four for the second day in a row.
The Yankees managed to end the no-hitter and shutout one swing in the top of the fifth, and it came from an unlikely source. Max Schuemann clubbed a ball out toward the triangle in left center field. The ball hit off the yellow stripe which denotes the ‘end’ of the Green Monster; essentially, if it hit to the left of that line it would have been in-play.
Schuemann’s first homer as a member of the Yankees made it a 4-1 game.
Cole departed with one out in the sixth having once again allowed a few too many big hits. It was quite reminiscent of his previous start against the Tigers: his command was not bad, per se, but he continually missed in crucial spots, and the opposing lineup was ready to take advantage every time.
Meanwhile, Boston’s good-young-southpaw-starter factory seems to have endless output. For the third straight game, the Bombers found themselves flummoxed by a lefty. Jake Bennett worked through six almost-spotless innings, the lone hit that Schuemann home run. He worked a bevy of quick 1-2-3 frames, preventing the Bombers from building any kind of early momentum. Seriously, I am formally requesting a moratorium on further precocious left-handed pitchers in the Boston organization. The bit gets old when you see it three days in a row.
The Yankees’ best opportunity to climb back into the game came in the top of the seventh when Bennett allowed a pair of singles. While the Red Sox bullpen got going, Bennett faced Jasson Domínguez, and struck him out on a changeup to grab a crucial first out. Interim manager Chad Tracy then made the move to Justin Slaten, who, it must be noted, entered action with a 6.48 ERA. Naturally, he came in and struck out José Caballero on a perfectly-located fastball at the knees (and we know it was perfect because Cabby challenged it), then got pinch-hitter Jazz Chisholm Jr. to wave over the top of a cutter to send the Yankees to the stretch emptyhanded.
The worst part about these losses is the individual who has shown up in the ninth inning to put them to bed. Aroldis Chapman started the ninth by rocketing a trio of fastballs past an overmatched Ben Rice, who suffered another oh-fer today. After Amed Rosario rolled over to shortstop, Cody Bellinger worked an admirable walk. So, like clockwork, Caballero popped out on the first pitch to make that battle meaningless. This is just what happens in June. The good news: June is almost over! The bad news: July awaits.
As ESPN was more than happy to point out ahead of the final out, at least this game and the one before were quick affairs, completed in a little over two hours.
All that is left to do is prevent the four-game sweep in Beantown. Tomorrow night, the Yankees will once again be on national TV. NBC will have the Sunday Night Baseball broadcast between Carlos Rodón and Sonny Gray. Note that first pitch is set for 7:20 PM.
The Colorado Avalanche lost two Ivans on Saturday.
Well, sort of.
Colorado traded forward Ivan Ivan to the Boston Bruins in exchange for former first-round pick Fabian Lysell, ending the brief Avalanche tenure of one of the NHL's most unforgettable names while taking a chance on a former top prospect still searching for his breakthrough.
It's a classic change-of-scenery trade.
Colorado parts with a reliable depth forward who exceeded expectations after signing as an undrafted free agent, while Boston sends away a skilled winger whose offensive potential has yet to translate consistently at the NHL level.
Fabian Lysell is the latest Avalanche reclamation project. Credit: Charles LeClaire - Imagn Images
The 23-year-old Lysell spent last season with the Providence Bruins, recording 17 goals and 25 assists for 42 points in 57 American Hockey League games. He helped Providence finish with the AHL's best regular-season record and capture the Macgregor Kilpatrick Trophy, ranking sixth on the team in scoring while finishing fifth in both goals and assists.
The Swedish winger has quietly been one of the AHL's more productive young forwards since turning professional. Over four seasons with Providence, Lysell amassed 57 goals and 106 assists for 163 points in 219 regular-season games. He has also appeared in 12 NHL games with Boston, collecting one goal and two assists.
A change of scenery may be exactly what he needs.
Selected 21st overall by the Bruins in the 2021 NHL Draft, Lysell entered professional hockey carrying the reputation of a dynamic offensive talent. While that promise hasn't fully materialized in Boston, the Avalanche are betting there's still another level to his game.
Before turning pro, Lysell starred for the Western Hockey League's Vancouver Giants, tallying 22 goals and 40 assists for 62 points in 53 games during the 2021-22 season. He elevated his play in the postseason, recording four goals and 17 assists for 21 points in 12 playoff games, with his 17 assists leading the entire WHL.
Prior to arriving in North America, the Gothenburg, Sweden, native played professionally with Luleå HF in the Swedish Hockey League after developing in Frölunda's respected junior system.
Lysell has also represented Sweden on the international stage, earning bronze medals at the 2022 IIHF World Junior Championship and the 2021 IIHF Under-18 World Championship.
Ivan, meanwhile, leaves Colorado after three seasons. Signed by the Avalanche as an undrafted free agent in March 2024, he appeared in 49 games with the club, recording five goals and four assists while earning a reputation as a dependable, high-energy bottom-six forward.
He spent a majority of his time with the Colorado Eagles, where he produced 25 goals and 44 assists in 169 career AHL games.
Whether the trade ultimately pays off will depend on which player benefits more from his new surroundings. Colorado is betting Lysell's first-round pedigree still carries untapped potential, while Boston adds a player who has already shown he can carve out a role at the NHL level.