Feb 27, 2026; Jupiter, Florida, USA; New York Mets center fielder Nick Morabito (70) celebrates after scoring against the St. Louis Cardinals during the fifth inning at Roger Dean Chevrolet Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images | Sam Navarro-Imagn Images
The Mets used a five run fourth and the poor rainy weather to take this one by a score of 6-3 after five. AJ Minter opened the game as a continuation of his rehab assignment and did okay, surrendering an unearned run in the frame.
Eric Wagaman walked home the tying run in the third, and a trio of Yonny Hernandez, Nick Morabito and Wagaman all drove in runs in the fourth to make it 6-1. The IronPigs scored two in the top of the fifth but were denied from there. Then, the rains came and turned this to a quick five inning win.
LF A.J. Ewing: 1-1, 2 R, 2 BB, 2 SB (2,3)
CF Nick Morabito: 2-3, R, 2B, 2 RBI, K, SB (8)
1B Ryan Clifford: 0-2, BB, 2 K
DH Eric Wagaman: 1-1, 2B, 3 RBI, 2 BB
3B Christian Arroyo: 0-3, K, E (3)
RF Ji Hwan Bae: 0-2, K
SS Vidal Bruján: 1-2, R
C Hayden Senger: 0-1, R
2B Yonny Hernández: 1-2, R, RBI
REHAB ALERT: LHP A.J. Minter: 1.0 IP, 1 H, 1 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 0 K
RHP Bryce Conley: 4.0 IP, 3 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 3 BB, 4 K, 1 WP, W (1-1)
Well, when you go down 6-0 in the first inning, it kind of tells the story for the rest of the game, and Binghamton did just that. Jordan Gerber got lit up in the first, surrendering those aforementioned six first inning runs. RBI knocks by Jose Ramos and JT Schwartz got them back in spitting distance in the fourth, but three runs in the fifth and two more in the seventh buried Binghamton.
CF Eli Serrano III: 0-4
1B-3B Jacob Reimer: 2-4, 2 R, 2B, K
C Chris Suero: 0-4, 3 K
RF Jose Ramos: 2-4, R, 2B, 3 RBI, E (2)
DH Kevin Parada: 0-4, 2 K
1B TT Bowens: 0-0
LF JT Schwartz: 1-4, RBI, K
3B-2B Nick Lorusso: 0-4, K
SS-P Wyatt Young: 1-4, 2 K
2B-SS Diego Mosquera: 2-2, R, BB, SB (2)
RHP Jordan Geber: 3.0 IP, 5 H, 6 R, 6 ER, 3 BB, 3 K, L (1-2)
RHP Kevin Gowdy: 2.0 IP, 3 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 1 BB, 2 K
LHP Felipe De La Cruz: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 0 K
LHP Gabriel Rodriguez: 1.0 IP, 2 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 0 BB, 1 K
RHP Wyatt Young: 1.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 0 K
The first four and a half innings went by scoreless, with Brooklyn finally breaking the scoring in the bottom of the fifth by way of a Vincent Perozo single. That would mostly be the end of the Brooklyn offensive experience. as they mustered up one other run (a ninth inning Daiverson Gutierrez single), and just three hits.
Frederick took the lead in the sixth and rolled from there.
2B Antonio Jimenez: 0-4, 3 K
CF Yonatan Henriquez: 0-2, R, 2 BB, K
SS Mitch Voit: 0-4, 2 K
DH Daiverson Gutierrez: 1-4, RBI, K
RF John Bay: 1-3, R, 2B, SB (7)
1B Trace Willhoite: 0-3
C Vincent Perozo: 1-2, RBI, BB
3B Kevin Villavicencio: 0-3, K, E (3)
LF Sam Biller: 0-3, 2 K
RHP Parker Carlson: 2.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 1 K
RHP Jonathan Jimenez: 4.0 IP, 3 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 2 BB, 6 K, E (3), L (0-3)
LHP Nate Lavender: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 2 K
RHP Felix Cepeda: 1.0 IP, 3 H, 2 R, 1 ER, 0 BB, 1 K, 1 WP
RHP Bryce Jenkins: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 1 K
Randy Guzman opened the scoring in this one, after a scoreless first three frames. Guzman hit a solo home run in the fourth, hit sixth on the year, raising his OPS to .918 on the year. Tampa tied it in the sixth, but St. Lucie responded by blowing the doors off of the game in the latter innings. They scored four in the seventh, including hitting two triples in the inning, added two in the eighth, and added a final run in the ninth, turning this game into a laugher.
SS Elian Peña: 1-4, R, BB, SB (10), E (3)
CF Edward Lantigua: 1-4, RBI, BB, SB (1)
1B Randy Guzman: 1-4, 2 R, HR (6), RBI, BB, 2 K
DH AJ Salgado: 3-5, 2 R, 2B, 3B, HR (6), 3 RBI, 2 K
LF JT Benson: 3-5, 2B, 3B, RBI, 2 K, SB (5)
3B Sam Robertson: 0-4, BB, 2 K
RF Simon Juan: 1-5, R, HR (2), RBI, K
C Francisco Toledo: 0-4, R, BB, 2 K
2B Jamari Baylor: 1-3, R, BB
RHP Cam Tilly: 6.0 IP, 4 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 6 K, 1 HBP, W (2-0)
RHP Ryan Dollar: 2.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 6 K, 1 WP, 1 HBP
RHP Ernesto Mercedes: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 0 K
BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 14: Chris Paul speaks onstage during The Daily Front Row's 10th Annual Fashion Los Angeles Awards wearing Nicole Miller at The Beverly Hills Hotel on April 14, 2026 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Amy Sussman/Getty Images for The Daily Front Row) | Getty Images for The Daily Front
Future Hall of Famer Chris Paul retired midseason after twenty-one seasons on the hardwood. Paul, considered one of the greatest point guards of all time, spent his last full season with the San Antonio Spurs. The pairing of CP3 with Victor Wembanyama was regarded as great mentorship.
One moment in particular always stuck out to me:
A more overt example of Paul giving Wemby “hands on” experience.
Paul made an appearance on the Pat McAfee Show and spoke about his time with San Antonio.
Chris Paul said the Spurs locker room last season was one of the funnest he’s been in:
"We played against the Knicks last year and the next morning he was at the park playing people at chess..That was one of the funnest locker rooms that I've ever been in"
It’s clear from his tone that he embraced his time with the Spurs and has esteen for the franchise.
After returning to Los Angeles, Paul was benched and subsequently traded by the Clippers last February. It came to light that he and Clippers head coach Tyronn Lue did not see eye to eye and CP3 aired his grievances publicly. Not the ending befitting a player of his caliber. Especially by the organization to which he gave some of his greatest years.
Paul has since joined the coaching staff at Campbell Hall High School in California, where his son plays. While he has shown little interest in coaching for the NBA, he has mentored many players. He’d be an asset to the Spurs as they navigate the next phases of development.
Who knows, CP3 may still have a window open to pick up an NBA ring.
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PHILADELPHIA, PA - APRIL 30: Jaylen Brown #7 of the Boston Celtics dribbles the ball during the game against the Philadelphia 76ers during Round One Game Six of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on April 30, 2026 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 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. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
Game Seven. Two of the most heart-pumping words in all of sports. Under any circumstances, the Philadelphia 76ers playing a win-or-go-home game with the season on the line would make for an edge-of-your-seat viewing experience. However, tonight has the added element of coming against the rival Boston Celtics, with all of the history that entails. The Sixers haven’t eliminated Boston from the playoffs in my lifetime; 1982 was the last time Philadelphia sent the Celtics home packing. Meanwhile, in the 21st century alone, the Celtics have ended the Sixers’ season five times, including three times during the Process era. A win tonight would exorcise a lot of demons and be talked about for years to come, regardless of what happened in a second round and beyond.
We’ve taken an improbable road to get here. Boston went up 3-1 in this series, with a pair of 32-point victories in Games 1 and 4 that were frankly embarrassing from a Sixers perspective. Everyone was shoveling dirt on the Sixers’ season and wondering what the postmortem fallout would be from a roster and organizational perspective. All we asked was Philadelphia to show a bit of fight, like we saw in the Game 2 win and the close Game 3 defeat. Get dragged off kicking and screaming rather than meekly accepting your tickets to Cabo and filing off quietly.
Instead, something clicked in the second half of Game 5 and the Sixers discovered their identity. They’ve been a connected, disruptive defensive group, playing stout, one-on-one defense against Boston’s ball handlers to reduce the number of open perimeter looks that come as a product of overhelping. The work on the glass has improved, even winning the rebounding battle in Game 5. The offense looks cohesive, with Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe still attacking and not excessively deferring to Joel Embiid, and Paul George shifting effortlessly between tertiary floor spacer and guy who can create his own shots in isolation as needed. The previous two wins didn’t seem fluky or a result of shooting variance. Across the last five quarters, the Sixers flat-out looked like the better basketball team.
Of course, things could flip back just as easily. I would expect a team with the championship pedigree of the Celtics to have a better gameplan and effort than what we saw in Game 6. Jayson Tatum tweaked his calf in that loss, but the Celtics once again have a clean injury report heading into the series finale. Joe Mazzulla probably found an adjustment to make watching The Town for the 84th time. Jaylen Brown had time to watch some film and rediscover an offensive move that isn’t stiff-arming defenders in the chest. Boston won 56 games for a reason this season, and that was without Tatum for most of it.
So that’s the stage. Complete the 3-1 series comeback and this Sixers group will be heroes. The Team That Finally Beat Boston, on a level with the 2007 Phillies who came back to catch the Mets to win the division. These last two wins have taken us from Acceptance, back into a place where we dared to dream again. A loss now would be an all-too-familiar brand of heartbreak. We’ll find out whether it’s heroes or heartbreak tonight.
Game Details
When: May 2, 7:30 p.m. ET Where: TD Garden, Boston, MA Watch: NBC, Peacock Radio: 97.5 The Fanatic Follow:@LibertyBallers
Boston Celtics Larry Bird (33) in action vs Philadelphia 76ers Julius Erving (6), Boston, MA 5/23/1982 (Photo by Tony Tomsic/Sports Illustrated via Getty Images)
It’s hard to understand how Game 7 became necessary. The Celtics split the first two games of the series, but then went on the road and took both Games 3 and 4 – one close and one comfortably – in front of hostile crowds. They returned home for Game 5 feeling good and expecting to wrap up the series.
But in Game 5, the Celtics went cold from the floor and couldn’t seal the deal. Then they inexplicably let Game 6 get away, too. And suddenly they were facing a Game 7 against a team with two superstars that seemed to have figured out how to win the series.
How could Boston have collapsed? Where was the killer instinct? Where was the clutch shooting? The defense? Weren’t they motivated to win one last title for their coach before he retired?
“Hold on,” you say, “what is that about? Joe Mazzulla isn’t having the best series, but he’s not retiring.”
Correct, but that story wasn’t about the current Celtics. It’s what occurred during the 1966 Finals between Boston and the Los Angeles Lakers. That was during the Bill Russell-Red Auerbach era dynasty, in the year they were going for their eighth straight title. Auerbach had announced he would retire from coaching at the end of the season, and during the Finals he revealed that Russell would succeed him in the role of player-coach.
If you’re accustomed to winning it all every single year, and the coach that led you there had taunted the entire league that they had one more shot at having the last laugh, you would probably be hell-bent on protecting your mentor. And no doubt those Celtics had that attitude. Still, they were taken to Game 7.
The Celtics did win that game, 95-93, against a Lakers team led by all-time greats Jerry West and Elgin Baylor. Boston built a 10-point lead with 30 seconds left, but in a flash West cut the lead to six. Only 16 seconds remained, so Auerbach lit up his trademark victory cigar, which he did whenever a game was safely in hand. When play resumed, the Lakers pressed, forced some turnovers, and got within two points with four seconds on the clock. K.C. Jones shook free for the inbounds pass and escaped a trap long enough for the buzzer to sound. The Garden crowd celebrated. Auerbach retired where he’d always been, on top.
The Celtics many times have been in series that started out 3-1 and wound up 4-3. A major difference: They’ve always been the team chasing the miracle comeback. Now they’re the team trying to hang on.
Back to today, Celtics Nation and probably the team members themselves are in shock about having to face survival in Game 7. No one imagined this after being up 3-1. There’s plenty of criticism and “how could they let this happen?” takes aimed at them now, and it’s not unwarranted.
But the reality is, if it could happen to a dynasty, it could certainly happen to the 2026 squad.
That’s the thing about the NBA. Anything is, indeed, possible. Just as almost everyone thought this would be a gap year, after 56 wins those same people thought the Celtics were favorites to capture the East. That notion is now in serious jeopardy. (How anyone bets on the NBA is a mystery to some of us; it’s absurdly unpredictable.)
The Celtics many times have been in series that started out 3-1 and wound up 4-3. A major difference: They’ve always been the team chasing the miracle comeback. Now they’re the team trying to hang on. That is admittedly a scary position, but it’s also worth remembering that competition is never over till it’s over.
Looking back, Boston has won some of those Game 7s and lost some.
In 1973, the Celtics fell behind New York 3-1 when captain John Havlicek was injured, and fought back only to lose Game 7 on the Boston Garden parquet (for the first time ever). Then in 2023, as we sadly remember, Miami went up 3-0 before the Celtics valiantly took the next three games (Derrick White at the buzzer!). They couldn’t close it out, however, in part because Jayson Tatum sprained his ankle on the game’s first possession.
Now, a 3-1 lead has again turned into a win-or-go-home showdown, the fourth time this scenario has occurred in the Boston vs. Philly rivalry. The previous three were epic.
Bill Russell (6) battles Wilt Chamberlain at the Boston Garden. | Photo by Dick Raphael/NBAE via Getty Images
1968
The Sixers, led by Wilt Chamberlain, were the defending NBA champs, having broken the Celtics’ eight-year string of rings in 1967. They met again in the Eastern Division Final, equivalent to today’s conference final. Boston won the opener in Philadelphia, but lost the next three, and it didn’t look good with Games 5 and 7 scheduled back in Philly. But Russell’s Celtics recovered to win Game 5 by 18 and Game 6 by six.
In a close, tense Game 7, Chamberlain – who once averaged 50 points per game for an entire season – oddly attempted just two shots in the second half. Russell made a couple of free throws in the final seconds to clinch the game, 100-96. It was the first time an NBA team had overcome a 3-1 deficit. Boston went on to defeat the Lakers for Banner 10.
1981
Boston and Philadelphia were loaded – they finished the regular season tied with 62 wins and just 20 losses. When they met in the Eastern Conference Finals, the Celtics had home court advantage thanks to a tie-breaker. That proved crucial since five games in the series ended up decided by one or two points. The Sixers, led by Julius “Dr. J” Erving, won the opener in Boston, 105-104, on a late jump shot by lethal rookie scorer Andrew Toney. The Celtics responded in Game 2 by double digits. Game 3 went to the Sixers by 10 points, followed by a two-point win for the 3-1 lead.
Back home, the Celtics trailed by six points with under two minutes left in Game 5, but rallied for a two-point win that stunned the Sixers. In an eventful Game 6 on the road, Cedric Maxwell got into a fight with a fan sitting behind one of the baskets (not ejected!), and Kevin McHale blocked a late Toney jumper to preserve a two-point win.
Game 7 in Boston was the most physical battle imaginable. Survival of the fittest for 48 minutes. The Celtics won it, 91-90, on a last-minute bank shot by Larry Bird, one of the moments that helped him become known as Larry Legend. The Celtics went on to the Finals, beating Houston to raise Banner 14.
<p>Larry Bird defending Julius Erving in Boston Garden, 1982 playoffs. (Photo by Tony Tomsic/Sports Illustrated via Getty Images)</p>
1982
Boston went 63-19 this season and again had homecourt advantage for the ECF. In Game 1, they obliterated Philly by 40 points. The embarrassed Sixers regrouped and won the next three games, only one of them close. Boston point guard Tiny Archibald injured his shoulder in Game 3 and was ruled out for the series.
The Celtics won a blowout Game 5 at home to keep hope alive. In Game 6 in Philly, they smothered the 76ers offense, winning 88-75, to force Game 7 in Boston yet again. Fans and media mocked Dr. J’s team as “the 75ers” and the consensus was they were headed for another crushing loss. Instead, they went on a mission to atone for the previous year. Toney and the Doctor combined for 63 points, Philly controlled pretty much the entire 48 minutes, and the Celtics were eliminated, 120-106.
That Sixers victory came 44 years ago, and they haven’t beaten the Celtics in a playoff series again. They’ve met six times since in the postseason, and Boston has won them all, including three during the Brown-Tatum era. Surely, today’s Sixers have heard all about that history. This Embiid-Maxey group has all the momentum now and will be motivated to avoid losing a seventh straight series in the rivalry. Beating the Sixers in Game 7 will take everything the Celtics have.
Understandably, many Boston fans are worried. The Celtics appear disjointed and their chances seem bleak. All of this has happened so quickly, going from a secure position to a potential worst-case scenario. Some fans are upset, some are stunned, and probably everyone is feeling the pressure.
Fortunately, the team remains confident. They have their own motivation to keep their streak going, to prove they can turn the series around, and to win and advance. What they’re looking for is to replicate the 1982 result, in reverse. Skeptics will point out these Celtics don’t have a Russell or a Bird; believers will counter that the Sixers don’t have Wilt or Dr. J.
The bottom line is that Celtics Nation still has hope. Buckle up for Saturday night and stay ready, because anything actually is possible.
Sep 22, 2025; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Atlanta Braves relief pitcher Hunter Stratton (65) throws against the Washington Nationals in the sixth inning at Truist Park. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images | Brett Davis-Imagn Images
The Atlanta Braves announced a few moves prior to Friday evening’s game in Colorado, beginning with recalling right-hander Hunter Stratton to Atlanta. The club also selected the contract of fellow righty Anthony Molina. Things were not as fortunate for Joel Payamps and José Suarez, who were each designated for assignment.
The #Braves today recalled RHP Hunter Stratton to Atlanta and selected RHP Anthony Molina to the major league roster. The club designated RHP Joel Payamps and LHP José Suarez for assignment.
Stratton has yet to make his 2026 debut at the major league level, but in Triple-A, he’s put together a 4.50 ERA in 11 games.
Molina made his season debut Friday night, where he threw two hitless innings. He recorded just one base on balls.
Given that Payamps and Suarez have been DFA’d, this looks to be a step in the right direction for the Atlanta bullpen.
More Braves News:
Despite his quad issue, Michael Harris II continued to rake and delivered a clutch two-run homer to give the Braves the 8-6 edge over the Colorado Rockies.
In the latest Braves Biweekly, we look at how the Braves are shaping up to be the best team in the league.
MLB News:
The Baltimore Orioles have placed right-hander Ryan Helsley on the 15-day injured list due to right elbow inflammation. The move is retroactive to April 29.
The Milwaukee Brewers placed righty Brandon Woodruff on the 15-day injured list with right shoulder inflammation. Fortunately, there are no structural concerns and his time on the IL should be minimal.
From the Feed:
After 19 wins in the month of April, it’s time to cast your vote on Braves Player of the Month.
Lakers forward LeBron James stands while the national anthem plays before Game 6 against the Rockets on Friday night. (Ashley Landis / Associated Press)
History eluded. Embarrassment avoided. Belief restored.
The most secure legacy played with the most desperation. The most creaky veteran played with the most aggression. The winningest superstar played like he had everything to lose.
Wow. Gasp. LeBron!
So it went at Houston’s Toyota Center on Friday night when the Lakers, just two losses from becoming the first team in NBA history to blow a three-games-to-none lead, blew away the Rockets 98-78 to win their first-round series four games to two.
It was a night that prevented possibly the greatest meltdown in NBA history. It was a night that celebrated possibly the greatest player in NBA history.
“Started with LeBron,” said Marcus Smart. “The OG came out.”
When the shorthanded Lakers needed him most, their ageless 41-year wonder indeed showed up huge, LeBron James fighting down the lane, throwing in from deep, finding teammates like the sizzling Rui Hachimura and the surging Austin Reaves, leading with his entire massive being.
James wasn’t going to be on the wrong side of history. He wasn’t going to further stain his sterling 42-13 close-out record. He wasn’t going to let his final season end so early.
Wait a minute, this is not his final season? Not a chance. Bury any lingering doubt. After watching him dominate the youngest starting five in these playoffs Friday, it is impossible to imagine he’s going to call it quits.
He scored a game-high 28 points while enduring a team-high 37 minutes. He had eight assists, seven rebounds and only three turnovers. He even played defense, as the Lakers were a game-best plus-26 when he was on the court.
His night ended with him appropriately surrounded in the locker room by teammates who were bleating like goats. Because he’s the, well, you know.
Lakers forward LeBron James shoots over Rockets forward Jabari Smith Jr. during the first half of Game 6. (Ashley Landis / Associated Press)
“It speaks to his greatness,” said Lakers coach JJ Redick, and, yeah, somebody must be great if they can induce grown men to imitate farm animals. “To me he’s had the greatest career of any NBA player … for him to do it again and answer the bell again, it’s … baffling in some ways.”
From the frying pan to the fire, the Lakers now travel to Oklahoma City to face the defending champion Thunder in the Western Conference semifinals beginning Tuesday.
This could get real ugly, real quick.
The Lakers won’t have injured leading scorer Luka Doncic for the foreseeable future. They will be playing a Thunder team that drubbed them in the regular season, including a 43-point stomping just last month.
The Lakers don’t stand a chance. They’ll be lucky to avoid a sweep. They should quit while they’re ahead.
Which is exactly what everyone said about them before this Rockets series, before they took advantage of a Kevin Durant injury and Reaves' return from injury, before they revealed a sense of focus and connection completely unexpected from this disjointed group.
Before James decided he wouldn’t let them lose.
“We had some obstacles obviously and I know they were without guys as well, but I thought we answered the call,” said James. “I thought we answered the challenge and for them to allow me to lead them, that means a lot to me.”
Truly, lost in all the criticism over the last two Lakers losses was the truth the Lakers never should have been in this position in the first place.
Consider this near miss one of James’ greatest postseason achievements. Consider this first career playoff series win a huge endorsement for Redick as a Lakers coach. Consider any positivity that comes from the Oklahoma City series as pure gravy.
Lakers forward LeBron James scores on an uncontested layup after blowing past the Rockets defense during the first half of Game 6. (Ashley Landis / Associated Press)
“For us to be written off a few weeks ago and to win a playoff series is a big deal,” said Redick. “And it speaks to the character of our team and the leaders of our team that they didn’t let go of the rope."
James led the Lakers to a five-point lead in the first quarter, then absolutely dominated with a 14-point second quarter in which he outscored the entire Rockets team and gave the Lakers an 18-point halftime lead that was never challenged.
See if you can follow along …
James hits a fallaway. Jake LaRavia races down for a layup. Smart draws a charge. James hits a three. James hits a spinning layup. LaRavia connects on a fastbreak jam. James sinks another layup.
For those breathlessly keeping score, the Lakers began that second quarter with a 9-0 run that, dating back to the first quarter, was an incredible 21-2 smackdown. At one point the Rockets missed a dozen straight shots. At another point they were 0-for-15 shooting in the quarter.
The Rockets momentarily stopped the bleeding with six consecutive points late in the quarter, but on James’ last-minute trey, the Lakers finished the quarter on a 7-0 run to take a 49-31 halftime lead.
”He just has this ability to set the tone for the entire group,” said Redick. “He did that again tonight and the guys responded.”
James scored on a jump shot just seconds into the third quarter and the route continued. Houston, which only made six baskets in the quarter, mounted a bit of a surge late in the quarter, but Smart ended any momentum by drawing his third charge of the night.
“I love charges,” said Smart. “They’re demoralizing.”
Redick angrily called a timeout with 6:28 remaining in the game after a defensive lapse with the Lakers leading by 19. James fittingly scored on a layup immediately after the timeout and the game was formally finished.
The Lakers defense was astounding, holding the Rockets to 13 points below their season low. The Lakers rebounding was astonishing, nearly doubling the offensive rebounds of the NBA’s best offensive rebounding team.
The Lakers offensive collective was also cool, Hachimura hitting five of seven treys, Reaves scoring 15 points with three blocked shots, and Deandre Ayton finishing a fine series with 16 rebounds.
But this was about the OG, who noted that he is finally comfortable celebrating small victories and said, “I think we should be proud of the way we handled this.”
Austin Reaves, left, celebrates with LeBron James during the second half of the Lakers' 98-78 win over the Houston Rockets in the Western Conference quarterfinals on Friday night. (Ashley Landis / Associated Press)
The individual performances in the Lakers’ ugly, but decisive 98-78 series-clinching win over the Houston Rockets on Friday were almost too numerous for coach JJ Redick to focus on each one.
That collective spirit is also what makes him so confident heading into the Lakers' first Western Conference semifinal appearance since 2023.
“For us to be written off a few weeks ago and to win a playoff series is a big deal,” Redick said after the Lakers polished off their first-round playoff series in six games. “And it just speaks to the character of our team and the leaders of our team. They didn't let go of the rope.”
After winning a series in which they were underdogs for every game they won, the Lakers return to the scene of their lowest moment to face the Oklahoma City Thunder in the Western Conference semifinals beginning Tuesday.
The last time they were in Oklahoma City, the Lakers lost by 43 points. Their two best players sustained regular-season ending injuries, with news of Luka Doncic’s hamstring injury and Austin Reaves’ oblique strain coming on consecutive days after the loss. Still dazed from the emotional hangover, the Lakers lost their next two games.
“There was a lot of question marks,” Reaves said. “And just the way that we responded as a group, I think it just tells you a lot about the people that we have in our room. There's no quit.”
The Lakers finished the regular season with three consecutive wins. They leapt out to a 3-0 series lead against Houston before letting doubt creep in again. After the Lakers squandered two chances to end the series, including a disappointing home loss Wednesday when Reaves returned from injury, critics wondered if the Lakers would really be the first team in NBA history to blow a 3-0 playoff lead.
James wouldn’t allow it.
The superstar forward dominated with 28 points on 10-of-25 shooting, seven rebounds and eight assists. He outscored the Rockets by himself in the second quarter 14-13 as the Lakers went on a 27-3 run to open a 19-point lead.
“We understand that he's the guy that brings energy, but also we have to help him,” forward Rui Hachimura said, “especially you know, he's old now.”
Hachimura tried to suppress a smile.
Lakers forward Rui Hachimura blocks a shot by Rockets forward Jabari Smith Jr. during the first half of Game 6. (Ashley Landis / Associated Press)
The Japanese forward did his part with 21 points, including five three-pointers. Smart leapt for a jaw-dropping block against 6-foot-8 Tari Eason and drew three charges. Ayton had 16 rebounds, helping the Lakers outrebound the best rebounding team of a generation 54-45.
Ayton, often maligned for his inconsistent effort, has been a force in the postseason, averaging 11.8 points and 10.8 rebounds while often guarding Rockets All-Star Alperen Sengun one-on-one.
“He's been saying it all year: 'Wait till I get to the playoffs,'" Smart said of Ayton. “It's a different side of him that fans haven't seen, that we expect, that we know he can give. He knows it and he's ready.”
In his second game back from injury, Reaves had 15 points on seven-of-14 shooting with three blocks. He missed all four of his three-point attempts, still searching for his shooting rhythm after a long layoff. But the way Reaves attacked his treatment and returned before the typical four- to six-week timeline was his own form of leadership, Redick said.
Reaves sometimes left his house at 7:30 a.m. and didn’t return until more than 12 hours later. He drove all over L.A. looking for different treatment options. He did everything short of following Doncic to Europe, Reaves joked.
Doncic’s status is still unknown for the beginning of the conference semifinals. He has yet to progress to live play on the court, although he recently started incorporating movement into his on-court drills instead of just stationary shooting. He is still out indefinitely.
Without the star point guard, the Lakers could confidently turn to James to steer them through choppy waters. He averaged 22.8 points, 7.2 rebounds and 8.3 assists in the first-round series. At one point during Friday’s game, Reaves approached him to just tell him his performance was “insane.”
“I don't think you can say in words how special he was,” Reaves said, “not just tonight but this series, this year."
In the locker room after the game when the Lakers prepared to break their last huddle, the lights suddenly clicked off. Players started bleating, serenading James with sounds deserving of the G.O.A.T. — greatest of all time.
TORONTO, CANADA - MAY 1: Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers stands for the National Anthem before the game against the Toronto Raptors during Round One Game Six of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on May 1, 2026 at the Scotiabank Arena in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. 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. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Mark Blinch/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
Heartbreak only happens when you put yourself in a position to make it possible.
The Cleveland Cavaliers had their souls crushed by an RJ Barrett three that bounced off the rim multiple times before falling through to give the Toronto Raptors a 112-110 victory and force a Game 7.
The Cavs shouldn’t have been in that position. They didn’t bring the effort and focus they needed to close out a playoff series.
The defensive process was bad for the first three quarters.
Toronto lacks players who can create advantages for themselves off the dribble, particularly with the absence of Immanuel Quickley and Brandon Ingram.
Still, Cleveland’s defenders couldn’t stay in front of their assignment. And even if they did, one of the other four Cavaliers would find themselves stuck in no-man’s land, where they weren’t committed enough to cut off a drive, weren’t in the gaps to shut down passing lanes, and also weren’t close enough to their assignment to prevent an outside shot.
The Cavs' half-hearted help defense, where the defender is neither cutting off drives, nor close enough to their guy to influence the three-point shots, remains infuriating to watch. pic.twitter.com/ct95Ecs0k2
— Jackson Flickinger (@JacksFlickinger) May 2, 2026
The Cavs didn’t lose this game in the fourth; they lost it in the first three quarters when plays like this were commonplace. The Raptors connected on 11-27 (40.7%) from beyond the arc through the first three quarters, leading to 91 points overall.
Then, the defense flipped.
Cleveland locked in with the focus they should’ve had from the opening tip. They limited the Raptors to just 12 points in the fourth quarter on 4-17 (23.5%) shooting, which included going 1-7 (14.3%) from three.
It’s easy to look at the offensive outcome and judge how the defense played from there. However, limited scoring doesn’t mean there was good defense and vice versa. In this instance, the Cavs’ defense was actually good.
The help defense successfully cut off drives to the basket, as Toronto attempted just two shots in the restricted area and six in the paint overall. For context, they had an average of 9.3 shots in the paint per quarter before the fourth.
Cleveland did this while being able to rotate back to shooters to either contest outside shots or actually prevent looks from going up entirely.
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The frustrating part isn’t that the Cavs aren’t capable of playing good defense. That would be understandable. It’s that they can’t focus enough mentally or show the willingness needed to actually do so, until it’s nearly too late.
If they supplied anywhere close to this level of effort for an extended stretch at the start of the game, they win this one going away.
Donovan Mitchell deserves the most blame for the loss.
The entire offense, and this era of Cavs’ basketball in general, is built entirely around him. They can’t afford for him to play below his standards for four straight games and expect to easily close out a series.
Once again, Mitchell couldn’t establish anything going toward the basket. Through the first three quarters, Mitchell attempted just six of his 13 shots in the paint and had no free-throw attempts. That can’t happen for someone whose game is built mostly on his explosiveness to the rim.
As with the defense, the frustrating part wasn’t that Mitchell was incapable of getting to the basket. In the fourth quarter and overtime, he attempted seven of his 12 shots in the paint, posting 13 points in that span to put the Cavs in a position to win the game.
Going to the basket is draining, especially against a team that is doing everything within its power to make it difficult to do so. But that doesn’t mean you don’t have to try and get there in the first three quarters.
Mitchell’s teams have consistently underperformed in the playoffs, but he’s mostly escaped criticism. Being a high-volume scorer who puts up numbers has allowed him to do so. When you score 35+ points, it’s easy to point to other reasons why the team didn’t get it done.
These playoffs have been a referendum on that notion.
Mitchell’s scoring has completely dried up. Over the last four games of this series, he’s averaged 19.5 points on 37.3% shooting from the floor and 29.4% shooting from three while taking just 1.5 free-throw attempts per game.
The lack of scoring underscores the other parts of Mitchell’s game that aren’t up to snuff. The defense has been horrendous, he’s averaging more turnovers than assists in the last four games, and he doesn’t make an impact as a rebounder. This all adds up to the Cavs getting beaten in the minutes he’s played.
In the last four games of this series, the Cavs have been outscored in Mitchell’s time on the court by a combined 35 points. That comes out to an average of losing his minutes by 8.8 points per game, which included Cleveland being outscored by four in Game 6.
Losing Mitchell’s minutes wasn’t a common occurrence in the regular season. The Cavs outscored their opponents with him on the floor in 49 of the 70 games he played. And when they didn’t, they usually lost, with a record of 5-16 in those situations.
This was the fourth-straight game the Cavs have been outplayed with Mitchell on the floor. Unsurprisingly, that has led to them losing three of those games.
The warts that have held Mitchell back in the postseason have always been there. They were just masked by his incredible scoring.
If you think of the best playoff performers of all-time, they’re all incredibly versatile two-way players who can beat you in a variety of ways on both sides of the ball. That isn’t Mitchell. And until it is, teams that are built around him will continue to fall into the same issues year after year.
This wasn’t James Harden’s best game. He dribbled the air out of the ball a few too many times down the stretch, couldn’t get a couple of clean looks to go late, and had too many careless turnovers. This led to an inefficient 5-14 showing with four giveaways.
Even so, this loss wasn’t on Harden.
Harden has earned his reputation as a playoff underperformer. This game won’t do him any favors in that department. However, his more well-rounded skillset is why the Cavs played their most impressive basketball with him on the court.
There’s more to Harden’s game than just scoring. He set up his teammates well (even though the spacing remains horrid) and should’ve had much more than nine assists. In addition to that, he did an excellent job affecting the game as a rebounder.
Guard rebounding is incredibly important when the margins are this tight. Harden came down with nine rebounds, including five on the offensive end. He led the team in offensive boards, which is the one area the Cavs thoroughly dominated. Cleveland outscored Toronto 22-10 on second-chance points. Harden was a big part of that.
Single-game plus/minus can be misleading, but it sometimes does paint an accurate picture. The Cavs won Harden’s minutes by a game-best 11 points due to the numerous ways he positively influenced the game despite being a poor defender.
Head coach Kenny Atkinson made numerous bad decisions.
Sticking with Max Strus as a starter just hasn’t worked. There are several Cavaliers who’ve gotten lost helping off-ball, few more than Strus. This is part of the reason why the defense has typically struggled with him on the floor.
The starting unit with Dean Wade remains their best lineup. Atkinson went to it late to get back into the game, but maybe things wouldn’t have gotten out of hand if that unit had been given the time they deserved.
Then, there’s the fact that the Cavs wasted their challenge in the first half on a borderline foul that didn’t go their way on review. Having that challenge late would’ve helped as numerous questionable calls didn’t go the Cavs way and influenced the outcome of the game.
Finally, Atkinson’s play calls out of timeouts were bad in overtime. His decision to run their second-to-last possession to Schroder in the backcourt when he knew Toronto was going to foul was a head-scratcher with Mitchell and Harden on your team.
In addition to that, having Evan Mobley, who’s been a bad free-throw shooter for several months on the floor in that situation, also didn’t make sense. He shouldn’t have been in a position to lose the ball late.
And lastly, the final play call didn’t make sense. Using Harden, your second-best offensive player, as the inbounder is questionable. I understand that you want an on-target pass, but you’re taking a prime shooter and decoy off the court. If you want to ensure you get the ball in, you can always use a timeout and have Harden inbound the second attempt.
More importantly, the final play call made no sense. I’m not sure what the desired outcome was, but there was no chance that Mitchell could break free from this designed mess. Settling for an off-balance Mobley three probably wasn’t the ideal outcome there.
Evan Mobley played one of the best games of his career, considering the moment.
The Cavs aren’t in a position to steal this if it weren’t for his efforts on both ends. Mobley continually beat up mismatches inside, took it to the basket when he had an opening to do so, and scored Cleveland’s last nine points of regulation to send the game to overtime. This included hitting a triple with under two minutes left and converting a game-tying finger roll in the final seconds of the fourth.
Cleveland has looked their best this series when Mobley has been involved offensively. Toronto doesn’t have someone who can easily combat his size and quickness. Scottie Barnes is probably the best bet in doing so, but they need him to cover one of the guards. This leaves Mobley free to attack in the post and in space as a cutter.
Mobley’s game doesn’t neatly fit into a number one or two role on a high-level offense. The handle isn’t tight enough for him to be entirely a self-creator. That said, he has constantly found ways to elevate his game in the playoffs after a rough postseason debut against the New York Knicks three years ago.
Still, the building blocks are there for him to grow into more. And even if he doesn’t, he’s proven to be a matchup problem in the playoffs. That’s an incredibly important skill to have in the postseason.
This heartbreak was only possible because the Cavs showed some fight. If they rolled over quietly, like it seemed like they would do midway through the third quarter, this loss might not sting as much.
This game wasn’t lost when Barrett hit the improbable three. The Cavs instead choked it away well before that. They didn’t come out with the energy they needed for a close-out game. Trying to steal it by finally exerting effort in the final 10 minutes like it was the second night of a back-to-back in January wasn’t, and never will be enough, to eliminate a playoff opponent.
So on one hand, the Cavs don’t deserve any credit for fighting back since that was the bare minimum that they could do.
At the same time, if you wanted to take the glass-half-full approach, you’re perfectly capable of doing so. The resilience the Cavs displayed late wasn’t something we’ve seen often in this era. They showed that they could be a high-level defensive team, and if a few more open shots fell down the stretch, the conversation would be entirely different.
We’ll find out which perspective is the right one on Sunday when this era of Cavs basketball is on the line.
Apr 30, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia 76ers center Joel Embiid (21) and Boston Celtics guard Baylor Scheierman (55) compete for a rebound during the fourth quarter at Xfinity Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images | Bill Streicher-Imagn Images
The Boston Celtics are collapsing in on themselves, now having dropped back-to-back games against the Philadelphia 76ers. What was supposed to be a quick series for Boston has now turned into a slog, with Philly bouncing back from a 3-1 deficit to force a Game 7.
It’s do-or-die time. No more second chances. The Celtics had several opportunities to close out this series, but now their backs are against the wall, and momentum is not in their favor.
Boston held a 13-point lead in the third quarter of Game 5, a potential close-out game. It’s been all downhill from there, though. The Sixers turned Boston’s 13-point lead into as much as a 17-point deficit, ultimately stealing the game by 16. So, what changed? Why was Philly able to snatch control of the series?
Well, as my CelticsBlog colleagues have pointed out, from a tactical perspective, Boston is no longer playing Celtics basketball. The root cause of the issue becomes clearer when we look at how Boston’s bench closed out Game 6, but the problem isn’t with the bench.
In Game 6, Joe Mazzulla pulled the starters at the 10:24 mark of the fourth quarter when Boston was facing a 23-point deficit. Many saw this as a waving of the white flag, but I wasn’t so sure.
A lineup of Payton Pritchard, Baylor Scheierman, Ron Harper Jr., Jordan Walsh, and Luka Garza took the floor. Outside of Payton, no one in that lineup had a consistent role this season. They were thrown in to the fire at what almost felt like random stretches of a game, and they all had success in those stretches. They all gave every stint – every possession – their all. That’s what led to Boston’s 56-win season, obviously alongside the winning plays of the starters.
I had no reason to expect that it would be any different when they took the floor together in the 4th quarter of Game 6. And what do you know? They faced off against Philly’s starters, and shaved off as many as 11 points from the deficit in just over 3 minutes, making it an 88-76 lead for the Sixers with 7:10 left on the clock.
Ultimately, Boston’s bench wasn’t able to take it any further, a 106-93 final score, but we were able to see exactly what the Celtics were missing that put them in the 23-point hole in the first place. Effort. Connectivity. Determination.
shoutout to the Celtics ‘stay ready’ group + Pritchard.
cut the lead down to 12 two different times. scored 28 points in a 10 minute stretch. pic.twitter.com/tNpNhF4DNz
— Celtics Performances (@BestOfCeltics0) May 1, 2026
The “Stay Ready” group earned their name for a reason. They don’t know when they’ll take the floor, but they know exactly what they’re going to give to the game when they do – everything. It’s what the starters have been missing in these past two games.
Now, let me be perfectly clear. I am not questioning the starters’ heart, skill, desire, or anything of the sort. Celtics fans are blessed to have a team of such high-character players, and that too, players whose only goal is to win. I’m not going to let one disappointing series make me start doubting that.
But the starters don’t seem to be playing with the same sense of urgency as the bench is. They have experience, no doubt, but it’s felt like they’ve been going through the motions. Jaylen Brown said he thinks that Boston is “playing into [Philly’s] hands a little.” Too much isolation and matchup hunting, lapses on defense, miscommunications – it’s all amplified under the spotlight when the shots aren’t falling.
When the bench came in, it felt like there was finally some flow again. There wasn’t any overdribbling, the ball moved from side to side, everyone was making the extra pass, and the Celtics were getting some very high-quality shots. Not all of them dropped, which happens, but you also can’t expect the bench to be perfect. If the starters played the same way, you’d imagine they’d at least find the same success, if not more.
When asked about why they were inserted into the game, Mazzulla had this to say: “Wanted to give the game a different feel. I mean, all year we’ve had 14-15 guys be able to impact winning. Just wanted to give the game a different look.”
Along with the improvements on offense, it also felt like there was more of a defensive presence. The Celtics were attacking loose balls, forcing turnovers, and crashing the boards. It was honestly a much-needed break for me as a fan of the game, finally seeing some more fight after a gut-wrenching first three quarters. It was the only thing that could take the sour taste of the rest of the game out of my mouth.
The thing is, we know the starters are capable of this too. This same group won a championship together just two seasons ago. We need that version of them in Game 7. Boston can’t afford to get off to a slow start. They have to come out swinging from the jump. They have to feed the TD Garden crowd, and put Philly on their heels.
I’ll take this moment to personally call out Derrick White, Jaylen Brown, Jayson Tatum, Sam Hauser, Neemias Queta, and even Nikola Vucevic (because they’re all obviously reading this); I don’t care if the shots don’t go down if you follow the right process. If we go out, let’s go out fighting. I believe in you. Play the Celtics basketball we all know and love, and send Philly packing.
MESA, ARIZONA - MARCH 24: Jasson Domínguez #24 of the New York Yankees high fives teammates in the dugout after hitting a solo home run against the Chicago Cubs during a spring training game at Sloan Park on March 24, 2026 in Mesa, Arizona. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images
SNY | John Flanigan: Ahead of Friday’s game, the Yankees got some good news, as the tests done on Jasson Domínguez’s elbow came back clean. There had been worry after he was hit on the elbow by a pitch in Wednesday’s game, leading to him exiting the game and undergoing X-rays and other tests. However, those appear to have not caused further worries, with Domínguez a possible option off the bench in Friday’s game.
MLB Trade Rumors | Steve Adams: The Yankees have lost a little bit of depth as veteran infielder Paul DeJong has opted out of his minor league deal with the team. The Yankees brought DeJong to spring training on a minor league deal with an opt out in May, and he’s decided to exercise that clause and see if he can catch on with another team.
Sportsnet: In other roster news, Randal Grichuk has elected free agency after having been DFAed by the Yankees earlier this week. The somewhat-infamous Yankee Killer leaves New York after a .194/.212/.323 showing in 16 games.
Kyodo News: Despite leaving the Yankees and MLB as a whole, Masahiro Tanaka has continued to pitch professionally back in his home country of Japan. On Friday, he hit a mark that ties him in the history books with another old friend. Yesterday as his Yomiuri Giants beat the Hanshin Tigers, Tanaka picked up his 203rd career win across NPB and MLB. That tied him with fellow former Yankee Hiroki Kuroda for combined wins, with the duo only trailing Yu Darvish in that record book.
Italian driver lost both legs in high-speed cart race crash
He went on to win four Paralympic golds as a para-cyclist
Alex Zanardi, the former Formula One driver who lost both legs in a racing crash and went on to win Paralympic gold medals, has died at the age of 59, his family said on Saturday.
Zanardi, from Bologna, made his F1 debut in 1991 and later achieved success in the Cart series in the United States, winning back-to-back championships in 1997 and 1998. His life took a dramatic turn in September 2001 when he was involved in a high-speed crash during a Cart race in Germany that led to the amputation of both legs.
PHILADELPHIA, PA - APRIL 26: Ron Harper Jr. #13 and Hugo Gonzalez #28 of the Boston Celtics box out Jabari Walker #33 of the Philadelphia 76ers during Round One Game Four of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on April 26, 2026 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 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. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by David Dow/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
Joe Mazzulla has stuck to his guns with his starting lineup and who he plays off of the bench.
The Celtics have started the same five of Derrick White, Jaylen Brown, Sam Hauser, Jayson Tatum and Neemias Queta in all 6 games of the first round. That lineup is -15 in 58 minutes in the series.
All season, Mazzulla was flexible with his rotations, starting Josh Minott, Jordan Walsh and Baylor Scheierman for different stretches this season and now that we have reached the playoffs, he’s been fairly rigid. Why is that?
Hugo Gonzalez and Ron Harper Jr. just cannot get on the court and Scheierman has been the seldom used 9th guy the entire series. These are guys who played roles throughout the regular season because they all played very well for the Celtics. They have all shown they are solid NBA players.
I don’t know that I love the Tatum at center look but that is another thing that Mazzulla hasn’t tried it at all.
What advantage has Hauser given them in the starting lineup? What advantage has any of their bigs given them?
The Celtics best lineup in Game 6 was Payton Pritchard, Harper Jr., Scheierman, Walsh and Luka Garza, they were a +6 in 9 minutes. Sure, it was at the end of the game and that lineup isn’t sustainable, but Philly had their starters out there for a bit with those guys on the floor and they played well.
PHILADELPHIA, PA – APRIL 30: Baylor Scheierman #55 of the Boston Celtics shoots a three point basket during the game against the Philadelphia 76ers during Round One Game Six of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on April 30, 2026 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 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. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
They are good players who played the brand of basketball you played all season, the brand of basketball that won you 56 games and took a 3-1 lead in this series.
No, you can’t pull Derrick White. He hasn’t played well but he is apart of the fabric of everything they do, they need him. However, they don’t need to go down on the Sam Hauser ship.
Yet, we need to question if it really matters. Is Harper, Scheierman, Gonzalez or anyone else really going to change anything? These are role players. If the Celtics best players don’t play well, it really doesn’t matter who plays or how much they play.
Before the playoffs, I wrote about how this was Jaylen Brown’s moment to prove he is one of the best players in the NBA, but he has more turnovers than assists in this series.
It is easy for us to look at a coach who keeps putting the same players on the court when it is not working and tell him to change it when there is a reason he started off with the guys on the court.
Yet, when you look back at the 2023 2nd round when the Celtics were down 3-2 heading to Philadelphia and Mazzulla made a change to his starting 5 by putting Robert Williams in there for Derrick White, it worked. When it stopped working in the Miami series, Joe went back to White and it worked until Jayson Tatum rolled his ankle in Game 7.
I do think Joe has been too stubborn with his rotations in this series. I do think he should have tried different guys as it became increasingly clear that what he has been trying have not been working.
Now, the Celtics are on the verge of being the 14th team in NBA history to blow a 3-1 lead. While it isn’t entirely due to Mazzulla not changing up his starting 5 or rotations, the Celtics are on the ropes and it is time for Joe Mazzulla to do something different.
Then, late in the period, the Bruins were hemmed into their own end, and the Sabres moved in just the right way to give Mattias Samuelsson a perfect screen to beat Jeremy Swayman.2-0 Sabres.
Unfortunately, that was all the scoring in the period for Boston, but Buffalo didn’t score, so things worked out!
Third Period
The goal that killed the season is almost preposterously stupid to describe. Hampus Lindholm forced a pass to David Pastrnak, who could not receive it and had him and McAvoy racing against Josh Doan for the puck, and finding out way too late that they’d unintentionally given Zach Benson unrestricted access to the net-front. 3-1 Sabres.
Game, Series and Season Over. Buffalo eliminates Boston in Six Games.
Game (and Series) Recap:
Your TOI Leader for tonight’s game was Charlie McAvoy, who played 25:09
The Boston Bruins lost this game the same way they’ve lost nearly every game they played this year. The only difference is that it counted for something. They let the other team have the puck for far too long, they completely bailed on their defensive structure; ESPECIALLY in front of their net, they puck watched, they absolutely could not win a puck battle to save their lives, and they needed Pasta and Swayman to try and get some hope back into their game. That’s not new. The difference is that they ran headlong into the Buffalo Sabres in an elimination game. Their X-Factors failed. Their usual weaknesses were exploited, and the Sabres eliminated them. Didn’t even seem to phase them that much. There was just not enough across the lineup. The Boston Bruins do not have enough.
The Sabres weren’t even really all that physically inclined; they were just faster on every single puck, they just had better position on just about every single play, and their best are built like super mutants when they did get hit. If I knew I could conjure their kind of scoring from anywhere like they had, I don’t think I’d be super worried about getting clipped from a hit or being down a goal either. What does it matter if you beat me up when Tage Thompson’s coming over the boards next? Yeah I’ll be a bit sore, but you’ll still be down where it matters.
If there’s anything about this series that I want Don Sweeney to understand, it’s this. Let’s just hope he recognizes what that actually means.
Speaking of which! There are a lot of players who absolutely did not show up for this series with a good amount of it that were needed. Morgan Geekie tapered off after some time. Victor Arvidsson got hurt and that forced Marco Sturm’s hand. A lot of this roster spent this playoff series in first gear and it ended badly. Do not listen to people who said “the Fourth line was great!”. Outside of a very specific group of players, the forwards were hot swamp ass for six games. Not even close to enough. There were players who I thought earned second looks, or maybe some temporary plaudits, but eventually results matter. This roster is slow and their forwards are hopelessly dependent on a handful of players to get anything done. That’s not a recipe for success.
Please politely remind your friends that would like to trade off someone like David Pastrnak that, despite what self-described fairweather fans running the morning radio shows will tell you, that he absolutely showed up for this series. Led it in goals, led it in points, for like two days was leading the league in that category. The problem is that there is a power gap after his name on the statsheet. The problem is that after getting some of that hope that I brought up earlier? The guy who did a “rah-rah we’re coming back” thing with the team? Absolutely nobody else met that moment. Not the rookie. Not the vets. Not the so-called tough guys and definitely not the defense. He showed, and Swayman showed. The few times they didn’t? They got absolutely murdered. Got blown the hell out.
During the preview, I noted that the Bruins defense needed to lock all the way down in order to keep competitive in this series, and they were able to do it…a grand total of once. Maybe twice. Meanwhile everything else came apart at the seams. Charlie McAvoy played his worst game of the series at the worst possible time and Hampus Lindholm pissed this game away for Boston on a play so bad it gave me stomach cramps just thinking about it again. This defense needs an overhaul and badly.
I’m not gonna sugarcoat it. If your coach isn’t playing your so-called “defender of the future” because he can’t trust him even though he’s big as a horse? Trade him. There’s no future for this player on this team. I don’t wanna hear about his f!#king tools if he doesn’t have the head to use them correctly more than once in the most important games of the year.
I think we have this understanding that the Buffalo Sabres are bad and have had it so reinforced from years of disappointment and incompetence that we still don’t quite “get” that they are good now. Maybe we don’t want to; I sure as hell don’t. They’ve got the best xGF% of any team left in the Eastern Conference and they get to wait out Tampa and Montreal killing each other. It’s a slim margin against the Hurricanes to be sure, but they are genuinely, all the way good for the first time since they wore those stupid navy blue sweaters. Their fans are gonna be unbearable twerps about this, and frankly after putting up with organizational malfeasance that would have Bruins fans melting like the wicked witch if it happened for more than a season, I think they have earned at least 24 hours of shit talking. Hats off to them; the better team won.
That said, once that 24 hours is over? Go turn that energy towards beating whoever comes out of Montreal/Tampa.
Jeremy actual Swayman, dude. I am so happy this player finally figured himself out and came back into this season poised to bounce back. The Bruins would not be in this position without his work, and we are fortunate to have him. Still walked away from this one with an .880 SV%.
A .906 SV% through six games however? Not bad! It’s not Frederik Anderson (lol. lmao.) or Scott Wedgewood (?!?!?!?!), but hey; this is the mid-nu-20’s NHL: that’s pretty decent.
The Good news is that while the playoffs are kind of tearing through at a breakneck pace, the Draft Lottery is also due in the upcoming week! We’ll get to see if Boston gets a high draft pick once and for all!
If the Vegas Golden Knights were the slightest bit nervous before a potential series-clinching Game 6 against the Utah Mammoth, they didn’t let it show. The locker room was loose after Friday’s morning skate– Rasmus Andersson cracked jokes with Noah Hanifin, while Mitch Marner looked cool as a cucumber. In fact, you might have thought they were preparing for a game they already knew they were going to win.
That’s how they played, too. The Golden Knights were all over the Mammoth right from puck drop, and they didn’t relent until the final horn. Even their celebrations were business as usual following a 5-1 victory to send them into Round Two.
“We’ve been here before,” said Mark Stone following the blowout win. “We don’t have the panic. Maybe some teams do, but we calm ourselves pretty quickly.”
The Golden Knights came out swinging and outshot the Mammoth 10-6 in the first. They didn’t press for offense; they simply waited for the Mammoth to make a mistake. They finally capitalized on one at 15:02 into the period.
Lawson Crouse misread a play as the Mammoth tried to exit the zone, and Mitch Marner took it back the other way. He played catch with Mark Stone, moved into the slot, and fired a shot that went wide of the net. The puck bounced off the end boards right onto the stick of Brett Howden, who chipped it in for his fourth goal in three games.
Total misread by Crouse as the Mammoth tried to exit the zone, and the Golden Knights capitalize! Brett Howden has four goals in his last three games.
The Mammoth came flying out of the gate in the second period and generated four high-danger scoring chances in the first few minutes. However, they simply couldn’t sustain enough offensive pressure to make it count; the Golden Knights had no such problem.
The Golden Knights capped off a 2-minute, 42-second shift in the offensive zone with a goal at 19:15 in the first. With five tired Mammoth on the ice, Ivan Barbashev made a great play to find Mitch Marner fresh from the bench in the high slot. Marner took advantage of Utah’s tired players, blew by Michael Carcone, and beat Karel Vejmelka with a clapper from the right dot.
Mitch. Marner. Caps off over a minute of extended pressure with a smaller from the right circle.
The Mammoth got on the board at 7:41 in the third. Mikhail Sergachev sent a stretch-pass to Kailer Yamamoto, who entered the zone with speed and beat Carter Hart with a snipe from the right dot.
Yamamoto’s goal energized the crowd, and the Mammoth fed off of it. But as Stone said, the Golden Knights simply ‘don’t have the panic,’ and they snuffed Utah’s surge out as quickly as it started.
The Golden Knights restored their two-goal lead less than two minutes after Yamamoto’s goal. Nic Dowd won an offensive zone draw, and Colton Sissons banged in Brayden McNabb’s rebound.
“There was no panic on the bench,” said head coach John Tortorella postgame. “We just settled ourselves down…. For us to come back, and just taking a shot on goal, looking for a rebound, playing in the blue… The third goal was a pretty big one for us.”
From there, the Mammoth had nothing; the Golden Knights were home free. Mitch Marner scored his second of the game on the power play at 12:09 in the third to cap off a three-point night.
The Mammoth pulled Vejmelka for the extra attacker with over four minutes remaining in regulation, but weren’t able to generate any offense. Cole Smith hit the empty net at 16:24 in the third, and the Golden Knights cruised through the final three minutes of regulation.
Three Takeaways of the Knight
1. There’s no way Mitch Marner wasn’t feeling the pressure heading into Game 6. Despite playing well and doing the little things right all series, the production wasn’t there. But when his team needed him, he answered the call. He scored two goals, including the game-winner, and recorded a team-leading seven shots on net.
“I’ve had a couple of opportunities in that same area that I just have missed on, and that’s why I kind of just decided to quickly wind one up and see if I can get a clapper through. Lucky enough, it went through and found a hole and found the net,” said Marner following the win. “Yeah, just trust yourself. Trust yourself in those moments.”
2. Carter Hart didn’t have the best stats in Games 2-5, but John Tortorella’s confidence in him never wavered.
“I don’t look at the numbers,” said Tortorella on Friday morning. “Carter made three or four huge saves at key times. That’s what playoffs are… I look at momentum swings in the game, and what he’s done for us to keep us in it if we’re not playing well.”
Tortorella’s confidence paid off in a big way. Hart finished the night with 21 saves and a 1.37GSAx.
3. When the Golden Knights are on their game defensively, they frustrate their opponents to no end. That’s exactly what happened tonight, and there was a moment in the second period when Mammoth captain Clayton Keller smashed his stick against the glass after a failed scoring chance.
The Mammoth are brimming with young talent, but that youth also equates to inexperience. The Golden Knights’ veteran maturity matters, and they’ll be facing another young and inexperienced opponent in Round Two in the Anaheim Ducks.
England head coach survived Ashes review but going missing for 43% of the county season is straight out of Seinfeld
George: Right now I just sit around pretending I’m busy. Jerry: How do you do that? George: I look annoyed. Think about it. When you look annoyed all the time, people think you’re busy. [Rolls his eyes, slaps his forehead, does look busy.]
Does anyone remember Brendon McCullum? You know. Baz. It was a thing. People said “Bazball” in parliament. It was probably in the dictionary, one of those new zeitgeisty words, like rofl. Distinguishing marks? Hat. Jawline. A way of standing. Sports socks provocatively splayed on an ornate balcony. Look, it doesn’t really matter. But has anyone actually … seen him?