Two-start pitchers: Jacob Misiorowski leads a plethora of terrific options as we pass the quarter pole

Hello and welcome to the eighth installment of our weekly two-start pitcher article for the 2026 MLB season.

I will be here every Friday to highlight some of the best two-start pitcher options in fantasy baseball leagues for the upcoming week providing my insights and recommendations on which options should be started or benched.

It’s crazy that we’re already more than a quarter of the way through the 2026 season. It seems like we just started.

We now have actual actionable data that we can use to make decisions on these pitchers, as most of them have taken the mound five or six times already. A pitcher can get lucky and post quality results despite poor underlying numbers through a couple of starts, but it’s much more difficult to sustain that over a longer stretch of time.

This is a living document, so we'll update the options below as the weekend moves along.

Before we get into it, we'll start with a couple of notes on situations that may be unresolved or teams that may not have a two-start pitcher lined up for the upcoming week:

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We know that Jose Quintana will make two starts for the Rockies this week. What we don’t know, is who else may join him for a two-step (vs. Rangers, at Diamondbacks). Chase Dollander is lined up to do so, but it seems far more likely that he’ll wind up on the injured list after exiting Thursday’s start due to tightness in his arm. It’s unclear whether they’ll summon someone from Triple-A to take his place in the rotation or roll with a bullpen game in that spot. Either way, no one that they could throw out there would be worthy of streaming in this spot.

Once again, we get a six-game week from the Dodgers, which means that each of their starters will take the mound once and no one will get a two-start week. We thought that we would get one from Yoshinobu Yamamoto last week, but with Blake Snell’s return to the rotation, it ended up being Roki Sasaki that got the ball twice.

There could be a second Yankees’ starter making two starts this week (vs. Blue Jays, vs. Rays), but as of now we aren’t sure who that will be. Max Fried is tentatively lined up to do so, but he’s getting additional testing done after exiting Wednesday’s start due to soreness in his elbow. A trip to the injured list seems likely there. It’s possible that Elmer Rodriguez could return and take his place in the Yankees’ rotation, which would make him an interesting streaming option. We’ll update here if we get any additional clarification through the weekend.

Someone will also make two starts for the Phillies next week (vs. Reds, vs. Guardians), but it’s not entirely clear who that will be yet either. Andrew Painter is scheduled to take the ball on Monday and he would be lined up to do so, but there’s growing speculation that the Phillies could use Thursday’s off-day to skip the struggling right-hander in order to give him a breather. If that’s the case, it would be Jesus Luzardo winding up with the two-start week for the Phillies. It’s pretty simple for planning purposes. Painter should be avoided whether it’s one start or two, while Luzardo is an easy start regardless of how many starts he makes.

Things could change for the Mariners, but as of now it looks like they’re going to move to a six-man rotation, at least temporarily, to accommodate the return of Bryce Miller. That means that Luis Castillo will stick around instead of heading to the bullpen and makes it so none of their hurlers will get the ball twice in a six-game week. If anything changes, and Castillo is bumped or Miller suffers a setback, it would be Bryan Woo getting the two-start week as he’s lined up to pitch on Monday.

Going Twice…

Note: Probable pitchers as of May 15 and are subject to change.

American League

▶ Strong Plays

Parker Messick, Guardians, LHP (at Tigers, at Phillies)

The 25-year-old southpaw has exceeded every possible expectation through his first nine starts on the season, going 5-1 with a 2.35 ERA, 0.99 WHIP and a 58/14 K/BB ratio over 53 2/3 innings. He has been an absolute stud for fantasy purposes. Both the Tigers and Phillies struggle against southpaws, which sets him up very nicely to continue his dominant run in this two-start week. He should be locked into lineups in all formats and represents one of the stronger overall plays on the board for this week.

Will Warren, Yankees, RHP (vs. Blue Jays, vs. Rays)

Warren has really taken the next step this season and become a reliable weekly fantasy option. He sits at 5-1 with a 3.42 ERA, 1.16 WHIP and a 59/12 K/BB ratio across 47 1/3 innings on the season and hasn’t shown any signs of slowing down. With the Yankees’ offense backing him, he’s a threat to win every time he takes the mound and he should easily be able to eclipse double digit strikeouts in a two-start week. He should be an easy start in fantasy leagues of all sizes.

Dylan Cease, Blue Jays, RHP (at Yankees, vs. Pirates)

Cease has been outstanding through his first nine starts for the Blue Jays, checking in with a 2.41 ERA, 1.18 WHIP and a league-leading 75 strikeouts over 52 1/3 innings. What has been especially impressive from Cease this season is the reduced walk rate which has led to a much more palatable WHIP than we’re used to seeing from the right-hander. The battle against the Yankees in the Bronx is tricky for sure, but it’s not close to being enough for me to sit Cease for a two-start week, especially when he’s rolling like this.

J.T. Ginn, Athletics, RHP (at Angels, at Padres)

Ginn has been very impressive in the early going for the A’s this season, compiling a 3.12 ERA, 1.20 WHIP and a 34/16 K/BB ratio over 43 1/3 innings through his first 10 appearances (seven starts). The fact that he gets to make both of these starts on the road in pitcher’s parks instead of at Sutter Health Park in West Sacramento is a major benefit as well. I know that he’s difficult to trust, but Ginn looks like a very strong option this week. I’d be starting him everywhere that I could.

▶ Decent Plays

Shane McClanahan, Rays, LHP (vs. Orioles, at Yankees)

This is a tough one for me to place this week as McClanahan has been so good through his first eight starts for the Rays, exceeding even the loftiest of expectations. I’m not convinced that he can stay healthy and continue at that level, but he’s absolutely pitching like an ace right now and should be started until further notice. My trepidation this week comes from the matchup against the Yankees in New York on Sunday. The Bombers have been punishing left-handed pitching all season and I could see that one going south for McClanahan in a hurry. It’s not enough to dissuade me from using him, but it’s the reason I have him listed as a decent play instead of a strong option for this week.

Framber Valdez, Tigers, LHP (vs. Guardians, at Orioles)

Valdez was supposed to come in and provide an elite 1-2 punch at the top of the Tigers’ rotation this season. Now with Tarik Skubal (elbow) shelved, he’s being counted on to shoulder a much bigger load for their pitching staff. The problem is that he hasn’t been as reliable as we have come to expect over the years. He holds a disappointing 4.32 ERA and 1.36 WHIP across his first 50 innings with the Tigers. The Guardians are one of the better offenses in the league against southpaws, so it’s not going to get any easier for him this week. Even if the results aren’t quite as good as you had hoped, I think you still have to continue trusting Valdez and rolling him out there each week – especially when he makes two starts.

Trevor Rogers, Orioles, LHP (at Rays, vs. Tigers)

Rogers predictably showed a bit of rust in his return from the injured list after missing time due to illness. It should be acknowledged that the start came in a difficult matchup against the Yankees though. The opposition gets a bit easier this week, getting to battle the Rays in Tampa Bay and the suddenly hapless Tigers at home. I know the overall results haven’t been great, but I have seen enough from Rogers during his time with the O’s that I’m willing to trust him against these opponents. I’ll be starting him with confidence in all leagues.

Reid Detmers, Angels, LHP (vs. Athletics, vs. Rangers)

The transition back to the Angels’ rotation for Detmers this season has gone pretty seamless so far, with the left-hander compiling a 4.38 ERA, 1.26 WHIP and a 53/17 K/BB ratio over his first 49 1/3 innings of work. The Athletics are a much less scary team away from home though and the Rangers have been the worst team in baseball against opposing left-handers this season. That makes Detmers a very attractive streaming target in all league sizes this week.

Noah Schultz, White Sox, LHP (at Mariners, at Giants)

Aside from one brutal start against the Angels in Los Angeles, Schultz has pitched very well in his first six starts at the big league level. The matchups this week are very favorable for him and the way that the White Sox’ offense has come to life, there’s actually a chance that he can earn victories when he pitches well. He needs to cut back on the walks in order to have sustained success at this level, but he’s still a strong start in this two-start week with his massive strikeout upside and the terrific matchups. I’d be comfortable starting him in all league sizes.

Walbert Ureña, Angels, RHP (vs. Athletics, vs. Rangers)

The 22-year-old rookie right-hander has performed admirably through his first seven appearances (five starts) for the Halos, registering a 3.29 ERA, 1.43 WHIP and a 26/17 K/BB ratio. If he can start to cut back on the free passes, the sky is the limit here. I like him much better with both of these matchups coming at home than I would if he had to go to a tough environment on the road. I think his strikeout upside makes him worth a look as a streaming play in all leagues.

Keider Montero, Tigers, RHP (vs. Guardians, at Orioles)

Montero has done a nice job stepping up and trying to stabilize a Tigers’ rotation that has been decimated by injuries this season. He holds a strong 3.65 ERA, 0.99 WHIP and a 31/10 K/BB ratio over 44 1/3 innings through his first eight starts. The elite WHIP is really what’s driving his fantasy value and is something that should continue even if the strikeouts aren’t quite where fantasy managers would like them to be. The added volume of the two-start week more than offsets that. I’d be rolling with Montero in all leagues.

Seth Lugo, Royals, RHP (vs. Red Sox, vs. Mariners)

After starting the season strong, Lugo has come crashing back to Earth over his last four starts where he has surrendered 18 runs over 21 1/3 innings. Both of his starts this week will come in Kansas City, which should help his cause, though the Royals’ offense has been struggling to provide support, leaving Lugo with just one victory to his name this season. He’s fine to use as a streaming option, just understand that the overall ceiling here is quite limited.

▶ At Your Own Risk

MacKenzie Gore, Rangers, LHP (at Rockies, at Angels)

Gore is such a frustrating player to roster for fantasy purposes due to his inconsistency. He’ll go out and throw a gem against one of the best lineups in the league only to get knocked around by subpar competition the next time out. The overall line looks alright though, which is all you’re really looking for at the end of the day. That being said, I’m not sure I want to trust him going to Coors Field this week, especially since the Angels loom as a tough matchup for a left-hander at the end of the week as well. My initial gut reaction was to start him in 15-teamers, but the more I dig in here, the more skeptical I’m becoming.

Slade Cecconi, Guardians, RHP (at Tigers, at Phillies)

Cecconi has been a major disappointment for the Guardians this season, posting an uninspiring 5.60 ERA and 1.58 WHIP over 45 innings in his first nine starts. It almost feels like his spot in the club’s rotation could be teetering on the ledge at the moment. Fortunately, he gets to battle a struggling Tigers’ squad at home to start the week which should be a get-right spot for him. The matchup against the Phillies on the road to finish the week isn’t as ideal, which leaves him in a tough spot this week. I’d consider using him in 15-teamers if I needed the volume, otherwise I’d probably leave him on the shelf.

Jacob Lopez, Athletics, LHP (at Angels, at Padres)

After a breakout 2025 season in which he gained fantasy relevance, Lopez has come crashing back to Earth in 2026 with a miserable 5.80 ERA and 1.71 WHIP over 40 1/3 innings through his first nine outings. If you’re looking for a glimmer of hope, he has pitched better of late – giving up just two runs in each of his last two starts. He also gets the benefit of both starts coming on the road as opposed to the bandbox that is Sutter Health Park. I can’t see going there in 12-teamers, but if you’re looking to make up volume in wins and strikeouts, I could see rolling the dice in 15-team formats.

Brayan Bello, Red Sox, RHP (at Royals, vs. Twins)

It seems like every time Bello takes the mound these days, he’s pitching to keep his spot in the Red Sox’ rotation. His last two times out, that has worked well for him, delivering back-to-back gems against the Tigers and Phillies – allowing just two runs over 13 1/3 innings with a 12/2 K/BB ratio. He has shown flashes like this before and gone back to being an extreme ratio destroyer, so the confidence level is low here, but the matchups against the Royals and Twins aren’t anything to shy away from. I think it comes down to whether you’re looking to attack wins and strikeouts or protect ratios. In 15-teamers I think he’s an easy start this week, in 12’s it would really depend on how badly I needed that volume.

Lance McCullers Jr., Astros, RHP (at Twins, at Cubs)

McCullers continues to look like a shell of his former self whenever he takes the mound for the Astros. He holds a horrifying 6.86 ERA and 1.53 WHIP across 39 1/3 innings on the season, though he has at least punched out 43 batters to provide some substance for fantasy managers that have streamed him. The matchups aren’t ideal this week and he’s likely to continue to inflict damage on your ratios, but if you want to throw caution to the wind to chase wins and strikeouts, go right ahead.

Patrick Corbin, Blue Jays, LHP (at Yankees, vs. Pirates)

We have all been sucked into this trap before. Corbin looks like a viable mixed league option to start the season, only to have one major blow up where he gives back any and all ratio gains that he may have provided up until that point. I’m not saying explicitly that it’s going to happen on Monday, but that matchup against the Yankees in the Bronx is screaming for a ratio correction. I’d be staying away from Corbin in all formats just due to that spot.

Simeon Woods Richardson, Twins, RHP (vs. Astros, at Red Sox)

To say that things have not gone well for Woods Richardson this season would be a massive understatement. Through his first nine starts he sits at 0-6 with a cringe-inducing 7.71 ERA, 1.86 WHIP and a 20/20 K/BB ratio while giving up a league-leading 36 earned runs in 42 innings. That’s about as bad as you can possibly get. It’s not going to get any easier this week, having to battle the Astros and then the Red Sox at Fenway. Don’t even think about getting cute here, this should be an easy avoid.

National League

▶ Strong Plays

Jacob Misiorowski, Brewers, RHP (at Cubs, vs. Dodgers)

This right here is the definition of an unstoppable force meeting an immoveable object. Misiorowski has been phenomenal this season, posting a ridiculous 2.12 ERA and 0.90 WHIP while punching out 80 batters in just 51 innings of work. He’s doing so on the strength of velocity that we have never seen before, averaging 100.6 mph on his fastball his last time out in a victory over the Padres. I’m not sure how long he can hold up pitching like this, but he absolutely needs to be started in all fantasy leagues every time that he takes the mound. The matchups are about as scary as they can get, but if anyone can navigate that gauntlet right now, it’s Misiorowski.

Nolan McLean, Mets, RHP (at Nationals, at Marlins)

McLean has been very impressive through his first nine starts on the year, checking in with a 2.92 ERA, 0.96 WHIP and a 64/15 K/BB ratio over 52 1/3 innings. He hasn’t allowed more than three runs in a start all season and has struck out six or more batters in eight of his nine outings. That’s about as consistent as you can get. He should be locked into fantasy lineups every week regardless of matchups, but this week lines up particularly well for him. McLean is easily one of the top overall options on the board for this week.

Shota Imanaga, Cubs, LHP (vs. Brewers, vs. Astros)

Imanaga has been exceptional through his first nine starts for the Cubs this season, registering a 2.32 ERA, 0.90 WHIP and a 59/13 K/BB ratio across 54 1/3 innings. The matchups aren’t ideal, but he has earned the right to be an every-week start in all formats regardless of matchups. Even if the ratios don’t wind up quite as sparkling this week, you’ll get double the strikeouts and a great shot at a victory with the added volume from the two starts. He’s a must play in all formats.

Max Meyer, Marlins, RHP (vs. Braves, vs. Mets)

Meyer has looked electric through his first nine starts on the 2026 campaign, posting a 3.21 ERA, 1.15 WHIP and a 54/17 K/BB ratio across 47 2/3 innings. He has been remarkably consistent as well, allowing four runs or fewer every time out and recording at least four strikeouts in every start this season. The Braves are a tough lineup to navigate, but that’s offset by a softer matchup against the Mets to finish the week – and he gets to make both starts at home. He’s an excellent all-around option this week.

Michael King, Padres, RHP (vs. Dodgers, vs. Athletics)

King never seems to get the respect that he deserves from the fantasy community at large despite the fact that he absolutely shoves every time he’s healthy enough to take the mound. In nine starts this season he holds a scintillating 2.63 ERA, 1.09 WHIP and a 50/22 K/BB ratio in 51 1/3 innings of work. Sure, a matchup against the Dodgers can seem scary, but he gets to make both starts this week at Petco Park which helps to mitigate that risk. He should be an easy start in all leagues this week, and every week as long as he isn’t on the injured list.

Mitch Keller, Pirates, RHP (at Cardinals, at Blue Jays)

Is everything finally coming together for Keller in his age-30 season? He has been terrific thus far, compiling a 3.59 ERA, 1.08 WHIP and a 38/15 K/BB ratio over 52 2/3 innings for the surprisingly competent Pirates this season. The Blue Jays and Cardinals both rank in the bottom half of the league against opposing right-handers, setting Keller up for continued success this week. He’s probably already being utilized on a weekly basis in most mixed leagues, so simply sit back and enjoy the added production from the extra start this time around.

Robbie Ray, Giants, LHP (at Diamondbacks, vs. White Sox)

So far, so good for the 34-year-old southpaw through his first nine starts, registering a 3.04 ERA, 1.17 WHIP and a 49/20 K/BB ratio over his 50 1/3 innings. The Diamondbacks and White Sox have both hit opposing left-handers very well this season, adding some ratio risk to that would otherwise set up as a strong two-start week for Ray. He should still be started in both 15 and 12-team formats, just understand that there’s a greater risk of a blowup here than we normally see from Ray.

▶ Decent Plays

Ryne Nelson, Diamondbacks, RHP (vs. Giants, vs. Rockies)

While he has an inflated ERA (5.40), Nelson hasn’t actually pitched that poorly this season, as evidenced by his 1.16 WHIP and 43/14 K/BB ratio across 45 innings. He now gets the benefit of two premium matchups at home this week, which should be just the prescription that he needs to get his ratios back in order. I’d expect double digit strikeouts this week and a good shot at earning a victory, making him an easy start for me in leagues of all sizes.

Christian Scott, Mets, RHP (at Nationals, at Marlins)

After struggling through his first start for the Mets this season, we have seen a much better version of Scott his last three times out. He has allowed two earned runs or fewer in all four starts and has struck out 20 batters over his first 15 2/3 innings. The only problem is that he’s having a hard time making it through five innings. Getting to battle the Nationals and Marlins this week sets him up well to earn his first victory of the season, provided he can get through 15 outs. The 26-year-old hurler looks like a very nice play in all formats this week.

Martin Perez, Braves, LHP (at Marlins, vs. Nationals)

It sounds like the Braves are shifting back to a six-man rotation with Grant Holmes slotting in on Sunday and Perez scheduled to take the ball on Monday. It seems like he’ll stick around and make two starts but it’s also possible that he could go back to the bullpen after Monday’s start and either JR Ritchie or Chris Sale could wind up with the juicy two-start week. Ritchie and Sale should be started regardless, so there’s no actionable takeaway there. If it does seem like Perez is going to start twice, then he makes for a very strong streaming option in all league sizes. Even if he only does get the one, a single against the Marlins in Miami isn’t a bad spot either.

Zac Gallen, Diamondbacks, RHP (vs. Giants, vs. Rockies)

Gallen has not pitched well this season. He has been even worse as of late, giving up 17 runs over 14 1/3 innings over his last three starts. So why would he still be considered a decent play for his upcoming two start week? Matchups. It literally doesn’t get any better than taking on the Giants and Rockies with both starts coming at home. If you can’t find a way to use Gallen this week, then you should never use him. I’m not saying it will be an enjoyable watch and there’s still a possibility that he gives you more ratio damage at some point during these two starts. I just think there’s enough meat on the bone here to use him in both 15 and 12-team formats this week.

Foster Griffin, Nationals, LHP (vs. Mets, at Braves)

Griffin had looked like one of the unexpected breakout pitching stars of the 2026 season until he was clobbered for nine runs over 4 1/3 innings against the Reds in Cincinnati on Thursday. Even so, he still sports a strong 3.53 ERA, 1.14 WHIP and a 49/18 K/BB ratio over 51 innings, so we’ll give him a pass on Thursday’s disaster. It may be tough for some fantasy managers to roll him back out there after that type of outing, but he looks like a solid enough option that I would make sure to use him once again in both 15 and 12-team formats.

▶ At Your Own Risk

Matthew Liberatore, Cardinals, LHP (vs. Pirates, at Reds)

Liberatore has been extremely underwhelming so far this season, with a 4.40 ERA, 1.51 WHIP and a 34/18 K/BB ratio over 47 frames. He has proven to be a useful fantasy option in the past when the matchups have lined up for him, I’m just not sure that they do this week. The Pirates and Reds both rank in the middle of the pack against left-handers and with the way the ball has been flying out of the park in Cincinnati, that seems like a disaster waiting to happen. Whether you ultimately decide to roll the dice here depends on your risk tolerance. I could see myself taking the plunge in 15-teamers if I really needed the extra start.

Jake Irvin, Nationals, RHP (vs. Mets, at Braves)

Like most pitchers in the Nationals’ rotation, it has been a rough season for Irvin so far. He holds an uninspiring 5.91 ERA and 1.45 WHIP over his first 42 2/3 innings while tallying just one victory. I like that he’s striking out more than a batter per inning, which makes him a viable streaming target if you’re looking for volume there. The matchup against the Mets doesn’t hurt either. I could see trying to use him as a deeper league option and hoping for the best.

Nick Lodolo, Reds, LHP (at Phillies vs. Cardinals)

Lodolo simply hasn’t looked right as he has battled through injuries this season, posting a ghastly 8.68 ERA and 1.61 WHIP over 9 1/3 innings through his first two starts. You’d like to trust his track record here, as the matchups aren’t overly imposing, but a larger part of me would like to see him get back on track before trusting him not to destroy my ratios. My gut tells me to sit this one out and wait until he looks right before deploying him for fantasy purposes.

Jose Quintana, Rockies, LHP (vs. Rangers, at Diamondbacks)

Going to stick with the usual mantra of “Never Rockies” again this week. Quintana has actually been somewhat serviceable through his first seven starts on the season, but we don’t want to be using him at home against anyone and the Diamondbacks on the road is a brutal spot to finish up a tough week. If he had some strikeout upside, maybe I could be talked into it in deeper leagues. I just don’t see him providing enough to be worth the ratio risk. Pass in all leagues.

Braxton Garrett, Marlins, LHP (vs. Braves, vs. Mets)

Let me start out by saying that I like Braxton Garrett and think that at some point this season he’ll be a viable mixed league option. That being said, we need to expect inconsistency in his return from Tommy John surgery. He struggled with his command during his time at Triple-A and walked five batters over 1 1/3 innings in his season debut against the Twins. The Braves are a patient lineup and that start could spiral into a disaster if he doesn’t command the strike zone there. It’s possible he skates through here with a pair of strong starts, but I’m not risking my ratios on Garrett until I see some consistency at the highest level.

What should the Royals do with a struggling Salvador Perez?

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MAY 02: Salvador Perez #13 of the Kansas City Royals reacts after striking out during the fourth inning against the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park on May 02, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Olivia Vanni/Getty Images) | Getty Images

No one wants to watch a legend fade, and yet that’s often what happens when it comes to larger-than-life figures in the world of entertainment.

Marlon Brando stars in The Island of Dr. Moreau.

Willie Mays stumbles in a Mets uniform.

Michael Jordan lags for the Wizards.

Johnny Unitas lumbers for the Chargers.

Gordie Howe finishes his career a Whaler.

Pelé retires with the Cosmos.

Those are just a few examples.

One happening in front of Kansas City’s very eyes, on a nightly basis, is the end of Salvador Perez. Entering play on Friday, Salvy is hitting just .200/.239/.339. Out of 171 qualified Major League hitters, he ranks 164th in wRC+. And the underlying metrics are…not good.

What makes this even tougher is that Perez has only played for the Royals, and it seems the two cannot break apart. Salvy’s not going anywhere on his own, and the Royals aren’t pushing him out.

It brings to mind Stan Musial hitting only .255 in his last year with the Cardinals.

And Mickey Mantle cratering to a .237 in 1968, his last season, to bring his career average under .300.

And Ozzie Smith butting heads with new manager Tony La Russa, appearing in only 82 games in the 1996 season, his last.

It’s a startling image, watching a once feared batter, the leader of the team, struggle, and struggle badly. To make the situation even tougher: the Royals are trying to win. After making the playoffs for the first time in nine seasons back in 2024, the team took a step back last year but still managed to finish with a winning record. This year was supposed to be a step forward, toward getting back to the postseason, even competing for the division title.

This year has not gone according to plan, and in the middle of it all is the aging legend, the last link between the 2014-2015 teams and this new era.

How should the Royals handle Salvador Perez going forward? There are four ways.

Bench him

This seems like the least likely option. Manager Matt Quatraro gave Perez an off day earlier this year, calling it a mental breather, a comment with which Perez took umbrage.

It only lasted one game. The Royals could approach Perez before benching him, of course, as he is the elder statesman on the team and deserves to not be blindsided by such a momentous decision.

But this won’t happen, for several reasons. One is that Perez feels like he can still produce, so he wouldn’t remain shy about his feelings. He went to X with the mental breather situation, but there are more public ways to express his displeasure.

Secondly, there’s not a great replacement on the roster. I always come back to this: If not him, who? The Royals carry two other catchers in Carter Jensen and Elias Diaz. Jensen has recently struggled and Diaz is 35 and without a hit in the month of May. Neither scream upgrade.

Third, the backlash. As much as readers of Royals Review may want to see Perez ride the pine for a bit, there are even more fans who would become incensed if the organization benched him, with or without his knowledge.

Drop him in the lineup

This is the best option: move him out of the cleanup spot. Sure, he had four hits in the series against the White Sox, but three of them were singles. He homered in his first at-bat Tuesday night, which was great, but there have been more at-bats where he’s swinging at damn near everything, either missing the pitches for ugly strikeouts or grounding into sure double-plays. He has no speed. He never has, but he’s slowed down from that. It looks like he’s standing in quicksand out there.

Again, though: If not him, who?

Dropping him in the lineup would only the be first step. Quatraro would have to revamp the entire lineup because swapping Perez with someone beneath him won’t fix things. Outside of Bobby Witt Jr. and, to a lesser extent, Maikel Garcia, no one is producing. Nick Loftin is playing well, but that’s mainly against lefties.

Stay the course

The most likely scenario: Q keeps Perez in the cleanup spot on a daily basis while sometimes putting him behind home plate and sometimes slotting him in the lineup as the DH.

Opting for this seems like madness. Salvy’s clearly slowing down, needs more time off, and to be put in a less stressful role. Running him into the ground isn’t going to solve this problem.

I’m loathe to write this, but Perez’s poor reaction to getting a mental breather shows he isn’t quite the leader we fans make him out to be. He needs to accept reality, put his team first, and insist on not staying the course.

Only Salvador Perez can prevent this option from happening.

A trip to the injury list

He looks kinda banged up, right? Joel Goldberg mentioned on the Tuesday night television broadcast that Perez has been battling a host of maladies to his hips and groin. That doesn’t sound ideal for anyone let alone a starting Major League catcher.

Maybe he doesn’t need a mental breather but a physical one. Throw him on the IL and see if he heals up.

It at least buys some time.

Pistons vs Cavaliers Computer Picks: Our Best Player Prop Projections for Game 6

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The Detroit Pistons saw their season flash right before their eyes after squandering Game 5 against the Cleveland Cavaliers, where our NBA player prop projections have identified several strong value opportunities.

By breaking down the data and comparing it to the latest market lines, we’ve uncovered where the strongest betting edges lie for this pivotal matchup.

These Pistons vs. Cavaliers predictions are driven by numbers instead of guesswork.

If you’re building your card, here are the model’s top NBA picks for Friday, May 15.

Pistons vs Cavaliers computer picks for Game 6

Celtics PistonsWarriors Cavaliers
Cunningham u27.5 points
-120
Harden o19.5 points
-110
Duren o8.5 rebounds
+105
Mobley o8.5 rebounds
+120
Robinson o2.5 3-pointers 
-112
Mitchell o3.5 assists
+100

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Pistons Game 6 computer picks

Cade Cunningham Under 27.5 points (-120)

Projection: 26.47 points

Cade Cunningham erupted for 39 points in Game 5, but the big question heading into a do-or-die Game 6 on the Cleveland Cavaliers home floor is whether he has enough left in the tank.

The Detroit Pistons have been in this spot before, with Cunningham often stepping up under elimination pressure to keep them alive. But if he can’t replicate that production — and falls short of this points prop projection — it could mark the end of Detroit’s season in Cleveland.

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Jalen Duren Over 8.5 rebounds (+105)

Projection: 9.66 rebounds

The Pistons need Jalen Duren to step up on the glass, especially after he’s fallen well short of his rebounds prop in three straight losses. With desperation setting in, Detroit will be leaning on him to reclaim his usual dominance on the boards and help keep their season alive.

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Duncan Robinson Over 2.5 3-pointers (-112)

Projection: 2.95 3-pointers

The Pistons will need Duncan Robinson’s shooting badly in Game 6, especially from beyond the arc. After sitting out Game 5 with back soreness, the veteran sharpshooter appears on track to return following participation in shootaround.

The injury clearly limited his impact in Game 4, where he finished with just four points and one made three. If he’s not restricted tonight, expect Robinson to find his rhythm again and push past this prop line from deep.

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Cavaliers Game 6 computer picks

James Harden Over 19.5 points (-110)

Projection: 22.65 points

The math is simple: when James Harden is rolling offensively, the Cavaliers usually benefit. The pattern has held throughout the series — his aggressiveness and scoring tend to translate into wins. This points line feels a bit light compared to his ceiling, and it’ll be on Harden to prove it again.

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Evan Mobley Over 8.5 rebounds (+120)

Projection: 9.54 rebounds

The Cavaliers have ranked seventh in offensive rebounding over their last 10 games, and Evan Mobley steps back into focus after a steady, impactful Game 5.

He’s narrowly missed this prop in three straight outings, but with a trip to the Eastern Conference Finals on the line, expect him to bring added urgency on the glass and fight for every rebound against the Pistons.

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Donovan Mitchell Over 3.5 assists (+100)

Projection: 4.65 assists

After shouldering a major scoring load all series, it’s unrealistic to expect Donovan Mitchell to keep living off tough buckets alone.

He’s consistently hovered around this assists line throughout the matchup, and there’s no better spot to break through than a pivotal Game 6 at home with a chance to advance.

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How to watch Pistons vs Cavaliers Game 6

LocationRocket Arena, Cleveland, OH
DateFriday, May 15, 2026
Tip-off7:00 p.m. ET
TVPrime

Not intended for use in MA.
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Report: Blues Turned Away Trade Offer For Robert Thomas From Wild

A long-time rival of the St. Louis Blues, the Minnesota Wild, reportedly made a strong offer to acquire the Blues’ top player and No. 1 center, Robert Thomas. 

It was no secret that at the 2026 NHL trade deadline, the Blues were willing to listen to offers on most players, including Thomas.

Thomas would have been the major move for the Blues, as no player on their roster would have brought in a better return. While Thomas’ first half of the season was riddled with underwhelming play and injuries, following the trade deadline, Thomas was a different player.

The 26-year-old finished the season with a team-high 25 goals and 64 points in 64 games, but his final 20 games saw him post 12 goals and 27 points. 

If an NHL team were able to pull off a trade for Thomas, they would have reaped the benefits. 

According to Michael Russo of The Athletic, the Wild reportedly offered a package that included goaltender Jesper Wallstedt and center Danila Yurov, but the Blues declined the offer. Russo also believes the Wild could revisit those discussions when Alexander Steen takes over as GM on July 1. 

Why Trading Robert Thomas For Brady Tkachuk Doesn't Make Sense For The BluesWhy Trading Robert Thomas For Brady Tkachuk Doesn't Make Sense For The BluesBrady Tkachuk hasn’t officially hit the trade market, but he has entered the rumor mill. Due to his ties to the St. Louis Blues and earlier reports about Robert Thomas’ availability, fan-made trade proposals have begun circulating. However, trading Thomas for Tkachuk would be a mistake.

Throughout the season, it was noted that the Utah Mammoth, Buffalo Sabres, Montreal Canadiens, and Detroit Red Wings were all interested in acquiring Thomas. Now that the season has concluded, it has been reported that the Ottawa Senators, and now the Wild, were in play for the former 20th overall pick of the 2017 NHL draft. 

In the end, it appears that Thomas will remain with the Blues, at least for now. Thomas still has five seasons on his current eight-year, $8.125-million contract, and he is still the focal point of the Blues’ offense.

He formed a strong trio with Jimmy Snuggerud and Dylan Holloway down the stretch, and the Blues don’t really have a player who can match Thomas’ production and fill in his role. 


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Aston Villa 4-2 Liverpool: Premier League – as it happened

Ollie Watkins scored twice and ran Liverpool ragged as Aston Villa clinched a Champions League place in style

“Right Rob, let’s get down to brass tacks – Slot, should he be shown the door or given another year?” asks Peadar de Burca. “On the evidence of, let’s say, the last ten games, you’d have to say that the Liverpool manager has been found wanting. That extra little bit of innovation or rough magic hasn’t been there. A lot of talent at the top end of the team and you get the feeling a good manager could have shaped those players into something sharper, as opposed to the butter knife attack we’ve mostly seen. So, give him the boot?

“Well, this is a Liverpool team in transition. I suspect the owners, no mugs, had this in mind back in July after Diogo Jota’s tragic death and saw this as a year to acquire some serious talent, let them bed in with the real aim being the 2026-27 season. You’d hope Jeremy Jacquet will be joined by one or two more defensively minded players and the team will have more balance. The team will have had time to become a team. Let’s not judge Slot now, but in eight months’ time when Isak, Ekitike, Wirtz and Ngumoha are able to read each other’s minds.

Today we are without nine players. The good news is that Florian and Mo are on the bench, but Alex [Isak] is out with a minor injury.

I have to compliment Mo on how hard he has worked to be back. It’s not always straightforward with the type of injury he had.

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NL West odds: Padres payout would be huge in close division race with Dodgers

MILWAUKEE, WI - MAY 13: Fernando Tatis Jr. #23 of the San Diego Padres runs to first after hitting a single in the third inning during the game between the San Diego Padres and the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field on Wednesday, May 13, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by Kylie Bridenhagen/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The last time the Los Angeles Dodgers didn’t win the NL West Division was 2021, the year after winning the World Series. The Dodgers have now won the last two World Series, and they’ve backfilled their roster churn by upgrading to star players through free agency and their own stellar farm system.

The lengthy MLB season provides a sample size that’s meant to favor averages over abnormalities. Hot- and cold-streaks blend together as weeks become months. But the weight of those games can also fall victim to entropy as months become years. The long summers are tests of endurance and commitment as much as talent. The San Diego Padres finished just three games behind the Dodgers in the 2025 division race, and the Toronto Blue Jays pushed them to seven games and extra innings last November. 

The thin line between dynasty and disappointment will be carved out over the next 120 games. FanDuel has odds on the NL West Division winner, which is an opportunity to prognosticate on the predictive ability of the first 40 games, and which performances will propel their team to a division title.

The Dodgers (-900) are heavy favorites to remain atop the division, with a deep roster that’s built to weather a long season. But their offense is still struggling midway through May. Shohei Ohtani is enduring his first cold streak, going hitless between starting pitching assignments for the first time in his career. Andy Pages (9 HRs, 35 RBI) and Max Muncy (11 HRs, .917 OPS) have been pacing an offense that’s welcoming back Mookie Betts this week. They’ve been able to afford patience with their bats because Ohtani, Justin Wrobleski, Tyler Glasnow, and Yoshinobu Yamamoto are anchoring an elite starting rotation.

The Padres (+800) have caught the Dodgers in the standings despite a slow start from their offense, ranking 25th in wRC+. Michael King (2.76 ERA) and Randy Vasquez (3.05 ERA) have held together a starting rotation that suffered key injuries early, including to projected Opening Day starter Nick Pivetti. Xander Bogaerts has kept the offense afloat while Fernando Tatis Jr., Manny Machado, and Jackson Merrill are working back to their expected averages. 

The Diamondbacks (+3000) have had a slow start, but the betting lines still see potential in their young talent that made a run to the World Series in 2023. Corbin Carroll is building back up to his all-world production after a broken hand, and they recently promoted top prospect Ryan Waldschmidt. It’s not any of the young guys but 34-year-old Ildemaro Vargas who’s been leading the offense thus far, posting a .331 average with 7 HRs and 28 RBI.

The Giants (+5000) have a top-10 payroll and a brand new manager getting his first taste of the MLB. Rafael Devers has been a disappointment, but Luis Arraez has been a bright spot, along with Landen Roupp and Logan Webb on the mound.

The Rockies (+30000) are just 9 games back from first place now, but the lines expect that number to grow closer toward last season’s line, when they finished 50 games back.

Underdogs Chelsea have shot at glory at end of season of disruption

A defiant performance against Manchester City could deliver silverware in a year in which the club has already sacked two head coaches

Chelsea fared well as underdogs in their most recent outing in a final. They surprised Paris Saint-Germain in last summer’s Club World Cup, racing into an unassailable 3-0 lead by half-time and disrupting the European champions thanks to a clever tactical approach from Enzo Maresca.

Perhaps there will be more of the same at Wembley. Chelsea have form when it comes to upsetting the odds in a big game, although the one problem with bringing up the PSG win before Saturday afternoon’s FA Cup final against Manchester City is that the challenge of coming up with a plan smart enough to beat Pep Guardiola is no longer Maresca’s responsibility.

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The 'Klim Reaper' Is Here: Abbotsford Canucks Winger Danila Klimovich's Journey From Belarus To BC

When Danila Klimovich took to the ice on October 16, 2021, he was making history along with his Abbotsford Canucks teammates in a new era of the Canucks’ AHL affiliate. Klimovich scored his first North American professional goal that night at the 8:09 mark of the second period, in an eventual 5-3 loss to Stuart Skinner and the Bakersfield Condors.

Just months earlier, with 93 seconds left in a pivotal game five, Klimovich had scored the championship-clinching goal for the Minsk Zubry (Minsk Bison) in the Belarusian Vysshaya Liga, the second league in the Belarus hockey system. Five years later, Klimovich would be known for his clutch goal-scoring on another continent, with Abbotsford fans declaring him the “Klim Reaper,” a nickname the young winger loves.

“When it came out, I was like, 'Oh my God, it’s pretty cool,” Klimovich told The Hockey News earlier this season. “People call me like that ‘cause it means something. It means that I did something like, well, I do something good.”

Klimovich is one of three players left on the roster from the inaugural Abbotsford season, along with Canucks captain Chase Wouters and defenseman Guillame Brisebois. The 2025-26 campaign was a stark drop off for the club, missing the playoffs despite their 2025 Calder Cup win the previous season. Still, Klimovich, now 23, had 34 points (18 goals, 16 assists) in 63 games, just four points shy of his career high (38) set last season.

He was drafted in the second round of the 2021 NHL Entry Draft by the Vancouver Canucks, their first pick of that year’s draft due to the earlier Oliver Ekman-Larsson and Conor Garland trade, which sent the Canucks’ first-round pick to the Arizona Coyotes. Expecting to go later in the draft, Klimovich was at a summer training session when he found out about the Canucks’ selection.

“It was exciting, I got drafted and I didn’t expect me to draft that high in the second round,” Klimovich said, “I was looking at [the draft rankings], and they were like third round. I was practising that summer and I was waiting in the locker room for the third round, and the guys were just yelling at me, like, you got in the second round.

“I was so happy, and then just ran to the cafe, where my father was sitting, and we celebrate together.”

Klimovich hails from the southern Belarusian city of Pinsk and grew up playing in their youth system, playing briefly in the southwestern city of Brest as well before moving north to the capital city of Minsk, joining the national under-17 team. Belarus has had 23 players appear in NHL games, including Canucks goaltender Nikita Tolopilo, though less than half of these players have played over 50 games, meaning a lot of attention also turns to players from their hockey superpower neighbour, Russia.

“I mostly looked at Russian players, like Kovalchuk, Ovechkin, Datsyuk, and trying to be more like them,” Klimovich said of his idols growing up, “In Belarus, we had a couple of players, like [Mikhail] Grabovski, who played in Toronto. He was really good.”

Grabovski scored 296 points in 534 NHL games over 10 seasons, appearing with the Montreal Canadiens, Toronto Maple Leafs, Washington Capitals, and New York Islanders. After retiring from playing, Grabovski went on to coach Dinamo Minsk in the KHL, which was affiliated with the Minsk Zubry, where Klimovich had played, as well as the Belarusian national team program.

The 2019-20 season was for making waves for the teenage Klimovich, as he moved up through the junior national system, playing at the under-17, -18, and -20 levels. Across the pond, heads were turning towards the young forward, as he was picked by the Rouyn-Noranda Huskies of the QMJHL in the 2020 CHL Import Draft. Unfortunately, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Klimovich was not able to come to North America at that point, instead staying in Minsk.

In his draft year, Klimovich scored 52 points (28 goals, 24 assists) in 37 regular-season games with Minsk Zubry, along with 14 points (9 goals, 5 assists) in 12 playoff games. Klimovich also appeared with the Belarusian national team, leading the team in scoring with six goals during the under-18 World Junior Championships, including a hat trick against Switzerland, and played three games in the senior World Championships.

Klimovich made the jump to North America a year later, debuting on the continent at the same time as the franchise he joined. He signed an entry-level contract with the Canucks just days after the draft, moving to a new country to pursue his dream at 18.

“I just wanted to play in North America, it’s my dream to play here and stay here, and make my dream come true to be an NHL player.”

Not only was Klimovich entering a new environment, but so was the Canucks organization, with Abbotsford’s inaugural AHL season. It came a decade after the organization’s AHL-affiliated team moved south of the border, after the newly resurrected Winnipeg Jets took over the Manitoba Moose franchise in 2011.

“When I came here at first, people were like so helpful, and like it’s the same stuff now,” Klimovich commented on his first impressions of the new team. “It was bumpy sometimes, but everybody tried their best, and now we’re a great organization.”

Still, there were certain roadblocks for Klimovich entering professional hockey in another country, especially at such a young age. His first season was not as offensively productive as was likely hoped, with 18 points through 62 games, which he improved upon the following year, reaching 29 points in 67 games in his sophomore season. His third year was a further dip, though, appearing in only 24 games due to injury and healthy scratches, earning just four points over the 2023-24 campaign.

“I would say I put more pressure on myself,” Klimovich said of playing up to higher pick expectations. “It’s good to be drafted that high and of course, like everybody expects something from you, like people, fans, and organizations, especially. But you just need to be the player you are and try to develop from that.”

On the transition to playing in North America, he said, “It was hard. Like the first two years, hard with the English barrier, and now I just only start to get into it more like the last two years. I’m getting better in these things, like, I can understand now, and it’s so much easier for me because back then it was just like, all alone.

“And then, yeah, hockey is different. It’s faster, and it’s more physical than Europe. Europe is more like, I’d say, hold this puck, like control more. Here, it’s like physical dump, like go forecheck, backcheck, like more energetic.”

Despite the language barrier, the Canucks forward has grown to fit into the environment in Abbotsford, saying, “I just get this culture pretty quickly, like all the jokes and all the holidays. It’s amazing. I like Canadian everything, pretty much.”

Klimovich also credited his now-wife, Nastassia, with helping him adjust to Canada and stay grounded during the move to North America.

“My girlfriend came, like, six months later, and we got married here, so she helped me a lot. We’re both trying to like, get into the culture together, it’s really helped me.”

The 2024-25 campaign was good for both the player and the team, as Klimovich hit a career high in points with 38, leading the team in goals with 25 during the regular season. In the run to Abbotsford’s run to the Calder Cup last postseason, Klimovich scored four goals, and all were incredibly consequential; the first was the game-winning goal in game one of Pacific Division semifinals against the Coachella Valley Firebirds, the second was in double overtime of game four of the Western Conference final against the Texas Stars which gave the Canucks a 3-1 series lead, the third was again in double overtime in game one of the finals against the Charlotte Checkers, and the fourth was the tying goal in the second period of the Calder Cup-winning game.

“We won the [Calder] Cup last year, and to be like the first Canucks team to win anything, it’s big. I’m really proud of what we done last year, and now we just need to build that culture for NHL too,” Klimovich commented on the Calder Cup win with Abbotsford, calling it his highlight with the organization. “It was the greatest team. For me just I think all these goals in the Calder Cup finals are really helpful for the team, and were really proud of what we all done. And then like, I scored in the game six in the finals, I think it’s the biggest highlight and we won after [Linus] Karlsson’s goal.”

Danila Klimovich of the Abbotsford Canucks (Photo Credit: Kaja Antic/The Hockey News)
Danila Klimovich of the Abbotsford Canucks (Photo Credit: Kaja Antic/The Hockey News)

Klimovich has spent much of his professional and adult life within the Canucks organization and has grown into the player he is now over the last five seasons, leading the Abbotsford franchise in game-winning goals with 15. The 23-year-old right-shot winger is a restricted free agent heading into the offseason, with a qualifying offer of $874,125, as his entry-level contract signed in July 2021 has carried over, and he has yet to appear on Vancouver's ice. Dependent on free agency, preseason outcomes, and impending contract decisions, if the yet-to-be-determined coaching staff wants to promote from within as the organization did for their recent management changes, Klimovich could be an option for a depth forward who is able to score in big moments.

“The Sedins’ work and coaching staff from last year and this year. Like Manny [Malhotra], Harry [Mahesh], Jordan Smith, they’ve been really helpful.” Klimovich said of his influences during his time growing within the organization. “They’ve helped so much to improve my game and improve me as a person. […] I love this culture in Abbotsford, in the Canucks.”

As for what he’s learned over the last five seasons, Klimovich said, “I am still learning to let things go, just better, like quicker. And be more positive, kinda thing. That’s for me is the most because I’m putting, like, pressure on myself and it’s not helping me, so now it’s better.”

And as for advice for his younger self?

“Just stick with it, be positive and have fun. Enjoy the hockey, enjoy the life.”

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NCAA bans ex-Abilene Christian basketball player Airion Simmons for alleged role in throwing games

A former Abilene Christian men's basketball player was permanently banned by the NCAA on Friday for allegedly helping rig basketball games for sports bettors.

According to the NCAA's Division I Committee on Infractions, Airion Simmons — who played at Abilene Christian from 2019-2024— colluded with a teammate and agreed with a bettor to throw a March 2024 game for money. In a December 2025 interview, Simmons told NCAA investigators he was also contacted by a second bettor about losing the game for money.

In January, Simmons and the two bettors were included in a sprawling indictment by federal prosecutors in Pennsylvania on various charges, including bribery, fraud and conspiracy.

The point-shaving scheme generally revolved around gamblers who placed bets and recruited players with the promise of a big payment in exchange for purposefully underperforming during a game, prosecutors said. Those fixers would then bet against the players’ teams in those games, defrauding sportsbooks and other bettors, authorities said.

Players often recruited teammates to cooperate by playing badly, sitting out or keeping the ball away from players who weren’t in on the scheme to prevent them from scoring. Sometimes the attempted fix failed, meaning the fixers lost their bets.

In September 2025, a former Abilene Christian men’s basketball student-athlete transferred to the program and reported that in March 2024, Simmons, along with another teammate, tried to convince him to join them in purposely losing a game for money.

Later, the student-athlete who reported the violations received a FaceTime call with Simmons, the teammate and a bettor, who told the group to throw the game for money. The student-athlete who reported the violations indicated that by the time he entered the game, the final outcome was already determined, and his performance had no impact on the outcome.

Simmons told NCAA investigators he told the bettors he had a hand injury and his status for the game was unclear, and he shared that another teammate would not be playing in the game. Simmons was offered $3,500 to “play bad” in the game. He left the game with a hand injury after playing 11 minutes.

Simmons said he met someone in a Dallas parking lot to get cash for throwing the game. He received the cash and did not pay the other student-athletes he had conspired with, the NCAA said.

According to the NCAA, Simmons agreed to be interviewed by its investigators but declined to participate in the processing of the case.

Simmons is the latest student athlete to lose his eligibility as part of the point-shaving scheme. Two former Fordham basketball players were also permanently banned by the NCAA last month.

___

AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball

Steve Kerr, Warriors admit needing ‘younger legs' as early NBA draft pick looms

Steve Kerr, Warriors admit needing ‘younger legs' as early NBA draft pick looms originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO – History already wasn’t on the Warriors’ side going into the 2025-26 NBA season, when they decided to rely most heavily on a group of mummies watching kids run right past them. 

A core of Steph Curry, Draymond Green, Jimmy Butler and Al Horford couldn’t be blind to Father Time. Neither can Warriors general manager Mike Dunleavy going forward. He knows it, as does Steve Kerr in his return to remain Golden State’s head coach on a two-year contract. 

“We need some younger legs for sure,” Kerr said Friday on the ninth floor of Chase Center. “We know that. How do you do that? It’s a difficult job. So that’s up to Mike, and obviously he will consult with me on moves, and we’ll hash that stuff out.”

Curry missed his first chunk of games two weeks into the season. Green first missed consecutive games at the start of December, just like Butler. The latter’s season ended on Jan. 19 from sustaining a torn ACL that will keep him out for the start of next season and likely until around the NBA trade deadline. Horford, the oldest of the bunch, found himself resting and rehabbing after the first two games of the year. 

The Warriors still orbiting around Curry is one of the only constants for them going into an offseason headlined by question marks. 

Green has a $27.6 million player option. While the Warriors want him back, the ball is in his court, as Dunleavy emphasized. They’ve also shown a desire to keep Horford in a Warriors jersey, but he will turn 40 years old on June 3 and has a $6 million player option. 

There isn’t an updated timeline on Butler’s recovery, though the Warriors at least are saying they’re operating under the assumption the six-time NBA All-Star will make his return in a Golden State jersey. Butler is owed $56.8 million next season. 

The concept of a 16-win player might as well be coined by Green. He, along with Curry, Kerr and others who have been NBA champions, know what that’s all about. They have the innate ability to flip a switch and start a countdown until only one more win is needed to be crowned champions again. 

But that kind of math hasn’t found the winning formula in the last four seasons since Golden State’s surprise title run in 2022. Finding a cast of 16-win players never has been easy. The Warriors have made getting a group 82-game players far too painful the past few seasons as their core continues to age. 

“I think the last couple of years, frankly, have been difficult with the age, the collective age of our team – the injuries,” Kerr said. “I think we had like six guys this year who either couldn’t play back-to-backs or were on minutes restrictions, often at the same time.

“I think I really, frankly, gave everyone too much leeway this year. It just felt like we were constantly resting everybody and just trying to survive to the next game and have enough healthy bodies.” 

That’s the kind of formula that leads to a 37-win season, even with injuries being out of everybody’s hands. It’s not bringing a knife to a gun fight. It’s finding a stick in the dirt and thinking it’s a lightsaber. 

First on the timeline of getting both younger and better is the opportunity the Warriors will be given in the 2026 NBA Draft, which is supposed to be one of the better classes in years, maybe even decades. Dunleavy has found value in the second round of the draft the past few years, as well as Brandin Podziemski at No. 19 overall in 2023. He now has his highest pick yet as GM, at No. 11 overall

All options are on the table for the Warriors’ top pick, as they should be. Dunleavy also knows the importance and responsibility of the pick at a time when minutes shouldn’t be so hard to come by from the start. 

“I’m confident we can get a good player, and hopefully that player will have an opportunity next year to perform, produce, help us,” Dunleavy said. “Given the state of the injuries with Jimmy and Moses [Moody], my guess is they’re going to have more of an opportunity than maybe in another year, so that will be there.” 

Kerr has been criticized for his handling of young players, creating a perception he doesn’t care about development. Every season is different, and in general, that couldn’t be further from the truth when it comes to Kerr’s coaching philosophy. 

When the Warriors had the No. 2 pick in the 2020 draft, they were coming off an injury-plagued season when it felt like taking a swing for the fences was an understandable strategy. Jonathan Kuminga, the No. 7 pick in 2021, and Moody, the No. 14 pick the same year, were rookies in Golden State’s last championship season. 

The Warriors’ existence now isn’t what it was then, and Kerr is all in on the development of his team, starting with the draft. 

“I think that’s a huge factor, and I think we’re in a different place now,” Kerr said. “There’s no question. I’ve talked to Mike. I don’t know the draft, but he feels really strongly that we’re going to get a good player. It could be a 19-year-old. It could be someone older.

“It’s obvious where we are with the injuries to Moses and Jimmy. You look at our depth on the wings. That guy has to play. He’s got to earn it, but we’re committed to absolutely, you know, the development of our young players and trying to do this thing in a way that allows for success down the road; down the road meaning the end of next season and beyond. We’re excited about that.” 

Younger, faster and fresher. Curry was 27 when he won his first championship. Green was 25. Those are now the ages of Oklahoma City Thunder stars Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams. 

Age is inevitable. Preserving it is the Warriors’ job now, and moving forward.

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Updated MLB Pipeline Prospect Rankings: Jesús Made named baseball’s No. 1 prospect

Feb 27, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Milwaukee Brewers infielder Jesus Made against the Chicago White Sox during a spring training game at American Family Fields of Phoenix. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

MLB Pipeline just released their first updated top 100 prospect rankings of the season, and several Brewers prospects have dramatically changed their stock. Let’s get into the risers and fallers, headlined by baseball’s new No. 1 overall prospect, Brewers prospect Jesús Made.

Risers:

SSJesús Made: No. 3 —> No. 1

INF Luis Peña: No. 26 —> No. 19

CF Luis Lara: Unranked —> No. 95

With the graduation of Pirates shortstop Konnor Griffin, Made is officially the No. 1 prospect in baseball. Made, a true five-tool player who throws 100-mph fastballs to first base and records exit velocities north of 110 mph, has certainly looked capable of becoming a star.

Made is the youngest player in Double-A and is currently tied for the Southern League lead in triples with three, third in hits with 36, and tied for fourth in stolen bases with 15. Despite slumping this month (.464 OPS), he’s still more than deserving of the title: “best prospect in baseball.”

Luis Peña, currently in High-A, had a scorching start to the season (.372/.462/.512), but he hasn’t played in over three weeks. Peña collapsed in the dugout during the eighth inning of a game on April 22, reportedly due to heatstroke. The Brewers organization announced that Peña was scheduled to see a neurologist last Monday, but no further updates have been provided.

Lara has broken out in a big way with the Triple-A Nashville Sounds. He was never much of a power hitter before this season, totaling just eight home runs across three years in Single-A, High-A, and Double-A. Through 40 games with Nashville, he already has seven homers to go with a .338 batting average and .966 OPS — playing well enough that Brewers manager Pat Murphy is now fielding questions about when Lara might get a shot in Milwaukee.

Fallers:

INF/OFJett Williams: No. 39 —> No. 60

SSCooper Pratt: No. 48 —> No. 66

3B Andrew Fischer: No. 82 —> Unranked

Williams and Pratt, both in Triple-A, have struggled at the plate relative to expectations. Williams (.247/.371/.370) is starting to turn it on, hitting .317 with a .936 OPS over the last two weeks. Pratt (.217/.342/.326), who the Brewers signed to an eight-year extension last month, is not, hitting just .182 with a .603 OPS over that same span.

Williams looks very close to major league ready and would probably get the call if the Brewers needed an infielder, especially given the way he’s been playing lately. Pratt’s defense already looks polished enough for the big leagues, but he’ll likely need to hit a bit better over an extended stretch before earning a promotion.

Fischer, unlike Williams and Pratt, has been hitting well this season. The Brewers’ 2025 first-round pick entered the year as MLB Pipeline’s top third base prospect and is slashing .259/.368/.589 with a .957 OPS and nine home runs in his first full professional season.

On the surface, there’s nothing in that stat line to suggest he’d fall down prospect rankings. The concern is with the underlying numbers. Fischer has struck out 48 times in 136 plate appearances, good for a 35.3% strikeout rate, while his 63.7% overall contact rate would rank among the worst in the majors — and he’s not even in Double-A yet. Fischer can absolutely hit the cover off the ball, but he’ll need to cut down on the strikeouts if he wants to climb back up the rankings.

Terry Stotts, Jerry Stackhouse will not return to Warriors’ coaching staff, per report

INGLEWOOD, CA - APRIL 15: Head Coach Steve Kerr, Assistant Coaches Terry Stotts and Jerry Stackhouse looks on during the game against the LA Clippers of the Golden State Warriors during the SoFi Play-In Tournament on April 15, 2026 at Intuit Dome in Los Angeles, California. 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 Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

In today’s Dub Hub:

The changes have begun for the Golden State Warriors this offseason, starting with the coaching staff. According to ESPN’s Anthony Slater, the Warriors’ top two assistant coaches, Terry Stotts and Jerry Stackhouse, will not return to the team after their contracts expired following the season.

Slater reported that both coaches are leaving on good terms, with Stotts informing head coach Steve Kerr late in the regular season that he did not plan on returning next season, while Stackhouse is expected to pursue head coaching opportunities elsewhere.

Via ESPN:

Stotts just finished his second year as Kerr’s lead assistant and offensive coordinator. His nearly three-decade coaching career includes a nine-season run as head coach of the Portland Trail Blazers. Stotts informed Kerr late in the regular season that he didn’t intend to return and told ESPN he is leaving the Warriors on good terms and remains open to NBA head coaching opportunities.

“I enjoyed my time with Steve, the staff and players,” Stotts said. “My two years there were fulfilling. Nothing but well-wishes.”

The timing is notable, however, considering the news comes just days after Kerr agreed to a multi-year contract to remain with the Warriors. There have been reports that Kerr’s return was conditioned on some adjustments to his coaching staff being made in an effort to adapt to a more modern style of play. With Golden State having secured Kerr for the foreseeable future, he will now need to rebuild his staff with that in mind.

One name Slater mentioned as a potential candidate is former New Orleans Pelicans head coach Willie Green, who previously served as an assistant under Kerr in 2016. Meanwhile, ClutchPoints reporter Brett Siegel floated another familiar name to Warriors fans: franchise legend Andre Iguodala.

For more on this and other news around the NBA, here is our latest news round-up for Friday, May 15th:

Warriors News:

Sources: Warriors assistants Stotts, Stackhouse won’t return | ESPN

The injury-riddled Warriors won only 37 games last season and failed to make the playoffs through the play-in bracket. Management voiced the need for changes in conversations with Kerr after the season.

In the next two months, during the NBA’s transaction season, the Warriors are expected to refresh the roster around Steph Curry, along with remaking the coaching staff under Kerr.

Drake drops epic reference about Steph Curry, Davidson on new ‘Iceman’ album | NBC Sports Bay Area

Grammy-winning rapper Drake dropped no shortage of bars when he released a whopping three albums Thursday night.

And of course, the Canadian musician had to shout out NBA superstar and family friend Steph Curry in his new song, “2 Hard 4 the Radio.”

“Ayy, first off, I make real town smacks

Boy, you know the motto, gotta push it to the mack

Back when they was askin’ ’bout where Davidson was at

Now everybody got a blue thirty on they back

Warriors GM Mike Dunleavy interview + Golden State & Steph Curry’s future | NBA Draft Combine

NBA News:

Myles Turner addresses lack of discipline under Doc Rivers | ESPN

“Guys were late all the time,” Turner told New York Liberty forward Breanna Stewart on their “Game Recognize Game” podcast. “Guys were showing up to film whenever they wanted to show up. Guys were missing meetings. It was one of the craziest things I personally ever experienced.”

Asked by Stewart who was most likely to be late last season, Turner said it was an “easy” answer.

“Giannis. Giannis is going to show up whenever he wants, really,” Turner said. “I think that this kind of just came with the territory that — and once I saw what was going down, I was like, ‘Hey man, more power to you. They ain’t going to fine you. S—, do what you do.'”

Memphis Grizzlies pay tribute to Brandon Clarke who passed away on Tuesday at 29 years old

In case you missed it at Golden State of Mind:

Steve Kerr is still invested in the Warriors’ ‘dying dynasty’

That seems to be what’s keeping Kerr going. Realistically, it’s not about winning a fourth title. It’s about remaining competitive and having nights like the play-in win against the Los Angeles Clippers. And it seems to be about coaching Steph Curry for as long as he can and probably Draymond, too.

Given his comments about wanting to give the franchise a “clean start” after Curry is done, it sounds like Kerr is committed to being there for the messy ending. The dynasty might be dying, but Kerr is there to go down with the ship.

A post to end the week:

Follow @unstoppablebaby on X for all the latest news on the Golden State Warriors.

Fraternizing with the Enemy: A Premature Closing Conversation with Pounding the Rock’s JR Wilco

SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS - MAY 12: Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs and Ayo Dosunmu #13 of the Minnesota Timberwolves react during the first quarter in Game Five of the Second Round of the NBA Western Conference Playoffs at Frost Bank Center on May 12, 2026 in San Antonio, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Ronald Cortes/Getty Images) | Getty Images

I am joined by Pounding the Rock’s (our Spurs sister site) JR Wilco for yet another parlay about the series as it continues. With the Spurs now up 3-2, on the verge of closing out a competitive second round matchup, much of our conversation shifted to if this series is about to end, or if it has another twist still in store.


J.R. Wilco

Before the series began, I was terrified of Anthony Edwards destroying my playoff hopes and dreams. And the more tape I watch of this series, the more I’m coming to feel like San Antonio is pretty lucky that he’s not 100%. The Spurs are throwing the kitchen sink at him, and he still regularly wins the play. I can’t imagine how frustrated with him I’d be if he was fully healthy.

Is it just me, or are some of the Timberwolves getting frustrated with Julius Randle? I’m not talking about how his scoring has fallen off, everybody goes through slumps. I’m talking about his effort level. Jaden McDaniels’ body language seems to be screaming something like, “Dude, we’re all trying out here. Want to join us?” Anyway, I haven’t been watching the team all year, maybe that’s just a dynamic you’re used to.  

SAN ANTONIO, TX. – MAY 2026: Minnesota Timberwolves forward Julius Randle (30) and Minnesota Timberwolves center Rudy Gobert (27) react as they head into halftime against the San Antonio Spurs in Game 5 at Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas, on Tuesday, May 12, 2026. Minnesota Timberwolves vs. San Antonio Spurs, NBA Western Conference Semifinals, Game 5. NBA Playoffs. (Photo by Carlos Gonzalez/The Minnesota Star Tribune via Getty Images) | Star Tribune via Getty Images

Leading up to Game 5, I was pretty concerned that Minnesota was going to try some bid for retaliation against Victor Wembanyama’s extracurricular elbow. And outside of the one play where Reid went up for a hook shot and chopped at Wemby’s neck, I didn’t see anything other than your basic psychological warfare. So, a couple of questions: were you expecting them to retaliate, and do you think anyone in the Minnesota camp actually thought that mind games would work with Victor?

Thilo

Despite his reputation as a bad boy conflict initiator, Jaden McDaniels has not really gone after anyone in a meaningful way outside of his own hand. If that’s the head of the “I want to fight” snake, I didn’t really expect anyone else on the roster to make that call. 

I also think the Spurs haven’t built up enough hatred from the Wolves for them to try to start anything. The Nuggets deserve that animosity. The Lakers do as well. NBA on TNT (and its modern equivalent) did.

The Randle angle is the larger story. He is, with no exaggeration, playing to the standard of being one of the least valuable playoff players in the past 30 years of the NBA in this run. Especially after last year’s run had the inverse situation (Randle had a career best series against the Lakers as part of their gentleman’s sweep), I think the team is just hugely disappointed. They dragged him forward during the Nuggets series, but you can’t sport a negative star against a team this good.

Randle’s defense on Wemby remains the only silver lining of his play in this series. I feel I can’t accurately describe the level to which the eye test matches the numbers. Randle’s made field goals are keeping pace with his total fouls. His turnovers are doing the same to his assists.

Part of this is that Randle’s favorite passing partner, Donte Divincenzo, is out for the year with a torn achilles. But even that modicum of credit can’t undo all the bad.

In just a few words, Randle has been the Spurs second best player. And, with respect to Dylan Harper, it hasn’t been close. I fully expect Julius to be on another team next year. The question is if Rudy Gobert will join him.

However, let’s go back to that second best player question. It seems clear to me, as it does to most of Wolves twitter, that Harper is the second scariest player for the Wolves outside of that horrifying alien you guys call a center.

While DeAaron Fox and Stephon Castle continue to struggle with the defense looks they’re seeing, Dylan Harper was absolutely fantastic in Games 4 and 5. He was efficient, he got to the line, and in the fourth quarter, it was his constant driving that kept the Spurs in it when their shots went cold.

MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA – MAY 08: Dylan Harper #2 of the San Antonio Spurs knocks the ball away from Anthony Edwards #5 of the Minnesota Timberwolves during the fourth quarter in Game Three of the Second Round of the NBA Western Conference Playoffs at Target Center on May 08, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by David Berding/Getty Images) | Getty Images

I’m curious if you think a move to the starting lineup is coming, as one is almost certainly in store for the Wolves. What would stop you from making that move? What scares you most about a potential Wolves rotational change?

J.R.

My kids are finally old enough and so I’m watching The Office with them for the first time. And right now I feel like Angela trying to choose between Andy and Dwight, because I really like Castle, but Harper is blowing up. I want to complement Dylan and talk about how awesome he has been and what his efficiency is doing for the Spurs in limited minutes, but I don’t want Stephon to know that I’m thinking all these things. 

Fox is such a steady hand and his ability to manipulate the defense has been huge, but the rookie had that one on four fast break where Ayo tried to stop him, but he gave the double behind the back move (which I may not have even known was a thing) and took off to dunk it on everyone’s head. Only none of the four guys in white jerseys even got off the floor, so it turned into a showboat dunk instead. 

Stop asking me difficult questions because I don’t want De’Aaron to drive a Prius over to my house and drive me into the hedges. I could talk about this for much longer, but you’ve asked me other questions so I’ll just adjust my clothes as I come back from the warehouse and hope that nobody notices.

There’s no way Coach Mitch adjusts the starting lineup at this point of the season. The last time, a difficult decision had to be made about the rotation, Johnson handled it perfectly though it took some time. Now Keldon Johnson has a 6MOTY trophy to show for it and the team is excited for him following in Manu’s footsteps. But the playoffs are not the time to mess with touchy situations like that unless the end is nigh. 

As far as what scares me about Minnesota changing things up, that’s easy. I feel like everything I’ve seen so far the series has led me to expect the Spurs to win Game 6. Everybody has shown their cards, tactically, speaking, and so if all else remains the same, there isn’t much to keep the status quo from continuing. The Spurs are up 3-2, and so I like the status quo. If it’s all the same to you I’d prefer to keep things the way they are. Can we do that please?

Thilo

Can we? Maybe. Would I like us to? Absolutely not.

That being said, I’m sure this wasn’t the intention, but after back to back years of getting smacked by teams that are clearly in a different tier from these Wolves, I am more excited for this off-season than I should be considering it (likely) isn’t ending with a title and parade.

I am personally always in favor of tweaking things until the very end. Identity is found in continuity. Ceiling is found in change.

With that in mind, it seems unavoidable now to see that the Wolves are certainly a good playoff team, but not nearly good enough to win a title in the current Western Conference. 

That leads us back to the question of where Randle and Gobert will be. And I am incredibly excited to see what Tim Connely and Co. will do with an off-season full of question marks and two teams that have clearly outpaced them.

The series isn’t over just yet though, and calling Game 6 would be premature. Maybe we’ll be back here, maybe we won’t but all we can hope for is a good game!

The Sabres Finally Made The Playoffs — And Priced Out Their Own Fans

Buffalo fans waited 15 years for playoff hockey, only to discover many of them can’t realistically afford to be there.

Playoff Shock

For years, the Sabres positioned themselves as one of the few affordable nights out in professional sports. According to a recent study by Action Network, Buffalo ranked as the cheapest NHL experience for a family of four during the regular season, with an average total cost of just $457.32 at KeyBank Center. In a league where some franchises charge well over $1,000 for a single game night, Buffalo appeared to understand its market better than most.

But the moment playoff hockey finally returned, that image disappeared almost overnight.

After asking fans to endure one of the longest playoff droughts in modern professional sports, the Sabres suddenly shifted from “family affordable” to premium pricing. Fans who stayed loyal through losing seasons were met with immediate sticker shock once postseason tickets became available.

Multiple fans online reported upper-level playoff seats starting around $120 to $150 before fees, while lower-bowl prices quickly climbed toward $500 per ticket on resale sites. For a city that prides itself on being blue-collar and deeply connected to its hockey culture, the reaction was swift.

And honestly, it’s hard not to understand why.

A Blue-Collar Fanbase Hits Its Breaking Point

These are fans who sat through multiple rebuilds, watched games surrounded by empty seats, and still kept buying jerseys and supporting the team in the hope that meaningful hockey would eventually return. Buffalo remained loyal through coaching changes, front-office shakeups, and years of disappointment because people believed the payoff would someday come.

Playoff hockey was supposed to feel like a reward.

Instead, for many families, it became another reminder that live sports are increasingly becoming inaccessible to the very people who care the most.

And when you compare Buffalo’s prices to other playoff markets, the frustration only grows. One circulating graphic on social media showed Sabres playoff ticket prices dramatically higher than teams like the Edmonton Oilers and even the Montreal Canadiens — one of hockey’s most historic Original Six franchises. That’s where many fans feel the disconnect begins.

If you think I'm misleading you, take a look for yourself. This is insanity.

Buffalo is not a massive corporate market overflowing with luxury buyers. It’s a passionate hockey city built on working-class fans. Pricing ordinary people out of the building risks creating an atmosphere where the most loyal supporters are replaced by whoever can simply afford the experience.

What makes the situation sting even more is that the Sabres clearly understand affordability matters in Buffalo. The regular-season numbers prove it. They marketed accessibility because they knew it resonated with the fanbase. But the moment demand surged, so did the prices.

Fans online described standard tickets disappearing within minutes before resale listings flooded the market. Others questioned why a team that struggled to consistently fill seats for years suddenly began operating like a luxury product the second it became relevant again.

There’s a difference between normal playoff pricing and outright gouging. Nobody expects postseason tickets to cost the same as a random Tuesday night game in January. But when the NHL’s cheapest regular-season experience suddenly becomes inaccessible the moment the games actually matter, criticism is fair.

Buffalo fans spent over a decade waiting for this moment.

A lot of them are now watching from home instead — and honestly, that may be the smarter financial decision. A beer in your own fridge costs a fraction of arena prices, and the couch doesn’t come with hundreds of dollars in ticket fees attached. More importantly, fans shouldn’t feel punished financially for wanting to celebrate the return of meaningful hockey in their city.

Buffalo, you deserve better.

Image

Gonzaga Bulldogs in the NBA: 2026 Playoffs Report

Nov 12, 2025; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA; Oklahoma City Thunder center Chet Holmgren (7) drives to the basket against Los Angeles Lakers forward Rui Hachimura (28) during the second quarter at Paycom Center. Mandatory Credit: Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images | Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images

13 former Gonzaga Bulldogs suited up in the NBA this season, setting a new program record. As the 2026 playoffs get underway, seven of them punched postseason tickets, with one more agonizingly close to joining them. From a reigning champion hunting a repeat to a journeyman veteran soaking up garbage minutes on the hottest team in basketball, the Zag pipeline has never looked deeper. Here’s where every former Bulldog stands as the playoff race starts heating up.

Chet Holmgren | Oklahoma City Thunder | Western Conference Finals

OKC swept Phoenix in the first round, and then ran through and swept the Lakers in four (LeBron’s team never led a single game at any point). They’re now sitting in the Western Conference Finals at 8-0 waiting on whoever survives Spurs-Wolves. The defending champs are doing exactly what defending champs are supposed to do.

The Thunder were the #1 seed for the second straight year, Holmgren was a first-time All-Star and DPOY finalist, and he signed a five-year $240 million max extension last July. His regular-season line was 17.1 points, 8.9 rebounds, and a team-high 1.9 blocks across 69 starts.

His playoff numbers are actually better than last year’s championship run: 18.6 points, 9.1 rebounds, 1.8 blocks, 60% from the floor, compared to 15.2 and 8.7 boards across 23 games in 2025. The signature moment came in Game 2 against the Lakers when OKC’s Shai Gilgeous-Alexander landed in foul trouble in the third. Holmgren took over in his absence and finished with 22 points and nine boards. OKC won by 18. 

Only two former Zags have ever won a ring (Adam Morrison and Austin Daye), and neither played a meaningful role for their respective squads. If Holmgren and the Thunder hoist the championship trophy once again, he’ll be the first former Bulldog to win back-to-back titles while actually playing a meaningful role: big minutes on a big contract as the second-best player on the best team in the sport. 


Kelly Olynyk | San Antonio Spurs | SAS leads MIN 3-2

Thirteen years in the league. Seven teams. Kelly Olynyk has seen everything, and this season he landed on the best roster of his career. The role is what it is: 3.2 points, 1.8 rebounds, 1.2 assists in under 10 minutes a night, zero starts across 42 games. But Olynyk is a guy who knows how to stick, and the Spurs are glad to have the veteran insurance behind Wembanyama.

And what a team to be part of. San Antonio went 62-20 this season, second-best record in the league, and have looked every bit that caliber in the playoffs. Wembanyama is doing some unprecedented basketball things: 27 points, 17 rebounds, and 5 blocks in the Game 5 throttling of Minnesota that pushed the Spurs to a 3-2 series lead. 

Game 6 is tonight in Minnesota, and if the Spurs close it out, Olynyk would be heading to the Western Conference Finals for just the second time in his career, the first being that remarkable 2020 Miami Heat run where he dropped 24 in a Finals game against the Lakers. He’s been around long enough to know what this moment is worth. 


Rui Hachimura | Los Angeles Lakers | Eliminated — Second Round (swept by OKC)

The Lakers went out in a sweep, but Rui Hachimura had nothing to do with it. Over 10 playoff games (six against Houston in the first round, four against OKC), he averaged 17.5 points, 4.0 rebounds, and 3.3 threes per game while shooting 54.9% from the floor and 56.9% from three. That three-point percentage is the highest in NBA playoff history.

He scored in double digits in every single game. He hit five or more threes twice. In Game 4 against OKC, with the Lakers’ season on the line and Hachimura coming off 25 points on 9-of-15 shooting, coach JJ Redick pulled him from the floor for the final 12 seconds, trailing by three, and drew up a play for Austin Reaves that didn’t work. The internet did not take it well, and honestly, fair enough.

The kicker is that Hachimura heads into the summer as an unrestricted free agent off the best postseason of his career. His regular season line was a more modest 11.5 points in 32 minutes, but the playoffs revealed what Gonzaga fans already knew: the dude’s a winner. The Lakers would be wise to bring him back. See below for some Zag on Zag playoff violence.


Jalen Suggs | Orlando Magic | Eliminated, First Round (lost Game 7 to Detroit)

The fifth overall pick in 2021 keeps adding chapters to a career that consistently delivers on the defensive end while leaving the offensive ceiling somewhat unresolved. This season was his best yet in terms of playmaking: a career-high 5.4 assists to go with 13.9 points and 1.9 steals across 57 games, though injuries again cost him 25 regular-season games.

The Magic had to claw through the play-in just to face the top-seeded Pistons, which made their seven-game push all the more impressive. Suggs had his moments: 16 points in Game 1, 19 points in Game 2. But Game 7 told the familiar story. Six points on 2-of-9 shooting, four steals and two blocks, a guy who showed up fully on one end and couldn’t find his shot when it mattered most. Orlando lost 116-94 and went home.

At 24, he still has time to round it out, and the defensive reputation is legitimate. But for a former Zag billed as a two-way star coming out of Spokane, the scoring consistency and injury concerns linger.


Julian Strawther | Denver Nuggets | Eliminated, First Round (lost to Minnesota 4-2)

The frustrating part of the Strawther story is the timing. Across a 57-game regular season, he averaged 7.2 points in a limited role, but when Denver’s injury situation opened the door in the final stretch, he walked through it: 22 points against OKC, then 25 against San Antonio in the regular season finale, looking every bit like a guy who belonged in the rotation. Then the playoffs started, the full roster came back, and coach David Adelman dropped him entirely. He was a DNP by Game 2 against Minnesota.

Denver lost to the Timberwolves in six. Strawther watched.

He is 24, still on a rookie deal, and the shot’s still there. But three years in, the NBA has yet to deliver him a consistent role on a team that has consistently needed wings. That’s a front office problem as much as a player one, and next year’s situation bears watching.


Corey Kispert | Atlanta Hawks | Eliminated, First Round (lost to New York 4-2)

Corey’s season has two acts. Act one: a bench role in Washington on a rebuilding team going nowhere. Act two: a January trade to Atlanta as part of the Trae Young deal, landing him on a Hawks squad that nobody expected to make the playoffs, and then proceeded to go 46-36 and win the 6-seed outright. In 39 games with Atlanta, Kispert averaged 9.2 points, 2.3 rebounds, and 1.5 threes in 18.2 minutes off the bench. Solid. Useful. Exactly what a role player on a good team is supposed to be.

The playoff run ended at the hands of the Knicks in six. Kispert’s Game 6 line was four points on 1-of-7 shooting in a 140-89 blowout.

He is under contract through next season and will turn 27 in March. The shooting stroke is as smooth as it’s ever been, and his role in Atlanta is well defined. For a former Gonzaga wing who came into the league with questions about whether the shot would travel, the answer has been yes, consistently, for five years now.


Drew Timme | Los Angeles Lakers | Did Not Make the Playoff Roster

Gonzaga’s all-time leading scorer spent the year bouncing between the Lakers and their G League affiliate in South Bay, once again searching for the right team to make the right choice and just give him an actual contract. When the Lakers’ frontcourt got thin mid-season, Timme stepped in and made the most of it: a career-high 21 points against Portland, LeBron James publicly calling him “an NBA player” after the game, genuine organizational buzz around a guy who had been fighting for a foothold in the league for three years.

Then the playoffs arrived, and the Lakers had one roster spot to fill. They chose guard Nick Smith Jr. over Timme, citing backcourt depth with Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves both banged up. Timme’s two-way contract made him ineligible regardless, and that was that.

He finished the regular season averaging 3.4 points in 23 NBA appearances, numbers that don’t begin to capture what he showed in his best moments. The G League numbers do: averaging over 24 points per game with South Bay this season. At 25, he needs a standard contract and a real role, and there’s enough tape now to suggest he deserves a shot at both.


Thirteen Zags on NBA rosters, seven in the playoffs, one hunting a second straight championship, and another setting all-time playoff shooting records. From Holmgren anchoring a dynasty to Timme scratching for every minute on a two-way deal, the full spectrum of what an NBA career looks like runs right through Gonzaga’s alumni list this year.