The Anaheim Ducks finished off a busy Day 1 of the 2026 NHL Entry Draft by selecting Marcus Nordmark with the 28th overall pick. The Ducks acquired the 28th pick by trading picks 29 and 117 to the Vegas Golden Knights. They acquired the 29th pick, along with the 15th pick (Nikita Klepov), from the St. Louis Blues in exchange for forward Mason McTavish.
Nordmark was selected from Djurgardens IF in Sweden. During the 2025-26 season, he tallied 38 points (14-24=38) in 25 games at the U18 level and an assist in eight games at the SHL level. He represented Sweden at the U18 World Championship, where he scored four points (3-1=4) in six games en route to a gold medal.
With the puck on his stick, Nordmark dictates pace and controls play by protecting and making deft plays from everywhere in the offensive zone. While not the lightest on his feet, he has all the other tools necessary to become a producer at the NHL level.
Though not too involved when off-puck, he finds soft ice and has a quick, heavy release that can beat goaltenders from distance. He has the vision to know when to keep his feet moving, make a slip pass, or attempt something a bit more ambitious.
Skating and forechecking leave something to be desired, and he’s not overly physical despite his 6-foot-2 frame. He’s under contract with Djurgardens for the 2026-27 season.
It wasn’t the easiest outing for Noah Schultz, but he continues to make progress back from injury. | Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images
Rochester Red Wings 6, Charlotte Knights 2 After pummeling Rochester a couple of nights ago, Charlotte decided it was only fair that the Red Wings get a couple of jabs in, too. Nolan Jones carried the team, producing both of Charlotte’s runs. He started with an RBI double plated in the fifth, and followed up with a sac fly in the eighth with the sacks packed and one out. Although Michael Turner and Korey Lee made sure Jones wasn’t the only productive batter at the plate, the rest of the lineup decided to take a break for this one.
Meanwhile, the pitching failed to get off the ground for the first half of the game. Noah Schultz’s two runs allowed in 4 2/3 innings were tolerable considering he struck out seven, but he tipped the domino in the wrong direction when he turned the ball over to the bullpen. Duncan Davitt and Lucas Sims each gave up a pair of runs between the fifth and seventh innings, pushing the Knights further from striking distance and ultimately costing them the game.
The worst part of the game wasn’t the loss, though; it was Rikuu Nishida’s exit. Nishida promptly left the game in the sixth after Rochester’s Trevor Gott hit him. Hopefully, it’s nothing serious, but getting knocked out of the game is never a good sign.
Knoxville Smokies 3, Birmingham Barons 2 The losing train keeps plugging along for the Barons, who have fallen into a seven-game slump. The lineup hindered their run production by going 2-for-8 with runners in scoring position and leaving eight on base. Caleb Bonemer delivered a blooper single into center to score Alec Briley in the third to keep his bat lukewarm. Although Bonemer has continued to cool off since April, especially since encountering the Double-A talent jump, it was nice to see him deliver tonight. Brendan Dixon tried to rally a late comeback in the ninth with a sac fly, but the attempt was extremely short-lived.
From the arm side, there’s not much else that could’ve been done. Connor McCullough put on a hearty performance, allowing six hits and two runs while punching out five in 4 1/3 innings, while the bullpen backed him up for nearly the entire game. Pierce George pitched his second Double-A game since graduating from Winston-Salem, and he did well, all things considered. Although he gave up a run, he lasted two full innings.
While the lineup didn’t pull its weight, the Barons simply came up short on this one.
It turns out the scoring would come to a screeching halt after that, though. Nathan Archer made his High-A debut as a pinch-runner to replace Taussig in the 10th to try and bring in the go-ahead run with two outs and runners on second and third, but he ended up never grabbing a bat.
Juan Carela had his first rude awakening to High-A hitting after being promoted from his rehab assignment in the ACL recently. Carela gave up three runs in four innings but managed to get four strikeouts to give the Dash a fighting chance. Unfortunately, that chance ended with Jake Peppers, who blew his save and turned the game back to Hub City for the rest of the night. Even though the momentum never shifted back towards Winston-Salem, Mathias LaCombe deserves a round of applause for his standout effort: 2 1/3 IP with seven strikeouts and no runs allowed helped send the game to extras when the offense had shut down.
Columbia Fireflies 5, Kannapolis Cannon Ballers 0 It’s a good thing the Ballers had postgame fireworks, because their bats didn’t bring any. Jaden Fauske and Leandro Alsinois pieced together four of Kanny’s six hits, while the rest of the team might as well have sat on the bench waiting for the postgame pops and cracks. Although they didn’t fare too poorly in the strikeout category, the lifeless CBs offense was back after a not-so-brief hiatus.
Pointing never feels good, but unfortunately, Gabriel Rodriguez was the lone pitcher to blame for Kanny’s loss. Rodriguez was tagged with all five earned runs in four innings and really tangoed with command, giving up four of the five runs via the home run. Worse, but understandably, three of the four dingers came from pitches over the middle of the plate. Needless to say, tonight was not Kanny’s night.
The only person who profited from Rodriguez’s poor outing was Blaine Wynk, who allowed just three hits and struck out three in a three-inning shutout.
DSL Phillies 11, DSL White Sox 1 The 5-14 Sox floundered big time. Four hits and six walks only totaled a single run, courtesy of Carlos Vielma’s bases-loaded walk. Pulling highlights for this game is difficult and painful, as not much good comes from a lineup that went 0-for-6 with runners in scoring position and left eight on base. A shout-out should go to lefty reliever Cristopher Romero, who only allowed a walk in his 1 1/3 innings hurled, and provided reprieve for the our DSL defenders in the fifth. It was the first time since his first DSL appearance on June 2 that Romero went scoreless, so that’s something to cheer for. But other than that, that’s all she wrote.
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - JUNE 26: Payton Tolle #70 of the Boston Red Sox reacts after the final out of the the seventh inning of a game against the New York Yankees at Fenway Park on June 26, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Brian Fluharty/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Holy crap. Payton Tolle was flat-out brilliant Friday night at Fenway—seven innings, one hit, zero runs, seven strikeouts. Five perfect frames. The Yankees lineup managed just three hits for the entire game. THREE. Goldschmidt, Bellinger, Chisholm—a combined 0-for-11. The one guy who got to Tolle at all was Spencer Jones with a single in the sixth. That’s it. That’s the whole résumé for New York’s offense. Aside from two walks from a gassed Tolle in the 7th but still.
On the flip side, Will Warren couldn’t find a punchout if he walked into Cask ‘N Flagon or the Lansdowne at 1am 5 2/3 innings, seven hits, five runs, three walks, and zero—A BIG OL’ GOOSE EGG—strikeouts. The Red Sox just put the ball in play all night, refused to expand the zone, and let Warren beat himself. Frankly letting the Yankees beat themselves is a special kind of schadenfreude in Boston. By the time Ryan Yarbrough came in to clean it up, the game was already decided.
The only blemish on the night was Tommy Kahnle coughing up the lone Yankees run in the eighth on a Wells RBI. But after seven shutout innings from Tolle, that’s about as high-stakes as finding a scratch on your car bumper.
Oh, and Willson Contreras decided to make things interesting. Warren’s walk to him in the 5th came on a pitch that ran decently inside—almost hitting Willy’s elbow, and apparently Contreras took real exception to just how inside it was. He and Warren started jawing at each other, and the next thing you know both benches and both bullpens had emptied. No punches, nobody got tossed, the whole thing defused itself. But Contreras was unmistakably the main character of the situation and was not visibly interested in calming anyone down. Honestly, this isn’t even close to the first time he’s looked like he’d be perfectly fine if things escalated to a full field brawl. Bowser came to play baseball and apparently is open to other activities as well.
Studs
Payton Tolle (7.0 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 7 K)
There’s a version of this piece where I write a whole section about the offense and mention Tolle at the end. That’s not the right version. Seven innings, one hit against a lineup that has legitimate lineup depth—that’s the kind of outing that earns a little reverence. Tolle commanded everything tonight. Seven strikeouts and it didn’t even feel like he was hunting them; he was just pitching and hitters were running out of options. Really nice start.
Willson Contreras (2-for-3, 1 HR, 2 RBI, 1 BB)
Contreras keeps doing this thing where an at-bat builds logically to a home run. Two hits, the long ball, two runs driven in, a walk. Good Contreras is genuinely one of the better offensive players on this roster and nights like this are a reminder of that ceiling.
Caleb Durbin (2-for-4, 1 2B, 2 R)
Still rolling. No RBI tonight, but he scored twice and the double was a loud one—the funniest knuckleball screaming line drive that Spencer Jones can’t track well. He’s in the middle of a real stretch at the plate and has become a guy you watch every at-bat wondering what he’s going to do. Is it the private hitting coach? The lack of Driveline finally in this team? ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Connor Wong and Tsung-Che Cheng (2 RBI and 1 RBI, respectively)
I’m going to lump these two together because the bottom of this order deserves a lil moment. Wong had a hit and two RBI with a walk. Cheng had an RBI double and a walk. In a game where Tolle was going to make this comfortable regardless, the early cushion those two helped build was a real gift.
Duds
Ceddanne Rafaela (0-for-4)
Rafaela has been one of the better offensive stories on this team through 63 games—wRC+ of 123, OPS north of .770, the whole thing. He went 0-for-4 tonight and that’s fine, it’s a 162 game season. One game doesn’t undo a two-month arc. Moving on.
Mickey Gasper (0-for-4)
He brought a run home, which is credit, but four at-bats without a hit keeps him in this section. Gasper has been a bit of an enigma at the plate this year and tonight didn’t change the picture.
Play of the Game
Has to be Tolle’s full outing. From the first inning to the last pitch, he gave this team exactly what it needed—and then some. Absolute fire and a blast on the mound to watch.
On Friday night at the NHL Draft, the Detroit Red Wings made a splash, sending goaltending prospect Sebastian Cossa to the Utah Mammoth in exchange for the 23rd overall pick. Detroit would go on to use the pick on Kamloops Blazers forward JP Hurlbert, who grew up dreaming of wearing a Red Wings jersey.
The Allen, Texas native is coming off one of the most impressive rookie seasons the WHL has seen in years, posting 42 goals and 97 points in 68 games with the Kamloops Blazers, finishing fourth in the entire league in scoring and earning WHL Rookie of the Year honors in the process.
Hurlbert spoke to Sportsnet's Ailish Forfar shortly after his selection and made it clear that being picked by Detroit is about more than just hockey for him.
"I was a Red Wings fan growing up. My whole family is from Detroit. It's so special to be able to put on this jersey. I'm so excited."
"That's how I got into hockey. I was a Red Wings fan. My grandpa, my whole family is from Detroit. It's so special to be able to put on this jersey. I'm so excited."
The six-foot, 190 pound forward will enter the organization with high expectations as the piece Detroit sent to Utah in Sebastian Cossa is widely viewed as a potential difference-maker at the NHL level as early as next season, meaning the pressure on Hurlbert to deliver early on.
The Red Wings trade their way into the first round and draft J.P. Hurlbert with the 23rd overall pick ☑️ pic.twitter.com/L6qOQaB0sf
What Red Wings fans can be sure of is that they are getting a player who is deeply passionate about the organization and will pour everything into representing it well. Detroit fans may not have to wait long for a first look either. Hurlbert has committed to the University of Michigan, putting him in close proximity to the Red Wings organization and his family in the area.
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CLEVELAND, OHIO - JUNE 26: Joey Cantillo #54 of the Cleveland Guardians throws a pitch during the first inning against the Seattle Mariners at Progressive Field on June 26, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Welcome back to another edition of a recap of a game the Guardians have played eighty-five million times this season. They have lost a 1-0, 2-1, 3-1, or 3-2 game for the 175th time this season. It is an MLB record.
Joey Cantillo was good, again, tonight. He’s begun spinning his breaking pitches much more effectively recently, something that has yielded great success for him. Even though the Mariners have been bad against LHP this season, Cantillo was still able to shut them down quickly and effectively. He went 6 innings, striking out 9, and giving up his only run of the night on a homer from Colt Emerson (an Ohio native, if anyone were surprised).
Khalil Watson cares! He drove in the only run of the night, tonight, on an RBI double off the left field wall.
Khalil Watson is responsible for driving in 6 of the Guardians last 9 runs if you were wondering how the offense has been.
Herrin pitched again. In the 7th inning. Yay. Walked Cal Raleigh (.575 OPS) and Dominic Canzone (23 PA vs LHP) to start the inning. Got old friend Josh Naylor to ground into a double play on the first pitch, but then Travis Bazzana was unable to come up with another groundball, leading to the go-ahead run scoring.
Espino gave up a run in the 8th on a Rodriguez RBI single.
Manzardo, Rocchio, and Watson went strikeout-strikeout-groundout to end the game.
In what was, yet again, an uninspiring performance from both the offense and bullpen, the Guardians dropped the series opener against a struggling Mariners team, 3-1.
It’ll be Cecconi vs. Gilbert/Hancock (piggybacking) tomorrow night.
Zach Thornton took the mound for the Mets on Friday night for just the second time in his career, and it was awfully impressive.
Going up against the high-powered Phillies and with Zack Wheeler on the mound, Thornton held his own, allowing just one run across six innings while striking out seven batters. Although the Mets fell 2-1, Thornton was impressive.
"You have to be pleased with the pitching tonight. Zach Thornton was really good," Mets interim manager Andy Green said after the game. "Talking about a young kid who gets a barreled up three consecutive times. Gets a mound visit, settles in and gives us six great innings....Thought he was great."
As Green alluded to, Thornton's night started off precariously. He allowed three straight hits and the Phillies to drive in a run, but retired the next three hitters (two on strikeouts) to escape further trouble.
Green said that Thornton mixed his pitches effectively, speeding up hitters with his fastball, allowing his offspeed pitches to be more effective. He also liked the young left-hander's aggressive approach.
"He really attacked, went after aggressively, that’s what you’re looking for in a young guy," Green said. "We knew that was inside of him and who he is that he showed at every level. It’s good at this stage for everyone to see that from him."
"Got the nerves out in that first game, now I just go out there and compete," Thornton said of the difference between his first start and second.
A big part of Thornton's night was the defense behind him. First baseman Jared Young grabbed a screamer hit down the line for the second out of the first to help the youngster get out of the inning. Young would catch a few other snares hit at him throughout the night and Francisco Lindor made a couple as well, all in support of Thornton, which helped settle him down.
"Let's me pitch freely in the zone knowing I got Francisco Lindor there at shortstop," Thornton said.
Thornton became just the fifth left-hander in franchise history to record at least seven strikeouts in one of their first two major league appearances (David Peterson, 2020). Friday was also just the third time this season a Mets pitcher threw six-plus innings, struck out, seven or more batters and allowed one or zero runs.
So, did that start earn Thornton another go through the rotation? Green was non-committal, stating the organization had to figure out the pitching order since Christian Scott is to be activated for Saturday's start. A pitcher will need to be optioned to activate him, and Thornton could be the unlucky pitcher.
Whichever direction the Mets choose to go with Thornton, Friday's start has instilled in the 24-year-old that he can pitch at this level.
"Gives me the confidence that I can compete with the best out there and get anyone out," Thornton said of his performance. "I want to pitch in the big leagues for a long time and I think I can do that."
The Vegas Golden Knights entered Friday without a first-round pick in the 2026 NHL Entry Draft. They changed that before the San Jose Sharks selected Ivar Stenberg at 2nd overall.
Of course, they had to give something to get something. And the something they gave was
The Golden Knights sent 25-year-old Pavel Dorofeyev, a Restricted Free Agent and their two-time leading goalscorer, to the Big Apple in exchange for a first-round pick in 2026, a third-round pick in 2026, and a first-round pick in 2028.
The New York Rangers quickly signed Dorofeyev to a seven-year, $11 million contract. That’s a deal the Golden Knights were never going to agree to, as they currently have just $4,625,000 in salary cap space and only 13 skaters signed. They’ll gain another $8,800,000 in relief if they put Alex Pietrangelo on Season Ending LTIR, but that’s still a far cry from being able to afford giving Dorofeyev $77 million.
Dorofeyev was a rare home-grown talent, selected 79th overall by the Golden Knights in 2019. He broke into the NHL in 2023 and went on to lead the team in goals for two straight seasons, scoring 35 in 2024-25 and 37 in 2025-26.
In their pursuit of success, the Golden Knights have flipped almost every prospect or draft pick with value for players to help them win now. As a result, they’ve enjoyed unprecedented success over their nine-year history. But now, the cupboard is bare.
Because the Golden Knights weren’t going to write Dorofeyev the check he wanted, trading him was the only option. But did they get enough in return to justify losing their best goalscorer?
On one hand, the Golden Knights turned a third-round pick in 2019 into the 26th overall pick in the 2026 Draft. On paper, that’s an excellent return on investment, especially since just eight players drafted by Vegas went on to play at least 100 NHL games. Only four did so with the Golden Knights, and just one– Kaedan Korczak– is still with the organization.
On the other hand, for all their elite offensive talent, the Golden Knights don’t have many players who want to put the puck in the back of the net.
No Golden Knight has scored more goals over the past two seasons than Dorofeyev, who scored a total of 72. The next closest scorers were Tomáš Hertl with 56 and Jack Eichel with 55. After that, it’s a pretty steep drop-off— Mark Stone with 47, Ivan Barbashev with 46, and Brett Howden with 35.
The Golden Knights made it all the way to the Stanley Cup Final this year and were just two wins away from winning their second Stanley Cup in four years. And then, an old demon reared its ugly head, and the 2025-26 season ended the exact same way that the 2024-25 season did.
After scoring 13 goals through the first three games of the Stanley Cup Final, the Golden Knights scored just five goals over their final three games.
Dorofeyev scored the Golden Knights’ only two goals in Game 5, and they were shut out in Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Final. For the second straight year, their season ended because they couldn’t score a single goal.
Can two first-round picks and a third-rounder replace Dorofeyev, who scored 37 regular-season goals and 12 in the postseason? Is the return enough to replace Dorofeyev and his 20 power-play goals during the 2025-26 season?
The San Jose Sharks had a night to remember on Friday to say the least. The Sharks entered the first day of the 2026 NHL Draft with three first-round draft picks, and left the event with three highly-touted prospects.
First, the Sharks selected forward Ivar Stenberg with the second overall pick. Stenberg will likely fill the hole left by the departing William Eklund for years to come, at a much lower cap hit for at least the first three seasons of his career.
The Sharks then took the stage once again for the ninth overall pick, this time they addressed a massive organizational need when they selected right-handed defenseman Keaton Verhoeff out of the University of North Dakota in the NCAA.
Finally, the Sharks traded up from the 27th overall pick to the 21st selection to take another right-handed defenseman, Ryan Lin out of the Western Hockey League.
Both Stenberg and Verhoeff could be in consideration to play in the NHL as early as next season, although it's more likely that Verhoeff returns to North Dakota for a second collegiate season. As for Lin, he's committed to play under David Carle at the University of Denver during the 2026-27 season.
For many years it seems, the Sharks have been saying that the future is teal. Year after year, they continue adding so much high-end young talent that the statement appears to become more than just a marketing slogan, it's seemingly becoming the truth regarding the future of the NHL.
ST. PETERSBURG, FL - JUNE 26: Junior Caminero #13 of the Tampa Bay Rays hits a home run against the Arizona Diamondbacks during the first inning of a baseball game at Tropicana Field on June 26, 2026 in St. Petersburg, Florida. (Photo by Mike Carlson/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Somewhere in another baseball universe, the Arizona Diamondbacks challenge a called ball, and it gets overturned as strike three. Junior Caminero walks back to the dugout, shaking his head, and Friday night’s game unfolds a little differently.
That is not the universe the Tampa Bay Rays played in on Friday night.
Instead of Diamondbacks catcher Gabriel Moreno challenging the pitch with two runners aboard in the first inning, Caminero got one more pitch, and he launched it over the centerfield wall for a three-run homer that immediately flipped the game in Tampa Bay’s favor.
Zac Gallen perfectly executed a 1-2 slider on the lower outside corner to Junior Caminero.
It was mistakenly called a ball, Gabriel Moreno did not challenge and Caminero delivered a three-run homer on the next pitch. Brutal. pic.twitter.com/DitZ0J7UYy
That is not the whole story of the Rays’ 6-1 win, but it is awfully hard to tell the story without starting there.
The Diamondbacks looked like they might be the ones setting the tone early. Nick Martinez got Ketel Marte to fly out in foul territory to start the game, with Jonny DeLuca making a running catch near the seats. A nice play, but also a bit of foreshadowing for the defense to come in the game.
Then Geraldo Perdomo homered to right center to put Arizona up 1-0. Corbin Carroll followed with a triple to center after the ball deflected away from DeLuca, and suddenly Martinez was trying to keep the first inning from getting away from him.
He did. Moreno popped out. Nolan Arenado popped out. Arizona had landed the first punch, but the Rays kept it to one run.
That mattered almost immediately.
Yandy Díaz opened the bottom of the first with a walk, because Yandy getting on base to start chaos is basically tradition at this point. Jonathan Aranda was hit by a pitch, bringing up Caminero with two on and nobody out.
His 20th homer of the season did not just flip the score. It flipped the whole feel of the night. The Rays went from trailing 1-0 to leading 3-1 in one swing.
Junior Caminero picks up right where he left off yesterday, a three-run shot to put the #Rays up 3-1! Junior has five home runs this homestand! pic.twitter.com/ByKn1UbjzF
From there, the game became less about constant offense and more about the Rays refusing to give the Diamondbacks a clean inning to get back into it. The Rays did not strikeout once, the first time they went a full game without a strikeout since June 15, 2013, against the Kansas City Royals.
They did not crush everything. They did not turn every ball in play into a rally. But they forced Arizona to defend every at-bat, and eventually that pressure helped extend the lead.
The bigger separator, though, was Tampa Bay’s defense. Arizona finished with eight hits, so this was not Martinez and the bullpen simply mowing everybody down. The Diamondbacks had opportunities, but the Rays had gloves that did not come from a two-day online sale.
In the fourth inning, Carroll singled, Moreno followed with another hit, and Arizona had runners on the corners with nobody out. This was a spot where a two-run lead can start feeling very flimsy, very quickly.
Instead, the Rays handled it. Arenado popped out in foul territory. Max Kepler then lined a ball toward third, and Caminero went up for a leaping grab that took away a RBI-swing and helped Martinez breathe. Lourdes Gurriel Jr. followed with a force out, and the threat was gone.
DeLuca added another strong defensive play in right in the fifth, running down a ball near the angled wall in the right field corner.
Tampa Bay missed a chance to add on in the sixth when Díaz doubled, and Caminero was intentionally walked. Arizona wanted no part of another big swing from Junior, which was understandable. Richie Palacios popped up, DeLuca flew out, and the Rays left two aboard.
A 3-1 lead was fine. It was also not enough to relax.
Mullins helped with that in the seventh. Leading off the inning, he drove a solo homer to right center, pushing the lead to 4-1 and giving the Rays the breathing room they had been chasing. Mullins had been quiet at the plate earlier, but all it takes is one swing for the rest to be forgotten.
Then the Rays kept going. Hunter Feduccia doubled with two outs, Díaz singled him home, and Aranda doubled in Díaz. A tight 3-1 game had become a 6-1 game, and suddenly the Diamondbacks were running out of innings.
Mullins added the defensive punctuation in the eighth. Perdomo reached to start the inning, and Carroll lined a ball to center that looked like it might start something. Mullins charged in, dove, and made the catch. One batter later, Moreno grounded into a double play started by Caminero and turned through Palacios to Aranda.
Caminero had the swing everyone will remember, the leaping grab that helped save the fourth, and a hand in the double play that helped erase Arizona’s last real push. If I weren’t out of tin foil, I’d make a hat and say that it feels scripted on the night the Rays celebrated Dominican Heritage Night.
Craig Kimbrel was doing 2026 Craig Kimbrel things and made the ninth a little wobbly with a walk and a wild pitch, because even a five-run lead needs a small stress test. But he got Gurriel on a foul tip strikeout and ended it when Pavin Smith lined out to Palacios.
An impressive win with big hits, no strikeouts, and incredible defense. The Rays will look to clinch the series when these two teams meet again tomorrow night, with first pitch scheduled for 7:10 pm.
"THE RAYS BEAT THE DIAMONBACKS IN THE FIRST GAME OF THE SERIES AND HAVE WON THEIR THIRD CONSECUTIVE GAME!"@andybfreed with the call as the #Rays beat the D-Backs 6-1! pic.twitter.com/NuUNffAUjz
But when it comes down to a weekend matchup against one another at the end of June, young outfielder Samad Taylor views the rivalry as “Just another day of baseball.”
Samad Taylor running on the basepaths for the San Diego Padres. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect
Of course, Taylor had a smile on his face after he called Friday night’s game another day of baseball, but he does understand what the rivalry means.
“When I signed over here at first, you know, over the previous years of watching baseball, you see all the bench clearings and guys getting hit, and you see all that good stuff, and you know what you’re getting yourself into,” Taylor told 97.3 The Fan.
“I know the rivalry that it is, and like I said, it’s just another day of baseball. We’re gonna keep working, and hopefully we get a sweep, or hopefully we get a series win.”
Samad Taylor spoke about being teammates with Ty France after coming up through the ranks with him, how he feels about facing the Dodgers and if the Padres are beginning to click at the right time: pic.twitter.com/knEIYJrxGl
Taylor is prepared to get his first taste of the rivalry as he will make his debut as a member of the Padres, after signing with the club during the offseason on a minor league deal.
Taylor just missed the Padres’ first series against the Dodgers when they came to town at the end of May while he was playing with San Diego’s Triple-A affiliate, the El Paso Chiuhauhaus.
After a strong start to the minor league season, he was called up to the Padres’ MLB roster and has served as a platoon corner outfielder, spending time between right and left field.
San Diego Padres outfielder Samad Taylor. Getty Images
Through 17 games this season, Taylor has been on a tear across the MLB, slashing .379/.446/.448 with 22 hits, 11 RBIs, 7 walks, and 6 stolen bases.
“I know the stadium is going to be rocking, per usual. I wouldn’t necessarily say just because of the team across, the stadium is going to be more packed. You look at the past couple of series we’ve had at home, it’s 40,000 fans. Are there probably going to be more? Who knows?” Taylor said. “It’s just going to be another game, another day, take it how we got it.”
CLEVELAND, OHIO - JUNE 26: Luis Castillo #58 of the Seattle Mariners throws a pitch during the first inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Progressive Field on June 26, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Despite the Mariners winning this afternoon’s game against the Guardians, the big story was a standout performance from Cleveland’s starter, Joey Cantillo, and his newfound love of the curveball. The curveball’s fallen out of fashion in MLB lately. Just 8.2% of the pitches this season have been big benders, the second-lowest since 2008, despite the general rise of the secondary pitch and fade of the fastball. But there are exceptions to every trend, and Cantillo has decided to zig where the league has zagged, and all that movement left the Mariners flummoxed.
Here’s a little chart of Cantillo’s curveball usage leading up to today’s game:
Notice that big spike? That was Saturday’s game against the Astros, when he went eight innings, striking out nine against just one walk and one run allowed, on the back of a 45% curveball rate. Now here’s today’s game on that chart:
So on the one hand, you can forgive the Mariners for getting caught off guard. Prior to Saturday, Cantillo’s career high on the curveball was 33%, and he’d only pitched four games in which he used Uncle Charlie more than 30% of the time. The fact that the Mariners whiffed on the pitch more than half the time owes a lot to how dramatically Cantillo changed his game. I genuinely can’t remember the last time I saw a starting pitcher use his curve literally 50% of the time.
More troubling, though, was the Mariners’ inability to adjust. Even the second and third time through, they were still getting hammered by the 59-inch break. Take Dominic Canzone’s second at-bat. Cantillo threw five curveballs in a row, with Canzone whiffing twice and barely getting a piece of a third before finally giving Cantillo a sword on a fastball that Canzone obviously thought would be a curve. Seattle struck out on the curveball five times, with another four punchouts set up by it one way or another. The team only managed one hard hit off Cantillo’s curve, a 103-mph groundball off the bat of Julio Rodríguez, which ended the sixth and ended up being the final pitch Cantillo threw.
The Mariners did get to Cantillo once, a homecoming home run for Colt Emerson. In Colt’s first game in the ballpark he grew up coming to, he smashed a ball out of the park in front of all his friends and family. How did he do it? By laying off two curveballs and getting a changeup.
Colt doesn’t show as much emotion on the field as Cole Young, and the game state made the home run less consequential. But don’t let any of that fool you. This was just as special for him as Cole’s was in Pittsburgh.
And despite getting pretty well manhandled by Cantillo, the Mariners were in a fine position when he left the game because Luis Castillo put up six excellent innings of his own. In one way, it was vintage Castillo, mixing in all his pitches, and even getting four whiffs and several weak ground balls off his formerly premier cambio. In another way, it was hardly the Castillo of old, with just ten whiffs and four strikeouts. Still, I’m happy to celebrate a Castillo that rolls through a lineup on soft contact. No muss and no fuss isn’t as sexy as taking another team’s lunch money, but we could use a little less muss and fuss after Seattle’s last couple weeks. It’s good enough for today’s Sun Hat Award anyway.
The Mariners were able to win the game in the final three innings thanks to taking advantage of Cleveland’s mistakes. As soon as Cantillo left the game, Tim Herrin walked the first two Mariners he saw, Cal Raleigh and Dominic Canzone. And after some bad BABIP luck over the past month or so, the Mariners got a little good luck with Travis Bazzana bobbling J.P. Crawford’s groundball, allowing Cal to score. In the next inning, the Guardians once again let a free baserunner score when Colt Emerson walked and was driven in by Julio.
Those three runs were enough today, despite it being the 12th game in a row that the Mariners have scored three runs or fewer, because unlike Cleveland, Seattle’s bullpen locked down their starter’s good outing. Jose A. Ferrer, Gabe Speier, and Andrés Muñoz retired all nine batters they faced. Connor Donovan points out that over his last two outings, Muñoz has faced six left-handed batters out of six possible batters faced and struck out five of them. And remember that chart of Cantillo’s curveball usage? Let’s look at another one to close this out. It shows Gabe Speier’s fastball velocity over each month of his career.
That spike at the very end is only going to move higher because he averaged 97 mph again today. I’ll have more to say about that next week.
The Anaheim Ducks made a blockbuster trade during Friday night’s NHL Draft.
When the St. Louis Blues were set to take the podium at the draft, it was announced that they were trading the 15th and 29th picks to the Anaheim Ducks in exchange for Mason McTavish.
The Ducks went ahead and took Nikita Klepov at No. 15 and Marcus Nordmark at No. 28 after they traded the 29th and 117th pick to the Vegas Golden Knights.
Anaheim Ducks’ Mason McTavish huddled around his teammates. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect
McTavish, 23, was taken as a center by the Ducks with the third overall pick in the 2021 NHL Draft.
The departure of McTavish from the Ducks comes a year after the team signed him to a six-year, $42 million contract extension that he signed with the team last summer.
Fresh off his extension, it appeared that the Ducks would consist of a core made up of McTavish, Leo Carlsson, and Cutter Gauthier for years to come. But after a season in which McTavish regressed, it became more apparent that the Ducks and McTavish would soon part ways from one another.
After tallying 52 points, 22 goals, and 30 assists during the 2022-2025 season, McTavish got off to a hot start at the beginning of the year, putting together 11 points in his first 15 games, but after that, he faded away, finishing the season with 41 points, 17 goals, and 24 assists.
Anaheim Ducks Mason McTavish on the ice, about to shoot the puck. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect
McTavish’s departure from the Ducks comes after he lost the second-line center spot to Mikael Granlund and was moved over to left wing, so the Ducks’ third and fourth lines could finish with Ryan Poehlin and rookie Tim Washe.
The writing on the wall for McTavish’s future with the Ducks became more apparent as last season went on, being scratched multiple times during the regular season and sitting out twice during the Ducks’ second-round playoff matchup against the Golden Knights.
Klepov is considered a high-ceiling offensive forward who will play at Michigan State next season. In his first OHL season, he won the league’s scoring title after compiling 37 goals and 60 assists in 67 games.
With the 27th overall pick in the 2026 NHL Draft, the Philadelphia Flyers have selected massive defenseman Maksim Sokolovskii from the OHL London Knights.
After chatter about moving down in the draft, the Flyers finally did so, acquiring the 27th, 62nd, and 120th overall picks from the Sharks in exchange for their 21st overall pick.
With the 21st overall pick, the Sharks selected defenseman Ryan Lin.
Sokolovskii, 17, is widely regarded as the meanest, most physical player in the entire 2026 draft class, making him a perfect fit for a Flyers organization looking to get bigger, stronger, younger, and better on defense.
The Kazakh defender is a surprisingly strong skater for his 6-foot-7 size and will never hesitate to throw the body as hard as he can, as often as he can.
Of course, the Flyers have a deep history with the Knights, having drafted Denver Barkey and Oliver Bonk in 2023, and they continue to draft from the OHL.
First-round picks Jett Luchanko (2024) and Jack Nesbitt (2025) also hail from the OHL, and Matvei Michkov is the Flyers' last first-rounder to come from outside one of the CHL's best leagues.
Sokolovskii was ranked 22nd overall by EliteProspects, and his physicality was graded an 8.0 out of 9.
"Undeniably the draft's meanest, most physical player with the potential to become so much more; a high-probability NHLer with top-four upside," their draft profile summary on Sokolovskii read.
Sokolovskii will have to improve his puck handling and passing skills, but he has the size, athleticism, and aggression that just can't be taught.
He is committed to the University of Maine for the 2027-28 season.
The Los Angeles Angels have announced they are relieving general manager Perry Minasian of his duties and have appointed John Mozeliak as the club’s interim general manager.
Minasian’s departure was announced by a press release from Angels team president, Molly Jolly.
“Perry has been a valued leader who worked tirelessly over the last six years to strengthen our baseball operations department,” said Jolly via a press release by the Angels. “I am grateful for his dedication, insight and many contributions to our organization.”
Los Angeles Angels general manager Perry Minasian in the Angels dugout. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post
Minasian, 46, was hired as the club’s general manager in November, 2020. During that time, he was tasked with fixing the Angels.
He inherited Joe Maddon as his manager, Shohei Ohtani, a prime Mike Trout, and one of the worst farm systems in baseball.
Minasian’s tenure as general manager of the Angels oversaw multiple losing seasons and five different managers leading the clubhouse.
The Angels have failed to reach the postseason, a drought that dates back to 2014, and have failed to finish a season above .500, another drought that dates back to 2015.
In 2021, the club finished 77-85; since then, they’ve been steadily declining. In 2023, the team was having its best season under Minasian’s guidance, sitting at 52-49 when the trade deadline came around. The team would go on and win 21 of their next 61 games and would finish the season fourth in the American League West with a 73-89 record.
In 2023, the Angels had the opportunity to trade Ohtani, as multiple teams expressed interest in trading for him, but Angels owner Arte Moreno insisted the club kept him as they were hopeful they could sign him in free agency.
Los Angeles Angels players taking a team photo at Dodger Stadium. MLB Photos via Getty Images
As Minasian was tasked with fixing the Angels’ farm system and turning the team competitive on the fly, he notoriously drafted players who were close to being MLB-ready during the draft, notably Zach Neto, Nolan Schanuel [Who made his MLB Debut the same year he was drafted], Sam Bachman, and Christian Moore.
In his first year as general manager, he also had the infamous 2021 MLB draft, where he selected 20 pitchers as the Angels were in dire need of starting pitching. Only Bachman remains with the club from this class.
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Mozeliak will join the Angels following a 30-year tenure with the St. Louis Cardinals.
During his time in St. Louis, he spent the last 18 years leading the team’s baseball operations. During his guidance, he helped the team reach the postseason 10 times, winning 6 National League Central division titles, winning the National League Pennant twice, and helping the team win the World Series in 2011.
“John is one of the most accomplished and respected baseball executives with a proven track record of building a winning organization,” Said Jolly in a press release.
“For three decades, he constructed one of baseball’s most respected organizations, combining strong leadership with a commitment to player development and organizational excellence. We are thrilled to welcome him to the Angels and look forward to benefiting from his experience and perspective as we continue to shape the future of our organization.”
"It sucks,” Soto said when asked about his emotions when he heard the news. “It’s tough to see for a guy like that. I was really close with him; I talked to him a lot.
“Then to see him go, it’s really tough.”
Soto, who signed with the Mets on a 15-year deal after Mendoza’s first season as skipper, said he was informed of the decision by a call from the team’s front office. Soto said he spoke with Mendoza to express his appreciation for what the former manager did for him in welcoming him to the clubhouse “in the best way.”
“Not at all, not at all,” Soto said after Friday’s loss.
“It’s moves every day here. You see bullpen guys going up and down, trades, starters getting moved to the bullpen. You're always expecting those moves,” he continued. “But seeing Mendoza, it's just tough."
Soto said he didn’t think the team’s struggles were a result of players pressing in the hopes of rescuing the floundering season and saving the manager’s job.
“It’s tough, it’s part of baseball,” Soto said of the team’s struggles despite the talent on the roster. “We just haven’t been coming through in big situations. That’s the way the game goes, you gotta come through in the right moment.”
In Friday’s game, Soto came close to a two-run home run in the bottom of the first, but Phillies center fielder Derek Hill made a tremendous leaping grab to bring the ball back from over the fence.
“I think it was an unbelievable catch,” Soto said. “When you see the replays, you see how impressive it was. He didn’t even have any time; he just went straight to the wall and jumped. That was incredible.”