Bruins must ride Swayman to bolster chance at making playoffs

Bruins must ride Swayman to bolster chance at making playoffs originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Bruins entered Wednesday in the first wild card playoff spot in the Eastern Conference thanks to a regulation wins tiebreaker advantage over the Detroit Red Wings. Both teams have earned 82 points from 68 games.

Keeping that postseason spot could prove very difficult for the B’s from now through the April 14 regular season finale.

The Bruins have a slim one-point lead over the Columbus Blue Jackets and a five-point edge on the Ottawa Senators in the wild card race. The Blue Jackets have one game in hand on Boston, while the Senators have two.

Boston’s margin for error in this tightly contested playoff battle is extremely small. The Blue Jackets and Senators aren’t going away. Columbus has taken at least a point from 10 straight games. Ottawa is 7-1-2 in its last 10 games.

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With points at an absolute premium, the Bruins need to rely on their No. 1 goalie to carry them back to the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

The Bruins have 14 games remaining, including two back-to-backs, and Jeremy Swayman should start almost every single one of them.

Swayman has been the Bruins’ best player this season. He has bounced back nicely from a difficult 2024-25 campaign. The 27-year-old netminder has a 26-14-4 record with a .906 save percentage and a 2.77 GAA.

Those numbers don’t look elite, but if you dig deeper, it’s easy to see how impressive he has played this season.

The Bruins have given up the second-most high-danger scoring chances in the league, per Natural Stat Trick. They also rank 30th in shots allowed and 26th in scoring chances allowed. Swayman has faced 376 high-danger shots this season, which is the third-most of any goalie. He has an impressive .827 save percentage on those shots.

Swayman ranks third among all goalies with 22.8 goals saved above expected, per MoneyPuck. His 3.80 wins above replacement is also third-best among netminders. His 30 quality starts are the third-most and trails the league leader, Andrei Vasilevskiy, by two.

The bottom line is the Bruins are defending poorly, which has forced Swayman to thwart a ton of Grade A scoring chances by the opposition, and so far he has more than stepped up to the challenge.

If Swayman played on a team that defended at a high level, he might be the Vezina Trophy favorite right now. And honestly, he’s still making a case to be a finalist for the award despite playing on a bad defensive team.

Look at Tuesday night’s loss in Montreal, for example. The Canadiens tallied 25 high-danger chances — the most the Bruins have allowed in any game this season. Montreal’s expected goals scored was five, but Swayman allowed only three (two in regulation).

Jeremy SwaymanDavid Kirouac-Imagn Images
The Bruins need Jeremy Swayman to play spectacular down the stretch to secure a playoff berth.

There’s not much to suggest the Bruins will suddenly become a consistently good defensive team over the final 14 games, and that’s a huge reason why Swayman needs to play almost all of the remaining matchups. He set a career-high last year with 58 starts. He’s made 44 starts this season, so it’s not like he’s been overworked. And after playing only one game for Team USA during the three-week Olympic break in February, he shouldn’t be fatigued.

Another reason to play Swayman most of the remaining games is backup goalie Joonas Korpisalo cannot be trusted to give the Bruins a chance to win on a consistent basis. Korpisalo has allowed four or more goals in four of his last five starts, and he’s on pace to finish with a save percentage below .900 for the third consecutive season. He has a .888 save percentage with 27 goals allowed in his last seven games.

The Bruins have the league’s toughest remaining schedule, per Tankathon. Seven of their last 14 games are against playoff teams and eight are on the road. The Bruins play the Red Wings on Saturday and the Blue Jackets twice more in Columbus. They also play the Atlantic Division-leading Lightning twice.

The Bruins need to play their best hockey of the season over the next month to secure a playoff spot. Every point is critical.

Swayman is the sixth-highest paid goalie in the league and he’s performing at an elite level. It’s time for the Bruins to rely on him almost every game the rest of the way. If that means starting 12 (or more) of the last 14 games, so be it.

Dodgers’ Roki Sasaki has another erratic outing as he tries to earn role in starting rotation

SURPRISE, Ariz. — Roki Sasaki had another up-and-down performance in a spring training game against the Kansas City Royals as he tries to solidify his spot in the Los Angeles Dodgers ' starting rotation.

The 24-year-old Japanese right-hander got off to a good start, giving up one hit, walking one and striking out two through two scoreless innings. But after fanning Gavin Cross to start the third, he lost command, walking three straight before manager Dave Roberts took him out of the game.

Roberts said he was encouraged by aspects of Sasaki’s outing, but there needs to be more efficiency.

“You’ve got to be able to take down innings and be able to make adjustments sooner,” Roberts said. “I know there were some things he was working through tonight, but when you’re in the middle of a game, you’ve got to find a way to adjust quicker. That’s something that’s probably part of the learning curve for him.”

Sasaki re-entered in the fourth — a quirk that’s allowed during spring training — and struck out two more while also allowing a two-run homer. He started the fifth, giving up a hard-hit double to veteran Starling Marte before leaving the game for good.

The final line: 3 1/3 innings, four hits, three earned runs, four walks and five strikeouts. Sasaki threw 71 pitches, including 38 strikes.

“There are a lot of things I need to work on, but it’s just spring training,” he said through an interpreter.

Sasaki’s positives are obvious. He has an electric fastball that touched 99 mph, a great splitter and a newly-added cutter that often was effective. But there also are moments when he can’t seem to repeat his pitching delivery, leaving him prone to bouts of wildness.

“When it’s good, it’s really good,” Roberts said. “We’re just trying to get him to be more efficient in the strike zone.”

It was Sasaki’s third Cactus League appearance and first since March 3. He has a 13.50 ERA this spring, giving up 10 runs over 6 2/3 innings.

He also pitched in a game against White Sox minor leaguers on March 10 and threw four scoreless innings.

Sasaki entered his rookie year in 2025 with a lot of fanfare, but didn’t pitch much in the majors during the regular season, finishing 1-1 with a 4.46 ERA over 36 1/3 erratic innings. He appeared in 10 games, starting eight, and missed more than four months because of a right shoulder impingement.

He returned in September and became a key piece of the bullpen during the postseason, giving up just one earned run over 10 2/3 innings and earning three saves to help the Dodgers win their second straight World Series title.

Sasaki agreed to a minor league contract with a $6.5 million signing bonus last offseason, becoming the 13th Japanese player to join the franchise.

José Berríos Out With Stress Fracture

DUNEDIN, FL - FEBRUARY 20: José Berríos #17 of the Toronto Blue Jays poses for a photo during the Toronto Blue Jays photo day at TD Ballpark on Friday, February 20, 2026 in Dunedin, Florida. (Photo by Mike Carlson/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

First of all, cheers to the Venezuela for winning the WBC. It seemed like the odds were stacked against them, having to play for the second night in a row and now being able to lose the reliever who got them past Italy. The reaction of their players and the Venezuelan fans make the whole WBC worth the effort.

I wonder if Daniel Palencia glove has fallen to the ground. He threw it so high. Eduardo Rodriguez had such a terrific start. And they got just enough hitting.

On the US side, they got just three hits, two of them from Bryce Harper. Their offense never really got going throughout the WBC. I can’t say I’m sorry for Mark DeRosa.


John Schneider told reporters that José Berríos has a stress fracture in his elbow. He also went on to say that José has been ‘remarkably’ pain-free. He won’t be on the roster opening day and there is no time line suggested, just that he’ll rest the arm for a bit and then start back up. How long ‘a bit’ is we have no idea.

He went so many years in a row getting his 32 starts that it’s not a surprise his arm is asking for some time off.

I guess I shouldn’t have laughed at how many starting pitcher the accumulated this off-season.


The Jays have announced their starters for the next few days:

  • Today: Josh Flemming. Eric Lauer will start in a minor league game today. With the Berríos news, Lauer is likely to have a starter’s role at the start of the season.
  • Thursday: Cody Ponce.
  • Friday: Max Sherzer.
  • Saturday: Kevin Gausman.
  • Sunday: Dylan Cease.

Today’s lineups. The game is at 1:00 Eastern. I interested to see Eloy play first base. Too bad Andrés Giménez isn’t back yet (though I’d imagine his nursing a hangover today), the back of the lineup could have been Giménez, Jiménez, Jiménez.

Today’s Lineups

ORIOLESBLUE JAYS
Dylan Beavers – RFGeorge Springer – DH
Adley Rutschman – CDaulton Varsho – CF
Pete Alonso – DHAlejandro Kirk – C
Ryan Mountcastle – 1BAddison Barger – RF
Colton Cowser – LFKazuma Okamoto – 3B
Blaze Alexander – CFNathan Lukes – LF
Jeremiah Jackson – 2BDavis Schneider – 2B
Weston Wilson – 3BEloy Jimenez – 1B
Jose Barrero – SSLeo Jimenez – SS
Albert Suarez – RHPJosh Fleming – LHP

Celtics star Jayson Tatum leaned on family during his Achilles rehab

Jayson Tatum leaned on family during one of the toughest times in his career.

The Boston Celtics' six-time All-Star’s right Achilles tendon ruptured during Game 4 of the NBA Eastern Conference semifinals against the New York Knicks on May 12, 2025.

Tatum mentioned that he stayed at his mom’s house during a part of his recovery.

"She’s set a good foundation for my life and helped me become the basketball player that I am," Tatum told USA TODAY. "To have her be a part of the off-the-court things that I'm doing is important."

His injury kept him away from live-game action for nearly 300 days before he was cleared and ready to return.

His mom recently joined him in a March Madness commercial for AT&T. The commercial showed Tatum on a video call with his mother while a small child, meant to play the role of his son Deuce, dunks on a toy basketball hoop for the first time.

"It was all about sharing special moments with my family," Tatum said, "I think it went really well."

The commercial also allowed him to reflect on his first time he was able to dunk a basketball during a middle school game in St. Louis.

In his return to NBA action, Tatum recorded a double-double in his season debut as the Celtics earned a 120-100 victory over the Dallas Mavericks on March 6.

Boston Celtics forward Jayson Tatum (0) dribbles against Phoenix Suns forward Oso Ighodaro (11) during the second half at the TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts on March 16, 2026.

His first dunk attempt upon returning wasn’t as easy. Tatum was still testing out what he could do in a live-game situation and had one of his attempts denied by the rim.

Tatum had a slow start in the first half after being introduced and welcomed back by the Boston crowd.

He went 2-for-8 from the field for five points. He also had five rebounds and five assists.

The NBA champion produced the points in the final moments of the second quarter, bringing the crowd to their feet with a putback dunk and a three-pointer on the following possession.

He had 15 points, 12 rebounds and seven assists in front of the Boston fans at the TD Garden.

"Hey, I’m back," Tatum said about his mindset for coming back. "Let’s continue where we left off. Our goal is to win a championship."

The forward has nearly produced a double-double in the five games he’s played in since his return. He’s averaging 20 points, 8.2 rebounds and 4.4 assists.

Jaylen Brown and the Celtics went 41-21 to start the season with Tatum out of the lineup. Boston has put together a 4-2 record since Tatum’s return.

"I couldn’t be more proud of this team for the way they attacked the season and how they went about it to be the second or third seed in the Eastern Conference," Tatum added.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Jayson Tatum leaned on family during injury rehab, return to Celtics

Braves will return broadcast crew for inaugural BravesVision season

PHILADELPHIA, PA - SEPTEMBER 13: Bally announcer Brandon Gaudin interviews Austin Riley #27 after the Atlanta Braves defeatec the Philadelphia Phillies to clinch the NL East at Citizens Bank Park on September 13, 2023 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Kevin D. Liles/Atlanta Braves/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We already had this confirmed directly to us, but hey, have a very long press release:

Basically, Brandon Gaudin and C.J. Nitkowski are coming back as the main booth lads, Jeff Francoeur will be there when he feels like it (a 30-game commitment), while Wiley Ballard and Paul Byrd will chip in from the sidelines.

Former Braves Peter Moylan, Nick Green, and Charlie Culberson will handle pre-game and post-game stuff, which I can’t comment on because I will always just switch to a different game rather than bothering to watch someone talk about the game I just watched where I already know what happens.

On a personal preference level, it’s basically impossible for me to complain because the current broadcast situation is so many leagues better than what existed in the Chip Caray era that I’m eternally grateful for not having to mute the game within the first few batters each time. Gaudin and Byrd definitely enhance my experience, and this crew seems to work well together.

And, before you fill up the comments on the same topic, no, we don’t know of any other carrier deals with BravesVision yet… so if you’re looking to get it via cable or a streaming service, you’ll still have to stay tuned until we do know.

Canadiens Still Need To Fix Recurrent Mistake

Recently, the Montreal Canadiens’ defensive woes have been at the forefront of their press coverage. Not that it’s a new issue, it’s been there all season long, but when you’re winning, or you can pin the loss on the goaltender, it’s not as obvious.

In their two losses against the San Jose Sharks and the Anaheim Ducks over the weekend, Martin St-Louis’ men committed a whopping 40 giveaways. When you turn the puck over to the opponent and find yourself having to flip to defence mode in an instant, you’re more likely to commit mistakes in your reads or your coverage, and that’s exactly how the Canadiens lost those two games.

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On Tuesday night, the Canadiens cut down on turnovers. Through 40 minutes, they had only committed six, and they ended the game with 11. Lane Hutson and Kaiden Guhle were separated after being on the ice for the Ducks’ game-winner on Sunday, with the sophomore skating with Jayden Struble while Guhle was paired with Alexandre Carrier.

While the defensive play was better, it wasn’t perfect. The Habs’ difficulty with the man-to-man defensive coverage was particularly evident on the Boston Bruins’ second goal. Struble had his man, but Hutson and Oliver Kapanen went for the same man, Viktor Arvidsson, leaving Pavel Zacha, who had scored the Bruins’ first goal, to skate unhindered to Jakub Dobes’ net and be in perfect position to convert on Arvidsson’s pass.

Throughout the season, the Canadiens have outscored their issues. They simply scored so many goals that it didn’t matter that they allowed so much because they were able to run up the score. The problem with that is when you get to the playoffs, or even nearer to the playoffs, as we are now, teams tighten up, and they play a more defensive game. You can’t outscore fundamental defensive flaws in the playoffs.

At this stage of the season, it’s too late for a complete overhaul of the defensive system, but Martin St-Louis has to be aware that there’s a lot of work to be done there. While on paper the system works, it means that on the ice, players need to make the right reads in a split second. That’s easier said than done, and if a player like Oliver Kapanen with such a high hockey I.Q. can make a mistake, anybody can. On Tuesday, instead of sticking with his man, the Finn stopped and was drawn to the puck carrier who Hutson already had. 

Of course, it’s impossible to play a perfect game in which you make no mistakes, but if the Canadiens want to get to the playoffs and play more than the five games they had last season, they need to tidy things up as a matter of urgency. 


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AL West Preview – Astros prospects, the fun part

HOUSTON, TEXAS - SEPTEMBER 19: The Houston Astros 2025 first round draft pick, Xavier Neyens, takes batting practice in front of Astros general manager Dana Brown before a game against the Seattle Mariners at Daikin Park on September 19, 2025 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Houston Astros/Getty Images) | Getty Images

This might be the easiest, low-stress, high-joy article I write this season.

It’s just so much fun to research the Houston farm system. It’s kind of hard to even come up with sections or headers for this one, so let’s just jump into it. 

Baseball America: 27th in organizational rankings, 0 Top-100 prospects (hell yeah)

Baseball Prospectus: 27th, 0 Top-101 prospect (Hell Yeah)

FanGraphs: Org rank not updated, but ended 2025 ~29th, 0 Top-100 prospects: (HELL YEAH)

MLB Pipeline: 29th, 0 Top-100 prospects: (can i get a big fat “hell yeah” in the chat?)

The Good:

The pride of Northwest Washington State, shortstop Xavier Neyens is, in most evaluators eyes, the top prospect for the Astros. Before being Houston’s 2025 1st draft pick, Neyens played for Mount Vernon High School in Mount Vernon, WA, just a 25 minute drive down the road from little ole’ me up here in Bellingham. 

He spent his senior year terrorizing the Northwest Conference, leading the Bulldogs to a 20-game win streak, a 25-3 record, and a 2025 3A state title. A bat-first player, he hit .456 with eight home runs, had an on-base percentage of .689 (buoyed by a state championship game where he was intentionally walked four times), and racked up 35 stolen bases. That’s nothing to say of his heroics as the Bulldogs’ closer, where he went 6-for-6 in save opportunities, delivered 11.5 K/9, and flashed 95 mph and 22”+ of IVB on the fastball. 

He was that guy. Neyens is a high-floor prospect with five strong tools whose power has the potential to carry him. Expect for him to break the top-100 prospect drought for Houston by the end of the season.

The Rest:

This concludes the end of the high-floor and high–ceiling section of the Houston farm system. From here on out, it’s all risk/reward calculations, baby. 

Kevin Alvarez is MLB Pipeline’s top prospect for Houston, but he only comes in at no. 5 for Baseball America, as BA heavily weighs his high-risk profile and how early he is in his development process. 

Baseball America describes the system’s 3rd-best prospect (Brice Matthews) as a likely utility player with a 30 grade on the bat. Not what you’re looking for from the number 3 spot. 

Almost none of the rest of the top 10 of this system have what can even be described as a medium floor. They range from low-floor, high-ceiling at best, to low-floor, lowish mediumish ceiling on average. 

Now, for the being fair and not purely gloating section: the Astros have been very successful at development over the last 10 years. It’s fair to think that many of these players may reach the higher end of their profile. This is not the first time that we’ve looked at their farm system and not thought there was any gas left in the tank. 

In conclusion: I wish a million risk upon the Houston Astros, and a zero reward upon them as well. I think my wish will be coming true.

The World Baseball Classic matters, no matter what you or Derek Jeter say about it

MIAMI, FLORIDA - MARCH 17: Daniel Palencia #29 of Team Venezuela celebrates after the 3-2 victory against Team United States at loanDepot park on March 17, 2026 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Megan Briggs/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Certain segments of American baseball fans and the American baseball establishment are struggling to accept an increasingly obvious reality: The World Baseball Classic matters a lot, even if it doesn’t matter all that much to them.

Prior to last night’s championship clash between the USA and Venezuela, Derek Jeter, who played in the first iteration of the WBC back in 2006, dismissed the tournament in a typically American way, which is to say a typically arrogant way:

It’s not at all surprising that Derek Jeter values the World Series over the World Baseball Classic. And I would never tell him he is wrong to do so. Meaning does not inherently exist in anything. Meaning is not something that can be objectively measured like the weather or the decibel level of the crowd in Miami last night. The meaning of anything in the world — whether we’re talking about a baseball tournament or a favorite tee-shirt — is determined by what’s in someone’s heart.

But while I would not tell Derek Jeter that he is wrong to value the World Series over the World Baseball Classic, I would tell him that he is objectively wrong to say that anyone who has played in a World Series finds more meaning in that than in the WBC. We already know this is not the case. Kiké Hernandez, who has played in more World Series than any other active player, directly told this to to all of us, Jeter included:

Hernandez’s sentiment is plainly shared by the vast majority of non-American ballplayers. Anyone who watched these games could see that. They tried to tell us this with every bat they flipped, with every dugout rail they hopped, with every tear that they shed on the field — whether those tears came from Shohei Ohtani before the first game, or Salvador Perez after the last. That Derek Jeter refuses to listen to them is disappointing but not surprising. Indeed, the dismissal of these players’ own feelings is foundational to how the global baseball industry works.

The economic system that controls global baseball is a product of American economic imperialism. As with bananas in the Caribbean, pineapples in the Hawaiian islands, or oil in the Middle East, America has used its economic might to shape the way that baseball is both produced and consumed around the world, ensuring that the vast majority of money spent on baseball flows into the pockets of American ownership interests.

Venezuelan big leaguers are not victims under this system. Far from it. The exploitation of their talents by American capitalism has made many of them millionaires, far more financially comfortable than just about anyone else in their home country, where the median annual income isn’t enough to cover one month’s rent for a studio apartment in many parts of the United States.

But Venezuelan baseball culture is a victim of this system. Venezuela does not have a thriving and independent domestic baseball league that provides full-time jobs for coaches, groundskeepers, statisticians, scouts, writers, TV personalties, and social media influencers, like we have here in America. Venezuelan fans cannot take the train to the ballpark and buy a ticket to watch Ranger Suárez pitch to Ronald Acuña, Jr. Venezuelan ballplayers cannot make a living in their home country. They are instead given no other option but to ply their trade in a foreign land — one that is increasingly hostile and unwelcoming to them, one that sees them as lesser and now harasses and intimidates them as a matter of government policy, as the hero of last night’s game, Eugenio Suárez, has frankly and honestly discussed.

That Venezuelans do not have a viable baseball industry of their own is not because Venezuelans care less about baseball than Americans do. On a per capita basis, they almost certainly care a lot more. It’s because might makes right — whether that might comes in the form of the dollar or the gun. The economic realities of the world force Venezuelan ballplayers to not only leave their country to work, but to check meaningful parts of their culture and identify at the border in exchange for a paycheck. They do so largely without complaint, just as you and I likely would if the economic situation were reversed. But that doesn’t mean they don’t make real sacrifices. In order to do their jobs they leave all they know from birth behind and live a rootless life of baseball nomadism. They are forced to endure a kind of cultural loneliness.

What Derek Jeter can’t see is that it is precisely this cultural loneliness that gives the WBC so much meaning to many of these players. For one month every few years they are with their people. They don’t have to speak someone else’s language, eat someone else’s food, or adhere to someone else’s unwritten rules of behavior and decorum. For one month they are free to be fully Venezuelan and fully a ballplayer at the same time. Instead of sublimating their cultural identity in order to play baseball, they get to express their cultural identity through baseball.

The World Baseball Classic does nothing to break the American economic stranglehold over the global baseball industry. That was Rob Manfred handing out the medals last night, after all. The WBC is owned and operated by American ownership interests, and they do it for no other reason than it makes them even more money.

But what the WBC does do is break the cultural hegemony that America has always wielded over the game. This manifests itself not only in the way the game is played on the field during the tournament, but how the tournament is held in the hearts of those who are playing it. The American baseball establishment still controls the baseball industry, but it doesn’t control what baseball means. These players have decided that the WBC means more to them than the World Series. And because meaning is something that only exists in the heart, they are right.

Astros vs. Cardinals 3/18/2026 Spring Training Game Thread

CHICAGO, IL - APRIL 23: J.P. France #68 of the Houston Astros pitches against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field on April 23, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Jamie Sabau/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Houston Astros (10-10-3) travel to Jupiter to take on the St. Louis Cardinals (12-9-2) in Grapefruit League play.

RHP J.P. France will make his fifth appearance, including his first start of the Grapefruit League this season. RHP Kyle Leahy will be on the mound for the Cardinals facing the Astros for the third time this Spring.

TODAY’S STARTER: RHP J.P. France is set to make his fifth appearance, including his first start of the Grapefruit League this season. He last pitched on March 13 at STL, where he allowed one hit and one walk with five strikeouts in 3.0 scoreless innings.

He missed a majority of the 2025 season while recovering from right shoulder surgery, making only two appearances with the Astros in 2025.

TODAY’S POTENTIAL RELIEVERS: RHP AJ Blubaugh, LHP Steven Okert and RHP Kai-Wei Teng.

TODAY’S ROSTER MOVE: The Astros have reassigned C Collin Price to minor league camp.

Game Info

Game Date/Time: Wednesday, March 18, 12:05 p.m. CST

Location: Roger Dean Chevrolet Stadium – Jupiter, FL

TV: none

Streaming: MLB.com (Cardinals feed, subscription required)

Radio: KBME 790 AM/94.5 FM HD-2

Dodgers option Kyle Hurt to Triple-A, opening day choices narrow

MESA, ARIZONA - MARCH 8: Kyle Hurt #63 of the Los Angeles Dodgers throws a warm up pitch during a Spring Training game against the Athletics at HoHoKam Stadium on March 8, 2026 in Mesa, Arizona. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Dodgers on Wednesday optioned pitcher Kyle Hurt to Triple-A Oklahoma City, getting closer to finalizing the opening day roster.

After Tuesday night’s win over the Royals in Surprise, manager Dave Roberts was asked by Kirsten Watson on SportsNet LA if, this late into camp, the team has seen what they needed to see to finalize the opening day roster.

“We have,” Roberts said. “We’re going to have some good conversations, some hard conversations over the next couple of days.”

Hurt had Tommy John surgery on July 30, 2024 and spent all of 2025 on the injured list. But unlike some of his returning-from-surgery cohorts in camp, the right-hander did pitch on rehab in Triple-A for the final month of the regular season, and was used during scrimmages during the postseason throughout October.

In seven appearances this spring, Hurt allowed three runs on six hits in 7 1/3 innings for a 3.68 ERA with two walks and 12 strikeouts, the latter representing a 40-percent strikeout rate.

After missing most of the last two seasons with injuries — he only pitched in .. games in 2024 — Hurt is back as a potential bullpen piece this season. Given that the Dodgers have used 39, 40, and 40 pitchers over the previous three seasons, if Hurt stays healthy this year he should get plenty of opportunities to contribute in Los Angeles.

Hurt getting options leaves only a few pitching roster decisions to be made to finalize the opening day roster. Blake Snell, Gavin Stone, Brusdar Graterol, Brock Stewart, and Bobby Miller all won’t be ready for opening day. That leaves only 15 available pitchers on the 40-man roster who haven’t already been optioned, plus two non-roster invitees in left-hander Antoine Kelly and right-hander Chris Campos.

In other words, only four more cuts to go to get down to 13 active pitchers for opening day.

Senators vs Capitals Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight’s NHL Game

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The Ottawa Senators are playing their best hockey of the season and look to inch closer to a playoff berth with a win over the Washington Capitals at Capital One Arena on Wednesday, March 18.

My top Senators vs. Capitals predictions and NHL picks are calling for Ottawa to do just that and top Washington tonight.

Senators vs Capitals prediction

Senators vs Capitals best bet: Senators moneyline (-125)

The Ottawa Senators are putting together a postseason push with an active 11-2-2 record while ranking fourth in Corsi For percentage and second in expected goals percentage at 5-on-5.

It’s a different story for the Washington Capitals, with respective ranks of 25th and 20th during the same stretch.

Additionally, I also value Sens starter Linus Ullmark going 7-1-2 with a respectable 4.12 goals saved above expected since returning to action.

Senators vs Capitals same-game parlay

A key to success during Ottawa's heater has been excellent defense, with the Sens allowing the fewest goals per game (2.13) and third-fewest expected goals per 60 minutes at 5-on-5. 

Plus, the Capitals have played to the Under in 10 of their last 12 games (+7.95 Units / 61% ROI).

Sens winger Drake Batherson rounds out the same-game parlay, as he continues to be mispriced in the points market. He’s found the scoresheet in six of his past eight games to climb to an impressive 3.19 points per 60 minutes.

Senators vs Capitals SGP

  • Senators moneyline
  • Under 6.5
  • Drake Batherson Over 0.5 points

Senators vs Capitals odds

  • Moneyline: Senators -125 | Capitals +115
  • Puck Line: Senators -1.5 (+185) | Capitals +1.5 (-225)
  • Over/Under: Over 6.5 (+115) | Under 6.5 (-135)

Senators vs Capitals trend

The Washington Capitals have hit the Under in 10 of their last 12 games (+7.95 Units / 61% ROI). Find more NHL betting trends for Senators vs. Capitals.

How to watch Senators vs Capitals

LocationCapital One Arena, Washington, DC
DateWednesday, March 18, 2026
Puck drop7:30 p.m. ET
TVMNMT, Sportsnet

Senators vs Capitals latest injuries

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Dodgers finalize spring breakout roster

GLENDALE, ARIZONA - MARCH 10: Zyhir Hope #94 of the Los Angeles Dodgers jogs on the field during a Spring Training game against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Camelback Ranch on March 10, 2026 in Glendale, Arizona. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Dodgers prospects play White Sox prospects on Saturday afternoon at Camelback Ranch, and on Wednesday all teams finalized their rosters for these spring breakout games.

This game on Saturday will be in the big league stadium at Camelback Ranch, and was originally slated for 3:30 p.m., after the Dodgers play the A’s. But due to excessive in and around Phoenix, everything was moved up one hour. The Dodgers Cactus League game will start at 11:05 a.m., with the prospects game coming at 2:30 p.m.

MLB Network will televise the Dodgers-White Sox spring breakout game, which will be streamed for free on the MLB app.

The Dodgers trimmed down from their preliminary list of 40 potential players for the spring breakout game to 27 players expected active on Saturday.

As expected, the slew of outfield prospects will be there, including all four top-100 prospects Josue De Paula, Zyhir Hope, Eduardo Quintero, and Mike Sirota, plus the slightly-older Zach Ehrhard and James Tibbs III who impressed in big league camp, plus 100-steal man Kendall George.

On the pitching side, Christian Zazueta and Adam Serwinoski stand out. Also active on Saturday are three of the Dodgers’ first four draft picks from 2025 — pitcher Zach Root, his Arkansas teammate outfielder Charles Davalan, and outfielder Landyn Vidourek.

Dodgers spring breakout roster
  • Left-handed pitchers (4): Maddux Bruns, Cody Morse, Zach Root, Adam Serwinowski
  • Right-handed pitchers (4): Cam DayPayton Martin, Marlon Nieves, Christian Zazueta
  • Catchers (2): Francisco Espinoza, Victor Rodrigues
  • Infielders (7): Moises Bolivar, Chase Harlan, Elijah Hainline, Kellon Lindsey, Emil Morales, Joendry Vargas, Logan Wagner
  • Outfielders (10): Charles Davalan, Josue De Paula, Zach Ehrhard, Kendall George, Zyhir Hope, Eduardo Quintero, Mike Sirota, James Tibbs III, Brendan Tunink, Landyn Vidourek

Build Your Winning Bracket!

SB Nation’s CBB expert Mike Rutherford and resident bracketologist Chris Dobbertean will answer all your questions this week and help guide you to bracket glory! Drop in SB Nation’s March Madness Feed all week long and we’ll have both on hand! (All times ET)

Mikel Brown Jr. to miss Louisville's first round March Madness game vs South Florida

Louisville basketball will be without star freshman Mikel Brown Jr. for its Men's NCAA Tournament first round game against 11-seed South Florida on Thursday in Buffalo.

If the Cardinals are to win, Brown will also miss Saturday's second round game, the school announced Wednesday. The winner of Louisville/South Florida plays the winner of Michigan State/North Dakota State.

Brown has been dealing with a nagging back injury, but Cardinals coach Pat Kelsey said Monday, March 16 that Brown had “made great progress” leading up to this week.

Brown, a projected 2026 NBA draft lottery pick, averaged 18.2 points and 4.7 assists per game this season, but last played Feb. 28. He's missed 11 games this season.

It's a major blow for the Cardinals, who are reliant on the star point guard.

Louisville enters March Madness with a 7-5 record with Brown on the bench vs. a 16-5 record when he plays. Per CBBAnalytics.com, it averages 6.4 fewer points per 40 minutes (88.1 vs. 81.7) and shoots 4.8% worse from beyond the arc (38.2% vs. 33.4%) when he's not on the court.

Kelsey said Brown reaggravated the back injury, which initially surfaced in mid-December, by taking some hard falls during a Feb. 23 loss at then-No. 19 North Carolina.

Brown told reporters at the ACC Tournament he was "starting to get there. I'm slowly progressing; I'm slowly doing more day in and day out, just trying to get a feel for it. But, obviously, like coach said, the plan is: I'll come back when I'm 100%."

When asked, "Are you 100% positive that you’ll be back for the NCAA Tournament?" He replied, "Right now, I’m just focused on my rehab more than anything. When the time feels right, I'm going to talk to the coaching staff; and we’re going to come to an agreement."

Will Mikel Brown Jr. play vs South Florida in March Madness?

The Louisville star freshman has been ruled out for Thursday's first round game against the Bulls. And if the Cardinals are to advance, he won't play in the second round game either.

March Madness schedule: When is Louisville vs South Florida?

  • Time/day: 1:30 p.m., Thursday
  • TV: TNT

Louisville Courier-Journal reporter Brooks Holton contributed to this story.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Mikel Brown Jr injury update: Louisville star out first two rounds

Knicks Bulletin: ‘So if my shot’s not falling, what does that mean?’

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - DECEMBER 2: Filmmaker Spike Lee looks on before a game between the Boston Celtics and the New York Knicks at TD Garden on December 2, 2025 in Boston, Massachusetts. 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 Adam Glanzman/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Turns out tankers are not only tankers, but also bad-as-hell buncha guys.

The Knicks trounced the Pacers, and the best is yet to come as they 1) were without JB and 2) next face the Nets.

Forgive me for the lack of multimedia bits today, but X is down right now. Cold world.

Mike Brown

On helping players find their rhythm whether they’re scoring or not:

“More than anything else, you hope that everyone’s playing the right way. So if my shot’s not falling, what does that mean? Maybe I try to get to the rim, or I try to go get an offensive rebound, or I try to get out in transition and get an easy one just to see it go in. So those types of things you hope guys realize and try to embrace to help get a rhythm while we’re trying to help them, too.”

On focusing on honing out details late in the season:

“It’s about embracing the details, focusing the right way, and playing with a sense of urgency while making other teams feel us at this point in the season.”

On Mikal Bridges working through his slump:

“Mikal’s a pro. He’s been through this before. And we’ve had other guys go through it this year. He’s going to find his rhythm. Just got to keep trying to embrace doing other things and try to get some easys: try to attack the rim, try to get to the free throw line, try to get out in transition and get offensive rebounds. But it’s the same stuff that I would say and that I have said about other guys trying to find ways to impact the game, which he’s more than capable of doing.”

On leaving Bridges on the court to help him regain some confidence:

“He hit a couple shots down the stretch and to try to get anybody that hasn’t shot well from the 3-point line, to try to get him more looks, especially in a game like this, was a good thing. To try to get him an extra look or two down the stretch is something we wanted to do.”

On demanding stronger starts from the Knicks:

“I’ve said it before, our focus, our physicality, our sense of urgency to embrace the details possession after possession, while making our opponents feel us. We can’t ease into the game.”

On Josh Hart’s connectivity with the starters amid whispers of a lineup change:

“I think the main thing is him connecting the group. I’m not saying he is Andre Iguodala or his game is like Andre Iguodala’s, but there are a lot of similarities. When you watch him, you’re like, ‘oh my gosh he’s a great shooter.’ But you’re like he’s pretty good at that, he’s really good in a lot different areas. But more importantly he connects the group and having a guy like that especially to start games is huge. With him missing all the preseason and me getting used to how we can play with him, the different ways people guard us with him on the floor took some time but he’s been fantastic giving us that energy, giving us the connectivity we needed with that starting group and then doing the little things. Offensive glass, pushing the pace, getting off in transition. He’s a switchable guy, he’s a physical guy and a lot of things that don’t necessarily show up in the stat sheet that he does that help with connectivity as well.”

On Hart taking the right shots on Tuesday:

“I just like that he took the right shots and he didn’t hesitate.”

On keeping Hart alongside Tyler Kolek on the floor vs. Indy:

“Not just for the starting five, but yeah. Especially when Tyler, as a young point guard, is on the floor we try to keep Josh out there with him. Just to help in that area at times. He was still kind of finding his way; so Josh is a great secondary ball handler within the group.”

On giving Bridges extra looks late:

“To try to get anybody that hadn’t shot it well from the three-point line to get another look, especially in a game like this, was a good thing. You talk about Mikal’s streak and his durability – when he turned his ankle, I was like, ‘Whoa.’ So for him to be able to somehow someway fight through that was good to see. So to try to get him an extra look or two down the stretch was something that we wanted to do.”

On choosing Jordan Clarkson over Mohamed Diawara in the Pacers game:

“We’ll continue to see what happens going forward. We’ve all had the pleasure of being able to see Mo at a young age contribute a lot. He just has to keep himself ready like Jordan did. Go out there when your number’s called, don’t do too much but do what you can do and perform at the highest level in terms of your work ethic, focus and attention to detail and just go from there.”

On potentially changing the starting lineup for the playoffs:

“It’s not too late to do anything. If I feel the need, I will. I’m not thinking that right now. I’m concentrating on each individual because, like you said, we’ve started different people at different times. It’s collectively.”

On Miles McBride’s recovery timeline:

“Anytime we can get healthy, yeah. I try not to hear the updates though, because does that mean he’ll be back in two weeks, three weeks, a week, 10 days? I don’t know. Deuce was playing well for us when this happened. It’s part of the season, so keep fingers crossed, allow our medical crew who has done a fantastic job, and when he comes back we’ll all be excited.”

On expecting Jalen Brunson to return on Friday:

“I imagine he’ll play in Brooklyn. There’s two days off before the next game. There’s plenty of time to get himself right.”

Josh Hart

On regaining shooting confidence:

“I think since All-Star I was struggling in terms of shooting. I think I’m kind of in my head with a lot of stuff. So I just got to trust my work and go out there and shoot my shots.”

Jose Alvarado

On breaking his shooting slump in his first start for New York:

“It was a weight off my shoulders. I wasn’t really focused on it, but obviously it was in the back of my mind, something that’s not who I am. I just trust the work.”

Karl-Anthony Towns

On Josh Hart stepping up without Brunson on Tuesday:

“Josh does a lot of things to make options available. He can get a rebound, outlet it quick, pushing pace and making the defense have to converge on him. Around the basket, he does the full-court dribble with the euro, gets to the basket and kicks it out to the corner for a 3.”

On the team effort vs. Indiana without Brunson:

“It was special. It’s a game obviously we’re missing JB. We all understood the importance of picking up the slack, and I thought all of us in this locker room, particularly Josh, did a great job of playing team basketball. It was great for all of us — obviously one person’s not gonna replace Jalen, but we all can collectively come together and try to play better basketball for each other with his absence.”

The six Minnesota Twins to have worn No. 42

42 post-’97. | Getty Images

Watching 42 on Friday’s movie night, I had forgotten that among shots of MLB players wearing 42 during the pre-credits montage, there is one at Target Field. That got me thinking about the Twins who have worn #42 outside of April 15 every year, and checking Baseball Reference, there have been just six. (Two of them were Senators, but they still count.)

They are:

Al Kozar
2B, 1950
Kozar spent all of 1948 and 1949 with the Senators, wearing #2 the first season and #1 the second. For the start of the 1950 season, he wore #42, an unusual number change for a player — players usually move to a lower number. However, he only wore #42 for 20 games before being traded to the White Sox, where he played 10 more games before his MLB career ended.

Cass Michaels
2B, 1950-1
Michaels came over to Washington in the Kozar trade and immediately claimed the vacated number. He wore #42 for the rest of 1950 and part of 1951 before switching to #7 (I could not find any further specifics as to when he switched), but in that new number, his Senators career ended the same way as his predecessor’s: a trade, sent to the Browns in May 1952.

Jim Manning
RP, 1962
The first Twin on the list, Manning wore #42 during his entire career: seven innings across five games at the start of the 1962 season.

Jack O’Connor
SP, 1982
O’Connor’s case is interesting. He wore #33 for most of his four seasons (well, three seasons and two games) in Minnesota, but he wore #42 for at least part of 1982, his only season as a primary starter. He ended that season with a 4.29 ERA, the lowest ERA of any full season in his career, walking 57 and striking out 56 across 126 innings.

Butch Huskey
OF, 2000
When MLB retired #42 across the league on April 15, 1997, the dozen or so players still wearing that number were allowed to keep it for the rest of their careers, including if they changed teams. Huskey was a Met in 1997, and three years and three teams later, he found himself wearing his usual number in Minnesota. He stayed with the team until mid-July, playing 64 games as a Twin, until the team traded him to Colorado, where he finished his career wearing #35.

Mike Jackson
RP, 2002
Another post-’97 holdover, Jackson had been with Cleveland at the time of the number’s retirement, and he pitched for that club for three seasons. After missing the 2000 season with injury and spending 2001 in Houston, he signed with the Twins as a free agent and spent 2002 pitching in the Metrodome. Jackson had a solid season, appearing in 58 games to the tune of a 3.27 ERA, but failed to make the bigs with Arizona the next season before finishing his career with the White Sox (wearing #38) in 2004.

And that is the entire list… until April 15 comes around again.