A Hall of Fame Father's Day Weekend for Former Jets Forward Keith Tkachuk

It would be difficult to script a better Father’s Day weekend for Keith Tkachuk.

After years of waiting for the phone call, the former Winnipeg Jets captain officially received hockey’s highest individual honour, being named a member of the Hockey Hall of Fame’s Class of 2026. 

Photo by Scott Rovak/USA Today 
Photo by Scott Rovak/USA Today 

As if that wasn’t enough, the announcement came just a day after the Tkachuk family received another piece of unforgettable news: Keith’s two sons, Matthew and Brady, are finally joining forces in the NHL as members of the Florida Panthers. 

Not a bad few days for the extended Tkachuk household.

Keith may finally have a good enough excuse to purchase that Florida lake house and spend eight months of the year in the Sunshine State.

The 54-year-old joins the Hall as part of a loaded 2026 class featuring Patrice Bergeron, Carey Price, Pekka Rinne, Cindy Curley and Brian Burke. For Tkachuk, the honour represents the final stamp on a career built around skill, size, toughness and competitiveness. 

Long before his sons became two of the NHL’s premier power forwards, Keith helped define the position.

Drafted 19th overall by the Winnipeg Jets in 1990, Tkachuk quickly became one of the franchise’s most important young players. He made his NHL debut during the 1991-92 season and developed into the exact kind of player opponents hated facing - a bruising winger who could punish defenders physically while also filling the net.

Tkachuk spent parts of five seasons with the original Jets before the franchise relocated to Arizona, serving as Winnipeg’s captain during its final years before the move. He became the face of a transitioning organization and provided Jets fans with one of their final superstar talents before NHL hockey left Manitoba in 1996.

His best offensive years followed shortly after, including a 52-goal campaign in 1996-97 that made him the first American-born player to lead the NHL in goals. Over 1,201 career regular season games with the Jets, Coyotes, St. Louis Blues and Atlanta Thrashers, Tkachuk finished with 538 goals, 1,065 points and more than 2,200 penalty minutes. 

Few players in league history have combined offence and edge quite like Tkachuk. And that style has clearly been passed down.

Matthew and Brady have carved out their own identities as two of the NHL’s most impactful forwards, both carrying many of the same traits that made their father a star - physicality, emotion, net-front presence and an ability to take over games.

Now, for the first time at the NHL level, they will do it together.

Florida’s blockbuster acquisition of Brady from the Ottawa Senators (for a package including three first round picks) reunites the brothers with the Panthers, giving Keith a front-row seat to watch both of his sons chase the Stanley Cup together. 

For a family already deeply woven into hockey history, the timing could not have been much better.

Keith spent years watching Matthew become a Stanley Cup champion and Brady develop into one of the league’s top leaders. Now, the two brothers will wear the same sweater while their father prepares for his official Hall of Fame induction.

Podcast: Wrapping up a middling Orioles first half

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 20: Leody Taveras #30 of the Baltimore Orioles celebrates with Jackson Holliday #7 after scoring during the second inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium on June 20, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ryan Sirius Sun/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Tonight, the Orioles will play their 81st game of the season, marking the mathematical halfway point of the regular season. The best they can do is 39-42. That’s disappointing relative to preseason hopes that this thing would get turned around, but this first half really could have been a lot worse than it was. Whatever else can be said about this year’s Orioles, they have not let themselves crash out of the picture early like last year’s team did.

In this week’s episode of the podcast, I’m looking at what’s been working and what hasn’t over the first three months worth of games, as well as what might actually have a chance of getting better from here on out. Can they do well enough to get Mike Elias to make a real, serious move in July to improve this team in the short-term? There is a lot to be figured out still. They’re going to need to win like they did last night a lot more often to get anywhere good this year.

Also in this episode, a question in the mailbag about who is exciting in the minor league system right now. One answer is obvious to anyone who’s been paying attention to the farm this year. I try to figure out who else is on the cusp of maybe being exciting heading into next season as well.

Listen to this week’s episode here:

If the above player isn’t displaying, view this article in Incognito Mode or check it out on the show’s page.

This is my weekly podcast about whatever is going on lately with the Orioles. If you enjoyed this episode, please make sure to subscribe. You can get the show on SpotifyApple Podcasts, or wherever you prefer to access your podcasts.

How are you feeling about the way things are going with the Orioles right now? Answers could make it into the mailbag section of a future episode of the podcast.

A Pod of Their Own: Freeze the rent, freeze the Mets

Welcome back to A Pod of Their Own, an all-women led Home Run Applesauce podcast where we talk all things Mets, social justice issues in baseball, and normalize female voices in the sports podcasting space. 

This week, we begin by discussing the Mets’ rotation, which has completely fallen apart, and the impending return of Francisco Lindor and Tyrone Taylor. We also talk about the grim outlook for the trade deadline and potentially beyond.

Next, we cover the latest in the CBA negotiations, as the league has put forth a set of proposals involving the draft, which the union swiftly rejected. We also discuss the latest in the Giants Pride Night scandal, which has escalated all the way to a DOJ investigation.

We also plug a GoFundMe for Adam Bayatti aka TheMetsHomeRunner in order to get him to New York to see a Mets game in person. Throw a few bucks his way if you are able.

Finally, we wrap things up with Walk-off Wins, where each of us talks about what’s making us happy this week, baseball-related or otherwise. 

You can listen or subscribe to all of our wonderful Home Run Applesauce podcasts through Apple Podcasts, where we encourage you to leave a review if you enjoy the show. It really helps! And you can find us on the Stitcher app, Spotify, or listen wherever you get podcasts. You can also support our work by subscribing to our Patreon, which will get you bonus episodes, access to our Discord server, livestream experiences, an exclusive monthly playlist, and more!

You can follow A Pod of Their Own on Twitter, Instagram, and Bluesky (@apodoftheirown) and you can follow Home Run Applesauce on Twitter and Instagram (@HRApplesauce). You can also follow our co-hosts on Twitter and Bluesky: Allison McCague (@PetitePhD), Maggie Wiggin (@maggie162), and LindaSurovich (@LindaSurovich). You can also email the show at aa.apodoftheirown@gmail.com. 

Look for A Pod of Their Own in your feeds every week and don’t forget: there’s no crying in podcasting!

Guardians vs White Sox Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today's MLB Game

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The Chicago White Sox picked up a high-scoring walk-off victory in their series opener against the Cleveland Guardians.

While another competitive game should be expected, my Guardians vs. White Sox predictions and MLB picks believe the wrong team is favored and see value in backing Chicago to take Game 2.

Who will win Guardians vs White Sox today: White Sox (-105)

The Chicago White Sox are one of the league’s best offenses against southpaws, ranking fifth in wOBA, fourth in OPS, and first in ISO.

Parker Messick is very promising, but his level of play has tailed off of late.

Messick owns an xFIP of 4.01 and SIERA of 4.25 over the past 30 days. Both of those outputs are well above the 3.21 ERA he has posted, a sign a dip could be coming.

Without Jose Ramirez and Chase DeLauter, it could be difficult for the Cleveland Guardians to keep up.

Back Chicago to -115.

Covers COVERS INTEL: The White Sox make their fly balls count, leading the majors with a 19.4 HR/FB% against lefties.

Guardians vs White Sox Over/Under pick: Over 7 (-120)

The White Sox have posted high-end metrics across the board against left-handed pitching. They have also hit more homers than anybody.

While Messick generally doesn’t give up much power, it’ll be tough to neutralize such a potent offense.

Even without Ramirez and DeLauter, the Guardians have scored at least three runs in five of their last six games.

Sean Burke ranks in the 52nd percentile in xERA and is a mid-tier arm. Behind him is the 22nd-ranked bullpen in FIP. The Guardians should still chip in.

This total is half a run too low. Play the Over to -130.

Todd Cordell's 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets: 39-29, +2.00 units
  • Over/Under bets: 36-28-4, +4.64 units

Guardians vs White Sox weather

Temperatures in the high 60s are expected, with slight northeast winds. The weather should have little impact on this game.

Guardians vs White Sox odds

  • Moneyline: Guardians -115 | White Sox -105
  • Run line: Guardians -1.5 (+155) | White Sox +1.5 (-180)
  • Over/Under: Over 7 (-115) | Under 7 (-105)

Guardians vs White Sox trend

Chicago has won 20 of its last 24 games at home (+18.10 units, 70% ROI). Find more MLB betting trends for Guardians vs. White Sox.

How to watch Guardians vs White Sox and game info

LocationRate Field, Chicago, IL
DateTuesday, June 23, 2026
First pitch7:40 p.m. ET
TVCHSN, CleGuardians.TV
Guardians starting pitcherParker Messick
(7-3, 2.70 ERA)
White Sox starting pitcherSean Burke
(4-4, 3.89 ERA)

Guardians vs White Sox latest injuries

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

Celtics fans are imagining life without Jaylen Brown

BROOKLYN, NY - JUNE 23: Jaylen Brown speaks with press after being selected third overall by the during the 2016 NBA Draft on June 23, 2016 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. 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 2016 NBAE (Photo by Amanda Westcott /NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Milwaukee Bucks traded Giannis Antetokounmpo and Bobby Portis to the Miami Heat late Monday night for Tyler Herro, Kel’el Ware, Jaime Jaquez Jr., Kasparas Jakucionis, three first-round picks, a pick swap and a second-round pick. Boston had pursued Antetokounmpo with an offer built around Jaylen Brown, but Milwaukee ultimately preferred Miami’s younger players and draft capital.

It’s finally over.

After weeks of reports, counterreports, fake trades, real negotiations and enough collective bargaining agreement analysis to qualify half of Celtics Twitter for an entry-level front office job, Giannis Antetokounmpo is taking his talents to South Beach.

The Celtics were involved deeply enough for Shams Charania to report that Jaylen Brown had been placed at the center of their offer, and close enough for Boston fans to spend several days weighing the arrival of one of the greatest players ever against the end of the partnership that has defined this era of Celtics basketball.

This would have hurt.

For a moment, Brown stopped feeling like the player we would watch next season and became the player we were preparing to remember. We pictured him in a Bucks uniform and imagined Jayson Tatum returning without the teammate who had grown up beside him. We began sorting through the past ten seasons of playoff runs, criticism, improvement and the championship they eventually won together.

Then Milwaukee chose Miami.

Brown remains a Celtic for now. Whatever happens next, the possibility of losing him brought his entire Boston career into sharper focus. It reminded us how much of the last decade he has occupied, how much he has given this franchise and how strange it would feel to see No. 7 play anywhere else.

Ten years ago, Boston greeted him with boos.

Brown was 19 years old when the Celtics selected him third overall in the 2016 NBA Draft, a pick that immediately disappointed a loud section of the fanbase. People wanted a trade. They wanted a bigger name like Kris Dunn, Dragan Bender or Buddy Hield. They wanted someone they had already decided was safer, readier or easier to understand.

Brown stepped into that noise and made a promise anyway.

“I’m going to go to war for the city,” he said shortly after being drafted. “I wear my heart on my sleeve and I’m gonna leave it on the floor every night. I love to play ball and I know you guys love to watch. So let’s build this bond, and I promise I won’t disappoint.”

Ten years later, Boston already has its answer. Brown has kept every part of that promise.

Jaylen has grown up in front of us

Brown’s path to NBA stardom has been anything but smooth.

He fought for minutes as a rookie on a veteran team trying to contend. He worked his way into the rotation, then into the starting lineup, then into the heart of a team that kept reaching the edge of something bigger without quite getting there.

Every step forward in his game seemed to uncover a new flaw for everyone else to discuss.

His handle was too loose. His decision-making was too slow. His shooting came and went. He couldn’t go left. He and Jayson Tatum supposedly could not play together. One of them would eventually have to leave. Brown’s contract was too large, his game too limited, his fit beside JT too uncertain.

Then he would come back the next season with another answer.

The handle tightened. The jumper improved. His body got stronger. His reads became quicker. He took on harder defensive assignments and gradually became someone Boston could trust with an entire possession when a game began to wobble.

His growth has rarely been graceful, and maybe that’s part of what makes his journey so satisfying.

Brown has become a five-time All-Star and a two-time All-NBA selection during his first decade in Boston. He has climbed to 10th on the Celtics’ all-time scoring list, surrounded by names that already hang above the floor at TD Garden. He’s helped Boston reach six conference finals and two NBA Finals while spending his entire career under the pressure that comes with playing for a franchise that measures success in banners.

Through all of it, he has simply kept getting better.

The run that changed everything

Brown’s place as a Celtics great was secure before 2024. That year’s postseason run made him a Celtics legend.

He entered the year carrying the label of the league’s most overpaid player after signing his (at the time) record-breaking supermax extension. He had just been left off the All-NBA teams despite helping Boston post the league’s best record, and the Celtics’ shiny new toys in the form of Jrue Holiday and Kristaps Porziņģis led some people to wonder whether he would become the odd man out.

Instead, Brown played the best basketball of his life when Boston needed it most.

He averaged 23.9 points during the 2024 playoffs while shooting 51.6 percent from the field, often drawing the most difficult defensive assignment on the other end. When the Celtics were seconds away from losing Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals, Brown deflected an inbound pass, then buried the game-tying three. Two nights later, he scored 40 as Boston took control of a series it would eventually sweep.

If we thought that was the mountaintop, the Finals showed us Jaylen still had another level to reach.

Brown hounded Luka Doncic, attacked Dallas whenever Boston’s offense started drifting and delivered one of the defining performances of his career in Game 3. Boston nearly lost a 21-point fourth-quarter lead that night, but Brown steadied the game with the jumper that effectively ended Dallas’ comeback.

When the series ended in Boston, the Bill Russell NBA Finals MVP trophy belonged to him.

Brown’s first instinct was to share it.

“It was a full team effort,” he said. “I share this with my brothers, and my partner-in-crime, Jayson Tatum. He was with me the whole way.”

That remains the Jays’ story at its best. They were drafted one year apart, compared constantly and blamed regularly whenever Boston fell short. Together, they grew through it. And when they finally reached the top, Brown used the greatest individual moment of his career to pull Tatum right beside him.

There is no banner 18 without both of them.

Boston has gotten more than a basketball player

Brown has never treated Boston like a temporary workplace. His ambitions have always extended beyond basketball.

Through the 7uice Foundation, he has worked to close opportunity gaps for young people in communities that are often overlooked. The Bridge Program brought students from Dorchester, Roxbury and other Boston neighborhoods to MIT, where they studied fields including artificial intelligence, robotics and climate science. He wants kids to see themselves in places that may once have felt closed to them.

Brown also launched Boston XChange with the goal of creating generational wealth in communities of color. Its creator incubator has supported local entrepreneurs working across arts, fashion, food and media. He partnered with Jrue Holiday to invest in people who had ideas and talent but had not always been given access to the rooms where money and opportunity move.

Brown has also become a trusted voice among his peers. In 2019, at only 22 years old, he was elected as a vice president of the National Basketball Players Association. His fellow players re-elected him to a third term in 2025, another reflection of the leader he has become and the respect he commands well beyond Boston.

All of it speaks volumes about the man Jaylen has become over the years. Brown could have kept his relationship with the city confined to basketball. Plenty of players do. They arrive, perform, maybe donate to a few visible causes and eventually leave.

Brown has studied the city, challenged it and invested in it.

BOSTON, MA – DECEMBER 14: Jaylen Brown #7 of the Boston Celtics participates in a hospital visit on December 14, 2017 at Boston Children's Hospital 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. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2017 NBAE (Photo by Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Like Bill Russell before him, Brown cares about Boston without pretending the city is perfect. He has spoken openly about racism, education and economic inequality. He has marched against injustice and used the attention that comes with basketball to force conversations far beyond it.

Sometimes, that has made him complicated. He’s willing to say things that invite disagreement and think out loud in ways professional athletes are often trained to avoid. Brown is curious, ambitious and occasionally difficult to place into the neat little boxes fans prefer.

This year, Brown continued offering people a closer look at how he saw the game and the team around him. After the season, his livestreams became their own source of controversy when he called it his favorite year of basketball. Some fans heard that as a dismissal of the championship season, but his full explanation was far more personal. He had watched young teammates earn real roles, seen Tatum fight his way back from injury and helped a team with modest expectations become one of the East’s best.

The reaction was revealing. Celtics fans say they want athletes to be more open and candid, then occasionally bristle when those athletes give answers that do not match the ones they expected. Brown’s Twitch streams offer something rare: an unfiltered look at one of the best players in franchise history thinking through his season in real time. Even when people disagree with him, there is something special about being invited that close.

I, for one, am thrilled Boston gets the whole person.

History will remember the Jays together

When you talk about one Jay, it’s hard not to talk about the other. Brown and Tatum are not simply two stars who happen to share the court. As a duo, they have been Boston’s timeline. Celtics fans have watched them evolve from young prospects to playoff regulars, then through painful losses that felt like referendums on everything they were building.

They lost to LeBron James as kids. They battled with the Brooklyn experiment, Heat culture and Golden State’s dynasty. They heard that they did not pass enough, did not fit well enough and would never finish the job together.

But they did finish it together, and no trade can ever separate them in the Celtics history. The trade that never was would’ve ended the partnership. Instead, the Giannis pursuit reminded everyone how much the partnership has already accomplished.

What happens next between Brown and the Celtics is harder to know. Shams Charania reported that Boston made an offer built around Brown, but we have no idea what Brad Stevens told him behind closed doors, how seriously the Celtics believed Milwaukee was considering their package or whether Boston’s involvement helped force Miami to offer more. Once Milwaukee began prioritizing younger players and draft capital beyond Brown, the deal may have stopped making sense for the Celtics anyway.

Still, seeing your name publicly attached to a trade for your replacement can leave a bruise, even in a league where everyone understands the business. Stevens now has to make sure Brown knows where he stands and whether the trust that carried this partnership through years of rumors remains intact.

Brown has spent a decade giving Boston answers. After the past week, the Celtics may owe him one.

The promise became the legacy

There is a symmetry to Brown’s story in Boston that already feels almost too perfect to be real.

He arrived with people booing the pick before he had even put on the jersey. Instead of shrinking from that reception, he told the city exactly what he planned to give it.

He would go to war for Boston.

Over the next decade, he has lived up to every word.

He has played through criticism and trade rumors, transforming parts of his game that people treated as permanent limitations. He has defended the best players in the world, carried the Celtics through crucial playoff moments and kept the franchise among the league’s top-tier contenders.

Away from the floor, he’s treated Boston like a place worth investing in. He’s given young people access to education and helped local creators imagine businesses of their own. He understands that wearing Celtics green gives him influence and has tried to make that influence useful and positive.

The boos did not define his relationship with Boston. They only made what followed more meaningful.

One day, Jaylen Brown will walk onto the TD Garden floor with his family beside him and watch No. 7 rise above his head. Tatum’s No. 0 will find its way up there eventually, too, because even history should understand that those two are inseparable.

BOSTON, MA – JUNE 17: Jayson Tatum #0 and Jaylen Brown #7 of the Boston Celtics celebrate in the locker room after winning Game 5 of the 2024 NBA Finals against the Dallas Mavericks on June 17, 2024 at the TD Garden 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. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2024 NBAE (Photo by Grace Beal/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Brown’s journey in Boston began beneath those rafters with people wondering why he was here. Someday, it will end in the same building with thunderous applause, as the city he went to war for gets the chance to thank him for everything he has given it.

But that day is not here yet.

No. 7 still belongs on the floor. Jaylen Brown is still a Celtic. And after spending the past week imagining how we would say goodbye, Boston has another chance to appreciate him before his place among the legends becomes something we can only look up at.

What’s the worst Red Sox loss you can remember?

Jun 22, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; Colorado Rockies outfielder Jake McCarthy (31) and Colorado Rockies outfielder Tyler Freeman (2) celebrate after a ninth inning walk off win against the Boston Red Sox at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Christopher Hanewinckel-Imagn Images | Christopher Hanewinckel-Imagn Images

The end of last night’s Red Sox game was nothing short of a debacle. A fiasco. A disaster. Whatever you want to call it. Garrett Whitlock and Aroldis Chapman combined to allow eight hits in the eighth and ninth innings, though the former somehow escaped without allowing a run, while the latter coughed up a two-run lead.

It was probably the worst loss of the season. There have been plenty of other bad losses, but losing to the (2nd?) worst team in baseball in that fashion is downright embarrassing. So, what’s the worst loss you can remember? It doesn’t have to be this season. It could be a massive blowout, a huge blown lead, or a certain Game 6.

Talk about what you want and be good to one another.

Braves vs Padres Prediction: Odds, recent stats, trends, and best bets for June 23

Manny Machado delivered what ended up being the game-winning home run in the bottom of the fourth inning as the Padres beat the Braves, 1-0.

Atlanta is 3-8 over the last 11 games and ranks 24th in batting average (.228), the fewest walks (21), and second-fewest home runs (11) in the last 15 days. In that same span, Atlanta's pitching rotation ranks 24th in OBA (.269), 22nd in WHIP (1.44), and 19th in ERA (4.52). Atlanta recorded seven hits on Monday, but had nine strikeouts to one walk in the scoreless effort.

San Diego improved to 3-2 over the last five games and 8-11 in June. The Padres pitching staff has been elite with a 3.63 ERA (3rd), but .268 OBA (25th). On the other side, the Padres offense has not been fruitful. San Diego is batting .222 (27th) in June and bottom 10 ranks in OBP, OPS, SLG, and home runs.

Let’s dive into the matchup and find a sweat or two.

We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on the how to catch first pitch, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.

Follow Rotoworld Player News for the latest fantasy and betting player news and analysis all season long.

Game details & how to watch Braves at Padres

  • Date: Tuesday, June 23, 2026
  • Time: 9:40 PM EST
  • Site: Petco Park
  • City: San Diego, CA
  • Network/Streaming: ESPN / MLB TV

Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out.

Odds for the Braves at the Padres

The latest odds as of Tuesday:

  • Moneyline: Atlanta Braves (-112), San Diego Padres (-108)
  • Spread: Padres +1.5 (-186), Braves -1.5 (+153)
  • Total: 8.0

Probable starting pitchers for Braves at Padres

  • Tuesday's pitching matchup (June 23): JR Ritchie vs. Griffin Canning 
  • Padres: Griffin Canning

2026 stats: 42.0 IP, 1-5, 6.64 ERA, 1.57 WHIP, 41 Ks, 25 BB

  • Braves: JR Ritchie

2026 Stats: 35.2 IP, 1-2, 4.54 ERA, 1.37 WHIP, 30 Ks, 21 BB

Who’s Hot? Who’s Not

  • The Braves’ Michael Harris II is hitting .305 with 78 hits, 14 home runs and 41 RBI over 256 at-bats
  • The Braves’ Austin Riley is hitting .219 with 61 hits and 90 strikeouts over 279 at-bats
  • The Padres’ Fernando Tatis Jr. is hitting .284 with 83 hits, 2 home runs, and 26 RBI over 292 at-bats
  • The Padres’ Manny Machado is hitting .185 with 51 hits and 70 strikeouts over 276 at-bats

Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!

Top betting trends & insights to know ahead of Braves at Padres

  • Atlanta is 43-34 ATS, ranking seventh-best
  • San Diego is 42-35 ATS, ranking tied for ninth-best
  • Atlanta is 37-34-6 to the Over, ranking 10th-best
  • San Diego is an MLB-best 43-33-1 to the Under
  • Atlanta is 24-15 ATS on the road, ranking second-best
  • San Diego is 21-18 ATS at home

Expert picks & predictions for tonight’s game between the Braves and the Padres

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Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts.

Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Tuesday's game between the Braves and the Padres:

  • Moneyline: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the Braves on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: NBC Sports Bet is leaning towards a play ATS on the Braves at -1.5.
  • Total: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the Over on the Game Total of 8.0

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MLB Home Run Predictions Today: Best HR Prop Bets, Picks, Parlay & Odds for Tuesday, June 23

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It has been two profitable weeks as I continue to try to dig myself out of an early-season home-run hole.

I've hit a dinger in five of my last six articles, and today's slate is setting up well for four-baggers and MLB player props.

The Mariners are projected to put up some crooked numbers vs. Mitch Keller and the Pirates, while nobody is swinging a better bat than Pete Crow-Armstrong, and that price vs. Kodai Senga is on the right side of expected value. 

Finally, if a Phillie bat is not on your HR card vs. Zack Littell, are you really betting on homers?

These are my favorite home run props for Tuesday, June 23. 

  • UPDATE: Added another HR pick + parlay.

Best MLB home run props today

Player to hit a HROdds
Mariners Josh Naylor +660
Cubs Pete Crow-Armstrong+382
Phillies Brandon Marsh+660
💲Today's HR parlay+22933

Home run pick: Josh Naylor (+660)

Give a bump to the left-handed bats of the Mariners today. Generous winds are blowing out to right field at PNC Park, and the pitching matchup is working in their favor as well. Josh Naylor at +660 is the target.

Mitch Keller has allowed 4+ runs in all but one of his last seven starts, posting a 7.64 ERA over that stretch. At home, he's been even worse, allowing 18 runs in 13+ innings across his last seven starts.

His fly-ball rate is lower than his career average, and his HR/FB rate is starting to normalize after some early-season months of keeping it below 10%. His SIERA and xFIP are both at five-year highs, suggesting these bad times are here to stay. 

Naylor has seen Keller eight times in his career, taking him deep once while hitting .375. I love the Mariners team total Over 4.5 today, and Naylor is one of the better +EV home run props on the board with a fair price closer to +520.

  • Time: 6:40 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: SportsNet Pittsburgh, Mariners.TV

Home run pick: Pete Crow-Armstrong (+382)

Pete Crow-Armstrong is the hottest hitter in baseball right now. He leads MLB in slugging over the last two weeks at .935, and his .500 ISO trails only Shohei Ohtani.

This is a great price in a game that could feature multiple home runs given the pitching matchup.

Kodai Senga owns the 13th-worst HR/FB rate among MLB starters this season, and only three qualified starters have a worse ground-ball rate. He's allowed multiple home runs in three of his last four starts, and this will be just his second outing after missing three weeks with a spine/arm injury.

Senga may be the biggest pitching target on the slate today, and getting a red-hot hitter at +300 or better in a plus-plus home run matchup is an easy way to make the HR card.

  • Time: 7:10 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: SNY, Marquee Sports Network

Home run pick: Brandon Marsh (+660)

I need a left-handed bat against Zack Littell, who continues to be a gift to home run hitters.

Brandon Marsh went deep yesterday and gets another favorable matchup against Littell, who owns the 19th-worst HR/FB rate among MLB starters and pairs it with a poor 31% groundball rate. Only three other starters have a worse Ideal Attack Angle percentage.

Hitters square Littell up consistently, and he's coming off a start where he allowed four home runs. The left-handed bats won't be hitting straight into the wind like the righties today with the wind blowing in from left field.

Littell is also coming off a 99-pitch outing — his second-highest pitch count of the season and well above his usual workload, which sits around 80 pitches.

I love the Phillies to pile on runs today, and Marsh at +550 or better is making the HR card.

  • Time: 6:45 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: NBCSP, Nationals.TV
Josh Inglis' 2026 Transparency Record
  • HR picks: 17-118, -31.25 units

Today’s HR parlay

Mariners Josh NaylorBet Now
+22933
Cubs Pete Crow-Armstrong
Phillies Brandon Marsh

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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Evaluating Mike Gansey’s draft history in Cleveland

CAMDEN, NJ - JUNE 8: Mike Gansey speaks as the Philadelphia 76ers introduce him as their new President of Basketball Operations on June 8, 2026 at The Penn Medicine Philadelphia 76ers Training Complex in Camden, New Jersey. 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 Mary Kate Ridgway/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The 2026 NBA Draft happens begins Tuesday night. The Sixers are likely going to make their only pick in this year’s draft at 22nd overall. It’s an important pick for the franchise as it was the primary return in the highly-scrutinized Jared McCain trade from this past February. With Mike Gansey taking over as the team’s new president of basketball operations, we felt now was a good time to look back on Gansey’s draft record in Cleveland, a front office he worked in for nearly a decade.

Before we go any further, it’s important to point out that Gansey was always working under Koby Altman in Cleveland. That’s likely to change now that Gansey is in Philadelphia. If you take the Sixers at their word that Bob Myers will only be involved from afar, Gansey’s going to be making practically all the final decisions when it comes to personnel and day-to-day basketball operations.

We’ll see what Gansey has up his sleeve in his first offseason running the Sixers, but the most widely-held belief as to what the Sixers are going to do with the 22nd overall pick next week is to use it on a player that can quickly assimilate into their rotation and give them some much-needed bench help. Gansey’s tenure in Cleveland’s front office spanned a long enough time to see the Cavs drafting in a variety of places across the first round which makes this an interesting exercise. Without further ado, we’ll look at the hits, misses and TBDs of the Cleveland first-round picks under Gansey.

Hits

Collin Sexton (8th overall – 2018): Sexton was the first draft pick the Cavaliers made after Gansey was promoted from the G League to assistant general manager. Perhaps this one might be more in the gray area. Sexton has played for four teams already since being drafted and has never made an All-Star game, but I do think if you’re simply deciding between hit and miss, Sexton is a hit. For his career, he’s averaged over 18 points per game and shot just below 40% from the three-point line. His assist totals could likely be a bit higher, but he’s always been more of a combo guard than a true point guard anyway. Plus, he had to be good enough for Utah to want as a piece in the Donovan Mitchell trade four years ago, right?

Darius Garland (5th overall – 2019): Much like Sexton, Garland is no longer with Cleveland, although he stuck around with the Cavs much longer than Sexton did. Additionally, there should be no mixed feelings on Garland’s time in the NBA. The two-time All-Star slowly got better in his first three seasons as a pro and perhaps what’s most notable about his statistical increases is that his assist average went from 3.9 per game to 8.6 per game from his rookie season to his third season in the association. If you’re still scratching your head as to why Cleveland traded Garland in a deal that brought back James Harden, you’re not alone, but the sole action of drafting Garland has to be a hit. 

Evan Mobley (3rd overall – 2021): This one’s a no-brainer. Mitchell is probably Cleveland’s best player, but Mobley is definitely the second-best player on the Cavs’ roster in that case. The USC product is a walking double-double and is just one year removed from winning the NBA’s Defensive Player of the Year award.

Additional hits: We do want to take some time for Cleveland’s ability to dig up Sam Merrill and Dean Wade while Gansey was working there. After one season in Milwaukee and another in Memphis, Merrill was fighting for survival in the NBA in 2022. He joined Cleveland’s G-League roster to start the 2022-23 season and by March was signed to a 10-day contract with the Cavaliers. Since then, he has blossomed into a rotation player that’s usually playing between 15 and 25 minutes per night.

Wade joined the Cavs immediately after not being drafted in 2019. He would appear in 12 games at the NBA level in 2019-20 before playing 63 and becoming a fixture in the NBA for years to come. He’s grown to the point where he’s starting more than half the regular season games he’s appearing in for Cleveland. His stats don’t stand out, but he’s certainly been a positive return on investment given that he’s still with the organization seven years after not being drafted.

Misses

Isaac Okoro (5th overall – 2020): After six seasons in the NBA, Okoro has at the very least carved out a role for himself as a professional, but when you’re merely a role player as a top-five pick regardless of how weak the draft might have been, that’s a disappointment. And yes, if you’re thinking “Wasn’t 2020 the COVID draft that took place in November?” you’d be correct, but we still had most of the college basketball season take place in 2019-20. The point is, Okoro has became a decent wing defender who doesn’t score a lot and while that’s kept him around in the NBA, it’s not enough to be a hit as a top-five selection. Cleveland moved on from Okoro last season too, trading him for Lonzo Ball last offseason which should tell you a lot. 

Ochai Agbaji (14th overall – 2022): While Agbaji never played a game for the Cavaliers, he wasn’t one of those selections who saw his rights get traded to another team on draft night either. Therefore, we have to include him here because Cleveland at least drafted him with some intention of him playing in Northeast Ohio. Agbaji was selected at the end of the lottery four years ago, but was included with Sexton in the trade to Utah for Mitchell just before training camp opened for the 2022-23 season. He’s started less than half the games he’s appeared in during his four seasons in the NBA, his numbers have fluctuated but have never been anything that have stood out and it would come as no surprise if he’s hanging on for dear life just to survive in the NBA a couple years from now.

To Be Determined

Jaylon Tyson (20th overall – 2024): This one’s probably the pick that could be the most insightful for Philly’s 22ndoverall pick next week for a couple of reasons. First off, it’s a pick that was made just two years ago and is the closest of all of these selections in the first round to 22nd overall. Tyson was also the only pick of these first-rounders that wasn’t a lottery pick. Additionally, through two seasons in the NBA, Tyson’s early career arc seems to be mirroring what you get out of good picks made in the first round outside of the lottery.

Much like Tyrese Maxey for the Sixers, Tyson did not come right into the NBA and start a lot of games. Now, his role was less in Cleveland during his rookie season that Maxey’s was in Philly, but Tyson took a big leap from his rookie season to his second season. He started just three games as a rookie and that number ballooned to 42 starts in 2025-26. All of his statistical numbers went up and Cleveland is probably most encouraged by a 10-point uptick in his three-point percentage from 34.5% in 2024-25 to 44.6% this past season.

It’s still just a TBD because these players often improve incrementally and we’ve only seen one season of incremental improvement from Tyson. He’ll have to continue to get better like Maxey did as he takes on a bigger role for the Cavaliers and plays even more minutes in the future. Having said this, it looks like this pick is trending towards a hit for the Cleveland front office. 

Verdict

While there are more hits than misses, I think most juries would still be deliberating if this was the only available evidence put in front of them. With the exception of maybe Sexton, all of these players are still young enough in their NBA careers for things to change in a positive or negative direction, even if you might have your mind made up on a lot of them.

For purposes of the exercise, I had three hits, two misses and one TBD which leaves the final grade very difficult to give anyway. It’s also worth noting that most of these picks, particularly the ones in the top 10, were likely Altman’s calls as it would only be logical to assume that Altman was making the more impactful roster decisions and Gansey was tasked with finding marginal improvements. That’s another reason why Cleveland selecting Tyson seems like the best reflection of Gansey in the present day. By the 2024 draft, Cleveland was coming off a season in which it made it to the second round of the playoffs. Its core, mostly built by Altman, was in place and marginal upgrades were more easily achievable.

We should note that the marginal upgrades like Merrill and Wade are also a good sign for Gansey’s future in Philadelphia, particularly in the short term. If you subscribe to the widely-held belief that Philadelphia is simply stuck with Paul George and Joel Embiid for the next few seasons, then how else are they going to improve? Even if they hit a home run at 22, that’s still just one player for a team that needs probably three or four serviceable bench players to feel good about its rotation next season. Adding cheap talent in the second round, undrafted free agency or simply players like Merrill who were late bloomers after one or two changes of scenery is how you improve marginally. Doing that enough in the next 6-24 months might just be enough for the Sixers to become a contender with Embiid and George still on their cap sheet. Plus, finding cheap rotation players that are young would give fans more reason for optimism about what the team could look like in the 2030s, presumably built around Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe.

At the end of the day, there’s more to like than to dislike when it comes to Cleveland’s evaluation of draft prospects with Mike Gansey in its front office. It’s a thumbs up for Gansey based on what we know, but you probably also shouldn’t be brimming with confidence either.

NBA Draft Preview: Bennett Stirtz

HOUSTON, TEXAS - MARCH 26: Bennett Stirtz #14 of the Iowa Hawkeyes shoots the ball during the Sweet Sixteen round game of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament held at Toyota Center on March 26, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Jack Dempsey/NCAA Photos via Getty Images) | NCAA Photos via Getty Images

Just when you thought basketball season was over until the fall! The New York Knicks win their first NBA title since the Nixon administration and they get precisely 10 days to enjoy it, as the NBA calendar quickly moves on to the the NBA Draft and later free agency set to begin on June 30. And that doesn’t even include trade season – Giannis is already on the move to Miami!

Tonight’s draft will have an Iowa tinge to it, as Bennett Stirtz looks set to become Ben McCollum’s first NBA draft pick and Iowa’s third first rounder since 2022, after Keegan and Kris Murray joined the Association in 2022 and 2023, respectively. After a huge drought of first round picks between Ricky Davis and Keegan, Iowa now looks to get three in a four-year window.

The Scout

You all saw Stirtz play, both at Drake two seasons ago and then at Iowa this past season. The shot making. Don’t let anyone else tell you he’s a bad athlete – he’s not. At times, excellent defense. The near-iron man minutes. Stirtz lived up to all of the billing that accompanied him from Drake in his lone season at Iowa, a season that – remember this?? – ended with the Hawks making the Elite Eight for the first time since 1987. Stirtz averaged 19.8 points, 2.6 rebounds, 4.4 assists, and 1.4 steals per game in that lone campaign in Iowa City. Oh and he finished with 48/36/85 shooting splits. Not bad! He backed that up at the NBA combine in Chicago on May 11. Stirtz measured in at 6-2 1/2 without shoes with a 6 1/2-foot wingspan. He had a 37 1/2-inch vertical at the combine, with a 30 1/2-inch no step vertical. Stirtz also had a 3/4 court sprint time of 3.17 seconds, which was good for fourth in the combine.

Those are pretty good numbers overall and put to bed most worries about his athleticism, but where Stirtz really blew up was in the shooting categories. Stirtz was 20/25 on spot-up jumpers and 23/30 off the dribble. The spot up number was the best at the combine (out of 26), while he tied for third in off the dribble shooting (also out of 26.) In the 3-point star drill, he made 16 of 25 attempts, which tied him for 6th out of 25. He’s impressed enough that Jay Bilas finally found it in his heart to mention Iowa, where he has Stirtz listed as the sleeper of the draft.

The Draft Projections

Prior to his excellent combine, mock drafts such as The Athletic had Stirtz going at 26 overall to the Denver Nuggets. Not bad for a former D-II player, finding yourself in late first round territory. And also, yes, please on that draft – Denver needs another player that can shoot and take the ball handling burden off of Jamal Murray and to an extent, Nikola Jokic.

But that was pre-Combine. Post-Combine, every mock I’ve found has Stirtz moving into the top 20. The Athletic’s Sam Vecenie has Stirtz at 19 overall to Toronto. Vecenie notes hearing Stirtz in a tight range from 16 to 21, which would be landing spots in Memphis, Oklahoma City, Charlotte, the aforementioned stop north of the border in Toronto, San Antonio, or Detroit. ESPN’s latest mock has Stirtz at 17 to Oklahoma City. J. Kyle Mann’s last mock at The Ringer has Stirtz at 21 to Detroit. One could do worse than Toronto, Oklahoma City, or Detroit. All three were in the playoffs, and Oklahoma City was a game away from a shot at defending their 2025 title.

The 2026 NBA Draft begins at 7:00 p.m. central and will air on ESPN/ABC.

Blackhawks Perfect Offseason: Sign Connor Bedard, Draft Ivar Stenberg, Add High-End Winger

The Chicago Blackhawks are entering one of their most important off-seasons in franchise history. If they are going to properly build around the franchise center, that is Connor Bedard, they don’t want him to continue being wasted on one of the league’s worst teams. 

Speaking of Connor Bedard, he is currently a restricted free agent. The Blackhawks don’t want him to have to miss any time during training camp, so getting him signed sooner rather than later is the best way to keep that from happening. 

Over his first 3 seasons in the NHL, Bedard has established himself as one of the best young forwards in the game. He has 75 goals and 128 assists for 203 points in 219 games played. After his 30-goal, 45-assist 2025-26 season (69 games played), he sent a message to the rest of the league. 

Now, Bedard is in line for a long-term extension worth well north of $10 million per year. If the Blackhawks want to have their version of a perfect off-season, they must get him signed as soon as possible. Of course, they’d like to have it done before it really becomes a talking point on July 1st, but as long as it doesn’t linger, things will be fine. 

On that same day, July 1st, free agency will open for the entire NHL. Although the options are dwindling, the Blackhawks need to make one or two additions. They have the cap space to bring in some notable players. A high-end winger, in particular, is their biggest need. 

Making a big trade for someone who fits this bill is also on the table. The Blackhawks have an embarrassment of riches when it comes to both picks and prospects, which is what it will take to get a consequential player that fits their criteria.

A trade like that could be done at the 2026 NHL Draft, which takes place on Friday. It is unlikely that they will move the fourth overall pick, but those aforementioned assets are on the table. 

With the fourth overall pick, the Blackhawks have what they hope is their last chance to draft a top-five prospect for a long time. Their last three drafts saw Connor Bedard, Artyom Levshunov, and Anton Frondell in the top four. In 2027, they hope not to be a lottery team again. 

If Ivar Stenberg is sitting there when they come up to pick at four, you might see them run up to make the selection.

Stenberg fits in as far as age and skillset, and he's NHL-ready right out of the draft. Right away, he should be a middle-six forward at a minimum, with top-line potential.

There is also a world where Stenberg is off the board by the time the Blackhawks come up to pick. In that case, they have to call an audible. Is Caleb Malhotra still there? Do they go off the board for the next best forward? Is one of the "big three" on defense enticing to them? At the end of the day, they must get it right if they don't want to set the franchise back another year.  

If Connor Bedard gets signed long before camp begins, they bring in a wingman for him, and make an impactful selection with the 4th overall pick, that would be good enough to consider it a "perfect off-season" with realistic expectations. 

They could get off to a similar hot start in 2026-27 if they have an off-season like that and everyone stays mostly healthy throughout the year. 

Of course, other issues with the team must be addressed as well. Adding a veteran defenseman, naming a captain, and working on the development of their players are incredibly important. Without these things happening, they won't feel better about the state of their organization by this time in 2027. 

Things fell off the rails after a great October and November last year, but some of these issues being addressed could keep it from being a similar situation. 

Realistically, nobody ever has a truly perfect off-season; rebuilding takes time. But there are realistic expectations for Kyle Davidson, the players, and the development staff this summer. 

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Timberwolves 2026 NBA Draft Thread: Pick Order and Selection Tracker

BROOKLYN, NY - JUNE 25: An overall view of the draft board during the 2025 NBA Draft - Round One on June 25, 2025 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. 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 2025 NBAE(Photo by Luther Schlaifer/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

It’s been 40 days since the Minnesota Timberwolves season ended. The rest of the league wrapped things up just over a week ago, so it’s time we officially turn the page on the 2025-2026 NBA season.

Nothing signals the start of a new season like the NBA draft.

That was my initial thought before Monday night happened. The Wolves weren’t expected to make much of a splash as far as the draft is concerned, holding just picks 28 and 59. The focus was more about a lot of looming player movement dominoes. Well, most of those dominoes fell yesterday.

With Julius Randle jettisoned, Ayo Dosunmu terms agreed to, and the 28th pick turned into the 33rd pick, Wolves fans should expect to a rather drama-free evening. Let’s congregate in the ol’ Canis comments section to see what happens to the other 29 teams!


Draft Info

What: 2026 NBA Draft Round 1
When: Tuesday, June 23, 2026 @6:00 pm CT
Where: Barclays Center (Brooklyn, NY)
TV: ABC/ESPN


What to Expect on Draft Night

The Timberwolves books look a lot different than they did 24 hours ago. Prior to shedding Randle’s $33.3 million contract, adding a fringe-first round rookie (pick 28) at roughly $3 million a year would have been tough. However, dumping his contract came at the cost of sliding down from pick 28, to pick 33. Some pundits have had the discussion of whether a guaranteed contract of a first round pick is more valuable than the open flexibility of a second round pick, so it’s worth asking if this was really was a downgrade.

That said, Wolves President of Basketball Operations Tim Connelly came from out of the shadows to acquire the eighth overall pick during the 2024 draft. Even prior to Connelly giving up this year’s first round pick yesterday, there was speculation that he could be up to something similar again.

Was this just some last minute due diligence? Or was a precursor of something else Connelly has cooking in the oven like they did when they secretly brought in Joan Beringer for a workout? In theory, it does make sense for Minnesota to get back into the mix as they have more financial flexibility to acquire and sign a first round pick post-Randle trade.

As mentioned earlier, many fans around the league will be eagerly awaiting announcements of ensuing blockbuster trades to come. Randle was first, and then came Giannis Antetokounmpo. Who’s next? Jaylen Brown? Kyrie Irving? Derrick White?

What else will happen tonight?


Draft updates

LIVE updated board:

Round 1:

  1. WAS
  2. UTA
  3. MEM
  4. CHI
  5. LAC
  6. BKN
  7. SAC
  8. ATL
  9. DAL
  10. MIL
  11. GSW
  12. OKC
  13. MIL
  14. CHO
  15. CHI
  16. MEM
  17. OKC
  18. CHO
  19. TOR
  20. SAS
  21. DET
  22. PHI
  23. ATL
  24. NYK
  25. LAL
  26. DEN
  27. BOS
  28. BKN
  29. CLE
  30. DAL

What do you think of Don Mattingly’s handling of pitchers?

May 9, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies manager Don Mattingly removes starting pitcher Aaron Nola (27) from the game against the Colorado Rockies in the fifth inning at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Ross-Imagn Images | Kyle Ross-Imagn Images

You simply cannot deny that the Phillies have improved under Don Mattingly’s watch. Since Mattingly took over as interim manager after the firing of Rob Thomson on April 28th, the Phillies have gone 33-17 and resurrected their chances at defending their NL East division crown. That record is the best in MLB over that span entering Monday. Whether you thought this run was coming regardless of the manager or didn’t, Mattingly has to get credit for overseeing this dramatic turnaround.

That doesn’t mean that there haven’t been some interesting decisions from Mattingly along the way though. Most notably, he is more willing to push his starting pitchers further in the regular season than Rob Thomson was. Two examples of such came over the last week with Jesús Luzardo and Zack Wheeler. In Luzardo’s last start on June 16th, he threw 106 pitches in seven innings. It was the first time this season that Luzardo went over 100 pitches and the third highest pitch count he’s had in a start in his career. Mattingly elected to push Luzardo into the seventh inning despite the Phillies having an 8-0 lead and the lefty sitting at 89 pitches before the inning. Luzardo managed to get through the inning, but he did allow a double and a home run to the first two batters he faced.

The other example is more recent with Zack Wheeler on Sunday. Wheeler appeared to be tiring in the sixth when he allowed three walks to load the bases with one out in a 6-1 game. Jonathan Bowlan was warmed up and ready in the bullpen as Mattingly approached the mound, but the manager elected to leave Wheeler in for one more hitter despite the righty being at 101 pitches and the situation being somewhat precarious. Wheeler got A.J. Ewing to ground into a force out, but the Phillies weren’t able to turn a double play and a run scored. Mattingly then decided to remove Wheeler from the game after 104 pitches, tying his season high and only the second time he has gone over 100 pitches since his return from thoracic outlet surgery. Bowlan meanwhile was able to strike out Marcus Semien on four pitches to end the inning.

It’s clear that Mattingly has faith in his starters, and he has every reason to have that belief, as the Phillies rotation has the third best ERA (3.25) and fourth best WHIP (1.14) in baseball since he took over as manager. But it’s also reasonable to question the high pitch counts at this point in the season, especially in this case with two pitchers with injury histories like Luzardo and Wheeler. One unquestionable strength for Thomson during his time as manager was his ability to deliver the team, and especially his rotation, mostly healthy to the postseason. The jury is obviously still out for if Mattingly can do the same.

So, what do you think of Don Mattingly’s handling of pitchers? Do you like his tendency for longer leashes?

Tuesday Morning Texas Rangers Update

MIAMI, FLORIDA - JUNE 22: Xavier Edwards #9 of the Miami Marlins dives for home plate but cannot score against Elias Díaz #35 of the Texas Rangers during the sixth inning at loanDepot park on June 22, 2026 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Sam Navarro/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good morning.

Evan Grant writes that the Texas Rangers were buoyed by the Tartan Army for the second time in a couple of weeks as Scottish soccer fans took in Texas’ 4-3 win from last evening.

Kennedi Landry writes that the World Cup visitors were treated to a unique and dominant and uniquely dominant appearance from Kumar Rocker in the victory.

Grant writes that the Rangers are dealing with a lack of pitching depth during one of their more grueling stretches, exacerbated by Jack Leiter hitting the IL.

MLB dot com’s Brian Murphy and Shanthi Sepe-Chepuru check out the latest All-Star vote update where Ezequiel Duran remains second in the AL second baseman vote.

Grant has the daily Corey Seager concussion recovery update where, like the rest of us, Seager remains day-to-day.

And, at FanGraphs, Dan Szymborski looks into the changes that MLB owners proposed for the draft and how much the changes would cost players (Spoilers: a lot).

Have a nice day!

Grading the Orioles’ offseason moves at the 2026 halfway point

BALTIMORE, MD - JUNE 13: Pete Alonso (25) of the Baltimore Orioles doubles to left field to drive in a run in the seventh inning during an MLB game against the San Diego Padres on June 13, 2026 at Oriole Park at Camden Yards in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

After tonight’s game with the Angels, the Orioles will officially reach the 81-game mark of their 2026 campaign. Heading into Game 81, it’s safe to say that the first half of the O’s season has largely been disappointing. Seen by most as a strong wild card contender heading into the season, Baltimore currently sits below .500 and is sitting on the outside looking in for the American League wild card spots.

As we’ve seen countless times from Birdland over the last two years, there is again a growing chorus calling for Mike Elias to lose his job due to the Orioles’ underperformance. This renewed consternation for Elias and the front office comes after their most aggressive offseason in the 7+ years since Elias’ hiring — an offseason that saw Elias & Co. make their first major free-agent commitment with Pete Alonso.

It’s undoubtedly true that this Orioles team has failed to coalesce and become the contender many — including Baltimore’s front office —thought they’d be. After all, this team is only 4 games ahead of the pace of last year’s last-place team.

And yet, does that actually mean that the front office’s attempts to improve this team were all failures? As we reach the halfway point of the 2026 season, let’s grade the nine offseason moves that were supposed to transform this team.

The move: Signing OF Leody Taveras to a 1-year/$2M deal

The grade: C+

Taveras was signed to be outfield depth in CF the same way the O’s front office took chances on Ramón Laureano and Dylan Carlson last season. Through the first 30 games of his Oriole career, he looked like a Laureano-esque signing, hitting .277 with a .821 OPS while taking over the starting CF job from Colton Cowser.

Since the beginning of May, however, we’ve seen a noticeable drop-off from the former longtime Texas Ranger. In his last 126 ABs, Taveras is only hitting .238 with a .620 OPS while striking out 31% of the time.

This move still gets a passing grade as Taveras was a plus contributor throughout the first month-plus of the season and has allowed the Orioles to ride out an injury to Dylan Beavers and cold stretches from Cowser and Tyler O’Neill without having to resort to playing Triple-A talent in the Baltimore outfield.

The move: Trading RHP Grayson Rodriguez for OF Taylor Ward

The grade: B

Like Taveras, Ward started off the season incredibly hot and has cooled off as of late. Ward finished the first month of the season with a .304 average and an MLB-leading .438 on-base percentage and a . For an offense that was often struggling to find its rhythm, Ward was a consistent and elite producer at the top of the lineup.

Across May and June, his average has dipped to .223 and his OPS is down to .660, though he’s still maintained a strong .363 OBP amidst his struggles. We’ve yet to see anywhere close to the power output that Ward showed last year with the Angels, as he’s on pace for 40-45 extra-base hits after producing 69 for the Halos last season.

And yet, his on-base ability at the top of the lineup has been extremely valuable for Baltimore, and the front office will be faced with the tough decision of potentially trading his expiring contract at the deadline if the team’s play doesn’t improve. Given that the cost of acquiring Ward was only the perpetually injured G-Rod, this move has so far earned a solid, if not outstanding, grade.

The move: Signing 1B Pete Alonso to a 5-year/$155mdeal

The grade: A-

The Alonso signing was the biggest move the Orioles made this past offseason and his first three months in black and orange have been exactly what the O’s paid for. The five-time All-Star leads the Orioles in hits (74) and home runs (18), while his 52 RBIs are not only best on the team but good enough for fifth in the American League. The Polar Bear is also playing the best defense of his career in Baltimore. Alonso was paid to be the best player on this Orioles’ offense, and through the first half of the season, he’s been just that.

The only reason this signing doesn’t earn a higher grade is that Alonso started the season off cold. Through the first month of the season, the star 1B was slashing .198/.306/.362 with only four homers. Since then, he’s been blazing hot, slashing .282/.357/.547 with 14 long balls in his last 181 ABs. If not for that slow start, the Polar Bear is likely challenging Yordan Alvarez and Nick Kurtz for the status of best hitter in the AL.

The move: Trading RHP Kade Strowd and prospects for INF Blaze Alexander

The grade: B+

Our Tyler Young went into great detail yesterday about how Alexander has significantly outperformed the expectations placed on him when he was acquired to be a super utility player. On analytics alone, he might be the best hitter on this year’s team. His grade doesn’t surpass Alonso’s because his overall offensive impact has been much smaller. But it was still undoubtedly a strong move by the front office to acquire the 27-year-old from Arizona.

The moves: Trading for RHP Shane Baz, signing RHP Chris Bassitt and re-signing RHP Zach Eflin

The grade: C

Elias & Co. made three moves to supplement the existing rotation options of Trevor Rogers, Kyle Bradish, Dean Kremer, Brandon Young and Cade Povich. The Baz trade (and subsequent extension) has been the most impactful acquisition. While his season ERA of 4.04 doesn’t jump off the page, he leads the Orioles with 89 IP and has put up a 2.62 ERA with a .223 BAA over his last seven starts. The former Ray is clearly a foundational piece that the O’s can build their rotation with going forward.

The other two veterans are what sink this grade. Perhaps including Efflin in this calculation is unfair because he only pitched 3.2 strong innings before blowing out his elbow and being lost for the season. Bassitt hasn’t been much better, posting a 5.27 ERA and 0.0 bWAR in 56.1 IP before landing on the IL with back discomfort two weeks ago.

Getting essentially zero positive impact from the $26.5M they invested in Eflin and Bassitt is far from ideal and may be enough to justify a lower grade. But the biggest swing was Baz, and that move looks better and better with each start, earning the front office a grade just above failing.

The moves: Re-acquiring RHP Andrew Kittredge and signing RHP Ryan Helsley to a 2-year/$28M deal

The grade: D-

The Orioles had a bad bullpen in 2025, with their relief corps ranking 25th in ERA at 4.57. The O’s went into this most recent offseason not only trying to patch the hole in their patchwork ‘pen, but also to find a new closer after another injury to Félix Bautista. The front office responded by reacquiring 36-year-old Andrew Kittredge and bringing in former All-Star closer Ryan Helsley.

Through the first half of the season, both have been plain bad. Kittredge is currently sporting a 6.11 and has more hits allowed (21) than strikeouts (16). Helsley is only slightly better with his 5.11 ERA in 12.1 IP, having missed most of the season due to right elbow inflammation.

The O’s currently sit 21st in bullpen ERA this season with most of that improvement coming via the strong seasons by Rico Garcia and Yennier Cano. And while the relative weakness of the bullpen isn’t this team’s biggest problem, it is certainly the place the front office failed to strengthen the most.