NBA Finals winner Anunoby predicts UK basketball boom

OG Anunoby in possession
OG Anunoby, born in London, is now a two-time NBA champion [Getty Images]

With 1.2 seconds left of game four of the 2026 NBA Finals, a sold-out Madison Square Garden erupted.

The score was 106-105 in favour of the San Antonio Spurs as they looked to level the best-of-seven series at 2-2, when New York Knicks talisman Jalen Brunson's three-point attempt was denied by the rim.

But before any Spurs defender could make the crucial rebound, a flying OG Anunoby did enough to rise through a crowd of players and palm the ball back into the basket for a one-point lead and put the Knicks on the brink of immortality.

Magic Johnson in 1986. Michael Jordan in 1996. Steve Nash in 1997. This means the company Anunoby can now put himself in with a game-winner that has gone viral and etched itself in history.

"Game four is probably the top of British basketball history," said London-born Anunoby, now a two-time NBA winner.

"Amazing for Britain and the UK and everyone who loves basketball in the UK."

Three nights after Anunoby's game-winner that sent MSG and its celebrity front row into shock, the Knicks wrapped up the series 4-1 in San Antonio for a first finals win since 1973.

Unlike his first NBA title with the Toronto Raptors in 2019, Anunoby played a significant role. Seven years ago, he was only a spectator as injury ruled him out of the entire play-offs, with the Raptors beating the Golden State Warriors in the finals.

In another tip of the hat to British basketball and its future, Anunoby's team-mates included Jeremy Sochan. While Sochan plays for Poland, because of his upbringing and allegiance to the UK he is listed as one of four UK-based players in the NBA.

Alongside Anunoby and Sochan, Amari Williams and Tosan Evbuomwan played in an NBA season that featured a record number of players from the United Kingdom this term.

Anunoby more than making up the numbers

OG Anunoby crowded by members of the media
OG Anunoby was mobbed by the media following his winner in game four against the San Antonio Spurs [Getty Images]

If you think of the Knicks and their current squad, point guard Brunson is likely the name that springs to mind.

Not only an NBA champion, but now an NBA Finals MVP winner and an NBA all-star in each of the past three seasons.

While Brunson is the immediate franchise player, Anunoby is very much one of those right behind him.

Anunoby featured in 84 of the Knicks' 101 matches this term, all of which he played from the start. During the play-offs, he ranked second in the Knicks squad for average minutes played as well as points, assists, blocks and steals per game.

Brunson may get the plaudits, but Anunoby is among those in the supporting cast who deserve their flowers, too.

More than three billion social media views were generated from game four, one where the Knicks had earlier trailed by 29 points before the result was ultimately decided by Anunoby's dramatic winning basket.

The series itself was the most-watched on ESPN since Jordan and the Chicago Bulls won their sixth and final title 28 years ago.

The Knicks have won this title, their first in 53 years, at a canter. They won 15 of their final 16 matches of the season, 10 of the first 11 of which were by more than 10 points.

Their only loss in that run was a four-point defeat by the Spurs in game three of the finals.

What next for British basketball?

OG Anunoby rising for the ball
OG Anunoby rose highest among crowds of New York Knicks and San Antonio Spurs players to win game four, and ultimately set the Knicks up for a first title in 53 years [Getty Images]

Anunoby's championship-winning season and his clutch moments throughout the year come at a timely crossroads as far as the future of British basketball is concerned.

The NBA is planning to launch an independent European league within the next 18 months. London and Manchester are in place to be hosts to a franchise each when that league is launched, currently planned for October 2027.

By the time it has launched, both cities will have hosted an NBA regular-season match in the two years leading up to what could be the biggest changes to club basketball across the United Kingdom and Europe.

"I think London, especially, is an untapped market. There's so much talent and so many people playing basketball, so I think it would be amazing to bring a team to Manchester and London and continue growing in England," said Anunoby on the prospect of a European NBA league.

"As time goes on [basketball in the UK] is going to grow more and more. I think over time more and more [young boys and girls] are going to pull up at the NBA or WNBA.

"I want them to see that someone from where they are from is doing this. There is a lot of untapped potential and hope it's going to grow. It will mean exposure, growth, more leagues, more excitement for the game."

The London Lions recently signed a multi-year deal to remain competing in EuroCup for at least the next three seasons, which could be extended to five.

Anunoby was previously a minority owner of the franchise, who are coming off the back of a domestic quadruple-winning season.

It is an exciting time for a sport that has struggled to consistently produce top-level British stars but is showing growth and enormous potential at grassroots level.

Anunoby's championship-winning run is both timely and an inspiration for the next generation of UK-based basketball hopefuls.

Key dates Spurs fans should know this summer

Jun 8, 2026; New York, New York, USA; San Antonio Spurs guard Stephon Castle (5) talks with forward Victor Wembanyama (1) against the New York Knicks during game three of the 2026 NBA Finals in the third quarter at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-Imagn Images | Geoff Burke-Imagn Images

The 2025-26 season may have ended in disappointment as the Spurs stumbled their way through 4 fourth-quarter collapses in the NBA Finals, turning what could have been four victories and a championship into four excruciating losses in five games. However, when you look at the broader view, it helps to remember this is nowhere near what was expected of this team this season, how far ahead of schedule they are, and how much more room they have to grow.

Another thing this year’s trip to the Finals has given us is, after years of watching and waiting for two months once the season ended in April, we immediately get to turn our attention to important summer activities, such as the NBA Draft, Free Agency and Summer League with almost no time gap. Below is a list of important dates to keep in mind as the Spurs build on a highly successful season and prepare for the future.

NBA Draft

June 23, 2026 — First round

  • Spurs pick 20th (via Atlanta Hawks)

June 24, 2026 — Second round

  • Spurs pick 35th (via the Utah Jazz)
  • Spurs pick 42th (via the Portland Trail Blazers)
  • Spurs pick 44th (via the Miami Heat)

As of today, the Spurs have four total picks, including 20th overall in the first round thanks to owning the right to swap picks with the Atlanta Hawks, who will in turn pick in the Spurs’ slot of 29th (the Dejounte Murray trade keeps on giving). They also have three second round picks via other teams, while their own is going to Minnesota. (After getting a little spoiled by the lottery in recent years, waiting for 20th is going to seem like a long time.)


Free Agency

June 14, 2026 — Teams can begin negotiating with their own free agents.

This was actually yesterday since it aligns with the first day after the end of the Finals, but with that being said, the Spurs have very few free agents of note. The most notable is Harrison Barnes, who began the season as a starter but fell out of the rotation as the season wore on and played sparingly in the playoffs. The Spurs’ other free agents include Kelly Olynyk, Jordan McLaughlin, Lindy Waters III, Bismack Biyombo and Mason Plumlee, as well as their three two-way players: Harrison Ingram, David Jones Garcia and Emmanuel Miller.

June 29, 2026 — Last day for early terminations and qualifying offers for restricted free agents.

The latter part of this day hardly matters to the Spurs since their 2022 draft class is gone, but the former could matter if they choose to decline Julian Champagnie’s team option and sign him to an extension. If that is the case, they would need to do so by this time.

June 30, 2026 — Last day for veteran extensions, negotiation period begins (5:00 PM CT).

Should the Spurs take the previously mentioned route with Champagnie, this would be the last chance for him to sign an extension, otherwise he would become a free agent. Also beginning at 5:00 PM CT, teams can begin negotiating with other team’s free agents.

July 1, 2026 — True beginning of Free Agency (list is courtesy of Hoops Rumors).

  • Official start of the 2026/27 NBA league year.
  • Moratorium period begins.
  • Restricted free agents can sign an offer sheet.
  • Teams can begin signing players to one- or two-year minimum-salary contracts.
  • Teams can begin signing players to two-way contracts.
  • Teams can begin signing first-round picks to rookie scale contracts.
  • Teams can begin signing second-round picks using the second-round pick exception.
  • Teams can begin exercising the third- or fourth-year team options for 2027-28 on rookie scale contracts.

A few notes here. One is as a reminder, the Moratorium Period is five days in which contracts can be negotiated but not signed. The other notable occurrence for the Spurs will be the bottom one, in which they can — and for all intents and purposes will — exercised the fourth-year option on Stephon Castle’s rookie contract and third-year options for Dylan Harper and Carter Bryant. (They technically have until October 31 to get this done, but it’s hard to imagine it would take that long, especially for Castle and Harper.)

July 6, 2026 — Moratorium period ends; trades, contracts and extensions can be officially signed.

Now pen can officially be put to paper for trades, contracts and extensions. The Spurs will be able to sign any new free agents, but most notably, Victor Wembanyama will become eligible to sign his rookie-scale extension. Assuming he takes the max, it will be largest rookie contract extension in NBA history and make him one of the league’s highest paid players beginning in the 2027-28 season. The base salary for his maximum extension is $251 million (or 25% of the salary cap) across five years, but it can turn into the super-max worth up to $301 million (30% of the salary cap) if he earns All-NBA honors or wins MVP or Defensive Player of the Year in the 2026-27 season. Barring him missing the 65-game limit, expect the super-max to be the case by the time it kicks in.

These are the main key dates that will be notable for the Spurs, but others within FA include:

  • July 13 —Last day to withdraw qualifying offers to restricted free agents.
  • July 31 — Players signed using the second-round pick exception begin to count against a team’s cap.
  • August 5 — Last day for teams to issue required tenders to unsigned second-round picks..
  • August 29 — Last day for teams to waive players and apply the stretch provision to their 2026-27 salaries.

Summer League

July 3-6 — California Classic

Amidst all the chaos of free agency will be Summer League, so you don’t even have to wait a month to watch basketball again! First, the Spurs will participate in the California Classic in San Francisco, along the Warriors, Lakers and Heat. This is usually a good place to at least see the Spurs second round picks for the first time.

July 9-19 — Las Vegas Summer League

This of course is the more notable of the Summer Leagues and where you stand a better chance of seeing the Spurs’ first round pick, as well as possibly some returning faces. While I wouldn’t expect Harper to be in SL this year (he doesn’t need it), it’s quite possible Bryant gets a run as team captain so he can develop more and show the Spurs how far he has come. This could also be a chance for players like Ingram to vie for another two-way spot with the Spurs or possibly even a guaranteed contract. Unfortunately, one face we may not see is Jones Garcia, who underwent ankle surgery in February and is not expected to be ready for SL.


It’s crazy how much quicker the offseason is when you play two extra months of ball (because math), but the lack of a long gap between April and now is certainly nice. It’s hard to believe that training camp is just a bit over three months away, and while the Spurs have some work to do this summer, expect them to return pretty much the same core team.

We will have plenty of content on potential draft and free agency prospects for the Spurs in the coming days and weeks, as well as Summer League coverage, so be sure to stick around at Pounding the Rock all summer. While this season may not have ended ideally, it was certain the best one I have covered since starting here in 2016-17, and the future couldn’t be brighter. Thank you all for your continued support!

The 2025-26 NHL season has ended, now what?

The 2025-26 NHL season has concluded, now what do we do?

Don’t worry hockey fans, there are several key dates coming up that should keep you interested until the dog days of summer arrive.

First up will be the 2026 NHL buyout window. The first buyout period this year starts 48 hours after the Stanley Cup playoffs end. So, with Carolina ending it last night, clubs will start the process of figuring out if they wish to buy a player out, and that process must conclude by June 30th at 5pm ET.

What will Columbus do during the buyout season? Probably nothing. The only player that would even remotely be a candidate is goalie Elvis Merzlikins, and honestly, I can't see that happening. 

And then, of course, on June 26th, the NHL will conduct the 1st round of the entry draft. The CBJ are picking 14th, and who they will choose is anybody's guess. There are plenty of quality players who will be available at 14. You can find the players we wrote about at The Hockey News -Columbus Blue Jackets site. You can watch the draft live on ESPN and ESPN+. 

On June 27th, rounds 2-7 will be conducted. You can watch the coverage on NHL Network and ESPN+. The Jackets have six picks from rounds 2-7, but of course, that is subject to change depending on trades.

A few days later, on July 1st, the free agency period begins. There are a few big names out there, but time will tell what Don Waddell does. He first needs to lock up Jet Greaves and Adam Fantilli to contracts, which will take up a nice chunk of change. Cole Sillinger must also be given a new deal before July 1st. Get those three players done, and then Waddell can focus on free agency. 

The Columbus Blue Jackets will have their annual development camp a few days after the NHL Draft. Last year, it went from July 2 to July 5. It's usually open to the public and will conclude with a Prospects Game on the final day of camp. It'll be held from June 29 to July 2 this year. 

After the development camp, the NHL’s dog days begin. Other than random signings, there’s not a lot going on. The only thing really going on is all the speculation on Twitter from fans about what their team is going to do in free agency. Some people take a break, get out in the sun, and enjoy the world. It’s nice to take a break from the stressful relationship a lot of fans have with their teams. Whatever you’re doing this summer, have fun!

Stay with THN Columbus all Summer for breaking news, player pieces, and everything else you can think of. 


Next Up For Columbus: The NHL Draft is on June 26 and 27 in Buffalo, where the CBJ will own pick #14.   

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Monday Stat Party: Because NY needs another party

The Empire State Building is lit with the colors of New York Knicks after the New York Knicks defeated the San Antonio Spurs in Game 5 of the NBA Finals to win the series, as seen from West New York, New Jersey, on June 13, 2026. The Knicks won the NBA Championship for the first time since 1973, for the third time in franchise history. (Photo by Leonardo MUNOZ / AFP via Getty Images) | AFP via Getty Images

Welcome back to Monday Stat Party, a weekly series showcasing some of the most curious and nostalgia-inducing statistical developments from the past week of Mets baseball. I trust that this edition of Monday Stat Party will be the biggest New York sports party of the week.

TUESDAY

Jordan Walker hit two batted balls with an exit velocity of 114 mph or higher. Prior to Walker, only one player in the Statcast era (since 2015) had hit multiple balls at 114+ mph against the Mets in a single game: Giancarlo Stanton, who did it on two occasions at Marlins Park (July 23, 2016, and September 18, 2017).

The Mets suffered their seventh shutout loss of the season, tying them with the Cubs, Padres, and Phillies for the second-most in MLB. Only the Giants (8) have more.

WEDNESDSAY

The Cardinals recorded 13 batted balls with an exit velocity of 100 mph or higher, matching the most the Mets have allowed in a game this season (April 15 against the Dodgers). What could make the Cardinals’ feat even more impressive? The day prior, they recorded 9 batted balls with a 100+ mph exit velocity, tied for fifth-most against the Mets this season.

THURSDAY

Juan Soto’s solo homer in the bottom of the seventh inning was his second go-ahead hit in the sixth inning or later this season. The other came on April 1, 2026, when he hit…another solo homer against the Cardinals.

The Mets surrendered three homers at a projected distance of 400+ feet for the second consecutive day. It’s the first time they’ve allowed a trio of 400+ foot home runs on back-to-back days since June 19-20, 2018 at Coors Field. Prior to Wedneday night, the Mets hadn’t allowed three 400+ foot homers since August 11, 2024 in Seattle. 

Thursday marked just the eighth game in the expansion era (since 1961) where two teams combined to homer in at least five of the game’s first 14 plate appearances. (source: Sarah Langs / MLB)

Christian Scott generated 13 whiffs, his most in a game this season. 11 of those whiffs came via fastball, tying Freddy Peralta (May 12 against the Tigers) for the most whiffs on a Met’s fastball in a game this season.

FRIDAY

The Mets hit multiple home runs in the first inning for the second time this season, having done so for the first time the day before against the Cardinals.

The Mets hit back-to-back home runs for the first time since Opening Day, when Carson Benge and Francisco Alvarez did it. (source: Apple TV broadcast)

Bo Bichette tallied six RBI, matching his career high set on August 4, 2025 at Coors Field.

Bichette also became the first player to hit two home runs within the first two innings of a game twice in his Mets career, whether in the same season or not. He had previously done so on May 19 at Nationals Park. (source: Sarah Langs / MLB)

The Mets hit two first-inning home runs in a second consecutive game for the first time in franchise history. (source: SNY broadcast)

Devin Williams earned his first four-out save as a Met, and his first save of four outs or more since May 28, 2023.

Cionel Pérez’s 1-2 fastball to Michael Harris II in the top of the fifth inning was clocked at 99.4 mph, marking the fastest pitch thrown by a Met this season. A 99.2-mph fastball thrown by Kodai Senga at Busch Stadium on March 31, 2026 was the team’s previous high.

SATURDAY

Sean Manaea completed six innings for the first time since October 8, 2024, when he went seven against the Phillies in Game 3 of the NLDS.

The Mets scored two runs or fewer through nine innings for the 34th time, giving them the most such games in MLB this season. The 1967 Mets (36) and the 1965 Mets (35) are the only teams in franchise history with more such games through the first 70 games of a season.

SUNDAY

The Mets recorded 13 hits, matching their season-high at Citi Field this season (set on May 12 against the Tigers).

Juan Soto and Brett Baty each recorded two hits and two walks. In MLB this season, they are just the fourth pair of teammates to record multiple hits and multiple walks in the same game. The first to do it were the Yankees’ Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Anthony Volpe, in a game against the Mets at Citi Field on May 17.

Soto, Baty, and MJ Melendez each drew two walks. It’s the first time the Mets had three different players in their lineup walk multiple times since Carson Benge, Francisco Lindor, and Jorge Polanco did it on Opening Day against the Pirates.

Soto recorded his fourth consecutive multi-hit game, his most in a row since July 10-13, 2024, while with the Yankees.

Baty reached base four times in a game for the first time since August 22, 2025, also against the Braves.

Miscellaneous Mets stat of the week:

On May 9, 1973 — the day before the Knicks won the NBA Finals — the Mets defeated the Atlanta Braves at home by a score of 8-1. 

On June 14, 2026 — the day after the Knicks won the NBA Finals — the Mets defeated the Atlanta Braves at home by a score of 8-1.

The Mets have only defeated the Atlanta Braves at home by a score of 8-1 on two other occasions in their 65-year history (June 12, 1970, and July 17, 2005).

Braves 2026 MLB Draft Candidate Tyler Bell Scouting Report

HOOVER, AL - MAY 19:Kentucky infielder Tyler Bell (6) hits a fly ball to deep centerfield during the SEC Baseball Tournament game between the Vanderbilt Commodores and the Kentucky Wildcats on May 19, 2026, at Hoover Metropolitan Stadium in Hoover, Alabama.(Photo by Jason Homan/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

As we close in on the 2026 MLB Draft, the focus on who the Atlanta Braves are looking at for the ninth overall pick has come into focus a bit. Names like Georgia Tech outfielder Drew Burress, Arkansas catcher Ryder Helfrick, Kentucky shortstop Tyler Bell, and Florida prep lefty Gio Rojas seem to be the names most prominently linked to the club. Massachusetts prep lefty Brody Bumila is also a name that has received some buzz. My goal is to start to break down who these players are and their strengths and weaknesses to prepare you for the newest Braves prospect.

Today we start with Tyler Bell – the highest drafted player in 2024 to make it to college. Bell is among the newest names to become prominently linked to the Braves, and that makes him worth diving into his profile.

Bio

Name: Tyler Bell

Position: Shortstop

Height: 6’1”

Weight: 190

College: Kentucky

High School: Lincoln-Way East HS (Frankfort, IL)

Previously Drafted: 2nd round 2024, Rays. #66 overall

Bats/Throws: S/R

Stats

2025: .296/.385/.522, 17 2B, 2 3B, 10 HR, 46 RBI, 11-16 SB, 24 BB, 59 K in 265 PA over 56 games

2025: .316/.409/.474, 3 2B, 0 3B, 0 HR, 2 RBI, 2-2 SB, 2 BB, 6 K in 22 PA over 5 games in Cape Cod League

2026: .343/.510/.608, 9 2B, 1 3B, 9 HR, 29 RBI, 10-13 SB, 30 BB, 36 K in 194 PA over 41 games


Hit 50/55

A switch-hitter, Bell came into Kentucky and had a very strong true freshman season, though he did hit slightly below .300 with a 22.3% strikeout rate. Although he missed time this year following an injury on the opening weekend, he did show real growth there. Bell raised his average by nearly 50 points, walked six more times over 71 less plate appearances, and cut his strikeout rate to 18.6%. It is worth noting that he was solid against right-handers, but he was elite against lefties

His data suggests that he makes his best and most frequent contact in the middle of the plate and having that stretch out to cover both sides of the plate. He can be beaten low, especially around the two sides of the plate. on the positive side he also seems to be able to hit almost any kind of pitch, with changeups being the pitch he struggles the most against – he also had some lower numbers against cutters, but we have a very tiny sample size – but he was still productive against changeups. Velocity isn’t much of an issue for him either, as he had his lowest exit velocities against 94-97 MPH pitches, but did slash .316/.409/.474 and he did record high exit velocities in the tiny sampling against 97+ MPH pitches.

Power 50

Bell has solid power production for a middle infielder. After hitting 10 homers as a freshman, he was just one short in 15 fewer games than last year. Still his power projects more average than plus, and he is the kind of hitter who will put the ball into the gaps for doubles and even triples power often.

Bell’s exit velocity data suggests that he actually outperformed his expected power numbers this season. It is worth noting that all nine of his homers came against pitches than were under 91 MPH, though five of his nine doubles came against pitches 91 MPH or above.

Speed 50

Bell is only an average speed guy, though does make up for that in other ways like a quick first step and good instincts. He should have the speed to be able to handle shortstop defensively, and while he isn’t a guy who will lead the league in stolen bases, he is a guy who will be a threat on the bases when he gets on.

Glove 50/55

Bell is a guy who should be able to stick at shortstop longterm with an average to slightly above glove thanks to his quickness, instincts, and arm. He does also bring some experience at both second and third base, so the fallback option of being a versatile utility guy is on the table for him if he can’t reach his ceiling.

Arm 55

Bell has a strong arm, which will grade out around above average.


Overall

Bell is a productive player who plays hard. He gutted through this season with his injured shoulder that he knew would require surgery after his season, so it does seem likely that he won’t make his pro debut until the 2027 season.

It’s important to note that there isn’t anything plus about Bell’s tools, but he is average or slightly better across the board. He reminds me a little of Tate Southisene from last year, with a little more power and a little less speed. The comparison is that these are two hard working kids who know how to hit and run, and while they do have power it isn’t the standout tool. Both players are grinders who will do whatever it takes to win and succeed.

Bell’s realistic ceiling probably gets him to borderline All Star, as he is a guy who could hit .270-280 with 20 homers and good on base ability as a shortstop. If he doesn’t reach his ceiling his floor could be a quality super utility guy that plays everywhere and contributes with the bat.

If the Braves were to draft Bell, I would count on not seeing him in a game until 2027, and potentially in Rome to open the season. I would believe he’d have a chance to reach Atlanta by some point in the 2028 season. He would rank behind prospects like Cam Caminiti, Eric Hartman, and probably Tate Southisene in the Braves system, but could rank as high as #4 upon being drafted.

In my personal opinion I wouldn’t say Bell would be my favorite option at #9, but I also wouldn’t say I dislike him as the potential pick. I would definitely be hoping to see the pick come in a little underslot, with the more under he is, the more I like the pick – though he isn’t likely to be significantly underslot either. He could be the Braves longterm answer at short, and is a player who could move quickly.

Chicago Cubs update: Pete Crow-Armstrong, Javier Assad, Michael Busch

The Cubs went 3-3 on their trip to Colorado and San Francisco. That isn’t great, but… it’s an improvement over recent weeks. They stand 7.5 games out of first place in the NL Central, which with 90 games remaining is far from insurmountable. And they are just one game behind the third wild card spot.

None of that is going to happen unless the team starts to hit again.

Here’s who was hot and not for the Cubs over the six games.

Three up

Pete Crow-Armstrong continues his surge

PCA batted .346/.370/.654 (9-for-26) over the six games with three doubles, a triple, a home run, five runs scored and two stolen bases.

He was NL Player of the Week last week — I don’t think that’s quite enough to win the honor again, but PCA is on an 18-game on-base streak in which he is batting .377/.429/.714 (29-for-77) with six doubles, a triple, six home runs, four stolen bases and 14 runs scored. That has raised his OPS from .673 to .806 and, I think, puts him in the All-Star Game conversation.

Here is his first-pitch-of-the-game homer Saturday in San Francisco, his 12th of the year [VIDEO].

He also made another five-star catch [VIDEO].

Javier Assad was dominant again

After his great emergency outing replacing the injured Jameson Taillon a week ago Sunday at Wrigley Field, Assad shut down the Giants for six innings Friday, allowing no runs and three hits.

Assad’s making a strong case to remain in the rotation even when the Cubs’ injured starters return.

Here are his five strikeouts Friday [VIDEO].

Michael Busch’s numbers are quietly on the rise

Busch goes about his business on the field with little fanfare, and so you might not have noticed he had at least one hit in each of the six games on the road trip.

That extended his hitting streak to nine. On the six-game trip he batted .333/.462/.667 (7-for-21) with a double, two home runs, six RBI, four runs scored, four walks and even a stolen base.

That brought his season OPS up to .789. He leads the team with 42 RBI and I would think he’ll start hitting homers soon — he does tend to do that in bunches.

Three down

What is wrong with Dansby Swanson?

Swanson had a decent start to this season but his OPS has dropped below .600, a real danger zone. Over the six games he batted .158/.273/.211 (3-for-19) with eight strikeouts.

He’s still playing solid defense but… that’s not enough. He got a “reset” by sitting the last two home games before the trip, but it did not seem to help.

Same thing for Nico Hoerner

Hoerner got Sunday off after batting .150/.143/.200 (3-for-20) in the other five games on the road trip. He did strike out only once, but after a hot start Nico is batting just .185/.267/.219 over his last 37 games — 165 plate appearances. That’s a large enough sample size to be worrisome.

There are some here who have mentioned the day Nico was hit in the head by a pitch in San Diego, April 29 [VIDEO] as a possible turning point.

He remained in the game and played the next two days before getting a day off.

Up to April 29: .291/.370/.449, four home runs, 26 RBI, 13 walks, 14 strikeouts (31 games, 146 PA)
Since that date: .197/.275/.243, no home runs, eight RBI, 17 walks, seven strikeouts (39 games, 171 PA)

I dunno. Should he have been examined for concussion protocol? Maybe you guys are on to something.

Ian Happ is quietly sliding

Over the six games, Happ batted .136/.231/.409 (3-for-22). He did hit two home runs, one each against the Rockies and Giants, but had just one other hit for the week.

Overall Happ’s numbers are still decent, but the Cubs could use more production there. Or, just about anywhere. Here’s hoping the bats come alive beginning tonight against the Rockies.

More On Yesterday’s Blue Jays Loss

Jun 6, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Blue Jays relief pitcher Jeff Hoffman (23) delivers a pitch against the Baltimore Orioles in the sixth inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images | Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images

The Jays have an off day today, which I’m ok with. After yesterdays loss, I could go for a week of off days. But then, tomorrow I’ll be sitting in front of the TV, ready to get punched in the gut again.

I often say that no one, including umpires, understand the balk rule. Yesterday was a good example.

So the balk was called because Hoffman did a ‘good inside move’ to make the pick off throw to second. Which he does on occasion. Which isn’t a balk. But, sometimes a good move will surprise an umpire and, occasionally, if something surprises an umpire, he’ll decide it is against the rules.

I’m sure if plate umpire Steven Jaschinski saw it on TV he would have thought nothing of it. But it was in front of him and it surprised him and, if it surprises him, it can’t be legal. Generally, if an umpire calls balk, the other three will also say it, because when a ruling is iffy, it is best you show a united front (and the umpires want to say ‘yeah, I saw it too’ whether they did or not’. Yesterday it was just Jaschinski.

It is the sort of thing, especially with a long argument delaying things further, that can throw a pitcher off. Moving a go ahead runner to third on the whim of an umpire, adds a fair bit of pressure. But Hoffman got a couple of strikeouts and all was good. For a moment.

And then there was this: I rarely buy into the ‘MLB favours the Yankees’ stuff, but the plate umpire let Caballero delay the game for a long time and the plate umpire never seemed to say ‘that’s enough’. Schneider comes out to argue something that was really worth arguing, and he got tossed quick. Of course, he may have said ‘key words’ that get you tossed. But it definitely seemed that Jaschinkis had a lot more patience with Caballero. I shouldn’t have used the word ‘seemed’, he definitely had a lot more patience with Caballero. I do think that umpires have a lot more patience for crap from Yankees’ players or managers.


I keep hoping that, with us not having couple of bullpen days, every time through the rotation, that we could ease the strain on the bullpen, but Corbin only went 3.2 innings and Scherzer went 3.1 last Wednesday, so we really aren’t going all that much better than a bullpen days quite often.


There was a lot to complain about in Yesterday’s game, mostly RISP stuff. But it was nice to see Nathan Lukes get hitting again, after a few lesser games. And George Springer and Kazuma Okamoto seem to have figured out how to make hard contact with the ball again. And Davis Schneider had two hits. After his time in Buffalo, where he seemed to be waiting for pitchers to walk him, I’m happy to see that. One game isn’t a trend, but it doesn’t hurt.

On the flip side, Yohendrick Piñango, Charles McAdoo and Jesús Sánchez all had a rough time with RISP. There are going to be days like that, but they did look like they were over matched.

I’m not really sure that McAdoo is that much of an upgrade on Lenyn Sosa, though it isn’t fair to judge him on 24 PA. I would feel better if he would take the odd walk. I guess he hasn’t shown MLB pitchers that they have to work off the edges yet. Sosa got 87 PA, McAdoo should get a similar number before we write him off.

Islanders Sign Defenseman Ethan Bear To One-Year, Two-Way Extension

The New York Islanders announced on Monday that they have signed right-shot defenseman Ethan Bear to a one-year, two-way deal. 

Bear, who was on an expiring one-year, two-way deal worth $775,000 at the NHL level, recorded 27 points (four goals, 23 assists) in 40 games with no points in two playoff games.

He missed significant time with what appeared to be a wrist injury after blocking a shot in preaseason.

The 28-year-old didn't make the Islanders' lineup in 2025-26 but has 275 NHL games of experience and will continue to be a leader for the younger prospects as they embark on their first season in Hamilton. 

Former Blues Forward Falls Short Of Third NHL Stanley Cup Win

On Sunday, June 14, the Carolina Hurricanes defeated the Vegas Golden Knights 3-0 to secure their second Stanley Cup win in franchise history. 

It was a back-and-forth series between the two teams before the Hurricanes ramped it up and took over. The Golden Knights won Game 1; the Hurricanes responded in Game 2 before the Golden Knights won Game 3 once again. But a goaltending switch to Brandon Bussi changed momentum, and the Hurricanes rallied off three consecutive wins to claim victory 4-2 in the best-of-seven series. 

While the Hurricanes go home to celebrate, the Golden Knights are left heartbroken. One of those heartbroken players is former St. Louis Blues forward Ivan Barbashev.

Barbashev played seven seasons with the Blues, notching 78 goals and 178 points in 410 games. Barbashev was traded to the Golden Knights during the 2022-23 season and helped them win the Stanley Cup. Barbashev was sent to the Golden Knights in exchange for prospect Zach Dean.

Dean has been unable to crack the Blues’ roster.

St. Louis Blues Sign Zach Dean, Dylan Peterson To Two-Way ContractsSt. Louis Blues Sign Zach Dean, Dylan Peterson To Two-Way ContractsThe St. Louis Blues have locked up their third pending RFA this week, handing out one-year, two-way contract extensions to forwards Zach Dean and Dylan Peterson.

Barbashev, on the other hand, has enjoyed career seasons in Vegas, most recently recording 61 points this regular season. The 30-year-old has thrived in Vegas, utilized in numerous roles. 

Barbashev has excelled playing on the top line with Jack Eichel or in a third-line defensive role. Wherever placed, Barbashev has produced and fulfilled his role. 

Although he fell just short of his third Stanley Cup, Barbashev scored several clutch goals and finished the 2025-26 post-season with six goals and 14 points in 22 games.


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Former Calgary Flames Players Who Reached the Stanley Cup Final After Leaving Calgary

Former Calgary Flames players have been represented in the Stanley Cup Finals every year since 2018.

While some have played more notable roles than others, each of these players suited up for the Flames before finding success after their tenure in Calgary was complete. With multiple former Flames having competed in the 2026 Finals, here’s a list of players who made the Finals shortly after leaving Calgary.

© Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images
© Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images

Mark Jankowski (CAR 2026) - Selected 21st overall by the Flames in 2012, Jankowski played four seasons in Calgary before moving to the Pittsburgh Penguins. After additional stints in Buffalo and Nashville, he landed in Carolina in 2024 and won the Stanley Cup with the Hurricanes in 2026.

Rasmus Andersson (VGK 2026) - Drafted and developed by the Flames (53rd overall in 2015), Andersson played parts of ten seasons in Calgary before being traded to the Vegas Golden Knights this year. He reached the Finals in his first season with Vegas, contributing significantly to their blue line.

Noah Hanifin (VGK 2026) - Acquired from the Carolina Hurricanes in the 2018 trade that sent Adam Fox the other way, Hanifin played six seasons for the Flames. He was traded to the Vegas Golden Knights in 2024, where he has become a core piece of their defensive rotation. He appeared in the Finals in 2026 against the Hurricanes.

© Jim Rassol-Imagn Images
© Jim Rassol-Imagn Images

Matthew Tkachuk (FLA 23/24/25) - In a pivotal moment in franchise history, Tkachuk informed the Flames in 2022 that he would not re-sign. Drafted 6th overall in 2016, he played six seasons in Calgary before being traded to the Florida Panthers for Jonathan Huberdeau and MacKenzie Weegar (and Cole Schwindt). Tkachuk went on to appear in three straight Stanley Cup Finals, winning the Cup in 2024 and 2025.

Sam Bennett (FLA 23/24/25) - Often cited as a player the Flames moved on from too soon, Bennett was the franchise's highest draft pick at 4th overall in 2014. Despite his potential, he struggled to find an offensive role in Calgary and was traded to Florida in 2021. He appeared in three consecutive Finals, winning twice, and earned the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP in 2025 after a dominant 15-goal postseason.

AJ Greer (FLA 2025) - Greer had a brief stint in Calgary after being claimed off waivers, playing 59 games during the 2023-24 season. He signed with the Panthers as a free agent on July 1, 2024, and captured a Stanley Cup later that season.

© Sam Navarro-Imagn Images
© Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

Ryan Lomberg (FLA 23/24) - Lomberg spent seven seasons in the organization after signing as an undrafted free agent in 2017. He played primarily for their AHL affiliate before joining Florida in 2020, where he reached two Finals and won the Cup in 2024. Lomberg returned to Calgary as a free agent in 2024 and has been a fan favourite in Calgary ever since.

Brett Kulak (EDM 24/25) - Drafted by Calgary 105th overall in 2012, Kulak played parts of four seasons in Calgary before being traded to Montreal. He eventually joined the Edmonton Oilers in 2022, reaching the Stanley Cup Finals with the Flames’ provincial rivals in 2024 and 2025.

Troy Stecher (EDM 24/25) - Stecher suited up for 20 games with the Flames at the end of the 2022-23 season. After signing back with Arizona, he was traded to the Edmonton Oilers in 2024, appearing in back-to-back Finals.

Derek Ryan (EDM 24/25) - After beginning his NHL career in Carolina, Ryan signed with the Flames in 2018. He spent three seasons in Calgary before joining the Oilers in 2021. He reached two Finals in Edmonton before retiring in 2025.

Brian Elliott (TBL 2022) - Elliott spent one season as the Flames' starter after being acquired from St. Louis for a 2nd-round pick. While his tenure in Calgary ended with a difficult playoff performance, he later signed with the Tampa Bay Lightning and reached the Finals in 2022.

Curtis McElhinney (TBL 2020 & 2021) - A 2002 draft pick of the Flames, McElhinney played parts of three seasons in Calgary. After a long journey through the league, he joined the Tampa Bay Lightning in 2019, where he helped the team secure back-to-back Stanley Cups as a reliable backup.

© Winslow Townson-Imagn Images
© Winslow Townson-Imagn Images

Jay Bouwmeester (STL 2019) - Bouwmeester joined the Flames in 2009 and was an ironman on the blue line for four seasons. He was traded to the St. Louis Blues in 2013, where he eventually captured the Stanley Cup in 2019 before retiring in 2020.

Chris Butler (STL 2019) - Acquired from Buffalo in 2011, Butler played three seasons in Calgary. He signed with St. Louis in 2014 and was part of the Blues' 2019 championship run as a veteran member of the extended playoff roster.

Deryk Engelland (VGK 2018) - Engelland spent three seasons in Calgary before being selected by Vegas in the 2017 Expansion Draft. He helped lead the Golden Knights to the Finals in their inaugural season and received the Mark Messier Leadership Award for his efforts.

Rockies vs Cubs Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today's MLB Game

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The Colorado Rockies own a NL-worst 13-25 record on the road this season.

With the Chicago Cubs having a massive starting pitching advantage, my Rockies vs. Cubs prediction and MLB picks are banking on Colorado's road woes continuing on Monday, June 15

Who will win Rockies vs Cubs today: Chicago Cubs -1.5 (-105)

The Chicago Cubs rank fifth in OBP and tied for ninth in runs.  They should have success against Michael Lorenzen, who owns a 7.54 ERA, 1.90 WHIP, and ranks in the first percentile in Pitcher Run Value.

While Lorenzen slowed the Cubs in his last start, his xERA was nearly five runs lower than his average. He’s unlikely to replicate that performance.

It’ll be tough for the Colorado Rockies to score on Shota Imanaga, who has allowed two or fewer in four of five against teams outside the Top-15 in OBP vs. lefties.

Play the Cubs run line to -115.

Covers COVERS INTEL:Lorenzen has allowed hard contact 42% of the time, the highest of any projected starter on Monday.

Rockies vs Cubs Over/Under pick: Under 9.5 (-120)

Excluding the most recent series against the Athletics, which was played in an extreme hitter-friendly park, the Rockies have a .299 wOBA and .115 ISO on the road vs. lefties this season.

They have also struck out more than 26% of the time, which is a recipe for trouble against Imanaga. He ranks in the 96th percentile in chase rate and could be in for a ceiling performance in strikeouts.

The Cubs will score against Lorenzen, but 7+ runs may be needed to push this one Over the total.

I’d play the Under 9.5 to -130.

Todd Cordell's 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets: 28-25, -4.70 units
  • Over/Under bets: 27-24-2, -0.06 units

Rockies vs Cubs odds

  • Moneyline: Rockies +170 | Cubs -210
  • Run line: Rockies +1.5 (-115) | Cubs -1.5 (-105)
  • Over/Under: Over 9.5 (+100) | Under 9.5 (-120)

Rockies vs Cubs trend

Chicago has hit the Game Total Under in 24 of the last 40 games (+6.8 units, 15% ROI). Find more MLB betting trends for Rockies vs. Cubs.

How to watch Rockies vs Cubs and game info

LocationWrigley Field, Chicago, IL
DateMonday, June 15, 2026
First pitch8:05 p.m. ET
TVRockies.TV, Marquee
Rockies starting pitcherMichael Lorenzen
(2-8, 7.54 ERA)
Cubs starting pitcherShota Imanaga
(4-6, 4.44ERA)

Rockies vs Cubs latest injuries

Rockies vs Cubs weather

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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Jeremy Sochan, NBA Champion

SAN ANTONIO, TX - JUNE 13: Timothee Chalamet celebrates with the New York Knicks after winning the NBA Finals aagainst the San Antonio Spurs during Game Five of the 2026 NBA Finals on June 13, 2026 at Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE(Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant /NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

One thing that we see every so often across sports ahead of a championship series is the “Guaranteed Ring”.

When a player plays for both finalists in a sport, they’re essentially secured a ring, as all players who suited up for a specific team in a season usually get one for their efforts, no matter how small or inconsequential.

It’s most common in MLB due to the sheer amount of roster turnover. Buddy Kennedy and Jose Ureña both played for the Blue Jays and Dodgers in 2025, but neither were in either organization by the time the World Series rolled around

Every so often, though, you get it in the NBA. Two recent examples include Torrey Craig in 2021 and Anderson Varejão in 2016. As the prophecy foretold, it happened once again in a five-year increment.

Jeremy Sochan was born in Guymon, Oklahoma, on May 20, 2003, to two former Division II basketball players. His mother, Aneta, was of Polish descent, coming from a long line of professional athletes that even has roots in the resistance of Nazi occupation in World War II with Sochan’s great-grandfather, Zygmunt.

As a child, Sochan moved from Oklahoma to France to England, where he spent much of his childhood before returning to the United States to play high school basketball in La Porte, Indiana. After leading the Polish U16 team to the 2019 FIBA U16 European Championship Division B title, he earned a scholarship to play for Scott Drew at Baylor, where he turned himself into a top-flight NBA prospect.

After briefly playing overseas with OrangeAcademy in Germany, he joined the Bears in 2021-22, where he averaged 9.2 points and 6.4 rebounds, being named the Big 12 Sixth Man of the Year as part of a stacked Baylor team that earned a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament a year after winning the national championship in 2021. While they were upset in the second round, Sochan had established himself as a promising prospect, enabling him to forgo his remaining eligibility to declare for the 2022 NBA Draft.

Sochan was the perfect encapsulation of teams preferring traits over college production. While guys like Jalen Brunson fall to the second round, guys like Sochan rise with their youth, size, and skill. He was an advanced passer for someone of his archetype, and despite his offensive game being very limited, teams saw a player who still had a lot of room to grow.

That’s what convinced the San Antonio Spurs to draft him ninth overall over notable players like Santa Clara’s Jalen Williams, Memphis’ Jalen Duren, and, of course, Ousmane Dieng. As the franchise’s first top-10 pick since Tim Duncan 22 years earlier, there might’ve been some unfair expectations put on him right away, but the team believed in him as the future piece of the next Spurs’ dynasty.

Things started out pretty well. In his first season, he averaged 11 points, 5.3 rebounds, and 2.5 assists as a consistent starter for a dreadful Spurs team. He flashed signs of brilliance, putting up 30-8-5 against a Suns team that went to the Finals in January, but things changed that offseason for both him and the franchise.

That dreadful season resulted in Victor Wembanyama falling into their hands. After wandering the desert since Kawhi Leonard’s departure and hoping that someone from the Sochan, Josh Primo, Keldon Johnson, and Devin Vassell quartet could break out, they were gifted the best prospect the league had seen since LeBron James.

That immediately meant everyone else was relegated to second fiddle, and while Sochan was likely never going to be a star with his offensive limitations, the fact that he was overshadowed just a year into his career might not have helped. Statistically, his next two seasons didn’t look bad at all, as he slowly improved as a shooter and seemed to form a great bond with Wemby on and off the court.

He even infuriated all Knicks fans everywhere with his 21-point performance on Christmas Day at Madison Square Garden, buoyed by going 3-for-3 from downtown.

But the cracks in the foundation showed. They seemed not to really know where to play Sochan, who was yanked around from being a wing to the team’s point guard to even being a small-ball center. His versatility made him able to weather many situations, but this was a guy who was barely able to buy a drink. That, coupled with his spacing concerns given his poor shooting, slowly degraded his play as things got worse.

The Spurs were suddenly blossoming into a powerhouse, benefitting from lottery luck in three consecutive seasons to build a young core. Guys like Johnson and Vassell settled into roles as valuable role players, but Sochan got lost in the shuffle. His minutes slowly dwindled towards the end of November and he was out of the everyday rotation by December.

In the final year of his rookie contract, it was time for a divorce. On February 11, the Spurs waived their former lottery pick just two months before free agency, but it was early enough to allow him to suit up in the NBA playoffs. Two days later, he put pen to paper with the New York Knicks.

Initially, it seemed like the Knicks would embrace him as an opportunity to play both a small-ball five role and a traditional backup power forward role, but he seemed like a square peg in a round hole with how Mike Brown tried to utilize him in the first few games. By the end of February, he was reduced to garbage time.

But even though he wasn’t playing and some believed he was a waste of a roster spot, he added something that doesn’t show up on the box score. Good vibes.

Sochan has always been a popular figure in every locker room he’s been in and has formed a nice bond with Josh Hart over their Premier League rivalry. He didn’t throw a hissy fit on the bench when he wasn’t playing. He didn’t alienate his teammates, unlike some buyout options, but he was ready when he was needed to be called upon.

The first three rounds? He wasn’t needed. Due to the many blowouts, he got some garbage time run, which even included scoring 10 points in less than four minutes in Game 5 against Atlanta, but he didn’t play any meaningful minutes through the end of the Eastern Conference Finals.

Then it just so happened that his former team was on the other side in the NBA Finals. Just two months removed from being in that locker room, Sochan became an asset. When the Knicks went over film, he would be their man on the inside.

Seems like he was pretty right about this, huh?

And the neat part about how this story ends up? His first meaningful minutes of the postseason came in this series. He played nine seconds in Game 3, three minutes in Game 4 due to shenanigans with the entire center rotation, and the final nine seconds of Game 5.

In Game 5, he was pestering his former teammate all game long. The exact one that dislodged his place in the Spurs’ organization. The man whose arrival started his path towards this current moment.

In the end, when the Knicks ended their 53-year title drought, guess who the man who contested the final shot was? It was Jeremy Sochan, who probably had maybe the most unnecessary contest of all time, considering the monumental risk of fouling with a four-point cushion, but we’d only remember that beyond this week if something bad had happened.

But it didn’t, and that’s how he became an NBA champion.

(P&T will be doing player-by-player article tributes over the next few weeks to commemorate the special team that ended our long, half-century nightmare)

Series Preview: Milwaukee Brewers vs. Cleveland Guardians

May 14, 2025; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Milwaukee Brewers right fielder Sal Frelick (10) hits a home run during the fifth inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Progressive Field. Mandatory Credit: Ken Blaze-Imagn Images | Ken Blaze-Imagn Images

The Milwaukee Brewers are looking to maintain their lead in the NL Central as they’ll play host to the Cleveland Guardians this week, a team right in the mix in the AL Central. The Brewers, at 43-26, sit five games ahead of the second-place Cardinals in the division and currently hold the No. 3 seed in the league, behind only the Braves (46-25) and Dodgers (45-27). The Guardians, at 39-33, are tied with the White Sox atop the AL Central, though they lost their best player in José Ramírez to a hamate bone fracture (the same injury that shelved Andrew Vaughn earlier this year) over the weekend.

The Brewers are currently without pitchers DL Hall (late July), Brandon Woodruff (mid- to late June), Coleman Crow (late June), Quinn Priester (TBD), Carlos Rodriguez (TBD), Brian Fitzpatrick (likely out for season), Rob Zastryzny (late June/early July), Logan Henderson (early July), Jared Koenig (close to returning), and Angel Zerpa (out for season). The lone position player currently on the IL is outfielder Brandon Lockridge, who is slated for a late June return, though he’s had several injury flare-ups in his knee in recent weeks.

The Guardians are without the aforementioned Ramírez, who will be out until after the All-Star break after undergoing surgery. Outfielders Chase DeLauter and Angel Martínez are both currently listed as day to day, as DeLauter is awaiting MRI and CT scans after a crash into the right-field wall, and Martínez took a foul ball off his left foot, though the hope is he’ll return for this series. The lone pitcher on the IL is lefty Erik Sabrowski, who began a rehab assignment over the weekend.

Jake Bauers sits atop the Brewer home run leaderboard with 13 this season, though Jackson Chourio is quickly closing on him with nine homers in just 35 games. Speaking of Chourio, after a big week, he’s now slashing .322/.370/.572 for the year. Brice Turang has cooled off considerably but still has a .261/.378/.457 line with 10 homers and 12 steals, while Gary Sánchez and William Contreras have also flashed their power this year. Garrett Mitchell, Christian Yelich, Sal Frelick, Andrew Vaughn, Joey Ortiz, and David Hamilton round out the regulars, with Blake Perkins and Luis Rengifo serving as depth, though if speculation is to be believed, Rengifo will be replaced one way or another by shortstop prospect Cooper Pratt on Tuesday, as Pratt has already been confirmed to be headed to the majors. As a team, the Brewers are hitting .255/.340/.394 (.734 OPS ranks eighth), with 63 homers (27th), 370 runs (third), and 70 steals (tied for third).

Angel Martínez leads the Guards with 11 homers this season, adding 11 doubles, nine steals, and 33 RBIs. DeLauter and Kyle Manzardo both have seven homers, while former Brewer Rhys Hoskins has six homers, though he’s hitting just .185 (with a much more solid .330 OBP thanks to 34 walks). Brayan Rocchio, Steven Kwan, Daniel Schneemann, and former No. 1 overall pick Travis Bazzana are also in the mix. Austin Hedges and Patrick Bailey share time behind the plate, while David Fry, Gabriel Arias, and Stuart Fairchild provide depth. As a team, the Guardians are hitting .232/.317/.372 (.689 OPS ranks 27th), with 66 homers (24th), 289 runs (23rd), and 69 steals (fifth).

The Brewer bullpen is led by Aaron Ashby, who sports a 2.72 ERA with 59 strikeouts over 43 innings. Trevor Megill, Abner Uribe, and Grant Anderson have also been reliable pieces, while Chad Patrick has been mostly good but struggled mightily against the A’s and Phillies in the last week. Drew Rom and Joel Kuhnel fill the back of the bullpen. As a staff, the Brewers have a 3.45 team ERA (fourth), including a 3.40 starter ERA (fourth) and a 3.51 bullpen ERA (ninth). They’ve struck out 675 batters (first) over 618 1/3 innings.

Tim Herrin and closer Cade Smith lead the Cleveland bullpen, as Herrin has a 2.92 ERA and 23 strikeouts over 24 2/3 innings, and Smith, who is 23-for-25 in save opportunities, has a 2.48 ERA with 49 strikeouts over 32 2/3 innings. Matt Festa ranks third on the team with 30 appearances, though he has a 4.30 ERA. Hunter Gaddis (3.86 ERA over 18 2/3 IP), Shawn Armstrong (3.32 ERA over 19 IP), Colin Holderman (1.73 ERA over 26 IP), Daniel Espino (no MLB appearances), and Will Dion (4.35 ERA over 10 1/3 IP) round out the bullpen. As a staff, the Guardians have a 3.75 team ERA (sixth), including a 3.80 starter ERA (sixth) and a 3.68 bullpen ERA (11th). They’ve struck out 658 batters (third) over 638 1/3 innings.

Probable Pitchers

Tuesday, June 16 @ 6:40 p.m.: LHP Robert Gasser (0-3, 6.38 ERA, 7.25 FIP) vs. RHP Slade Cecconi (3-5, 4.83 ERA, 4.29 FIP)

Gasser has had a rough go of it in his return to the majors, with a 6.38 ERA, 7.25 FIP, and 19 strikeouts over 18 1/3 innings in four starts. He’s taken the loss in each of his last three starts, though his last start came in Las Vegas, meaning it comes with the caveat of a lot of homers — six runs allowed on eight hits (four homers) and two walks, striking out seven over five innings. This marks Gasser’s first career appearance against Cleveland.

Cecconi, 27 next week, is in his fourth MLB season and second with the Guardians after beginning his career in Arizona. He’s been a serviceable albeit not great arm for them, with a 4.83 ERA, 4.29 FIP, and 61 strikeouts over 72 2/3 innings this year. He went five innings in a no-decision his last time out, allowing two runs on six hits and a pair of walks while striking out seven against the Yankees. This marks Cecconi’s first career appearance against Milwaukee.

Wednesday, June 17 @ 6:40 p.m.: RHP Brandon Sproat (1-4, 5.70 ERA, 5.56 FIP) vs. RHP Gavin Williams (9-3, 3.32 ERA, 3.81 FIP)

Sproat has still not quite been able to put things together with a 5.70 ERA, 5.56 FIP, and 57 strikeouts over 60 innings, though he’s coming off arguably the best start of his young career in Vegas. Over six innings, he allowed just one run (a solo homer) on four hits and one walk, striking out three on just 68 pitches. Unfortunately, the bullpen let him down, as they immediately allowed three runs in the seventh en route to a 4-3 A’s win. Like Gasser, this marks Sproat’s first career appearance against Cleveland.

Williams, 26, has quickly turned into a top-of-the-rotation type starter, as he turned in a 3.06 ERA season last year and has been nearly as good this season, with a 3.32 ERA, 3.81 FIP, and 99 strikeouts over 86 2/3 innings. After rattling off four consecutive wins from mid-May through early June, he took a no-decision his last time around, allowing four runs (three earned) on four hits and three walks, striking out five over five innings as the Guardians would go on to lose to the Yankees in extras. Williams has started against Milwaukee in each of the last two seasons, totaling nine innings with seven runs allowed on 10 hits and three walks, striking out 11 as he took a loss and a no-decision.

Thursday, June 18 @ 1:10 p.m.: LHP Shane Drohan (3-2, 3.59 ERA, 2.73 FIP) vs. LHP Parker Messick (6-3, 2.68 ERA, 3.33 FIP)

Drohan, who has now made three consecutive appearances from the rotation, hasn’t been quite as sharp as a starter, though he’s still keeping the Brewers in games. With a 3.59 ERA, 2.73 FIP, and 44 strikeouts over 42 2/3 innings, there’s clear potential for the young lefty. He’s coming off a loss, in which he allowed four runs on eight hits and no walks, striking out seven over five innings in a 9-8 loss to the Phillies. As is the case with Gasser and Sproat, this marks Drohan’s first career appearance against Cleveland.

Messick, 25, is in his second season and is off to a great start to his young career, with a career 2.69 ERA, 3.21 FIP, and 120 strikeouts over 120 1/3 innings through 21 starts. He’s coming off back-to-back losses against the Rangers and Yankees, though, as those two outings spanned 11 1/3 innings with eight runs allowed (seven earned) on 10 hits and four walks, striking out eight. This marks Messick’s first career appearance against Milwaukee.

How to Watch & Listen

Tuesday, June 16: Brewers TV; listen via radio on the Brewers Radio Network (620 WTMJ in Milwaukee)

Wednesday, June 17: Brewers TV; listen via radio on the Brewers Radio Network (620 WTMJ in Milwaukee)

Thursday, June 18: Brewers TV; listen via radio on the Brewers Radio Network (620 WTMJ in Milwaukee)

Prediction

This series features a trio of young pitching matchups, with the oldest starter among the six being Drohan at a whopping 27 years of age (Gasser is also 27, though slightly younger). Give me the Crew to win two of three.

Austin Reaves ‘widely expected’ to re-sign with Lakers

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - MAY 11: Austin Reaves #15 of the Los Angeles Lakers speaks to the media during a press conference after Game Four of the Second Round of the NBA Western Conference Playoffs against the Oklahoma City Thunder at Crypto.com Arena on May 11, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Allen Berezovsky/Getty Images) | Getty Images

With the Finals officially over, silly season is fully upon the NBA. Every team is now in the offseason and the league’s focus turns to the draft, the offseason and the future.

For the Lakers, that means a look at an upcoming free agency that will be incredibly important. One of the first pieces of business the team will need to take care of is Austin Reaves, who will almost certainly decline his player option.

While the most recent reports suggested that Reaves is looking for the max and is expected to have suitors elsewhere around the league, it seems the general consensus around the league is that he’ll remain in LA.

On Sunday evening, longtime NBA reporter Marc Stein reported that the expectation is Reaves will re-sign with the purple and gold in free agency.

The Lakers are widely expected to re-sign Reaves, whose fondness for Lakerland as well as his blossoming backcourt partnership alongside Luka Dončić are regarded as strong lures that suggest the sides will ultimately come to terms on a new pact.

After Austin spent most of the season saying he wanted to be a Laker and wasn’t even looking for the biggest payday possible, his team has tried to regain some leverage. First, they made it clear they were expecting a max deal and, last week, it was reported that the Nets and Pistons could be among the teams to pursue Reaves in free agency.

However, according to Stein, all the signals Reaves put out about wanting to remain in LA may be scaring teams away from making an offer for him.

Yet it is unclear what sort of external interest Reaves will generate after his strong production over the past two seasons … at least partly due to the inherent skepticism that stems from trying to woo him away from the Lakers. Brooklyn and Detroit have been mentioned as potential Reaves suitors, but neither is seen as a certainty yet.

A similar situation played out the last time Reaves was set for free agency. All signs were pointing to him remaining in LA, but in that instance, he was set for restricted free agency, so teams didn’t want to bother tying up cap space only to have him return to the Lakers.

This time, they may see it as a pointless venture to spend time negotiating a deal with Reaves as opposed to working out deals with free agents who actually might want to sign with the team.

If this is how teams feel, then perhaps it means the Lakers can agree to a more team-friendly deal if — or when — Reaves re-signs.

For now, though, it’ll be a lot of posturing from both sides in the final weeks leading up to the start of free agency.

You can follow Jacob on Twitter at @JacobRude or on Bluesky at @jacobrude.bsky.social.

Yoshinobu Yamamoto flirts with perfection on so-so Dodgers road trip

Los Angeles Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani, left, congratulates starting pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto on a 7-1 win against the Chicago White Sox at Rate Field on Saturday, June 13, 2026, in Chicago. Yamamoto carried a no-hitter into the ninth inning until he gave up a home run to the White Sox' Tristan Peters. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

The Dodgers broke even on the road last week, taking two of three games against the Pirates in Pittsburgh before losing two of three to the first-place White Sox in Chicago.

The offense was more productive than usual on the road trip, averaging over six runs per game, but the big inning has been the bane of the pitching staff of late. After allowing six runs in an inning in a home loss to the Angels on June 7, the Dodgers on the road allowed three runs and five runs in consecutive innings Wednesday in Pittsburgh, gave up a four-run inning on Thursday at PNC Park, then allowed a seven-run inning Friday and six runs in one frame on Sunday in the two losses in Chicago.

It’s been over a month since the Dodgers last lost consecutive games, but the shaky pitching of late has also prevented them from going on any sort of big run. They’ve alternated wins and losses over their last eight games.

Batter of the week

We’ll go with Max Muncy narrowly over Shohei Ohtani, though in reality either player could have won. Muncy batted two more times than Ohtani, and reached base two more times than Ohtani, giving him the razor-thin edge. Muncy, an excellent candidate to make his third All-Star team, leads National League third basemen in several categories, and his two home runs on Saturday gave him 225 with the Dodgers, three shy of tying Ron Cey for fifth-most in franchise history.

Pitcher of the week

Yoshinobu Yamamoto is the rock of the pitching staff, a reliable and durable ace who has turned in two gems in a row. He took a perfect game into the eighth inning on Saturday in Chicago, and took a no-hitter into the ninth in a blowout win over the White Sox.

Yamamoto leads the Dodgers with six starts of at least seven innings, including four times in his last five outings.

Week 12 results

3-3 record
41 runs scored (6.83 per game)
33 runs allowed (5.50 per game)
.598 pythagorean win percentage

Year to date

45-27 record
386 runs scored (5.36 per game)
245 runs allowed (3.40 per game)
.697 pythagorean win percentage (50-22)

Miscellany

Milestone watch: On Tuesday in Pittsburgh, Freddie Freeman had two hits, and his seventh-inning RBI single off Brandan Bidois was his 2,500th career hit. Freeman is the 102nd player in major league history with 2,500 career hits, and the first new member of the club since Robinson Canó in 2019. The next big milestone within range for Freeman — besides passing a few more folks on the all-time doubles list — is 1,000 extra-base hits, an exclusive group that currently includes only 39 members. Freeman through Sunday has 976 career extra-base hits. He has 24 extra-base hits over his last 60 games, to give a rough idea of a possible timeline to get to 1,000.

Shortest possible distance to Petit: Yoshinobu Yamamoto’s flirtation with perfection saw him retire his first 23 batters faced on Saturday in Chicago, which came directly after the right-hander retired his final 22 batters faced in a gem against the Angels on June 6 at Dodger Stadium. Yamamoto’s 45 consecutive batters retired tied Mark Buehrle (July 18-28, 2009) for the second-longest streak in major league history, just one behind Yusmeiro Petit from July 22-August 28, 2014. The error by shortstop Mookie Betts in the eighth inning on Saturday would have been the record-tying 46th straight out for Yamamoto.

Congraduations: Dave Roberts was away from the team on Sunday in Chicago, to be with his daughter Emmerson as she graduated from Stanford. That put bench coach Danny Lehmann in charge for Sunday’s loss to the White Sox. This is the third time Lehmann, who was promoted to bench coach in 2023, has served as interim manager. Lehmann was also at the helm for a 2-1 road win over the San Diego Padres on May 6, 2023 while Roberts was at his son Cole’s graduation from Loyola Marymount, and also for a 6-5 home win over the Washington Nationals last June 20 while Roberts was suspended for a game for a benches-clearing incident the night before against the Padres.

Transactions

Wednesday: When the Dodgers needed a right-handed multi-position infielder after the Hernándezes got injured on consecutive days in May, they chose to bring back the previously-dispatched Santiago Espinal. The writing on the wall was there for Tyler Fitzgerald, who started at five positions for Oklahoma City after getting acquired from the Toronto Blue Jays on April 28. So it wasn’t all too surprising that Fitzgerald was released last week.

Thursday: Five days after initially getting scratched from the lineup, catcher Will Smith was placed on the injured list with neck inflammation. The open 40-man-roster spot courtesy of Fitzgerald’s release was filled by the call up of veteran backstop Chuckie Robinson, playing for a second straight season with the Dodgers.

Game results

PlayerPARH2BHRRBIBBBA/OBP/SLG
Ohtani24651368.313/.542/.938
Muncy26572266.389/.577/.833
Espinal8050020.625/.625/.625
Rojas10231022.429/.500/.571
Freeman29652134.217/.379/.435
Betts28681111.296/.321/.444
Ward18331152.188/.278/.438
Tucker28351064.227/.357/.273
Rushing23332004.167/.348/.278
Freeland18231033.214/.333/.286
Call11120001.222/.364/.222
Pages31450132.179/.226/.286
Robinson3000000.000/.000/.000
Offense25741541293737.260/.383/.447
Kyle Tucker stole two bases, Mookie Betts stole one
PitcherRecordIPHRBBSOERAWHIP
Yamamoto1-08.311071.080.120
Lauer0-05.732053.180.529
Ohtani0-06.764364.051.350
Sheehan0-15.043185.401.000
Wrobleski0-04.764217.711.714
Sasaki0-14.3773414.542.308
Starters1-234.727219315.191.038
Hernández0-03.000410.001.333
Klein1-02.330150.001.714
Vesia0-01.300010.000.000
Treinen0-02.731243.381.875
Scott0-0, Sv2.321043.860.857
Henriquez0-01.7420310.802.401
Dreyer1-02.7540413.501.875
Hurt0-10.33420108.0015.000
Bullpen2-1, Sv16.320129226.611.776
Totals3-351.0473318535.651.275

Previous reviews: Week 1 | Week 2 | Week 3 | Week 4 | Week 5 | Week 6 | Week 7 | Week 8 | Week 9 | Week 10 | Week 11

Up next

The Dodgers are back home for the middle portion of their 12 straight games against American League teams, running the Danny Clyburn gauntlet against the Tampa Bay Rays and Baltimore Orioles at Dodger Stadium. Monday night is an exclusive ESPN telecast.

Mon, 6/15Tue, 6/16Wed, 6/17Thu, 6/18Fri, 6/19Sat, 6/20Sun, 6/21
RaysRaysRaysOFFOriolesOriolesOrioles
7:107:1012:107:107:101:10
LauerWrobleskiOhtaniSasakiYamamotoSheehan
MartinezRasmssenMcClanahan*GibsonRogers*Young
ESPNSNLASNLA/MLBSNLASNLA/MLBSNLA
*left-handed starting pitcher