Luka Doncic eligible for NBA's postseason awards after league, NBAPA rule in his favor

Los Angeles, CA - March 31: Lakers guard Luka Doncic, #77 celebrates his dunkl on a fast break against the Cavaliers during the second half at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles Tuesday, March 31, 2026. Doncic became the third-youngest player in NBA history to score 15,000 career points. The Lakers clinched a playoff berth before their win over Cleveland. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
Lakers guard Luka Doncic celebrates a dunk on a fast break against the Cleveland Cavaliers during a game on March 31. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

Lakers guard Luka Doncic will be eligible for postseason awards after the NBA and NBA Players Assn. announced Thursday they ruled in his favor on his extraordinary circumstances appeal of the 65-game rule.

Doncic, a leading candidate for most valuable player and a lock for his sixth All-NBA team, played in only 64 games before he suffered a regular-season ending left hamstring injury on April 2. The league's latest collective bargaining agreement requires players to appear in at least 65 games to be eligible for postseason awards, but Doncic and Detroit Pistons star Cade Cunningham both won appeals under the CBA’s extraordinary circumstances provision.

Doncic missed two games in December to attend the birth of his daughter in Slovenia and Cunningham, whose career season led the Pistons to the No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference, missed 12 games because of a collapsed lung suffered on March 17.

“I am grateful to the NBPA for advocating on my behalf and to the NBA for their fair decision,” Doncic wrote in a statement on social media. “It was so important to me to be present for the birth of my daughter in December and I appreciate Mark [Walter], Jeanie [Buss], Rob [Pelinka], JJ [Redick], and the entire Lakers organization for fully supporting me and allowing me to travel to be there."

Doncic earned his second league scoring title this season with 33.5 points per game. He surged back into the most valuable player race with a magical March when he was just the second player to score 600 points in March, joining Michael Jordan. He had four consecutive games of 40 or more points and 12 of 30 or more before injuring his hamstring on April 2. He and guard Austin Reaves (oblique) are out indefinitely as the Lakers begin the playoffs Saturday against the Houston Rockets.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

What NBA playoff coaches are on the hot seat? These five can't afford early exit

The end for an NBA coach can be brutal and sudden, even for teams that make the playoffs. Last year, twoplayoff teams even got rid of their coach right before the postseason began. It's not the profession for those seeking job security.

No such turmoil occurred to close the 2025-26 NBA regular season, but there is nonetheless a group of coaches still coaching as of Thursday, April 16 that could be fired soon if the high-stakes games of the 2026 NBA playoffs don't go their way.

A team's playoff ledger relative to expectations often supersedes the number of wins accrued over the months-long slog preceding the postseason. Those that fall short under these bright lights are eventually discarded, and NBA coaches have traditionally been among the most dispensable.

Here are five coaches currently in the NBA's postseason who are on the hot seat, especially if their team were to suffer an early exit from the playoffs:

1. Jamahl Mosley, Orlando Magic

The fifth-year coach could be coaching for his job when the Magic face the Charlotte Hornets to close out the Eastern Conference play-in tournament. Even a first-round exit to the top-seeded Detroit Pistons might lead to Mosley's firing after a disjointed season in which the trio of Paolo Banchero, Franz Wagner and Desmond Bane struggled to gel together offensively. Orlando spent four first-round draft picks on Bane last offseason to be a contender, not relegated to play-in fodder, and Mosley might pay the price in the days ahead.

2. Tiago Splitter, Portland Trail Blazers

The interim Blazers coach isn't on this list because of his performance. He just led Portland to its first playoff appearance since 2021 after starting the season with coach Chauncey Billups arrested following the first game as part of federal indictments related to illegal gambling. But new owner Tom Dundon has not committed to hiring Splitter, nor officially parted ways with Billups, and it will make for a complicated situation whenever the Blazers' season ends.

Houston Rockets Head Coach Ime Udoka talks with forward Kevin Durant (7) during the first half against the Minnesota Timberwolves at Toyota Center on April 10, 2026.

3. Ime Udoka, Houston Rockets

Among NBA teams to qualify for the postseason, only the Charlotte Hornets had a worse crunch time NET rating during the regular season than the Rockets. Despite the addition of Kevin Durant last offseason, their halfcourt offense has devolved at key moments and Udoka has thus far not adjusted well to the flaws or the absence of injured point guard Fred Van Vleet. Losing in the first round to the injury-riddled Los Angeles Lakers would mean Houston dropped a series in which it almost certainly got out-coached given the personnel discrepancies.

4. Mike Brown, New York Knicks

Brown is only in his first season with the Knicks and the team finished with two more regular-season wins than it did a year ago under former coach Tom Thibodeau. But the expectations are high in New York. A first-round exit against the Atlanta Hawks, combined with the reality that Brown was not the top choice for Knicks' brass to begin with last offseason, could lead to a quick change on the bench.

5. Nick Nurse, Philadelphia 76ers

Nurse hasn't succeeded with the Sixers like he once did with the Toronto Raptors, in large part because of injuries and roster construction. Getting out of the play-in tournament after a bounce-back regular season might be enough to give Nurse another year, particularly since Paul George and Joel Embiid again missed large chunks of the season. But Nurse would probably be wise to not get swept by the Celtics in the first round, just to be safe.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NBA playoff coach hot seat rankings: Why these coaches can't lose quick

Fantasy baseball hitter add/drops: Time to move on from Yainer Diaz, add Moises Ballesteros?

We're only three weeks into the MLB season, so it's not time to panic about a slow start to your fantasy baseball season. However, we also don't want to wait too long to pick up players who are starting to emerge, so we can't just sit idly by and do nothing. For me, that means not looking at surface-level stats but looking at stats I believe are indicators of continued production and seeing who is thriving or struggling.

I conducted that exercise for myself and then decided to publish it as an article, so this is not going to be a major deep dive. However, I created a custom leaderboard on FanGraphs that looked at hard-hit rate, chase rate, swinging strike rate, zone contact, and EV90 (a metric measuring a batter's top-end power by calculating the speed of their batted ball hit better than 90% of their other batted balls). I pulled the league average numbers and then made a list of players who were below league-average in essentially all those criteria and above average in all those criteria. That gets us our rough lists for adds and drops.

Obviously, it's not as simple as cutting the players on the bad list and adding the players on the good list, but I think this is an interesting starting point for decisions at the bottom of your fantasy rosters, so let's dive into it.

⚾️ Baseball is back on NBC: MLB returns to NBC and Peacock in 2026! In addition to becoming the exclusive home of Sunday Night Baseball, NBC Sports will broadcast MLB Sunday Leadoff, “Opening Day” and Labor Day primetime games, the first round of the MLB Draft, the entire Wild Card round of the postseason, and much more.

MLB: Spring Training-Chicago White Sox at Milwaukee Brewers
Cleanup man Sal Stewart climbs further and Mets rookie Carson Benge debuts.

Fantasy Baseball Hitters to Drop

NameRoster RateHardHit%Z-Contact%SwStr%O-Swing%
League Average104.84085.911
Yainer Diaz71%0.27101450.939540.1301520.4163209
José Caballero60%0.2820510.8153850.1270490.351351
Colson Montgomery83%0.28219010.76319010.1784190.2910429
Willi Castro17%0.3548390.8142860.1795920.39726
Heliot Ramos46%0.4016170.8561390.14018920.347419
Salvador Perez91%0.4038460.7971010.1349210.459627
Jarren Duran97%0.4102560.8333330.1788990.37594
Samuel Basallo26%0.43750.8181820.1675390.35
Ezequiel Tovar69%0.4782610.8352940.1679390.496855
Rafael Devers98%0.4782610.739130.1354170.347561

Now, we should get it out of the way right from the start that MY RECOMMENDATION IS NOT TO DROP ALL OF THESE PLAYERS. However, they all qualified for this list and are worth mentioning a bit here.

For starters, I would go ahead and cut WilliCastro if you still have him on your team, and I would also cut Jose Caballero if you are going well in stolen bases. The only reason he's really rostered in 60% of leagues is his speed, but he could lose his job when Anthony Volpe is back in 3-ish weeks. Maybe you grabbed a David Hamilton-type player off waivers, or could, and you can move on from Caballero.

I'd also probably cut Heliot Ramos. He slumped really hard in the second half of last year, and there were some comments he made that suggested the slump was mental and was connected to some defensive issues. However, he has not looked good at all to begin this season, and I don't believe he's so good when he's on that you need to hold him and miss out on a solid hitter on the waiver wire.

I've also never been big on Colson Montgomery, so I don't feel the need to hold him. I know that he had a big power surge when he was called up last year, but his swing decisions are not good, and his contact has always been a major question mark. Plus, he's on one of the worst offenses in baseball, which will limit his counting stats.

I'm MAYBE still holding Ezequiel Tovar, but it's close. He has always swung far too much out of the zone and swung-and-missed too often, but he had good zone contact rates and played in Coors Field. Now, pitchers just aren't throwing him strikes, and he keeps swinging. I don't see him ever hitting above .250-ish again with this approach, and he doesn't really steal bases, so that's tough to take from your middle infielder.

Yainer Diaz is concerning me. He had a pretty mediocre season last year and is off to a really bad start to this year. He makes tons of contact in the zone, but he also expands the zone too much, swings and misses a lot, and also makes weak contact because he swings at so much out of the zone. There are at least three catchers on the list below I'd rather have than Diaz right now.

I'm not yet ready to move on from Salvador Perez, but we do have to acknowledge that he's 36 and has a lot of mileage on his legs. We could be at the cliff. The hard-hit and barrel rates are still good enough that I'm not going to panic yet, but the exit velocities haven't been the same as we've seen before, and the bat speed is down. Perez has always been somebody who chased, and if he's now no longer able to handle a lot of the pitches he used to be able to, that could be an issue.

Jarren Duran is not somebody you can just cut, but I think we're still living in 2024, which looks more and more like an outlier season. Duran has good hard-hit and barrel rates, and he has plenty of speed, so there is potential here still. However, he expands the zone a bit too much and swings and misses far too often for a non-power hitter. Perhaps he's looking to pull the ball too much this year and is getting out in front, but I think he needs to be on your bench right now, and I would not buy low.

I might also sell low on Rafael Devers. His hard-hit and barrel rates are solid, and likely always will be, but they're not quite at levels we're used to seeing from Devers. As was pointed out on Twitter, Devers has fallen from the 68th to the 33rd percentile in bat speed from 2023 to 2026, and his hard-hit rates have decreased as well. I maintain that playing in San Francisco has not been good for him. Devers hit .236/.347/.460 with 20 home runs in 90 games with the Giants last season, striking out 29.4% of the time and pulling the ball 45% of the time, which is 8% higher than his career average. This year, his attack direction is even farther towards the pull side than he's had in his career, and I think he's struggling to adjust to not being able to slam line drives off the Green Monster. He's not going to be this bad, but if you could trade Devers for, say, Sal Stewart and maybe get an intriguing pitcher with some upside added to that as well, I would likely do that deal.

Fantasy Baseball Hitters to Add

NameTeamEV90HardHit%Z-Contact%SwStr%O-Swing%
Gary SánchezMIL1070.5294120.8888890.1118420.26
Ryan JeffersMIN108.20.5161290.8679250.0857140.303279
Francisco AlvarezNYM108.50.4736840.8867920.1074770.310078
Carlos CortesATH103.40.4347830.8823530.0458720.16129
Moisés BallesterosCHC105.70.60.9250.1125830.329787
Kyle IsbelKCR103.60.40.9230770.0813950.31068
Ryan O'HearnPIT103.80.440.8717950.0759080.287356
Colt KeithDET104.80.5609760.845070.0985920.203704
Jake BauersMIL107.10.5641030.8783780.1127450.245283
Ramón UríasSTL106.10.50.8809520.0888890.246753
Miguel AndujarSDP104.60.4827590.9148940.0920250.322222
Edouard JulienCOL102.90.4615380.8636360.0779220.202381
Nick YorkePIT106.30.50.9591840.0631580.282051
Curtis MeadWSN1060.440.9767440.0479450.240506
Xander BogaertsSDP104.90.4035090.8873240.0646390.28481
Victor CaratiniMIN103.30.40.9607840.0572690.289855
Jonathan ArandaTBR105.20.4897960.9294120.0869570.316667
Trent GrishamNYY1050.6410260.9344260.0620440.2
Iván HerreraSTL1060.5098040.9558820.0511180.275
Miguel VargasCHW104.50.4146340.8518520.0559440.190476
Jac CaglianoneKCR110.30.5161290.8305080.1162790.29661
Wyatt LangfordTEX106.80.4047620.8909090.095890.296875
Ryan McMahonNYY104.20.5416670.936170.1105530.315789

Both Wyatt Langford nd Jac Caglianone are rostered in too many leagues to "add," as in a waiver claim, but they are players I would be targeting in trades. Based on comments I'm getting on Twitter, a lot of people are looking to cut or trade them, and I think that's too rash. They're both making hard and consistent contact and showing good swing decisions. I think strong stretches are coming.

On Monday, I tweeted about Trent Grisham right before he had a two-home run game. That feels like a nice bit of validation for this list.

Gary Sanchez, Francisco Alvarez, and Ryan Jeffers are the key adds at catcher right now. Sanchez should be the near every day designated hitter in Milwaukee with Christian Yelich out, so that's going to give him about a month of playing time. Alvarez was somebody I loved coming into this season based on his success in the second half last year after he changed his swing in Triple-A. Jeffers has been a bit of an underrated hitter in recent years, but he is no longer splitting time as much as he has in the past, and he's crushing the ball right now.

Moises Ballesteros is a tougher add because he has no real position, which makes his playing time and fantasy roster construction tough. That being said, he is the Cubs' DH against all right-handed pitchers, and his quality of contact is off the charts. I had thought there might be a chance that Matt Shaw pushes Ballesteros to the bench, but that doesn't seem likely now. Ivan Herrera is in a similar boat, as he's catcher-eligible in Yahoo formats but nowhere else yet. Herrera is not off to as hot a start as Ballesteros is, but his underlying quality of contact and swing decisions are good. I think the production is coming.

Carlos Cortes is an interesting name to appear on here because he has stepped into Brent Rooker's spot in the Athletics' lineup. We don't have a huge MLB sample size for Cortes, but he was good in Triple-A last year, and his quality of contact has been great this season. He also seems to have a really good sense of the strike zone and makes a ton of contact in the zone. If you pair that with his great home park, it's hard not to get a little excited about this.

Both Nick Yorke and Ryan O'Hearn have emerged as near-every-day players for the Pirates. It's obviously easier to believe in O'Hearn because he has a better track record and better current production, but Yorke has a better-than-league-average hard-hit rate and EV90 numbers while making an elite level of contact. This could turn into something in deeper formats.

Most of you have likely rostered Eduoard Julien or Curtis Mead before. They both now find themselves in new situations and have started the season with intriguing batted ball metrics and good plate discipline. Julien didn't really qualify for this list based on his EV90, but his hard-hit rates are good, and playing his home games in Coors Field is going to help him. Mead is not yet a full-time player in Washington, so he doesn't need to be added right now, but I do believe there's a strong chance it happens in the next few weeks.

Ramon Urias is another player who is not in a full-time job right now, but I wanted to keep his name on this list because it would not be crazy to see him take Nolan Gorman's job.

I've already written up Colt Keith and Jake Bauers a few times this year, so their presence on this list shouldn't surprise you too much. However, Ryan McMahon being on here shocked me. I'm not even sure if I believe it, and it casts a cloud on this list. That being said, he has a 54% hard-hit rate, an 8% barrel rate, really strong zone contact rates, and league-average chase and swinging strike rates. I'm not saying he's going to turn things around to such an extent that he carries your fantasy team, but that also doesn't seem like the profile of a player who is struggling this much.

Padres teammates Xander Bogaerts and Miguel Andujar are often afterthoughts in fantasy these days, but both of them made this list in all criteria and are also off to decent starts. I know the counting stats aren't ideal, and that may limit them to 15-team leagues, but they deserve a little more love.

Miguel Vargas is another player whose stats don't suggest a ton of success, but he makes really good swing decisions and has above-average batted ball quality with a 42% hard-hit rate and 9% barrel rate. He hit .267/.354/.436 in 45 games in the second half last year, and maybe he just needs some time to fully heat up.

Bryce Elder elects to be extremely effective early on for Braves

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - APRIL 15: Bryce Elder #55 of the Atlanta Braves pitches against the Miami Marlins in the first inning at Truist Park on April 15, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. All players are wearing the number 42 in honor of Jackie Robinson Day. (Photo by Brett Davis/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Bryce Elder has made four starts and given up a grand total of one (1) run so far across four starts and 23.1 innings of work. That’s it — that’s the stat. As of now, there are only three pitchers who are ahead of Elder on the leaderboard and one of them is Shohei Ohtani. I bet you never thought you’d see those two guys in the same stratosphere, now did you?

Yet, here we are: It’s real and so far it’s been spectacular for Bryce Elder, who has stormed out of the gates to what is certainly one of the best stretches of his career so far. He’s scaled similar peaks over the course of his career but he’s certainly experienced his fair share of valleys as well. 2023 comes to mind when it comes to the peak for Elder, which is when he pitched his way into the All-Star Game during that season. The valleys have been covered in excruciating detail as well.

So while this is certainly a pleasant surprise, we’ve also been here with Elder before. The big question is what’s so different about the peak he’s currently on now and the peaks that he’s experienced in the past. I asked Elder about how he feels now compared to 2023 and it’s clear that he’s got a bit more confidence in his arsenal as a pitcher.

“I feel a little bit more complete,” answered Elder. “I think that year I just had however many starts where I was just executing pitches when I needed to — getting to a certain count and making the pitch. I feel a little bit more complete [now], I have more weapons and I’m going to try and keep it going.”

Indeed, Elder has been working a cutter into his arsenal and while it’s not the pitch that he’s been using to put away batters, he’s used it as a solid complimentary pitch aside from his usual arsenal. He’s also gone back to relying more on his slider instead of primarily sticking with the sinker and that’s gone a long way towards helping as well. Heading into Wednesday’s action, Bryce Elder had thrown the slider 93 times (according to StatCast) and opposing batters had only hit .083 against it with an xBA of .091.

His sinker had been getting knocked around a bit (to the tune of a .412 BA and a .338 xBA) but he’s used it to great effect as a Put Away pitch at 45.5 percent and a whiff rate of 27 percent. He’s getting a 28 percent whiff rate and a 32.1 Put Away percentage on the slider and his four-seamer has also gotten more effective with a whiff rate of 23.1 and a Put Away percentage of 25 percent. It’s nearly night and day compared to the numbers that he was getting on those pitches when he was spending 2024 and 2025 trying to get back to where he was in 2023.

Walt Weiss was asked by the media about Elder’s stuff so far and it’s clear that he’s noticed that the entire arsenal is working well for him right now. Elder stated earlier that he felt more “complete” and Weiss seemed to echo that thought in his remarks.

“It’s all his pitches, really,” stated Weiss. “His secondary stuff is better. His slider is a really underrated pitch and when you go back to his first year when he made the All-Star team, you’d see a lot of hitters swing and bounce sliders, they just didn’t see his slider. I think he’s got that slider back again. He’s getting a lot of swing-and-miss on it. He’s getting some takes on it. They just don’t see it very well. He’s got the cutter to add to the arsenal.”

“He had it once upon a time but he brought it back and it’s a good pitch for him,” continued Weiss. “He compliments the changeup really well and the changeup’s gotten better. All of his stuff has ticked up…He’s got three different fastballs: The two-seam, the four-seam and the cutter. It makes it difficult on a hitter when you’ve got three different fastballs and the other stuff is working too, so he’s throwing the ball really well.”

One thing that’s left to ponder now is just how long this is going to last for Bryce Elder. If you’re a believer in the Greg Maddux effect and the other changes that he’s made then there’s no reason to think that this couldn’t be the start of a major bounce-back season for Elder. Again, he’s experienced this type of form int he past where he was getting results and getting guys out at a very high rate. The difference now is that he appears to be a bit more confident in his stuff and his command — the days of waiting for a hanging slider from Elder to get hit to the moon by an opposing pitcher appear to be done for now, at least.

Again, there’s going to come a time when Elder will return to a valley and go through a rough patch. It happens to all pitchers and it’s just a part of baseball. The hope going forward is that we’ll no longer see Elder fall into a category of being an enigma — someone who’s go the capability to be a reliable pitcher but can’t quite seem to harness it on a regular basis. If we start seeing a less enigmatic version of Bryce Elder going forward, that should hopefully turn into a more reliable version of Elder as well.

Either way, it’s certainly been a pleasant surprise to see Elder start off his season on such a strong note. The starting rotation was a big question mark coming into this season and while we’re still in the early portion of this particular campaign, we’re getting closer to some of those question marks turning into periods. It’d certainly be huge if the ultimate question mark known as Bryce Elder ended up becoming a steady presence in the rotation rather than a source of frustration. We’ll see what happens!

Washington Nationals vs Pittsburgh Pirates Game Thread

PITTSBURGH, PA - APRIL 15: CJ Abrams #5 of the Washington Nationals looks on against the Pittsburgh Pirates at PNC Park on April 15, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. All players are wearing the number 42 in honor of Jackie Robinson Day. (Photo by Justin K. Aller/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After the offense got shut out for the first time this season, they boys will look to bounce back and secure a split in Pittsburgh. It has been a long and mostly successful road trip, but getting this win would be a great way to close things out. The Nats are playing some early afternoon baseball on getaway day.

With a righty on the mound, the Nats are loading the lineup with lefties. Luis Garcia Jr. will be back in the 2 spot after hitting 9th last night. Jorbit Vivas will actually be the DH today as well. Jacob Young returns to center field after Joey Wiemer got the start yesterday. Drew Millas and Nasim Nunez will be at the bottom of the order. Foster Griffin will look to stay hot this afternoon.

With a lefty on the mound, the Pirates have a very different looking lineup. Ryan O’Hearn and Spencer Horowitz will not be in there. Billy Cook and Jake Mangum will be getting starts this afternoon. Nick Yorke will be at first base in this one. With a lefty on the bump, Brandon Lowe will be lower in the lineup. Braxton Ashcraft is one of the most underrated arms in the league, and he will face the Nats today. 

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Game Info:

Stadium: PNC Park

Time: 12:35 PM EST

TV: Nationals.TV

Radio: 106.7 The Fan

Getting a win here would be an awesome way to close out a fun road trip. The offense was shut down for the first time last night, so hopefully they are coming to the park angry. Follow along down below and let’s go Nats!

Red Sox Minor Lines: Gage Ziehl saves the day

CORAL GABLES, FL - JUNE 02: Miami right-handed pitcher Gage Ziehl (31) pitches in the third inning as the Miami Hurricanes faced the Maine Black Bears in the Coral Gables Regional on June 2, 2023, at Mark Light Field at Alex Rodriguez Park in Coral Gables, Florida. (Photo by Samuel Lewis/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Worcester: L, 3-5 (BOX SCORE)

This game may have had a totally different outcome if the WooSox simply left fewer men on base, especially later on. A total of 14 were left stranded in the midst of 11 walks by Sounds (Brewers AAA) pitchers. It also didn’t help that the WooSox found themselves quickly down 5-1 due to ineffective starting pitching. To Worcester’s credit, Nashville was equally as abysmal with runners in scoring position; the Sound were held to 3 for 17 in that stat and stranded a dozen. So, in the end, the result was the result due to some early productivity by the home team, as well as some key extra-base hits when the leverage wasn’t quite so high. The team as a whole, though, looks uninspired at the plate after most started the season mashing. When at least one member is an injury list stint away from playing at Fenway, that’s not a great thing.

Portland: W, 8-6 (BOX SCORE)

Gage Ziehl, the return for getting Jordan Hicks out of here, had some sweet redemption from his last start. He went five strong and scoreless and struck out six. This was enough for the Sea Dogs to get out to a 5-0 lead in the third inning, as they took Altoona (Pirates AA) pitching for a ride via a lead-off home run by Franklin Arias (his second in as many games) and outfielder Will Turner hitting a triple with two on. The Sea Dogs stranded nine and eventually the bullpen let the lead shrink, but early offense and a great start by Ziehl was enough for Portland to stand alone as the only winners on the farm Wednesday.

On Ziehl, whose five innings actually LOWERED his ERA to 6.14: the former Miami Hurricane is still just 22 years of age and is a former Yankees draft pick, which is somehow even sweeter that he’s making moves in the Sox organization. His fastball lacks some velocity (it tops out at 92) but that gives it plenty of room to get tinkered with. Maybe more to come?

Greenville: L, 4-6 (BOX SCORE)

I want to acknowledge that the Drive played spotless defense, not committing any errors, while the Hot Rods (Rays High-A). This is usually the other way around, and while an errorless baseball game should be the norm, it’s good when it happens. The starting pitching by Luis Cohen wasn’t as spotless, and so the Drive found themselves at an early disadvantage. The good news is that Greenville hit four home runs on the night, but the bad news is that they were all solo shots, and the potential damage was minimized. If not for Greenville going hitless in seven attempts with runners in scoring position, those four home runs may have spawned a totally different conversation.

Salem: L, 4-5 (BOX SCORE)

The RidgeYaks were subject to a late blown lead despite an otherwise solid 4 2/3 innings of relief by former Texas A&M Aggie Myles Patton, who’s looked really good in the early going. Salem entered the 8th up 4-3 thanks in part to a very early home run by their nine-slot in the lineup shortstop, Ilan Hernandez, but the lead couldn’t be held. That inning got Salem up to a 3-0 lead over the Crawdads (Rangers A) but the lead was given right back via a Hickory double with the bases loaded, which effectively ended starter Jacob Mayers’ day. The game was quiet sans those few high-adrenaline moments, but in the end Hickory simply had more of them.

Have a solid Thursday!

Orioles vs Guardians Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight's MLB Game

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The Baltimore Orioles and Cleveland Guardians begin a four-game set at Progressive Field tonight, and I’ve got a pair of MLB picks for the series opener.

My top Orioles vs. Guardians predictions expect the Orange Birds to pull off a low-scoring win on Thursday, April 16.

Who will win Orioles vs Guardians tonight: Orioles moneyline (+110)

Cleveland Guardians starter Parker Messick will face a tough test this evening, as the Baltimore Orioles rank third in wOBA against southpaws

The 25-year-old lefty has an unsustainable .227 BABIP and 100.0% strand rate, so while his 3.37 xFIP is still an excellent mark through three starts, regression is coming for Messick, and the pendulum is set to swing the other way.

Cleveland is also 20th in wOBA against righties, and Baltimore right-hander Shane Baz has impressed over the past two years, allowing three runs or fewer in 22 of his last 34 starts.

Covers COVERS INTEL: The Orioles own the fifth-lowest bullpen xFIP this season.

Orioles vs Guardians Over/Under pick: Under 8.5 (-125)

Although I’m anticipating Messick running into problems, I’m not expecting statistical regression to hit him all at once.

Messick is limiting opposing hitters to a 28.9% hard-hit rate and owns positive pitch values on each of his offerings to start the season.

I also expect Baz to have a solid day on the mound. His 2025 numbers were skewed by pitching home games at George M. Steinbrenner Field — a minor-league park — and his arsenal features a plus fastball and knuckle curve.

Neil Parker's 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets: 4-6, -2.19 units
  • Over/Under bets: 3-3, -0.37 units

Orioles vs Guardians odds

  • Moneyline: Orioles +113 | Guardians -117
  • Run line: Orioles +1.5 (-186) | Guardians -1.5 (+178)
  • Over/Under: Over 8.5 (+113) | Under 8.5 (-117)

Orioles vs Guardians trend

Baltimore has hit the Under in 30 of its last 50 games (+9.00 Units / 16% ROI). Find more MLB betting trends for Orioles vs. Guardians.

How to watch Orioles vs Guardians and game info

LocationProgressive Field, Cleveland, OH
DateThursday, April 16, 2026
First pitch6:10 p.m. ET
TVMASN, Guardians.TV
Orioles starting pitcherShane Baz
(0-1, 4.50 ERA)
Guardians starting pitcherParker Messick
(2-0, 0.51 ERA)

Orioles vs Guardians latest injuries

Orioles vs Guardians weather

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.

Konnor Griffin’s 9-year, $140M contract with Pirates includes $14M signing bonus paid over 2 years

Konnor Griffin’s nine-year, $140 million contract with the Pittsburgh Pirates includes a $12 million signing bonus payable over the next two years.

Pittsburgh’s deal with the 19-year-old shortstop, announced April 8, can increase to $150 million based on his finish in MVP voting, according to details obtained by The Associated Press.

Griffin gets $5 million of his signing bonus within 30 days of the contract’s approval by Major League Baseball and $3.5 million each next April 1 and on April 1, 2028.

He gets salaries of $1 million this year, $2 million in 2027, $4 million in 2028, $6 million in 2029, $12.5 million in 2030, $21 million in 2031, $26.5 million in 2032 and $27.5 million each in 2033 and 2034.

His 2032 and 2033 salaries can escalate by up to $2.5 million based on MVP voting from 2026-31: $1.5 million for winning, $750,000 for second or third and $500,000 for fourth through 10th. His 2034 salary can escalate by up to $5 million based on the same levels in MVP voting from 2026-33.

Griffin receives a limited no-trade provision allowing him to block being dealt to six teams without his consent. He gets a hotel suite on road trips.

His deal supersedes a one-year agreement calling for the $780,000 minimum salary while in the major leagues and a $127,100 salary in the event he was sent back to the minors.

Griffin, who turns 20 next week, debuted on April 3 and is hitting .189 with five RBIs in his first 12 major league games.

He is among four top prospects to get a big-money deal since late March, joined by an eight-year, $150 million contract for 21-year Detroit infielder Kevin McGonigle, an eight-year, $95 million agreement for 20-year-old Seattle shortstop Colt Emerson and an eight-year, $50.75 million pact for 21-year-old Milwaukee shortstop Cooper Pratt.

Game #19: Washington Nationals vs. Pittsburgh Pirates

WASHINGTON, DC - SEPTEMBER 14: Justin Lawrence #61 of the Pittsburgh Pirates pitches against the Washington Nationals during the sixth inning at Nationals Park on September 14, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Scott Taetsch/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Washington Nationals vs. Pittsburgh Pirates, April 16, 2026, 12:35 p.m. ET

Location: PNC Park, Pittsburgh, PA

Broadcast: KDKA AM/FM, Sportsnet-PIT


The Pittsburgh Pirates are at home hosting the Washington Nationals this afternoon at beautiful PNC Park, where they hope to raise the Jolly Roger.


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Bryson Tiller bolts Kansas for rival Missouri after a breakout freshman season

Bryson Tiller is leaving Kansas for bitter rival Missouri after a promising and productive freshman season with the Jayhawks.

The 6-foot-11 forward arrived in Lawrence before the spring semester in 2025 and redshirted before playing last season, when Tiller was a regular in the starting lineup. He averaged 7.9 points and 6.1 rebounds, and one of his best games for Kansas came against the Tigers, when he had 13 points, five rebounds and five blocks in an 80-60 rout at the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Missouri.

Missouri has been active in the transfer portal, landing Tennessee forward Jaylen Carey and Providence forward Jamier Jones.

Tiller visited the Tigers on Sunday and made the decision to join coach Dennis Gates over interest from Michigan, Georgia Tech, NC State, Arizona and others. He visited Miami but canceled a planned visit to Arizona.

Kansas already lost another big man, Flory Bidunga, who decided to transfer to Louisville.

___

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

The Dodgers shattered MLB’s spending record at $515 million in 2025, 7 times the lowest payroll

NEW YORK — The Dodgers shattered Major League Baseball’s spending record with a combined $515 million in payroll and luxury tax last year en route to their second straight World Series title, according to final figures compiled by the commissioner’s office, and Los Angeles is projected for the highest total again in 2026.

Los Angeles’ 2025 spending included records for payroll at $345.3 million and tax of $169.4 million for a total of $514.6 million. Despite several contracts discounted to reflect deferred payments, the Dodgers’ total was seven times the $68.7 million payroll of the Miami Marlins, the lowest-spending team, and more than the payrolls of the bottom six clubs combined.

Spending by the Dodgers last year topped the previous high of $430.4 million by the 2024 New York Mets — and Los Angeles’ total didn’t include the $6.5 million signing bonus given pitcher Roki Sasaki as part of a minor league contract.

The Mets and Dodgers combined to spend $948.3 million. The ratio of the five highest spenders to the five lowest increased from 3.6 in 2021 to a record-high 4.7 last year.

The Dodgers in 2025 ended the Mets’ three-year streak as the top payroll, boosted by $8.5 million in earned bonuses by retiring ace Clayton Kershaw.

Los Angeles’ total would have been about $71 million higher but for the use of deferred money for seven players that resulted in discounting for their payroll calculations. Shohei Ohtani counts at $28.2 million because $68 million of his $70 million salary last year isn’t due until 2035.

The Mets finished second in payroll at $342.1 million and with tax had a total spend of $433.7 million.

In the first five seasons after owner Steve Cohen bought the team, the Mets spent $1.44 billion without winning a title: $1.11 billion in payroll and $320 million in tax.

Both the Mets and Dodgers exceeded the previous record-high payroll set by the 2024 Mets at $333.3 million.

Los Angeles is projected as of MLB’s opening-day figures to lead in 2026 spending with a $323.3 million payroll for its 40-man roster and a $163.7 million tax for a $487.1 million total. The Mets began with a record payroll at $358.4 million and have a projected tax of $124.1 million for a $482.5 million spend.

Cleveland has the lowest opening day 40-man payroll this year at $75.5 million.

Total spending, based on regular payrolls, rose 3.1% to $5.32 billion last year from $5.16 billion in 2024 and has increased 31.3% in four seasons under the current labor contract from $4.05 billion in 2021.

Those figures do not include the $50 million annual pre-arbitration bonus pool that began in the 2022 collective bargaining agreement or allocations for benefits, which are included in MLB’s luxury tax payrolls.

Among luxury tax payrolls, eight teams began 2026 over the $244 million tax threshold. The Dodgers ($415.2 million), Mets ($379.2 million) and New York Yankees ($339.6 million) were followed by Toronto ($319.5 million), Philadelphia ($315.2 million), Boston ($263.7 million), San Diego ($260.1 million) and Atlanta ($247.9 million).

The Chicago Cubs started $25,000 under and Detroit $2.5 million below. Payrolls increase and decrease during the season due to trades and roster moves.

The Yankees finished 2025 with the third-highest regular payroll at $301.5 million, followed by Philadelphia ($291.9 million), AL champion Toronto ($253.1 million), Houston ($236.4 million) and Texas ($229.9 million).

Four of the top five spenders reached the playoffs, except the Mets, along with teams whose payrolls ranked ninth, 10th, 12th, 15th, 17th, 22nd, 23rd and 25th.

The Dodgers boosted payroll the most in 2025 at $74.4 million. Other teams with big 2025 increases were Detroit ($61.9 million), Baltimore ($60.2 million to $165.6 million), San Diego ($45.6 million to $217.6 million), Philadelphia ($42.8 million) and Toronto ($34.7 million).

Fifteen teams cut payroll from 2024 to 2025, led by the Chicago White Sox (by $66.1 million to $87.9 million), St. Louis ($39.3 million to $139.1 million), Miami ($29.4 million to $68.8 million) and San Francisco (by $28 million to $182.9 million). The Cardinals have further slashed payroll to $102.3 million on opening day this year, and that includes about $47.4 million attributable to trades involving three players no longer with the Cardinals: Nolan Arenado, Sonny Gray and Willson Contreras.

The Yankees cut payroll by $9.4 million from 2024 to 2025 and have raised it to $302.8 million this year.

Eleven teams topped $200 million in 2025, matching the record set in 2023. Five teams were below $100 million, one more than the record-low in 2024.

Regular payrolls for last year are based on 2025 salaries, earned bonuses and prorated shares of signing bonuses and non-cash compensation for 40-man rosters. Deferred salaries and bonus payments are discounted to present-day values, and termination pay, option buyouts and cash transactions among clubs are accounted for.

MLB calculated the average salary as of Aug. 31, the last day before active rosters expanded to 26, at $4,611,595. The players’ association, using a slightly different methodology, arrived at $4,721,393,

Luxury tax is based on payrolls with average annual values that include benefits and the pre-arbitration bonus pool. The players’ association doesn’t think tax payments should be used in measuring disparity because half the tax money goes to a commissioner’s discretionary fund distributed among teams eligible to receive revenue-sharing money which have grown their non-media local revenue.

MLB Player Props & Best Bets for Today, April 16

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We have 11 games on the MLB betting board today and a few of our favorite props are in the early games.

See why I'm backing Rangers right-hander Jack Leiter and Rays first baseman Yandy Diaz with my best free MLB player props for Thursday, April 16. 

Best MLB player props today

Player PickOdds
Rangers Jack LeiterOver 5.5 strikeouts-110
Rays Yandy DiazOver 1.5 total bases-105
Guardians Parker MessickUnder 5.5 strikeouts-106

Jack Leiter Over 5.5 strikeouts (-110)

Texas Rangers righty Jack Leiter is coming off a rough outing against the Dodgers elite offense. However, he impressed in his first two starts, striking out eight batters versus Baltimore and fanning nine against Cincinnati.

Leiter is in the 88th percentile in strikeout rate (33.3%) and the 94th percentile in whiff rate (37.3%). He came on strong towards the end of his rookie year in 2025, averaging 10.1 K/9 after the All-Star break. 

He should mow down an Athletics lineup that strikes out at the second-highest rate in the majors (27.5%) and ranks 26th in whiff rate (29%)

  • Time: 3:05 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: NBC Sports California, Rangers Sports Network

Yandy Diaz Over 1.5 total bases (-105)

The Chicago White Sox will use Jordan Leasure (4.95 xERA) as an opener today with Anthony Kay in a bulk relief role. Kay has a 2.46 ERA but analytics suggest major regression. He's in the fifth percentile in hard-hit rate, and the 10th percentile in xERA (7.26) and xBA (.302). 

He'll get roughed up by Tampa Bay Rays first baseman Yandy Diaz. Diaz is slashing .369/.468/.569 and has racked up 37 total bases through 17 games. He has the platoon advantage against Kay and there's a 14 mph breeze blowing towards the outfield at Guaranteed Rate Field today.

  • Time: 2:10 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: CHSN, Rays.TV

Parker Messick Under 5.5 strikeouts (-106)

Cleveland Guardians southpaw Parker Messick has been extremely impressive but his strikeouts prop looks a tad inflated against the Baltimore Orioles today.

The rookie has gone below 5.5 strikeouts in two of three starts this season. He doesn't have overpowering stuff and his whiff rate is in the 30th percentile. He generates most of his strikeouts due to a high chase rate but Baltimore doesn't chase many pitches. 

The Orioles are 21st in the majors in strikeout rate (23.7%) but have trimmed that number to 19.7% over the last week. There's also a chance they get to Messick early since they have a sizzling .796 OPS against lefties. 

  • Time: 6:10 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: CLEGuardians.TV, MASN
Rohit Ponnaiya's 2026 Transparency Record
  • Prop picks: 2-1, +1.65 units

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.

Daily MLB Expert Picks & Baseball Predictions April 16

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It's getaway day on the diamond, with a litany of afternoon games to make MLB picks on.

We're getting into our expert's MLB best bets right away, jumping on the first game of the day and carrying into the afternoon based on prices from Polymarket, which allows baseball fans all over the country to jump in on today's MLB action.

MLB expert picks for today

PickOdds
Josh Inglis Josh Inglis: WAS/PIT u8.5+113
Jon Metler Jon Metler: COL ML+163
Neil Parker Neil Parker: BAL ML+108

Prices courtesy of Polymarket.

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Josh Inglis' expert pick: Nationals/Pirates Under 8.5

Price: 47¢ (+113) at Polymarket

Who doesn't love an afternoon getaway spot with a high total? The wind is still blowing out, but neither the Nationals nor the Pirates took advantage yesterday in a 2-0 game... with just five total hits. The pitching matchup is stronger today, and both bullpens should be fully available. Getaway lineups also tend to feature a few bench bats, which can dilute the offense. This number looks a bit high, with a fair price in the -120 to -115 range, making the plus-money Under worth a look.

Jon Metler's expert pick: Rockies moneyline

Price: 38¢ (+163) at Polymarket

The Rockies may be using an opener in Juan Mejia for this game, but the Astros are getting far too much respect in the market because of it. The Rockies are trading as a 38-cent underdog on Polymarket, but I make them closer to a 42¢ dog in this spot. Ryan Weiss is on the mound for the Astros, and he’s allowing left-handed hitters to bat .357 with a 1.009 OPS this season. That's a problem against a Rockies lineup loaded with lefties at the top, including Mickey Moniak, Edouard Julien, and TJ Rumfield. If those hitters can work the count, Weiss is likely to leave pitches over the heart of the plate that they can attack — especially considering he ranks in just the 7th percentile in hard-hit rate allowed, which is not a good sign for him — but a great sign for our bet.

Neil Parker's expert pick: Orioles moneyline

Price: 48¢ (+108) at Polymarket

Guardians starter Parker Messick will face a tough test today, with the Orioles ranking third in wOBA against southpaws. The 25-year-old lefty has an unsustainable .227 BABIP and 100% strand rate  — and the pendulum is set to swing in the opposite direction with a potent Baltimore lineup. Cleveland also ranks 20th in wOBA against righties, and Baltimore starter Shane Baz has allowed three runs or fewer in 22 of his past 34 starts.


More MLB best bets for today

PickOdds
Yankees ML-272
Read analysis in our Angels vs. Yankees predictions
Giants ML+112
Read analysis in our Giants vs. Reds predictions

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.

Mets trade LHP Richard Lovelady to Nationals for cash considerations

The Mets have traded left-handed reliever Richard Lovelady to the Washington Nationals in exchange for cash considerations. 

Lovelady was designated for assignment on April 11 when the club called up righty Craig Kimbrel. 

The 30-year-old Lovelady appeared in six games for the Mets this season, pitching to a 3.68 ERA in 7.1 innings, striking out six and walking four. Lovelady also appeared in eight games for the Mets last season, when he posted a 6.30 ERA. 

The Mets have had to make a number of bullpen moves lately, including releasing Luis Garcia and calling up Kimbrel and Austin Warren.