Meet new Red Sox infielder Brendan Rodgers

DENVER, CO - AUGUST 16: Trevor Story #27 and Brendan Rodgers #7 of the Colorado Rockies celebrate after turning a double play in the fifth inning against the San Diego Padres at Coors Field on August 16, 2021 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Michael Ciaglo/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Who is he, and where does he come from?

He’s Brendan Rodgers. He was an everyday starter for the lowly Rockies in 2024, leading some to believe he was heading our way at that year’s trade deadline, before we learned that Craig Breslow only makes deals for winning players in the offseason.

Subsequently, Rodgers’ age (and injury history) caught up to him while his raw ability to hit a baseball also declined. He was unceremoniously dumped by the Rockies following the 2024 campaign and bounced between the Astros, Triple-A Sugar Land, and the injury list last season.

The Red Sox have, in “pennies on the dollar” fashion, signed him to a minor-league deal for 2026. Rodgers still a solid depth pickup, though (stop me if you’ve heard me say that before).

Is he any good?

If you asked me this on, say, February 14, 2024, I’d have certainly been more enthusiastic. Now, I’d say no, but this isn’t a bad minor league signing. While never a hitter that tears the cover off the ball, slashing .267/.313/.401 in 7 Major League seasons, Rodgers’ biggest offensive weakness is simply that he strikes out too much. This was never more true than in 2025 when he struck out in 35.9% of his at-bats, which, had he qualified, would have placed him amongst the very worst in the league.

Rodgers is also familiar with several doctors’ offices in his career, as he’s been on the IL 18 total times since 2019. 2025 was no exception; he landed on the IL for separate stints with a concussion, oblique issues, and a broken nose, and was hitting under the Mendoza line when he was healthy.

Still, the second baseman is on the right side of 30 until August 9. He’s also very good defensively, something obviously very important to the Red Sox as they’ve been league leaders in errors in recent years. Rodgers was a Gold Glover in 2022. And, for what it’s worth, he’s a righty who has performed well against lefties for most of his career, slashing .295/.356/.481 against them, so he fills a team need there.

Tl:dr; give me his 2025 stats.

Yeah, about that…

43 G, 2 HR, 11 RBI, .191/.266/.278, -0.3 WAR

Show me a cool highlight.

Here’s that defensive prowess coming to use.

What’s he doing in his picture up there?

Hanging out with a former teammate we all know! Trevor Story and Rodgers were pieces of a Rockies infield that showed promise before what those in Denver refer to as “the dark ages.”

What’s his role on the 2026 Red Sox?

If he’s in Boston for too long, especially with the other pieces that Breslow has also acquired for bargain prices, there’s probably an issue. Still, you can’t count out a redemption arc for a guy just three years removed from a Gold Glove, especially if there are defensive issues on this Red Sox team of infielders who are playing with each other for the first time.

It’s hard not to get frustrated at this signing when thinking back on how much the 2024 version of Rodgers may have helped a 2024 Red Sox team that ended the season with an uninspiring 81-81 record. But this is 2026 and Rodgers can help in the club house in more ways than one. And if someone can bring back old Rodgers, that’s even better!

Eddie Jones blames Borthwick’s title talk for England’s Six Nations slump

  • Former head coach unimpressed by France comments

  • ‘To look ahead for any team is fraught with danger’

Eddie Jones believes England’s dramatic collapse in the Six Nations can be explained by Steve Borthwick’s overconfidence in looking ahead to a title decider against France before the tournament had begun.

Successive emphatic defeats to Scotland and Ireland have undone the progress made during a 12-Test winning run and turned the round-four appointment against Italy in Rome on 7 March into a game they dare not lose.

Continue reading...

Who’s your favorite current Met?

Feb 17, 2026; Port St. Lucie, FL, USA; New York Mets infielder Francisco Lindor (12) speaks to bench coach Kai Correa (50) during spring training at Clover Park. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images | Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

This post is part of a series of daily questions that we’ll ask the community here at Amazin’ Avenue throughout the month of February. We hope you find the questions engaging and that our prompts can spark some fun conversations in the comments. We’ll see you there and plan to have staff chiming in, too.

With the Mets’ roster having undergone a whole lot of turnover as several long-tenured players departed in free agency or trades, we’re curious: Who’s your favorite current Met?

Bill Self still has one big question about Kansas — and it goes past Darryn Peterson

The great debate within the larger basketball community hinges on Darryn Peterson’s durability and whether questions surrounding it will cost the ballyhooed Kansas freshman the No. 1 spot in the NBA draft.

How serious are the hamstring and cramping issues that have limited Peterson to playing in 17 of his team’s 28 games and just 465 of the 1,130 minutes his team has played?

Is he soft, is he disinterested, or is he really that impaired by injuries? Are these health issues that’ll clear up with a little time, or will the durability concerns follow him long-term into the pros?

Force yourself to look at this from a different vantage point, and perhaps you might even convince yourself Peterson is persistent for still playing and not shutting it down and proceeding directly to the NBA lottery.

Anyway, these are questions NBA evaluators must consider.

The bigger question atop Bill Self’s mind: Can his team — his team, with or without Peterson on the floor — develop the consistency necessary to make a deep run in the NCAA Tournament?

On its good nights, No. 14 Kansas looks like a bruiser with enough balance and mettle to be a March Madness menace.

“Our ceiling is high,” Self said on ESPN, minutes after picking apart No. 4 Houston in a 69-56 victory, “but also we can play to any level.”

Bad Kansas, then good Kansas. Good Jayhawks show up against Houston

The past two games illustrated this team’s bipolarity. The Jayhawks were woeful in a blowout loss to Cincinnati, a team on the wrong side of the March Madness bubble. Two days later, Kansas routed a Houston squad with Final Four potential.

We should have known a bounce-back performance was coming. Couple of things you must know about Self: He doesn’t lose back-to-back home games. And he doesn’t lose at home on Big Monday. Period.

Big Monday serves as a good test of a squad's durability, because it thrusts teams back into action two days after their previous game. In that way, it mimics the March Madness structure of playing twice in three days.

Houston had dead legs at Allen Fieldhouse. Two days after losing to Arizona, and one week after losing to Iowa State, the Cougars shot 32% against Kansas. That’s three straight losses for Houston against top-15 teams within the nation’s most rugged conference.

“We just ran out of steam,” Houston coach Kelvin Sampson said.

Contrast Houston’s fatigued performance to that of Kansas, which kept playing better the longer the game went.

Afterward, Self kept looking at the box score printout during a postgame interview with Scott Van Pelt.

He couldn’t have cared less that Flory Bidunga only scored four points, because Kansas’ big man made life miserable for Houston at the other end of the court.

“Totally dominant,” Self said of Bidunga.

Self noticed, too, that Tre White shook of his shooting slump to pour in a season-high 23 points.

“He was great tonight,” Self said.

And although he made no mention of it, it couldn’t have been lost on Self that Peterson played 30 minutes. Didn’t play great, but he made some significant buckets. Neither the best nor the worst player on the court, but a guy on the court all the same for most of the game, long enough to score 14 points.

Darryn Peterson quiets hot takes for one night, anyway

At no point during this game could you have rationally believed Kansas would be better off parting with Peterson, as some have recently suggested.

Everyone’s got a hot take on Peterson, and that includes the personalities who wield the largest megaphones.

I can't trust him,” ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith said recently.

That counts as a mild opinion.

Now, for the spicy:

“Sometimes a divorce is good for everyone involved,” Dick Vitale wrote on social media after the Cincinnati loss, and “I firmly believe that needs to happen NOW (at Kansas). The Darryn Peterson soap opera needs to end.”

Well, that’s a take.

Here’s an alternative one: Kansas cannot count on Peterson to be the driving force behind a Final Four run. He’s talented, but unreliable. The Jayhawks likely need him to be on the court, contributing, to advance to the tournament’s final weekend, but they’ll also need elite defense from Bidunga and big performances from White and Melvin Council Jr., like the Jayhawks got against Houston.

At times throughout this season, Self has sounded understandably frustrated at Peterson’s sporadic availability.

“There is one way (for Peterson) to change the narrative. Play. Finish,” the veteran Kansas coach said earlier this season.

Now, Self acknowledges Kansas playing so many minutes without the future NBA lottery pick has “forced our other guys to grow up.”

Those are the type of compliments that follow an impressive victory. Just two days earlier, Self called his team soft — not just Peterson, but the whole dang team.

From soft, to resolute, in two days’ time.

Kansas has now beaten Arizona, Iowa State and Houston. Those are caliber of opponents a team must be able to handle to reach April.

And still, even Self doesn’t sound like he knows what to expect from his team from one game to the next or whether Peterson will be on the court from one minute to the next.

“I have a decent feel of who we need to be,” Self said. “Do I know who we are? No. But, I still think we’ve got time to figure it out.”

Blake Toppmeyer is a columnist for the USA TODAY Network. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Bill Self has one key Kansas question that goes beyond Darryn Peterson

Canadiens: Trading Gritty Blueliner Would Be A Mistake

With the Olympic Tournament and the break in the books, the trade freeze on the NHL has been lifted, and there should be plenty of talk and speculation about trades in the run-up to the March 6th trade deadline. The Montreal Canadiens only have three games left until then, and given the team’s results this season, nobody expects the Habs to be sellers; their rebuild his over.

That doesn’t necessarily mean that Kent Hugues will stay put, though. There has been a lot of chatter about forward Patrik Laine being on the market, and the Habs do have an interesting situation developing on the blueline. For the third season in a row, Jayden Struble and Arber Xhekaj have been fighting for the role of sixth defenseman, and neither of them has been able to hang on to the role. Furthermore, we’ve seen that Adam Engstrom is knocking on the NHL door (although he was injured this weekend in the Laval Rocket game), and David Reinbacher should be ready to move up soon as well.

Canadiens’ Slafkovsky Made Olympic All-Star Team
Canadiens' Phillip Danault Benefiting Big Time From Trade
Canadiens Young Forward Is Big Player To Watch

When these kids are ready, someone will have to make way, and whichever way you look at it, Xhekaj and Struble, who have been on the bubble, are two candidates to go. The latter is in the first year of a two-year contract with a $1,412,500 cap hit, while the former is playing in the last year of a two-year pact with a $1,300,000 cap hit. Neither is near UFA status. Xhekaj will get there in 2028, while Struble will be free as a bird in 2029. Since both will remain under team control, there is no rush to move either.

Kent Hughes has always said that he’s not in the business of buying high and selling low, which leads me to believe that, at least for now, Xhekaj is not going anywhere. The 6-foot-4 and 240-pound defenseman has a special blend of skills and toughness that most teams would love to have. While it’s true that he makes some mistakes on the ice, be it in defensive coverage or by getting himself out of the play to make a big hit, the Canadiens will need to decide whether they are ready to live with those mistakes to benefit from what he brings on the physicality side.

Martin St-Louis doesn’t seem particularly fond of the gritty style Xhekaj can bring, but there’s no denying that the Canadiens need to have some players who can play that kind of game. It was evident in the playoffs last season when the Washington Capitals roughed them up, and it likely won’t be different in the upcoming playoffs. Despite his occasional shortcomings, it would be a mistake for the Canadiens to move on from Xhekaj. 

Asked about his future last Wednesday after practice, Xhekaj said that there had been no talk about a contract extension and that he’d see what happens in the future. Even though he’s only averaging 11:20 of ice time this season, he still leads the Canadiens in hits with 135, miles ahead of the next defenseman, Struble, who only has 73, followed by Noah Dobson, who has 39. Up front, Joe Veleno leads the pack with 119 hits, and Zachary Bolduc is next with 115. As things stand, Montreal cannot afford to trade Xhekaj, at least on paper.

The question is, though, will St-Louis ever be comfortable enough with his downsides to give him a regular shift? It appears that Hughes and St-Louis will need to discuss that topic to decide how to move forward. Could playing him up front in an energy role be an option? It sure seems like an idea worth exploring; the younger Xhekaj, Florian, is doing very well in that role with the Laval Rocket.

Whether or not they decide to move on from the hulking defenseman, it would make sense for the team to sign him to a new contract before trading him. That’s the only way to maximize his value. He’s got a special blend of attributes, but other teams are more likely to give better compensation if an asset is already signed to a cost-efficient contract.

Something will have to give soon on the blueline, but it doesn’t have to be before the end of the season. This seems to be a matter Hughes should take his time with; he could use another playoff experience to see how much of an impact these two blueliners can have when the stakes are as high as they can be.


Follow Karine on X @KarineHains Bluesky @karinehains.bsky.social and Threads @karinehains.  

Bookmark The Hockey News Canadiens' page for all the news and happenings around the Canadiens.

Join the discussion by signing up to the Canadiens' roundtable on The Hockey News.

Subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/free. Get the latest news and trending stories by subscribing to our newsletter here

Penguins still waiting for Crosby injury update

MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 22: Silver medalist Sidney Crosby #87 of Team Canada looks on during the medal ceremony for Men's Ice Hockey after the Men's Gold Medal match between Canada and the United States on day 16 of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena on February 22, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s still not clear if Sidney Crosby will miss any time with the lower-body injury that sidelined him for the last two games of the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics.

Penguins coach Dan Muse told reporters that Monday was a travel day for Crosby, who received his silver medal after Canada’s loss to Team USA on Sunday in Milan.

“There’s still more information that we need to get… there’s a couple more days here, before we play a game,” Muse said Monday.

The Penguins are seemingly preparing for the possibility of Crosby missing time. The team called up Avery Hayes on Monday as part of what Muse described as a “contingency plan.”

“It’s also just, see something different. See what the options might be. And I think that’s all we’re doing right now is just looking at, if we do get to the point where we need to explore different options coming off the break, then we’ve got the practice days to do it,” Muse said.

Hayes spent Monday skating on the Penguins’ top line, with Rickard Rakell sliding over to take Crosby’s usual spot at center.

Muse said he would be “very comfortable” with playing Rakell at center should Crosby miss time after seeing him in the position this preseason.

Hayes, who scored twice in his Penguins debut during the last game before the Olympic break, has since gone back to the AHL to record two hat tricks in a span of five games with the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins.

Even if Crosby is able to play Thursday, the Penguins could potentially consider keeping him up for another shot at NHL play depending on how practice looks later this week.

The Penguins have a scheduled day off Tuesday, per Trib Live’s Seth Rorabaugh. That could mean Penguins fans won’t find out more about Crosby’s status until practice Wednesday.

The Penguins have a busy stretch coming up. After Thursday’s home game against Jack Hughes and the New Jersey Devils, the Pens are taking on a back-to-back set at Madison Square Garden on Saturday and against the visiting Vegas Golden Knights on Sunday.

Preview: Injured Warriors take on Pelicans, ex-teammate Poole

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - NOVEMBER 29: Jordan Poole #3 of the New Orleans Pelicans warms up before the game against the Golden State Warriors at Chase Center on November 29, 2025 in San Francisco, 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 Lachlan Cunningham/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Let’s talk about a fun contest ahead, Dub Nation. The Golden State Warriors are rolling into the Smoothie King Center tonight looking like the world’s most talented MASH unit, missing Steph Curry, Draymond Green, Kristaps Porzingis, and Jimmy Butler. That’s four All-Stars sitting in street clothes while this team somehow just beat the third-place Denver Nuggets 128-117 on Sunday without their starpower.

Now the Warriors head to New Orleans on the front end of a road back-to-back, and that’s where it gets spicy. Because waiting for them in that locker room is Jordan Poole, a man whose Warriors career ended in one of the stranger chapters in recent franchise history, and whose Pelicans career has been one long identity crisis with occasional flashes of brilliance.

Golden State Warriors at New Orleans Pelicans

When: Tuesday, February 24, 2026 | 5:00 PM PT

Where: Smoothie King Center | New Orleans, Louisiana

TV: NBC Sports Bay Area

Radio: 95.7 The Game

Here’s the thing about JP right now: his back is genuinely against the wall. He spent the final nine games before the All-Star break completely out of the Pelicans’ rotation while the front office shopped him around. Then interim coach James Borrego threw him back out there against Philly, and Poole dropped 23 points on 53.3% shooting in 24 minutes, draining five threes like a man who had something to prove to everybody in the building and several people who weren’t. With Dejounte Murray potentially making his season debut tonight after missing the entire year with a torn Achilles, Poole’s rotation spot could shrink again the moment the final buzzer sounds. He doesn’t have the luxury of a bad night.

The Pelicans at 16-42 are not a good basketball team, but the Warriors have not earned any off nights especially without their best players.

Golden State’s depth has been the real story of this stretch. Moses Moody, Al Horford, and De’Anthony Melton all scored 20+ against Denver. The Warriors posted 42 assists on 48 made field goals, the kind of number that reflects genuine team cohesion rather than desperation. This isn’t a team just limping through the motions; it’s a squad adapting.

But don’t let the Pelicans’ record fool you. Poole with a chip on his shoulder and something to prove is genuinely dangerous, and tonight he gets to demonstrate it against the franchise that once thought he was worth a $140 million investment before reconsidering. That’s the kind of psychological fuel that turns a 23-point night into something considerably more devastating.

Open Thread: The Spurs and the 40-20 Rule

SAN ANTONIO, TX -FEBRUARY 19: Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs reacts after a dunk against Phoenix Suns in the second half at Moody Center on February 19, 2026 in Austin, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Ronald Cortes/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s a thing. It has its own Wikipedia entry.

The 40-20 Rule states that a team must win 40 games before losing 20 to have a chance at winning the championship in that season. Since 1980, only four teams have won a championship despite not winning 40 before losing 20.

The rule was introduced by Phil Jackson, which should make Spurs fans suspect. After all, this is the man who posited the 1999 NBA Championship should have an asterisk for being a shortened season. To the best of my knowledge, Jackson never made a comment when the Lakers won the 2020 title in a shortened season. But I digress…

After earning their 40th win on Saturday night against the Sacramento Kings, Spurs forward Harrison Barnes commented that hitting 40 wins before 20 losses was a goal the team had. And Barnes should know about setting goals as a team, he was a member of the Golden State Warriors 2015 title run.

Now keep in mind, the Spurs are not alone. The Oklahoma City Thunder and Detroit Pistons also hit the mark, and the Boston Celtics are three wins away from being the fourth team positioned to follow the rule.

Out of those four teams, the Spurs are definitely making their run ahead of pundit predictions. But if you ask the members of the Silver & Black, they’ll tell you they are right on schedule.

In the midst of a nine-game winning streak (the most recent also ending the Pistons five-game streak), the Spurs have a tough schedule ahead, especially considering they will spend the remainder of the month on the Rodeo Road Trip.

How are you feeling, Pounders? Put your Silver & Black tinted glasses aside and see through an impartial viewer’s eyes.

Is this the Spurs year?


Welcome to the Thread. Join in the conversation, start your own discussion, and share your thoughts. This is the Spurs community, your Spurs community. Thanks for being here.

Our community guidelines apply which should remind everyone to be cool, avoid personal attacks, not to troll and to watch the language.

Brew Crew Ball Daily Question: How worried are you about a baseball lockout?

March 4, 2022: A security guard locks the gates near the main entrance at the Salt River Fields at Talking Stick in Scottsdale, AZ. Major League Baseball commissioner Rob Manfred implemented the lockout over stalled labor negotiations with the Major League Baseball Players Association. Usp Mlb Lockout S Bbo Usa Az

We’re back with another daily question, and today’s question is: How worried are you about a baseball lockout?

This is one of those topics where everyone seems to have a strong opinion one way or the other. Obviously, no baseball fan wants to see an absence of games, and the long-term fallout is something that is definitely under consideration (remember what the 1994-95 strike did?). But at the same time, many (including plenty of Brewer fans) think a labor stoppage and lockout are the only way for some of baseball’s biggest issues to be fixed, namely the lack of a salary cap/floor.

Are you worried about a baseball lockout? Or is that the right thing for baseball?

Weigh in in the comments, and join us throughout the month as we keep these conversations rolling into spring training. Have a question you’d like to ask in a future BCB Daily Question? Drop one in the comments and we may use it later this month.

Orioles news: Working out the early-spring glitches

SARASOTA, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 12: Cade Povich #37 of the Baltimore Orioles pitches live during practice at Ed Smith Stadium on February 12, 2026 in Sarasota, Florida. (Photo by Todd Olszewski/Baltimore Orioles/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good morning, Camden Chatters.

We’re four days into the Grapefruit League season, still at the point where every team has roughly 10,000 players in camp and the regulars are getting sporadic half-days of work. That’s good, because yesterday’s 10-7 loss to the Braves was not the most sterling pitching performance for the Birds. The O’s used 10 pitchers, of whom you’d probably recognize fewer than half the names in the box score. Someone named Cohen Achen, who is so anonymous that his MLB player profile includes neither a picture nor a birthday, gave up five runs, including a grand slam by former Oriole Jorge Mateo. Journeyman reliever Enoli Paredes gave up three.

Still, the pitchers you’ve actually heard of mostly did well. Cade Povich worked two scoreless innings, and righty bullpen candidates Rico Garcia and Jose Espada tossed a perfect frame apiece. Keegan Akin wasn’t so sharp, giving up two runs in his inning of work. The important thing is that nobody got hurt and everybody’s got another month to continue working out the kinks.

The Orioles’ starting lineup was mostly full of regulars, though the majority of the offensive production came from bench players, who contributed six of the Birds’ nine hits. Jhonkensy “Big Christmas” Noel had a pair of hits, and even former first-round pick Vance Honeycutt got in on the action by hitting a home run, something he did only five times in 436 minor league PAs last year. For the first time, though, Pete Alonso started a game and did not homer. That’s it, I’m calling it: he’s a bust.

The O’s are back to work today at 1:00 PM with a visit to the Twins in Fort Myers, but for the second straight day, there will be no local TV or radio broadcast of the game. Albert Suárez will start for the Orioles, and we’ll just have to take someone else’s word as to how effective he looks today.

Links

Orioles sign infielder Thairo Estrada to minor league contract – BaltimoreBaseball.com

Based on his .655 OPS for the worst team in baseball last year, Estrada is probably not any kind of a solution to the Orioles’ infield problem. But it doesn’t hurt to stash him at Triple-A as depth.

Cade Povich’s newest slider, dubbed a gyro, could lead the Orioles pitcher to more consistency – The Baltimore Banner

I don’t see Povich having any real shot of cracking the Opening Day rotation, but don’t rule him out as a reliever. Not having to go multiple times through the lineup would help him a lot, and so could this delicious-sounding new pitch of his.

A few O’s pitching prospects make a nice early impression in Sarasota – Steve Melewski

One thing that made the 2025 Orioles’ rotation so shoddy is that they had almost no legitimate pitching prospects at Triple-A who could provide any big league help. They’re in a much better spot this year, thanks to the trio of Trey Gibson, Levi Wells, and Nestor German.

Puppy palace: Inside the dog-filled house at Orioles spring training – The Baltimore Sun

Jacob Calvin Meyer checks in with one of the more adorable stories from Sarasota.

Henderson on infield changes, WBC and more (plus Povich start and other notes on today’s 10-7 loss) – School of Roch

Craig Albernaz described Cade Povich as “really good” with a “really good” tempo, Keegan Akin as “good,” and Blaze Alexander as a “good” athlete who made “really good” defensive plays. Albernaz may turn out to be a fine manager, but somebody get this man a thesaurus.

Orioles birthdays and history

Is today your birthday? Happy birthday! And happy 70th birthday to the great Eddie Murray, the Orioles legend who spent 13 of his 21 MLB seasons in Baltimore. With the Birds, he was the 1977 AL Rookie of the Year, a seven-time All Star, three-time Gold Glover, two-time Silver Slugger, and 1983 World Series champion. He was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2003. Enjoy your day, Eddie!

Other former Orioles born on this day are catcher Chance Sisco (31), 1B/OF Chris Parmelee (38), and catcher Gustavo Molina (44).

On this date in 2014, the Orioles signed veteran DH Nelson Cruz to a one-year, $8 million deal. Cruz, despite solid career numbers, had been left untouched on the free agent market until spring training due to his 2013 suspension for involvement in the Biogenesis scandal. The O’s took a gamble and were rewarded with perhaps the best bang-for-the-buck free agent signing in franchise history, as Cruz mashed an MLB-best 40 home runs for the Orioles, leading them to the 2014 AL East title. But the O’s made the mistake of letting him leave in free agency, after which he crushed 204 homers in the next five years.

Phillies News: Taryn Hatcher, Justin Crawford, Kevin Long, Michael Conforto

Phillies News:

MLB News:

The 2026 St. Louis Cardinals: Rebuilding or Rebranding?

“All progress occurs because people dare to be different” is what the fortune cookie from my lunch said last week. That little sliver of paper with a generic response now sits on my work desk as a reminder to think outside the box and to challenge the minds of Cardinals fans, including myself. The 2026 St. Louis Cardinals project to feature a roster that is unlike anything this generation of Cardinals fans is used to. No All-Stars, no household names, no future Hall of Fame-bound members. The only universal aspect of this team that’s true across all of baseball is that half the fan base wants the Manager fired. No numbers, no graphs, no charts this week, just thoughts.

The highest-paid player entering the season (that’s still rostered) is Starting Pitcher Dustin May, and the oldest player projected to make the roster is 33-year-old Relief Pitcher Ryne Stanek. These are stark differences from teams we’ve watched over the previous decade-plus of Redbird baseball. The players that Cardinals fans ARE aware of each come with real question marks: Can Herrera stay healthy and be a factor as a Catcher? Can Masyn Winn take the next step offensively and be the 5+ win player and be the next face of this team? Can Victor Scott, Jordan Walker, or Nolan Gorman find offensive consistency and plant their flag as long-term members of the future? What’s realistic to expect from rookie sensation JJ Wetherholt? What if all of the IF’s become answers and the Cardinals wind up being better than everyone expects?

Same with the pitching staff; what if Dustin May makes good on his rebound and re-establishes himself as the pitcher amateur scouts drooled over? What if Liberatore puts together a full season of exceptional pitching and not just half of one? What if Pallante regains his 2024 form? Can McGreevy, Fitts, Dobbins, Leahy, and Matthews all take the next steps and provide the major rotation depth the Cardinals haven’t had in years? What if Riley O’Brien has a career year as a closer, and the other pieces of the bullpen settle into roles that create a new formula for the Cardinals to lock down games with a late lead?

What if it doesn’t matter if the Cardinals don’t look anything like the previous 30 years of Cardinals baseball and still find a way to be in a competitive mix at the end of the season, and knocking on the door of the playoffs?

The Cardinals will never be a team that can financially compete with the LA Dodgers, New York Mets, Philadelphia Phillies, or Chicago Cubs (If Ricketts ever realizes what a financial advantage he has in the NL Central from a media market size standpoint). The Milwaukee Brewers, Cleveland Guardians, and Tampa Bay Rays, despite being in the bottom third of baseball in payroll, have found unique ways to perennially find themselves in the mix for an October berth, thanks to unheralded talent nobody projected to be as good as they were.

So, I ask whether the Cardinals are actually rebuilding? Because they themselves have pushed back against that notion time and time again this offseason, and maybe it’s not actually a PR strategy, and the team has had more up its sleeve than we have been led to believe. To paraphrase: “We will stay long-term focused but concede nothing.” Continues to be a message that echoes in my head from Chaim Bloom’s introductory press conference.

Most readers on this site would concede that this team is not devoid of talent but rather devoid of proven production. Chaim Bloom has placed a large number of small bets on this team, and it just takes two or three to hit to alter the trajectory of the 2026 team. In the reader mailbag articles, I ask you, the readers, for your best, most pressing questions, to help me create content that’s centered around what you’re interested in from a Cardinals perspective.

So, I will flip the script on all of you and ask, are the Cardinals rebuilding, and this is a lost year? Or are we watching, in real time, the Cardinals rebrand themselves into one of the other major league teams that win differently, and more might be in store for 2026 than we all initially thought?

“If you accept the expectations of others, especially negative ones, then you never will change the outcome.” -Michael Jordan

-Thanks for reading

The Breakdown | Six Nations half-term report: France are flying while England’s decline is steep

Les Bleus have variety and gifted youngsters but, by contrast, Steve Borthwick’s men are predictable and flawed

France (15 points) Three games played, three bonus-point victories banked and the title at their mercy. If they claim another four-try win at Murrayfield on Saturday week, they will secure the crown with a round to spare, setting up a rousing grand slam opportunity in Paris. Above all else, though, Les Bleus have illuminated this year’s championship with their pace and attacking grace, not least “King” Louis Bielle-Biarrey who has been spectacularly good. How many other sides in the world, aside from South Africa, can also interchange their second-row and midfield pairings without missing a beat? Or casually whistle up gifted youngsters such as Fabien Brau-Boirie, Émilien Gailleton and Gaël Dréan who all look instantly to the manner born. When you factor in the squad’s collective ability with and without the ball – to date France have scored the most tries, 18, and conceded the fewest, five – the future looks dazzlingly bright.

Scotland (11pts) The script has previously been a familiar one. Bask in the rosy glow of beating England, only to come crashing to earth in their next game. This time, finally, they have broken that pattern and still have their destiny in their own hands. France are due an off day and do not always prosper at Murrayfield while, before last Saturday afternoon, more than a few people would have backed them to cause problems in Dublin on the final weekend. The message will be simple: attack as smartly and accurately as they did in their Calcutta Cup fever dream and maintain the defensive organisation that has so far enabled them to concede just six tries in three games. And, of course, keep Finn Russell fit. The quick‑thinking restart that helped to bail his team out against Wales was merely the latest example of his whirring creative brain. A shoutout, too, for Kyle Steyn and Rory Darge who lead the way, respectively, for defenders beaten and turnovers won in this year’s championship.

Continue reading...

A casual fan's guide to the NHL: What to know after Winter Olympics

The 2026 Winter Olympics in Milano Cortina are over, and the United States is returning with two gold medal hockey teams. The women's side was able to outlast Canada in overtime and won on a phenomenal stick rip into backhand goal from Megan Keller, whereas the men also won in overtime courtesy of a snipe from Jack Hughes.

The USA was abuzz after the wins, but while hockey is over internationally, NHL fans are now eagerly awaiting the recommencement of a season that is entering its final stretch. There are divisional races like the brutally tight Atlantic and the similarly close Pacific, dominant teams like the Colorado Avalanche (although their shine wore off a bit going into the break), and teams that are just plain fun like the Wild, where Quinn Hughes was traded from Vancouver earlier in the season.

There's a little something for everyone, and with most teams having about 25 games left to play this year, there's a lot of on-ramp ahead of the always-exciting Stanley Cup playoffs. Not to mention, there were some amazing players who didn't compete in the athletes due to the international ban on Russia, including all-time NHL goals leader Alex Ovechkin, plus Andrei Vasilevsky and Ilya Sorokin, arguably the best two goalies in the sport.

Of course, those looking to support some of the key players who won Team USA gold may be disappointed. Connor Hellebuyck's Winnipeg Jets and Jack Hughes' New Jersey Devils are all but out of the playoff race. With that being said, other key players like Quinn Hughes and Dylan Larkin are firmly in the thick of things.

Here's what to know about the NHL season as it stands, and who fans can root for depending on their proclivities.

The obvious: Geography

If you're in a city with a team, the easiest move to root for that team. This probably doesn't need exposition.

USA! USA!

If you just can't get away from the high of that Team USA win, there are a few players to look out for. Quinn Hughes, who notched the game-winner for the United States against Sweden, plays defense for the Minnesota Wild. He was traded from the Vancouver Canucks earlier in the season, and is tied for fourth among NHL defensemen in points with Avalanche blueliner and Canadian Cale Makar. In addition, Matt Boldy and Brock Faber play for Minnesota.

Then there's center Dylan Larkin, who plays center and is captain for the Detroit Red Wings. The Red Wings are entrenched in the most brutal divisional chase in the league, with the Atlantic Division having four teams within three points of each other. An Original Six team, the Wings have one of the most storied histories in the NHL, and are trying to break a nine-year playoff drought, the longest in team history.

Jack Hughes and Connor Hellebuyck play for the New Jersey Devils and Winnipeg Jets, respectively. Both are effectively out of the playoff picture, so if new fans are willing to wait, these could be teams to follow. Hughes plays with his brother, Luke, who is rehabbing a shoulder injury and is expected to return in early March. He is the youngest of the Hughes brothers.

Give me an underdog

The underdog to end all underdogs? The Buffalo Sabresare also entrenched in the bloodbath that is the Atlantic, and looking to snap a league-high 14-season playoff drought.

Led by USA forward Tage Thompson and captain Rasmus Dahlin, a star for Sweden, the Sabres were hockey's hottest team in December heading into January, winning 10 consecutive games in December and 15 of 17 after the span. NFL fans will know Buffalo has some of sports' most dedicated fans, and the Sabres reflect that. Plus, they semi-regularly don the goat's head jerseys of the 1990s. Huge bonus.

Sandwiched between Detroit and Toronto are the Ottawa Senators. Canada's capital has a team that is riding the line between playoff team and rebuild, with Brady Tkachuk at the forefront. The Senators have the worst goalie play in hockey by a wide margin, but with a solid defense and a year removed from a playoff berth, not to mention at least a fighting chance in the Atlantic, Ottawa is a fun team to get in on early.

Perhaps, however, you'd like to look to the West. The Seattle Kraken have made the playoffs just once in their first four years in the NHL, but are on the razor's edge to do the same this year. They're currently third in the Pacific, meaning if the season ended today, they'd be in. Matty Beniers and Jordan Eberle are the top scorers for the team, while backup goalie Philipp Grubauer just turned in a nice performance for Germany in Italy.

If there's a bandwagon, I'll take it

Normally the answer to this would be the Florida Panthers, but some bad injury luck has the back-to-back defending Stanley Cup champs at the bottom of the Atlantic. If you want instant bragging rights and Matthew Tkachuk, look no further than Miami, but it might not last long.

With that in mind, the Colorado Avalanche are the clearest answer. Though they sputtered a bit heading into the Olympic break, they still lead the Wild by five games in the West. Canadians Nathan MacKinnon and Cole Makar lead the way for Colorado, while their goalie tandem of Scott Wedgewood and Mackenzie Blackwood, affectionately dubbed "The Woods," continue to turn in impressive seasons.

The Tampa Bay Lightningalso belong here. They lead the Atlantic by six points with 78, although they've had their recent woes. After three consecutive Stanley Cup Finals appearances, they've been bounced in the first round of the playoffs for three years in a row. Coached by Team Canada coach Jon Cooper, their best two players are Russians Nikita Kucherov and Andrei Vasilevsky. The latter is one of the NHL's best goalies, second in the league in saves above expected only to Ilya Sorokin. Kucherov is third in the NHL behind Connor McDavid and MacKinnon in points with 91 and has won the last two scoring titles.

The Dallas Starsbandwagon is another fun one, and it isn't insufferable ... yet. The Stars are trying to get over the conference finals hump and are third in the Central behind the Avalanche and Wild. While Mikko Rantanen is one of the top setup wings in the sport, it's the non-Olympian fans may love: Jason Robertson, who was considered a somewhat egregious snub off Team USA. He leads the Stars in goals at 32, and has said himself: "Every one is for my cat."

There are also the Vegas Golden Knights, who currently lead the Pacific. The addition of Mitch Marner has been a boon for Vegas, and the team has been relevant since its inception in 2017. Vegas, of course, went to the Stanley Cup Final in its inaugural season and then won it all in 2022-23. The Golden Knights have made hockey a performance as much as any team in the league, and it has translated to results on the ice.

Give me speed, give me youth

If you want youth, the Montreal Canadiens are the way to go. They're the youngest team in hockey, and their top five point scorers are 26 or younger (three are 21 or younger). Similar to Robertson, Cole Caufield was a snub from Team USA, and is tied for the league-lead in overtime goals with the Wild's Kirill Kaprizov at four. Nick Suzuki played well for Canada, notching a clutch game-tying goal against Czechia in the quarterfinals. The Canadiens (with an E) are mixed up with the Red Wings, Sabres and Bruins in the Atlantic.

Then there's the San Jose Sharks, where wunderkind Macklin Celebrini is leaving his mark. The Sharks have work to do to slot into playoff position this year, as they're five games out of a wild card spot, but it's a far cry from where they were before drafting Celebrini in 2024. After going 20-50-12 in 2024-25, they've taken bounds this year, largely thanks to Celebrini. Now the Sharks are trying to build on the momentum of adding the face of their franchise.

Another team that's part of the youth movement is the Chicago Blackhawks, led by Connor Bedard. They aren't in the thick of things yet, but it's a team with a lot of history that new fans would be buying low on. The Blackhawks look to be on the upswing, and with recent Stanley Cups in 2010, 2013, and 2015, they aren't far removed from their most recent era of relevance (and dominance).

Show me the best player in hockey

It's Connor McDavid.

While naysayers will cite the lack of a Cup or Canada getting silver in these Games, McDavid is at or near the top of nearly every conceivable metric. He leads the NHL in points at 96, goals at 34, expected goals at 32.5, he's tied for the lead in assists with 62, second in primary assists with 36 and fourth in shots on goal per game. He also leads the league in high danger shots on goal, max skate speed, and he has 70 more bursts above 22 mph over No. 2 Owen Tippett with 106. If you want to watch the best player hockey has to offer, watch the Edmonton Oilers, who are looking for their third consecutive Stanley Cup Final appearance and are currently second in the Pacific.

I'll stick out a rebuild

Not everyone needs to get in and win right away. There are a few teams who are either entering into or transitioning toward rebuilding.

The St. Louis Bluesare poising themselves for a full on sale at the trade deadline, and while Jordan Binnington played some great goalie for Team Canada, he has been the worst goalie in hockey by a wide margin in goals saved above expected. They're likely looking at a roster teardown as they try to get back to the playoffs.

The Vancouver Canucks are a team new fans might struggle with. Ownership has had difficulty accepting a rebuild is needed, but the trade of Quinn Hughes was a start. Vancouver has never had a No. 1 overall pick, and this might be the year. But while things look bleak now, Vancouver is one of the most fun fanbases in hockey when it's winning. Even when it's losing, the fans find ways to make the best of it, like chanting "we want the Cup" ahead of a shutout win of the Anaheim Ducks despite clamoring for a rebuild.

Anyone shiny and new?

The Utah Mammoth aren't a new team per se, they're a relocated continuation of the Arizona Coyotes, but they're currently in a wild card spot in the West. Goalie Karel Vejmelka has been extremely strong this year, while Clayton Keller and Nick Schmaltz have turned in 50-plus point years to this point. Their logo also evokes the Wasatch Mountains over the head of the animal mascot, a cool localized touch.

I want a team with history

For teams with history, among the Original Six teams not mentioned are the Bruins and the Maple Leafs, both of the Atlantic.

The Boston Bruinsare a team that never really goes away. They had an eight-year playoff streak snapped last year, but this year are in the thick of the playoff hunt at 69 points, giving them a wild card spot for now. David Pastrnak has 71 points for the team lead, while Morgan Geekie and Team USA's Charlie McAvoy are other key contributors.

Then, and this is a little awkward, there are the Toronto Maple Leafs. USA captain Auston Matthews is the Leafs captain, and is second on the team with 48 points while leading it with 26 goals. The Leafs are at 63 points, six points out of a wild card spot, and haven't won a Stanley Cup since 1967. The Leafs have also suffered some ... unique heartbreak in recent seasons. They have lost seven Game 7s since 2013, including two in the past two seasons. The 2025 collapse against the Panthers ultimately ran Mitch Marner out of town (among other reasons), and this year looks like it may well end in disappointment up north.

Finally, there the New York Rangers to round out the Original Six. The Rangers are trying to retool their roster, having already traded Artemi Panarin to the Kings and being on the cusp of moving Vincent Trocheck, another Team USA member. The Rangers made the conference finals in 2023-24, but have lacked an identity in the past two seasons. They're hoping for a lottery pick this year, and easily could have gone into the rebuild category as well.

Obviously anyone can follow any team for any number of reasons, this is just a jumping off point. Come the NHL trade deadline on March 6 or the NHL entry draft June 26-27, things could end up looking very different. But as we enter the homestretch of the NHL season, these teams have something for everyone. So do the Blue Jackets and Flames, where Johnny Gaudreau — the player honored by Team USA after him and his brother Matthew were tragically killed by a suspected drunk driver in 2024 — played, the Capitals, led by the legendary Ovechkin, or the Penguins, led by the similarly legendary Sidney Crosby.

There's also the Hurricanes, who have made seven straight playoffs and are cued up for their eighth, the Islanders, who boast arguably the best goalie in the league in Ilya Sorokin, and the Predators, another team in an unorthodox location that has found sporadic success (and Nick Saban has stock in, for Alabama fans). The Ducks and Kings scratch the West Coast itch and play completely disparate games despite being so close regionally, and the Flyers, well, the Flyers have Gritty, one of sports' best mascots.

With the NHL entering its homestretch, all anyone has to do is turn it on and follow the rules. The Olympics provided a good blueprint of what to expect. An important caveat, however: It isn't best on best every night. Not every game is going to bring the excitement of the Winter Olympics. But the Stanley Cup playoffs are as high-stress as any postseason in sports.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: A casual fan's guide to the NHL: What to know after Winter Olympics

Pens Points: Welcome back, Avery

BUFFALO, NEW YORK - FEBRUARY 05: Avery Hayes #85 of the Pittsburgh Penguins skates in his first NHL game against the Buffalo Sabres on February 05, 2026 at KeyBank Center in Buffalo, New York. (Photo by Bill Wippert/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Tuesday will be the final day of the NHL’s Olympic break, with the 2025-26 season starting back up on Wednesday with eight games on the schedule. It will be a slightly longer wait for the Pittsburgh Penguins who return to action on Thursday against gold medal hero Jack Hughes and the New Jersey Devils at PPG Paints Arena.

If you were hoping for some big update on Sidney Crosby on Monday then you will have been disappointed since all we got from the team was that Crosby was on his way back to North America like his fellow Canadian teammates and will be evaluated once he rejoins the team this week.

Pens Points…

Back like he never left, Avery Hayes was recalled to the NHL on Monday, hoping to pick up where he left when he made his NHL debut in the final game before the Olympic break. Hayes was back in the AHL while the Penguins were off where he recorded a pair of hat tricks for the Baby Pens. [Pensburgh]

There was always an expectation that Hayes was going to be in Pittsburgh at some point this season, but the way he announced his arrival was perhaps not expected. He’s been on fire ever since and his first call-up along with the second has been well earned on the ice. [Trib Live]

There are 26 games remaining on the Penguins 2025-26 schedule, with each and everyone being important as the team battles for a playoff spot. They put themselves in great position through the first 56 games, but their fate will be determined by how they perform in what’s left. [Pensburgh]

Sunday was a defining moment for hockey in the United States and will have a profound impact for generations to come. In Pittsburgh, the sport is already a mainstay and will remain so, but it too will receive a boost from what transpired in Milan on both the men’s and women’s side. [Trib Live]

If that was in fact the last time we see Sidney Crosby on the Olympic stage, then it’s sure to leave a sour taste in his mouth given the way it played out. Let’s just hope for however long he continues his NHL career, he doesn’t face the same ending he just went through in Milan. [The Athletic $$]

NHL News and Notes…

Teams across the league are preparing for their return to action this week while Olympic players are still traveling back from Milan. With game resuming on Wednesday night, it remains to be seen if all Olympic players will jump right back into action or will be given a few extra days off to recover from the long travel.

Buffalo Sabres head coach Lindy Ruff joked during his media session today that he did not think any of the United States players were going to be fit to play to his week when asked about the availability of Tage Thompson. Whether or not Ruff turns out to be prophetic in his analysis remains to be seen, but no one could blame those guys for taking some time to let the hangovers wear off.

As someone who grew up going to ECHL games in Johnstown when the league was still strictly on the East Coast, it’s crazy to see how the league has expanded since. Next season, the league will welcome its 30th franchise, the New Mexico Goatheads, a part of the Colorado Avalanche affiliate system. [Avalanche]

A lot can happen in four years time, but assuming the NHL sends players to the 2030 Olympic Games in France, the United States will be in good position to defend its men’s hockey gold. While nothing it set in stone, there should be quite a few familiar faces donning the red, white, and blue next time around. [ESPN]