Diamondbacks 2, Queens 1: A Quality Start!

So today was Merrill Kelly’s fifth start of the season, after having his spring training cut short and then a lengthy rehab period to start the year. He entered the game carrying an unsightly 9.95 ERA, and while our broadcasters kept going on and on last Sunday about how he was “finally turning the corner,” he wound up surrendering 6 earned runs in while failing to complete five innings against the Cubs, which really didn’t support their oft-repeated thesis. Today, he was pitching at home, for a national audience because the game was being broadcast on Fox, and was facing off against Clay Holmes, who came into the game with seven starts under his belt and an NL-leading ERA of 1.69 (nice). So I for one certainly wasn’t feeling terribly optimistic, and I certainly didn’t expect a pitcher’s duel to break out.

But oddly enough, that was indeed what happened.

Merrill started things off with two quick outs, and then walked MJ Melendez, the Mets’ DH, on six pitches, which seemed to be a harbinger for control problems to come. No worries, though, at least not in the first frame, as Kelly picked Melendez off with a perfect throw to Ildemaro Vargas to end his inning with the minimum faced and only 11 pitches thrown. Because pickoffs don’t count as pitches. Sadly, however, Holmes retired our top three in order in the bottom of the first without breaking a sweat, and only 11 pitches thrown. It was eerie, almost.

We weren’t heading into the uncanny valley, though….Kelly recorded another two quick outs to start the second, then surrendered a single to Marcus Simien followed by a first-pitch meatball he left in the exact middle of the strike zone that Brett Baty sent out to deep center field for an RBI double. 1-0 Queens

We got some runners on base in the bottom of the second, thanks to a leadoff single by DH Adrian Del Castillo, and then a one-out walk by Nolan Arenado. The bottom of our lineup, though, were not going to cover themselves in glory today, though—collectively they went 0 for 11 with six strikeouts between them—as Holmes made short work of Lourdes Gurriel, Jr. and Gabriel Moreno.

Kelly pitched around a one-out walk in the top of the third to put up another zero, and despite being down a run, he was showing a lot more efficiency than in previous outings, pitching to contact and letting his defenders make plays behind him, and was go through the third with only 41 pitches thrown, and no nibbling at the edges of the strike zone in sight.

And finally, in the bottom of the third, our offense rewarded him with some actual run support. Not a lot of run support, to be fair, but when you’re very hungry even a half an apple and some crusts of bread are welcome. Ryan Waldschmidt, getting the start in center today and batting ninth, struck out to start things off, and four pitches later Ketel Marte grounded out to the pitcher for the second time in three innings, but then something nice happened! First Corbin Carroll grounded a single into shallow right. Then Geraldo Perdomo chopped a single over Bo Bichette and into left field, where Juan Soto made a very nice play to get the ball back into the infield that kept Perdomo from having a double and kept Carroll from scoring from first. That was okay, though, because ADC drew a six pitch walk, and then Ildemaro extended his new hit streak to three games with a single to left that scored both Carroll and Perdomo:

Nolan Arenado then flied out to end the inning, but Ildemaro had given us the lead! Also, we hung 31 more pitches on Holmes in that inning alone, so he was up to 60 pitches after three. 2-0 DBACKS

And that, in terms of offense, was that. For both teams. Seriously. It hadn’t felt exactly like a pitchers’ duel up to that point, but that’s exactly what it wound up being. Both teams sat down in order in the fourth, Kelly pitched around a two-out double and an intentional walk to Juan Soto in the fifth, before retiring the Mets in order in the sixth and seventh innings to finish with his longest and best start of the season so far. His final pitching line was 7 innings pitched, three hits and three walks given up, one earned run allowed, and six strikeouts with 97 pitches thrown. Not too shabby, Merrill. Not too shabby. It’s almost like you turned that corner today that Steve and Bob were jabbering about during last Sunday’s broadcast. And damn, it was really good to see.

Meanwhile, Clay Holmes didn’t go quite as deep, retiring the top of our order in order again in the bottom of the fifth and then getting the first two outs in the sixth before surrendering a single to Arenado that got him the hook. Well, that and the fact that he was at 103 pitches after Arenado’s at bat, so his day was done.

So it was up to the bullpens, and both bullpens buckled down and did their jobs. Some dude named Austin Warren recorded four outs despite a two-out Ketel Marte doulbe in the bottom of the seventh, and somewhat hilariously Craig Kimbrel came out for the bottom of the eighth, and got three quick outs after walking the first two batters he faced, largely thanks to two egregiously bad one-pitch ABs by Vargas and Arenado that were duly pillories in the Gameday Thread.

For us, Taylor Clarke pitched a perfectly clean eighth, and Paul Sewald pitched a perfectly clean ninth to record his eighth save in eight save opportunities. Say what you will about Sewald being back on the roster, but the dude isn’t costing us very much while we await the return of Puk and JMart, and as long as we don’t let him pitch in any situation other than a save situation, he’s doing the business. Credit where credit is due.

Win Probability, courtesy of FanGraphs

Winner, Winner: Merrill Kelly (pitching line above, +35% WPA)
Chicken Dinner: Paul Sewald (1 IP, 0 ER, 2 K, +17% WPA), Taylor Clarke ( 1 IP, 0 ER, +12% WPA)
Gizzards and Entrails: The offense as a whole (30 AB, 6 H, 2 R, 4 BB, 8 K, -14% WPA)

Those Win Probability numbers pretty much say it all. Our pitching won this game for us. The offense did just enough. Seriously, though, and I mentioned this in a comment elsewhere earlier today, but Torey needs to take the whole damn offense and cram them into his office and have a “one-way” conversation with them like he did with the starters after the sweep by the Cubs last weekend. We’re damn lucky Merrill was so good today, and that the back end of our bullpen is proving right now to be capable of holding a one-run lead when we manage to give them a one-run lead to hold. But come on. We need to do better.

Anyway. It wound up being a pretty good Gameday Thread today, with 220 comments at time of writing. By popular acclaim and because I very much agree, today’s Comment of the Game goes to WebbGemz, for this appreciation of our often-reviled closer:

Stop by tomorrow as we try to secure our first series win in awhile. Everyone’s favorite hologram is going for us, while Huascar Brazoban is currently listed as the starter for the Mets, which I guess indicates that they’re going to be giving us a bullpen game. That might be fun. First pitch is scheduled for 1:10pm AZ time, TheRealRamona will be filing her guest recap for the month of May, and she lived in Queens for awhile back in the day, so I’m sure she will have thoughts to share. Hope you can join us!

As always, thanks for reading, and as always, go Diamondbacks!

Lakers drop Game 3 to Thunder; now one loss from elimination

Los Angeles, CA - May 09: Los Angeles Lakers guard Austin Reaves (15) tries to defend Oklahoma City Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (2) early in game three of the second round of the NBA playoffs in Los Angeles, CA on Saturday, May 9, 2026. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)
Lakers guard Austin Reaves, center, tries to block a layup by Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, left, during Game 3 of their playoff series on Saturday night at Crypto,com Arena. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

The Lakers are one playoff defeat from their season being over and from the conversation turning to LeBron James’ future.

They are in a hole no team has climbed out of in the history of the NBA, the Lakers’ 131-108 loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder in Game 3 putting L.A. down 3-0 in the best-of-seven Western Conference semifinal series.

Game 4 is Monday night here in Los Angeles, a night the Lakers will try to stave off elimination and a night that will determine how the conversations will go with James if they lose.

As James sat at his locker with both knees wrapped in ice, after he had scored 19 points on seven-for-19 shooting, two-for-six on three-pointers, handed out eight assists and grabbed six rebounds, he was asked if this group of Lakers should acknowledge that a loss Monday night could be their last time playing together as currently constructed.

“No, you really don’t talk about that,” Jame said. “You focus on the moment at hand and go from there.”

James and his teammates gave a gallant effort Saturday night at Crypto.com Arena, but the defending champion proved to be more than the Lakers could handle.

Lakers forward LeBron James, center, shows frustration as Thunder center Chet Holmgren, left, slam dunks during Game 3.
Lakers forward LeBron James shows frustration as Thunder center Chet Holmgren slam dunks during Game 3 on Saturday night. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

James finished his night with 19 points on seven-for-19 shooting, eight assists and six rebounds. Rui Hachimura had 21 points and Austin Reaves finished with 17 points and nine assists.

The Lakers are fully aware that no NBA team has successfully come back from a 3-0 deficit in the playoffs, with those teams holding a 161-0 record. Only four teams have forced a Game 7 after trailing 3-0, all of which ultimately lost the series, including the Boston Celtics in 2023.

The Lakers have now lost all three games by double-digits, the 23-point defeat Saturday being the most lopsided of them all. They have lost the three games by an average of 19.6 points per game.

James was asked what kind of effort it will take for the Lakers to beat the heavily favored Thunder.

“I mean, obviously we gotta [give] everything … ” James said. “I mean, everything and more.”

James has been frequently asked this season about retirement, but he has not given any indication of what the future holds for him,

He’s 41 years old and playing in an NBA-record 23rd season.

James is in the final year of his contract that pays him $52 million, making him a free agent this offseason. He can retire, join another team or perhaps return to the Lakers next season.

"I wouldn't say I'm angry or disappointed,” James said. “I mean, obviously you're disappointed in the simple fact of, like, being down 3-0, obviously. But, I mean, we still got life and that's all you can ask for. And we gotta be much better on Monday. See what happens.”

The Lakers will see the same Thunder team that had seven players score in double figures, led by Ajay Mitchell’s 24 points and 10 assists and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s 23 points and nine assists.

Oklahoma City shot 56.% from the field and 44.7 percent from three-point range. They will still see a Thunder team that forced them into 17 turnovers and took advantage of that to score 30 points off those miscues.

“Typically, if you can poke holes at a team in a playoff series, there’s a good chance they might have, like, a temporary solution or can sort of adjust maybe a little bit,” Lakers coach JJ Redick said. “This team, in-game, because of their personnel, can just adjust like that. They need shooting on the floor — great. They need multiple wing defenders on the floor — great. They need two bigs on the floor — great.

"It’s just … they're a terrific basketball team. I said that before the series. I've been very impressed with them. Still think we can beat them, but we gotta be better.”

Lakers guard Marcus Smart reaches with his right arm to try to steal the ball from Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.
Los Angeles, CA - May 09: Oklahoma City Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (2) is tightly covered by Los Angeles Lakers guard Marcus Smart (36) in game three of the second round of the NBA playoffs in Los Angeles, CA on Saturday, May 9, 2026. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times) (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

The Lakers went down 13 in the third quarter and had to play catchup the rest of the way. They never the deficit just kept growing, topping out at 27 points in the fourth quarter.

They once again lost the game in the third quarter, getting outscored 33-20. The Lakers didn’t take care of the basketball in the third, turning it over six times, and they didn’t play good defense, allowing the Thunder to shoot 59.1% from the field and 55.6 percent from three-point range.

“You come and compete,” Reaves said. “Its a bunch of guys in this locker room that are competitors. And basically the message after the game was, ‘We’re going to come in here Monday and we’re going get a win.’

"Obviously this situation sucks, but that doesn’t give us the license to quit. We got to come in here and compete. We owe the organization that. We owe each other that. We owe our fans that. So, we’re going to come here on Monday and play as hard as we can.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Lakers blown out by Thunder in Game 3, one loss away from postseason elimination

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Shai Gilgeous-Alexander dribbling the ball during a basketball game, Image 2 shows LeBron James wearing a white Lakers jersey with the number 23

The details were different, but the story of Saturday’s Game 3 between the Lakers and Thunder played out similarly as the previous two matchups in Oklahoma City. 

The Lakers were competitive early, even having a lead going into halftime just like they did in Thursday’s Game 2.

But the results were the same as before, with the Lakers once again running out of gas against the Thunder and losing 131-108 for their worst loss of the playoff series on Saturday in Los Angeles, putting them one loss away from being eliminated from the postseason.

The details were different, but the story of Saturday’s Game 3 between the Lakers and Thunder played out similarly as the previous two matchups in Oklahoma City.  NBAE via Getty Images
But the results were the same as before, with the Lakers once again running out of gas against the Thunder and losing 131-108 NBAE via Getty Images

“They’ve kicked our ass three straight games,” coach JJ Redick said. “They’re an incredible basketball team.”

The Thunder outscored the Lakers 74-49 in the second half after the Lakers had a 59-57 lead going into halftime.

The Lakers were outscored 33-20 in the third, continuing their struggles in the series with after halftime, before the game was put out of reach in the fourth.

The Thunder have outscored the Lakers by a combined 31 points in the third quarters of the series.

 “If I had the answers, we would not struggle with it,” Austin Reaves said.

Even though they combined for 17 assists, LeBron James (19 points, 8 assists and 6 rebounds) and Reaves (17 points, 9 rebounds and 3 rebounds) both struggled, shooting a combined 12-for-32 from the field. 

Reaves (5) and James (3) also combined for 8 of the Lakers’ 17 turnovers.

They didn’t lead the way enough during a game the Lakers got a combined 39 points from Rui Hachimura (21 points on 7-of-14 shooting) and Luke Kennard (18 points on 7-10 shooting).  

The Thunder scored 30 points off the Lakers’ giveaways. 

Ajay Mitchell led the Thunder with 24 points, 10 assists and 4 rebounds. 

Reigning league MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander struggled with his shot (7-for-20 shooting), but finished with 23 points, 9 assists and 4 rebounds.  

Even though they combined for 17 assists, LeBron James (19 points, 8 assists and 6 rebounds) and Austin Reaves (17 points, 9 rebounds and 3 rebounds) both struggled.  AP
Reigning league MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander struggled with his shot (7-for-20 shooting), but finished with 23 points, 9 assists and 4 rebounds.   NBAE via Getty Images

What it means

The Lakers are trailing the Thunder 3-0 in the best-of-seven second round series.

No team in league history has come back from down 3-0 in a playoff series. 

“We’ve got to be better,” Redick said. “But I’m not giving up on the series, and we’re going to try to go win on Monday. We’re going to try to extend the series and we’re going to try to take this thing back to OKC.”

Turning point 

When Isaiah Joe made back-to-back 3s to close out the third quarter, giving the Thunder a 90-79 lead going into the fourth.

The Lakers cut their deficit to five with the help of a 7-0 run.

But the pair of open 3s – one was a pull-up and – put the Thunder back up by 11.

The Thunder led by double digits for the entire fourth quarter.


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MVP: Ajay Mitchell

The second-year guard once again did the heavy lifting for the Lakers during a game Gilgeous-Alexander didn’t have his best game. 

Mitchell shot 10-for-17 from the field, including 2-for-4 on 3s.

He had 18 points and 7 assists in the second half.

Stat of the game: 44

That was how many points the Thunder combined to score off turnovers and second-chance opportunities.  

They also scored a combined 105 points inside of the paint (64) and off of 3-pointers (51).

Up next:

Game 4 of the Lakers-Thunder is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. PT on Monday at Crypto.com Arena

Brewers walk off Yankees in extras as William Contreras plays hero

May 9, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Milwaukee Brewers manager Pat Murphy (49) smiles while he waits for a reliever to take the mound against the New York Yankees in the eighth inning at American Family Field. Mandatory Credit: Michael McLoone-Imagn Images | Michael McLoone-Imagn Images

Box Score

It was a matchup of two young pitchers who have been dominating to start 2026: Cam Schlittler and Kyle Harrison. Offense would be at a premium; that was certain.

The Brewers nearly were able to knock Schlittler out of the game in the first inning, after William Contreras ripped a 108.5-mph comebacker off of Schlittler’s calf for an infield single. He hobbled around gingerly, and his first test pitch sailed to the backstop. He pushed through to remain in the game, but was slow walking off the field after the inning.

He continued on and showed no ill effects from that hit and completed six innings, allowing just two hits while striking out six.

Kyle Harrison, meanwhile, lost the shutout on the first batter of the game, allowing a no-doubt home run to 38-year-old leadoff hitter and notorious Brewers killer Paul Goldschmidt. Then in the second inning, Harrison walked Amed Rosario and Jazz Chisholm with nobody out. He got out of it with no runs allowed, though. In the fourth, the Yankees went double, single, and walk to load the bases with nobody out. Harrison nearly got out of that one, until a Goldschmidt hot shot to third was unable to be fielded cleanly by Luis Rengifo, resulting in an infield single and a run scoring to make it 2-0 Yankees.

Pat Murphy turned to Chad Patrick out of the bullpen to begin the fifth inning. With days off on Tuesday and Thursday this past week and another one coming on Monday, the Brewers won’t need a fifth starter for a while, so this helps keep Patrick on some sort of normal schedule. Patrick was able to settle things down and kept the Yankees off the board in his three innings of work.

The Yankees turned to their bullpen in the seventh inning, and Jake Bauers was very happy to see it, taking the first pitch he saw, a middle-middle fastball from Brent Headrick, into the second deck in right to cut the deficit in half. The Brewers then added on in the eighth with some classic small ball, starting with a Brice Turang single. Turang followed by stealing second, and Contreras delivered an RBI single to left to tie the game up at 2-2.

With both teams unable to score in the ninth, we went to extra innings. Aaron Ashby was so close to getting through a scoreless 10th and had Ryan McMahon down 0-2, but a single through the middle gave the Yankees a 3-2 lead before Aaron Judge was caught heading to third.

In the bottom of the 10th, Garrett Mitchell was the Manfred Man on second base. A wild pitch put him on third base before Luis Rengifo walked. Gary Sánchez pinch-hit for David Hamilton and lifted a fly ball to shallow right field. Mitchell thought about tagging, but pulled up as the throw from Judge was on line (though a bit high). Then Jackson Chourio was able to deliver an infield single to bring Mitchell in and tie the game up at 3-3.

With runners on first and second and one out, Brice Turang hits a tapper to the pitcher Tim Hill. Hill, inexplicably, decided to throw the ball to third base to try to get Rengifo, and ended up hitting Rengifo in the hand, leaving the bases loaded for Contreras.

Contreras lofted a fly ball deep enough to right field to score Rengifo, and the Brewers walked off the Yankees 4-3.

Aaron Ashby ends up with his league-leading seventh win of the season, the Brewers win the series, and have a chance to sweep on Mother’s Day. Tomorrow’s game features Logan Henderson opposite Carlos Rodón, who is making his season debut for New York. First pitch is at 1:10 p.m.

Harden’s late barrage lifts Cavaliers past Pistons, cuts series deficit to 2-1

CLEVELAND (AP) — James Harden hit three clutch shots in the final two minutes, Donovan Mitchell scored 35 points and the Cleveland Cavaliers beat Detroit 116-109 on Saturday to cut the Pistons’ lead to 2-1 in the Eastern Conference semifinal series.

Harden bounced back from two mistake-marred performances to finish with 19 points and Jarrett Allen scored 18 for the Cavaliers, who will look to even the series when they host Game 4 on Monday night.

Mitchell reached 2,000 career postseason points in his 73rd game, tied for third-fastest among active players and ninth in NBA history.

Detroit’s Cade Cunningham had his second career postseason triple-double with 27 points, 10 rebounds and 10 assists, but also committed eight turnovers. Tobias Harris added 21 points.

Duncan Robinson’s 3-pointer with 3:14 remaining tied it at 104 before Cleveland, which is unbeaten in five playoff home games, was able to seize control.

Max Strus intercepted an inbound pass by Cunningham at midcourt and made a breakaway layup with 2:28 left.

Harden, who drew plenty of criticism for turnovers in the clutch in the first two games, kept the Cavaliers in front with big shots. The 17-year veteran hit a 16-foot step-back jumper to extend the lead to 108-104. After a driving dunk by Cunningham, Harden made a floating 7-footer to put the lead back up to four.

Cunningham responded with a 3-pointer before Harden provided the decisive blow with 25 seconds remaining on a step-back 3-pointer while being guarded by Harris to make it 113-109.

Robinson was short on a 3-pointer after a timeout and Mitchell made three free throws down the stretch.

THUNDER 131, LAKERS 108

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Ajay Mitchell had career playoff highs of 24 points and 10 assists, and Oklahoma City extended its unbeaten playoff run to the brink of another Western Conference finals with a victory over Los Angeles in Game 3 of the second round.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander had 23 points and nine assists for the Thunder, who coolly improved to 7-0 — both in these playoffs overall, and in their seven games this season against LeBron James and the Lakers. Oklahoma City is the NBA’s sixth defending champion to start 7-0 in the following postseason after three wins over short-handed Los Angeles by a combined 59 points.

Game 3 was remarkably similar to Game 2 in many respects: The Lakers again had to fight desperately just to keep up with the champs into the third quarter, only for the Thunder to run away with their usual merciless efficiency when LA finally faltered. Chet Holmgren had 18 points and nine rebounds for Oklahoma City, which outscored the Lakers 33-20 in the third quarter and wasn’t threatened at all down the stretch.

Game 4 is Monday night in Los Angeles.

James had 19 points, eight assists and six rebounds, while Austin Reaves had 17 points and nine assists. But both stars struggled from the field to a combined 12 for 32, and 21 points from Rui Hachimura weren’t enough to keep LA in contention with the champs.

Luke Kennard added 18 points for the Lakers, who have lost five of their last six games since midway through the first round against Houston.

James Harden’s Game 3 heroics to keep Cavs season alive show why he’s a winner

CLEVELAND, OH - MAY 9: James Harden #1 of the Cleveland Cavaliers walks off the court after the game against the Detroit Pistons on May 9, 2026 at Rocket Arena in Cleveland, Ohio. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

CLEVELAND — James Harden was the last player on the practice floor after the Cleveland Cavaliers’ lone tune-up between Games 2 and 3 of their first-round series against the Toronto Raptors. Everyone else was hurrying out of the team’s facility to prepare for the flight to Canada later that afternoon.

Harden picked up something while watching film from Game 2 of that series. He noticed that they were defending him a certain way, and he wanted to get as much practice as possible to combat Toronto’s scheme. I couldn’t tell what that specific thing was, only that he was meticulously working on various ways to generate three-point looks when coming off screens on his right.

All players go through individual drills with coaches to varying degrees. That isn’t unique. The level of focus he approached it with was — especially on an off day.

Every time Harden missed a shot or didn’t get the footwork how he wanted coming off the screen, he cursed. Some were under his breath that you would only notice if you were watching. Others you could hear from across the gym.

“There’s a cerebral part of the work he does individually,” head coach Kenny Atkinson said then.

Fast forward two and a half weeks to Game 3 of the second-round series against the Detroit Pistons. The Cavs coughed up what was a 17-point lead in the third quarter, and were trailing at times in the fourth. They needed baskets down the stretch to take and maintain the lead.

Instead of calling his own number, Donovan Mitchell deferred to Harden despite leading both teams in points with 35. And the reason was simple.

“You see the work,” Mitchell said. “He’s worked really hard on his game, and his resume speaks for itself.”

The resume does speak for itself.

Harden is one of the most accomplished guards in NBA history. He’s achieved nearly every individual accolade out there and has climbed the ladder in both all-time points (9th) and assists (12th). Even at 36 years-old, the skills that have allowed him to reach that point are undeniable.

The one hole in his portfolio is a lack of playoff success. His teams have faltered in the biggest moments, and so has he.

Harden has proved all the stereotypes about himself correct in the three months he’s been in Cleveland.

We saw what has led to his numerous postseason shortcomings during the first two games in Detroit. Turnovers, an inability to hit a big shot when his team needed one, and being picked on defensively were all present at the worst times for the Cavs. His play helped turn two winnable games into losses.

The other stereotype that he’s proven true is that he’s one of the hardest-working players in the league.

A week back, I asked Raptors head coach Darko Rajaković what causes certain players to rise in the playoffs while others fall. He attributed it to their preparation.

“I think that work is the baseline,” Rajaković said. “Players that really know that they put the right work in, they’re ready for this stage. … Those guys, they tend to fight through fatigue, through adversity, through whatever the playoffs bring. … I strongly believe it comes down to work.”

We don’t think of Harden as someone who’s fought through adversity, at least not on the court in the playoffs. We typically reserve that kind of thinking for players who we see overcome the obstacles thrown their way to emerge victorious.

At the same time, Harden has overcome obstacles.

He’s bounced back from every collapse and put himself in that position again the next year with the work he’s put in to still be playing at an incredibly high level in his 17th season in the league. Whether that motivation is monetary or for trying to win is unknown, and honestly, it doesn’t matter. The work ethic is the same regardless of the reason.

Sports often present this false binary. Everyone on the victorious team is labeled a winner, while those on the other are losers. There’s no room in between the two opposites.

Yet, if you judged whether someone is a winner by how they respond to challenges and shortcomings, you’d be hard-pressed to find many who have bounced back as consistently as Harden.

“You know the American way is championship or nothing,” Atkinson said before the playoffs. “In our movies, we call the little kid, ‘Hey Champ.’ That’s the thing. Sure, we’d all love to win the championship, but that doesn’t mean you’re not successful.”

Harden isn’t a winner in any way that we would typically define it, and understandably so because he’s fallen short in the playoffs too many times. Making crucial plays late in Game 3 of the Eastern Conference semifinals isn’t a big enough stage to alter that, even if his three-straight baskets and game-sealing triple over Tobias Harris after being hip-checked is why the Cavs’ season still has oxygen.

When asked why he wanted the ball late in Game 3 despite previous failures, his answer was simple.

“It’s something that I work on literally every day,” Harden said. “It’s basically repetition, and it’s the confidence to go out there and just do it.”

While this one two-minute stretch won’t change how he’s remembered, this game shows why it’s unfair to label him a loser or someone who will never be a part of a championship. The habits and work ethic that lead to winning have always been there.

And for one night, we saw that pay off in a way it typically hasn’t throughout his career.

“I’m not playing this long, at this high a level without putting the work in,” Harden said. “This is 17 years for me, and I work extremely hard, like, extremely hard on my body, especially since the last few years. … The confidence is always going to be there. It’s always there, and just put me in a position to be successful, and good things happen.”

Brewers rally in 10th to win 4-3 as Yankees waste brilliant performance from Cam Schlittler

MILWAUKEE (AP) — William Contreras singled home the tying run in the eighth inning and hit a game-ending sacrifice fly in the 10th as the Milwaukee Brewers rallied past the New York Yankees 4-3 on Saturday.

The Yankees wasted a brilliant performance from Cam Schlittler and have lost back-to-back games for the first time since they dropped five in a row from April 8-12. On Friday, they got just three hits against Milwaukee’s Jacob Misiorowski and Shane Drohan in a 6-0 defeat.

Paul Goldschmidt hit a leadoff homer and drove in two runs for the Yankees. Jake Bauers went deep for Milwaukee.

Schlittler got struck in the leg by a 108.5 mph liner off the bat of Contreras in the first but stayed in the game and allowed two hits in six scoreless innings, lowing his major league-leading ERA to 1.35.

After Ryan McMahon’s two-out RBI single on an 0-2 pitch from Aaron Ashby (7-0) put New York ahead 3-2 in the top of the 10th, Milwaukee scored twice in the bottom half to give Ashby the major league lead in wins.

Jackson Chourio’s one-out infield single off Fernando Cruz (3-1) tied it and put runners at first and second.

Tim Hill entered and got a comebacker from Brice Turang. The lefty reliever tried to throw out the lead runner at third, but his throw hit Luis Rengifo in the hand, loading the bases.

Contreras followed with a fly ball to right that easily brought home Rengifo.

Bauers got Milwaukee on the board in the seventh with a 420-foot shot to right-center off Brent Headrick. Turang hit a two-out single off Camilo Doval in the eighth, stole second and slid home on Contreras’ single to left.

Yankees right-hander Luis Gil was placed on the injured list Saturday at Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre with shoulder inflammation. The 2024 AL Rookie of the Year isn’t expected to throw for three weeks.

Up next

Seven months after undergoing elbow surgery, Carlos Rodón makes his season debut for the Yankees on Sunday. Logan Henderson (0-1, 4.50 ERA) starts for the Brewers.

Yankees’ quiet bats, bullpen waste away Cam Schlittler gem in 10-inning loss to Brewers

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows Cam Schlittler #31 of the New York Yankees throws a pitch in the first inning against the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field on May 09, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Image 2 shows Brewers' Luis Rengifo (13) scores the winning run on a sacrifice fly hit by William Contreras during the 10th inning of a baseball game against the New York Yankees, Saturday, May 9, 2026, in Milwaukee, Image 3 shows Cam Schlittler walks to the dugout during the first inning of a baseball game against the Milwaukee Brewers, Saturday, May 9, 2026

MILWAUKEE — Cam Schlittler threw six shutout innings Saturday night, then gave way to a slow-motion train wreck at American Family Field.

The Yankees lineup had wasted opportunities to blow the game open throughout the night, then saw it all come back to bite them late as a leaky bullpen could not hold a two-run lead and ultimately fell to the Brewers in brutal fashion, 4-3 in 10 innings.

The Brewers (21-16) walked it off against Tim Hill, as William Contreras — who had tied the game in the bottom of the eighth with an RBI single off Camilo Doval — delivered a bases-loaded sacrifice fly to win it.

Cam Schlittler throws a pitch in the first inning of the Yankees’ 4-3, 10-inning loss to the Brewers on May 9, 2026 at American Family Field in Milwaukee. Getty Images

That situation was preceded by an unwise decision from Hill. The lefty ground-ball specialist had entered a tie game with runners on first and second and one out to face the left-handed-hitting Brice Turang. Hill got Turang to hit a chopper off the mound, but with no shot of a double play, Hill should have just gone to first base for the easy second out. Instead, he forced a long throw to try to get the lead runner at third, only to hit him and get no outs at all.

“I made a good pitch and then a bad decision afterwards,” Hill said. “Feel like my instincts told me third and my instincts were wrong.”

Hill has been the Yankees’ most reliable reliever all season and typically fields his position well, but did not with the game on the line Saturday.

“Obviously one out there, want to get the out, any out we can get,” manager Aaron Boone said. “So I just think his aggressive nature took over.”

If Hill had gotten the out at first, he could have intentionally walked the righty Contreras to face the left-handed-hitting Jake Bauers — who homered off Brent Headrick in the seventh to pull the Brewers within 2-1 — with the bases loaded and two outs.

Luis Rengifo scores the winning run on a sacrifice fly hit by William Contreras during the 10th inning of the Yankees’ 4-3, 10-inning loss to the Brewers on May 9, 2026 in Milwuakee. AP

Instead, Contreras won it and handed the Yankees (26-14) their third loss in their past four games — just a few days removed from winning 15 of 17 — and their first series loss since April 10-12, when they swept by the Rays. They will now try to avoid another sweep Sunday, when Carlos Rodón makes his season debut.

On a night when the Yankees went 3-for-14 with runners in scoring position, Ryan McMahon collected one of those hits in the top of the 10th when he came through with a two-out, two-strike single up the middle for the 3-2 lead. But Fernando Cruz quickly gave it up in the bottom half.



He issued a leadoff walk to Luis Rengifo, who was trying to lay down a sacrifice bunt, and in the process spiked a fastball to the backstop, allowing the automatic runner to take third.

Ex-Yankee Gary Sanchez came up next and lofted a fly ball to right-center field that the Brewers decided was too shallow to test Aaron Judge’s arm. But they got the tying run in on the next at-bat, as Jackson Chourio poked a slow grounder to José Caballero’s right that the shortstop had no play on, at which point Boone called on Hill.

Cam Schlittler walks to the dugout after getting out of the first inning in the Yankees’ 10-inning loss to the Brewers. AP

After a dominant Schlittler left the game with a 2-0 lead, Headrick immediately gave up his first home run of the year in the seventh before Doval allowed another run in the eighth.

David Bednar tossed a 12-pitch bottom of the ninth, and Boone said he considered sending him back out for the 10th, but ultimately decided not to after the closer had thrown a five-out save Tuesday.

“You don’t want to get in the habit of doing that over and over and felt really good about being lined up there with Cruz and Hill to get us through in the end,” Boone said. “So I did consider it a little bit, but once you realize if he’s going to finish that game, it might get up into that 30-35 [pitch range], and I just didn’t want to be in a position to do that with a full bullpen still behind him.”

Paul Goldschmidt hits a homer in the first inning of the Yankees’ 10-inning loss to the Brewers. AP

The bigger issue was the Yankees not being able to cash in earlier in the game, stranding nine runners and giving their pitchers no margin for error. They put runners on first and second with no outs in the second inning and could not score; loaded the bases with no outs in the fourth and only scored once; and then put runners on first and second with no outs in the eighth and could not score again.

Paul Goldschmidt provided the 2-0 lead with a leadoff home run and an RBI single in the fourth inning, but that was all the Yankees got until the 10th.

“Obviously not being able to really break through is the difference there,” Boone said. “We had a chance to break it open, didn’t get that big hit enough tonight.”

Lakers experience Groundhog Day in Game 3 loss to Thunder

May 9, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Lakers guard Austin Reaves (15) reacts after not getting a foul call on Oklahoma City Thunder center Isaiah Hartenstein (55) in the first half of game three of the second round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Crypto.com Arena. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images | Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

It was deja vu all over again for the Lakers on Saturday as they battled early, led at halftime and lost in a blowout to the Thunder in Game 3, 131-108. LA now trails the series 3-0.

The purple and gold used red-hot shooting in the first half to hold a 59-57 lead at the break. But just as they did in the two prior games, OKC turned it up to a level in the second half that the Lakers couldn’t match.

Ajay Mitchell took over in the fourth to bury a clearly exhausted LA side, who looked out of gas and out of answers.

The Thunder jumped to a quick lead. Chet Holmgren and Isaiah Hartenstein combined for eight points. LA responded by tying the game behind Rui Hachimura and Marcus Smart 3-pointers. LeBron James and Deandre Ayton both had two points as well. 

OKC was winning the points in the paint battle early, 10-4. 

Austin Reaves was off to a slow start, missing all four of his shot attempts. Hachimura, however, continued his incredible shooting from behind the arc, draining yet another triple. Los Angeles was struggling mightily on defense, leaving shooters wide open and giving players easy paths to the rim. 

At the 3:57 mark, the Thunder were up by seven. 

Cason Wallace splashed two 3-pointers that helped OKC get a double-digit lead. Hachimura nailed another three as well, giving him nine points for the game so far. The purple and gold cut the deficit to six at the end of the first. 

Luke Kennard and Reaves both knocked down 3-pointers early in the second quarter. Jared McCain’s instant offense continued with a triple of his own.

Holmgren had an easy time making shots in the paint, scoring six more points. LeBron and Hachimura both knocked down 3-pointers, forcing an OKC timeout.

LeBron tied the game with a 3-pointer out of the break. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander responded with a triple on the other end before LA responded to jump ahead by four. SGA helped erase that deficit fast, but the Lakers held on to lead by two at halftime. 

Lu Dort opened the third period with a 3-pointer for the Thunder. Deandre Ayton responded on the other end with a shot in the paint. The offense was strong for both teams, as they traded baskets until OKC went up by seven. 

Ayton had been keeping Los Angeles in it with six points in this quarter. 

Oklahoma City was on an 11-2 scoring run. The Lakers started piling the turnovers and were now at 12 for the game. LeBron stopped some of the bleeding with a midrange jumper. 

Kennard and Hachimura combined for five points to help keep the team in it. 

The Thunder kept hitting back at full force, keeping their lead in double figures with 3:11 left in the quarter. Reaves was up to five turnovers. Marcus Smart and Adou Thiero put in great minutes to make it a single-digit deficit until Isaiah Joe responded with back-to-back threes, which gave Oklahoma City a lead of 11 at the end of the third. 

Hartenstein had two easy opportunities in the paint for four quick points to start the final frame. LeBron scored four points, trying to help the Lakers inch closer to make it a game, but they still had an uphill climb as they were down by 12. 

Oklahoma City’s offense was proving to be too much again as LA just didn’t have enough to firepower to match the Thunder’s depth, led by Ajay Mitchell. The Thunder blew the game open, as they did in the preceding games, before the two sides emptied their benches in the final minutes

Key Player Stats

LeBron finished with 19 points, six rebounds and eight assists. Hachimura ended with 21 points, five rebounds and four assists. Reaves pitched in with 17 points and nine assists.

Kennard had 18 points off the bench. Ayton logged 10 points with six rebounds. Smart scored 10 points with three rebounds. Adou Thiero played rotation minutes and had a chaotic outing, finishing with four points and eight rebounds in 13 minutes.

Game 4 will be on Monday against the Oklahoma City Thunder at 7:30 PM PT.

You can follow Karin on Twitter at @KarinAbcarians.

Yankees waste Schlittler’s gem, fall to Brewers in extras

MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - MAY 09: Brice Turang #2 of the Milwaukee Brewers slides safely into home plate past the tag of Austin Wells #28 of the New York Yankees to tie the game in the eighth inning against the New York Yankees at American Family Field on May 09, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by John Fisher/Getty Images) | Getty Images

On Friday night in Milwaukee, the Yankees were shut down by Brewers’ phenom pitcher Jacob Misiorowski to spectacular effect. On Saturday, it was the Yankees’ turn to throw their young star, and he was quite good himself. Cam Schlittler ended up going six innings, for the Yankees, allowing no runs on just two hits. He even came back from taking a line drive off the leg to put in another excellent outing.

It’s just that the rest of the team didn’t pull their collective weight. The Yankees managed just three runs on Saturday, despite seven hits and seven walks. However, they twice held late leads, as they were ahead in both the eighth and tenth innings. The bullpen couldn’t close things out either though, as they dropped a frustrating one to the Brewers, 4-3 in 10 innings.

Before the frustration, the game started on a pretty decent note. It took just one batter for the Yankees to surpass their run total from Friday night. On the second pitch of the game, Paul Goldschmidt took Kyle Harrison deep to give the Yankees a good start.

In the bottom of the first, there was a scary moment as Cam Schlittler took a comeback liner off the calf, causing him to limp around for a bit. After the trainer came out to look at him and some practice pitches, he remained in and struck out Jake Bauers.

The Yankees picked up a second run in the fourth inning, although it was a missed chance at even more. Amed Rosario and Jazz Chisholm Jr. opened the inning with hits, giving the Yankees runners at the corner, with a José Caballero walk then loading the bases. However, Harrison got the next two outs, leaving the inning up to Goldschmidt. The first baseman picked up another RBI after Luis Rengifo couldn’t handle his liner at third, giving Goldschmidt an RBI single. The Yankees couldn’t tack on any more in the inning, though.

After Schlittler left the game, it didn’t take long for Milwaukee to get on the board. On the very first pitch reliever Brent Headrick threw in the seventh inning, Bauers crushed a homer into the second deck in right field, cutting into the Yankees’ lead. Headrick came back after that to get through the seventh and the first out of the eighth. Camilo Doval replaced Headrick and got the second out of the seventh before Brice Turang kept the inning alive with a single. Turang then stole second and you knew what was coming after that. William Contreras dropped a single into left field and Turang just beat Cody Bellinger’s throw home, tying the game up. With little room for error, David Bednar came out and threw a nice 1-2-3 inning on just 12 pitches, sending the game to extras.

It seemed like the Yankees would then go down pretty quickly in order in the 10th. Ben Rice and Bellinger couldn’t do anything with the auto-runner at second, with Aaron Judge getting intentionally walked, as is custom. However, McMahon, having come in earlier for Rosario as a defensive replacement, poked a single up the middle to give the Yankees the lead back. Judge would get caught in a rundown after the run scored and the throw home was cut off to end the inning though, and the Yankees would regret missing out on the chance to get insurance runs.

For the bottom of the 10th, the Yankees turned to Fernando Cruz. He got off to a rocky start, as a wild pitch moved the runner up, and he then issued a walk. While a fly out ended up keeping the runner in place in the next at-bat, a Jackson Chourio grounder left Caballero with no play, tying the game back up.

The Yankees then went to Tim Hill, who immediately got a ground ball. However for whatever reason, Hill tried to go to third to get the lead runner. His throw hit Rengifo, the runner, allowing everyone to be safe. Hill then finally did get the second out, but it was a Contreras fly out to right that was deep enough for Aaron Judge’s throw home to be a couple steps late. You can somewhat chalk up Friday’s loss as just running into a freak of nature. Harrison and the pitchers Milwaukee used on Saturday are all pretty good, but the Yankees wasted this one.

Tomorrow, the Yankees and Brewers will wrap up their series with one final game in Milwaukee. It’s also a notable one for the Yankees especially, as Carlos Rodón will make his return from the injured list, opposite Logan Henderson for the Brewers. First pitch in that one will be at 2:10 pm ET.

Box score

On This Day: Steve Yzerman Scores On His Birthday Vs. Blues

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Former Detroit Red Wings captain Steve Yzerman, one of the most legendary figures not only in the history of Motor City hockey but in the NHL, celebrates his birthday today. 

And it was on this day in 2002 that it was made extra special thanks to a gift served up to him by St. Louis Blues goaltender Brent Johnson. 

The Red Wings were in the midst of a second round series against the St. Louis Blues, leading two games to one. 

After initially falling behind by a 1-0 score thanks to a power-play goal from Scott Young, Detroit rebounded with three straight goals from Brendan Shanahan, Jiri Fischer, and Tomas Holmstrom. 

In the third period, Johnson caught a dump-in attempt and tried the clear the puck himself, unaware that Yzerman was barreling down on him.

The puck deflected off Yzerman and into the net, giving his team a commanding 4-1 lead. 

Bookmark The Hockey News Detroit Red Wings team site to stay connected to the latest newsgame-day coverage, and player features

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The Red Wings withstood a late comeback effort from the Blues, winning the game 4-3 and taking a 3-1 series they'd later close out in Detroit in Game 5 at Joe Louis Arena.

The series win set up a date with the rival Colorado Avalanche in the Western Conference Final. 

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Knicks Notes: How Karl-Anthony Towns unlocked Mike Brown's 'equal opportunity' offense

Karl-Anthony Towns was in foul trouble early in Game 3. He played just 10 minutes in the first half and 25 minutes overall. But that was more than enough time for Towns to hurt the Sixers with his passing.

The All-Star center finished with seven assists in Game 3 -- six coming in the second half. It was the continuation of a remarkable passing stretch for Towns. The big man is averaging 7.7 assists in the Knicks' six-game winning streak. That's more than double his average in the opening three games against the Hawks (3.3); it's also more than double his regular-season average (3.0).

Some may be surprised by his passing. He is not.

"I feel like I've always had this my whole career," Towns said after Game 3 on Friday. "It's just I never had the opportunity to utilize that skill set. It's being utilized. My teammates have been in great positions for me to find them when they're open."

Mike Brown and the Knicks decided to use Towns as a passer on the perimeter starting in Game 4 against the Hawks. That adjustment is one of the reasons why New York has run off six consecutive wins with a 25.8-point average margin of victory. And it's one of the reasons why the Knicks are one win away from the Eastern Conference Finals.

The Knicks trailed the Hawks, 2-1, when they first implemented the changes.

"The real change for us came before Game 4 in Atlanta," Towns said. "That's when we really changed our offense. It's been great. It's been something I’ve talked about for a lot of the season, to feel like we can help our guys (on offense) more. We made the right moves."

Towns knows that the Knicks have more work to do. He and his teammates have talked about staying in the moment as they look to close out Philly. But the Knicks may have missed this moment without those offensive adjustments.

"It was the perfect time for all of us to really get on the same accord," Towns said. "There's no better time to be playing your best basketball than right now. So shout out to Mike and really the whole coaching staff for putting us in the best position to succeed."

May 4, 2026; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) controls the ball against Philadelphia 76ers center Joel Embiid (21) during the first quarter of game one of the eastern conference semifinal round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images
May 4, 2026; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) controls the ball against Philadelphia 76ers center Joel Embiid (21) during the first quarter of game one of the eastern conference semifinal round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images / © Brad Penner-Imagn Images

The changes were a product of conversations among Brown, his staff and the players.

"I feel like we all had an opinion and we were able to figure out what was best for our team, especially in a spot like that -- down 2-1," Towns said. "I had my opinion. I feel like we've done a great job adjusting to have all of us be our best."

If you go back to Game 4, the Knicks have the No. 1 offense among playoff teams in that span. They also have the second-best defense. In their opening three games, the Knicks ranked sixth in offense and seventh in defense among playoff teams.

Brown calls it an "equal opportunity" offense.

"Anybody can be in any position," he said Friday before Game 3. "Anybody can set screens. Anybody can initiate it, but it's going to take some time to expand on it."

The Knicks are "just scratching the surface" of what they want to implement on offense, Brown said.

They obviously don't have much time left in the season to make significant changes. NBA teams don't practice at this time of year. So maybe the Knicks can make some small changes here or there.

But in a big-picture sense, Brown believes Knicks are just "scratching the surface" on their offensive potential.

"What we're doing now, I think, can have great carryover next year and down the line because we'd be able to expand on it the right way through a training camp," Brown said.

May 8, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; New York Knicks guard Mikal Bridges (25) shoots against the Philadelphia 76ers during the second quarter of game three of the second round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Xfinity Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images
May 8, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; New York Knicks guard Mikal Bridges (25) shoots against the Philadelphia 76ers during the second quarter of game three of the second round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Xfinity Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images / © Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

BUILDING BRIDGES

Brown appreciates Mikal Bridges' ability to impact games in ways that may go unnoticed by the casual observer. What does Brown mean by that?

"One of the things is his ability to run, both directions," he said of Bridges. "I mean, he runs like a deer. His game is beautiful, which makes him fast, and it doesn't even look like it. (He) puts a lot of pressure on the defense because of his ability to run. He's got a good feel for what his pace needs to be in half court; he'll sprint into a ball screen and slip out. And when he slips out, he slips with vision.

"And the ball may not go to him for a score or for an assist, but when you generate something like that with pace and you're a threat to slip because you can score from the medium range or get to the rim, the defense has to (adjust). When the defense (adjusts), it opens up other opportunities for your teammates. And then he's always uplifting. He's extremely positive with his teammates.

"Those things are just a few of the things that go unnoticed to others throughout courses of games and throughout the course of year and we appreciate when he brings those to the table."

HART PLAYING THROUGH DISCOMFORT

Josh Hart suffered a sprained left thumb in Game 2 against Philadelphia. He played in Game 3 but will be playing through some discomfort in the thumb for the rest of the season. He said he had an X-ray during Game 2 and he learned he hadn’t broken his thumb. So he returned to the game, finishing out the Knicks' home win.

"It's something I'll revisit in the offseason," Hart said before Game 3. "There's people that played through this."

Hart pointed to Kyle Lowry, Philadelphia's veteran point guard, who did so while leading the Toronto Raptors to a 2019 NBA Finals win.

"They got someone on their team who played through it and won a championship," Hart said. "So it's something that's doable."

Ric Flair takes another shot at injured Luka Doncic during Lakers game

Ric Flair just took another shot at Los Angeles Lakers superstar Luka Doncic.

With the Lakers trying to avoid an 0-3 deficit against the No. 1 seed Oklahoma City Thunder in the Western Conference semifinals, the WWE Hall of Famer took to X yet again to voice his frustration — and direct it towards the injured superstar.

"@lukadoncic, There Is Only One Word That I Can Possibly Say, And That’s DISAPPOINTED," Flair wrote. "46 Million Dollars, And You Can’t Play. OMG, I Would Jump Off The Empire State Building With A Parachute For 46 Million Dollars A Year, And I Don’t Even Know How To Pull The Cord To Open It- But I Would Take My Chances."

Doncic has been sidelined with a grade 2 left hamstring strain since April 2 and recently revealed that he was originally given an eight-week timeline, which would mean a return isn't likely until the end of the Western Conference finals, should the Lakers get there. Doncic did travel to Spain to undergo platelet-rich plasma injections — a non-surgical treatment that uses a sample of the patient's own blood to accelerate healing in joints, tendons, ligaments and muscles, according to Johns Hopkins medicine — in hopes to accelerate his recovery, though he is proceeding under the original eight-week timeline for the time being.

This is the second time this series that Flair has called out Doncic over social media. He previously wrote, "Luka, Please Get In The Game! Take A Shot Of Cortisone And Deal With The Pain! They Are Paying You 50 Million A Year, And You’re Not There! WTF! I Hope @JeanieBuss Trades You Next Year. Nobody Wants A Lame Duck On Their Team!" during the Lakers' 107-90 loss to OKC in Game 1 on Tuesday.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Ric Flair takes another shot at injured Luka Doncic

White Sox right the ship against Mariners in 6-1 win

May 9, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Chicago White Sox third baseman Miguel Vargas (20) watches his solo home run against the Seattle Mariners during the fifth inning at Rate Field. Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images
Miguel Vargas notched his eighth and ninth dingers of the season in tonight’s ballgame. | (Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images)

Ending their short-lived losing streak, the Chicago White Sox tied the series against the Seattle Mariners with a 6-1 win, and the longball got the job done.

Sam Antonacci led off the ballgame with an opposite-field single to left-center, and his heart-and-hustle nature paved way for a stolen base and an aggressive tag from second to third on a Munetaka Murakami fly to right. With two outs and two strikes, Colson Montgomery faced his Achilles heel of a pitch, but took that up-and-in fastball to the left field bleachers to make it 2-0, Sox. Montgomery entered the double-digit club with his 10th homer, is up to 28 RBIs, and extended his on-base streak to 21 games:

After wreaking havoc on the basepaths, Antonacci kept that same energy in the outfield. With two outs in the second inning, Superman Sam stole a base hit to end the frame:

I cannot overstate how impressive Sam has been in left field. Heading into today’s game, he’s played only 19 MLB games in left field (144 innings) and just 10 extra games in the minors (100 innings). This compares to more than 1,030 innings in the infield throughout his professional career, with the majority at second base. And yet, he’s making routine and not-so-routine plays in left look so easy at the highest level of play.

Mirroring the first inning and in the game of Sam, Antonacci wore a hit-by-pitch to make way for Miguel Vargas to mash the second two-run homer of the ballgame and his eighth of the year:

Although he still hasn’t pitched into the sixth inning since early April, Anthony Kay had the start that he and the Sox needed. Notching a full five innings, Kay gave up just one unearned run via the sacrifice fly after a Murakami error, allowed only three hits, walked two batters and struck out five.

The Good Guys drove Luis Castillo out of the ballgame after four innings. Although he allowed four earned runs and five hits, he did strike out six and walked zero batters. However, the two home run balls plagued what otherwise would have been a bounce-back start.

In the bottom of the fifth with Josh Simpson on the mound, Vargas worked an 11-pitch at-bat ending in his second blast of the ballgame at 112.9 mph and a 5-1 Sox lead!

Grant Taylor took over pitching responsibilities in the sixth and seventh innings. He sat down Seattle’s core —Julio Rodríguez, Josh Naylor and Randy Arozarena — 1-2-3 while notching a couple of strikeouts and a ground out in his second inning of work.

Heading into the eighth, yesterday’s birthday boy Bryan Hudson handled some adversity when Naylor’s foul ball was overturned to fair, which put runners on the corners with two outs. However, Hudson hunkered down to strike out Arozarena at the plate to escape the inning and extend his own scoreless streak to 15 innings.

Looking for an insurance run in their half of the eighth, Chase Meidroth recorded his first hit of the night off the first pitch he saw, a double down the left field line. Jarred Kelenic followed with a walk, and Tristan Peters moved up both runners to second and third with a sacrifice bunt.

Randal Grichuk, once my enemy for his anti-bat flips stance during Tim Anderson’s reign, was hit on his toe to load the bases. To my dismay, after some miscommunication in the outfield, Edgar Quero was looking at an RBI single, but Grichuk, taking only a modest step toward second — even with no one covering the first base bag in case a catch was made — was forced out. Fortunately, the run scored for a 6-1 ballgame, but via a fielder’s choice variety.

Locking down the win was Tyler Schweitzer, recently recalled to fill Jordan Leasure’s spot in the bullpen. The southpaw put up a 1-2-3 ninth to secure the Sox victory, tying the series at one!

The White Sox improve to 18-21 while the Mariners fall to 19-21. Tomorrow’s rubber match begins at 1:10 p.m. CT on CHSN and ESPN 1000 radio.

Happy Mother’s Day!

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Leonardo DiCaprio, Jaafar Jackson, Noah Wyle headline star-studded crowd at Lakers-Thunder Game 3

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows Jaafar Jackson smiling in a maroon cap and black sweater, Image 2 shows Leonardo DiCaprio attends the game between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Oklahoma City Thunder, Image 3 shows Noah Wyle at an LA Lakers game

Saturday night in downtown Los Angeles brought all the stars of stage, screen, music, and sports for Game 3 of the Western Conference Semifinals between the Oklahoma City Thunder and the Los Angeles Lakers. 

In a parade of power and influence, actor Leonardo DiCaprio sat along the baseline near the Thunder bench, flanked by friend and fellow actor Lukas Haas. To his left sat longtime actors Don Johnson and Noah Wyle, star of the hit HBO show “The Pitt.” 

Industry executives and producers were well represented as well. Film producer Jeffrey Katzenberg exchanged pleasantries with legendary TV producer Dick Wolf.

Across from them sat record producer Lou Adler, who was not joined by his friend Jack Nicholson, but instead his son, Ray Nicholson, star of the horror sequel “Smile 2.”

Longtime Laker season ticket holders Andy Garcia, Dustin Hoffman, and Dyan Cannon cheered on the purple and gold, as did former Lakers’ owner Jeanie Buss and her husband actor/comedian Jay Mohr. 

Speaking of comedians, that artform was also well-represented as Byron Allen and Adam Ray shared laughs during the game.

Academy Award nominee James Franco watched the game undetected, whereas Jaafar Jackson, star of the hit biopic “Michael” about his uncle, pop-star Michael Jackson, wanted all the attention in his courtside seats. 

Jaafar Jackson attends the game between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Oklahoma City Thunder during Round Two Game Three of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on May 9, 2026 at Crypto.Com Arena in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images)
NBAE via Getty Images
Eden Hazard attends the game between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Oklahoma City Thunder during Round Two Game Three of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on May 9, 2026 at Crypto.Com Arena in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images)
NBAE via Getty Images
Leonardo DiCaprio attends the game between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Oklahoma City Thunder during Round Two Game Three of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on May 9, 2026 at Crypto.Com Arena in Los Angeles, California.(Photo by Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images)
NBAE via Getty Images
Noah Wyle at the Lakers game.
Kevin Reece/Splash News

Then there was other sports colliding with the NBA Playoffs, woven into the tapestry of the crowd like they belonged there. Former Laker, Sasha Vujacic, a champion of a different era, chatted up with the referees before the game. Former Chelsea and Real Madrid star Eden Hazard took a break from watching Champions League to catch the Lake Show up close and personal.

Former Dodgers and Phillies second-baseman Chase Utley, forever tied to October nights, watched with his children. Dallas Cowboys linebacker Micah Parsons, a frequent attendee during the NFL offseason sat one row in front of him. Even Nez Balelo, the CAA super-agent who represents Shohei Ohtani, was in attendance. 

Rounding out the list was NBA superfan and real estate mogul, James Goldstein, And reality star Corey Gamble, but without his famous girlfriend Kris Jenner. 

Even LA Mayoral candidate and another former reality star, Spencer Pratt watched the show.

Meanwhile, on the court the Lakers and Thunder battled for survival in the best-of-seven series. 

This story will continue to be updated…


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