Mets waste Freddy Peralta’s second six-inning outing of season

Freddy Peralta said following his last outing that the thought of working deep into games has come into his mind at times early on this season.

While the right-hander had struggled to complete six innings over his first six outings in a Mets uniform, Carlos Mendoza said that he wasn’t too concerned.

“He’s an ace, he’ll get there,” the skipper emphasized. 

And just five days later Peralta was able to get there, as he delivered the Mets six efficient innings in what ended as a disappointing series finale loss to the Nationals

It wasn’t always pretty, though, as he was hurt by his own error at one point. 

After issuing a leadoff walk in the second, Peralta botched a comebacker which could’ve been a routine double play had it been let go to the shortstop or fielded cleanly. 

Instead, he threw it away and the Nats scratched across the first two runs of the game. 

“You know, mistakes happen,” he said. “I knew that [Ronny] Mauricio was behind me but the reaction of the play that I had there was just trying to catch the ball and then I felt stupid because I made the error, but things happen.”

Washington struck again in the third, but then Peralta settled in nicely after the Mets’ offense picked him up, retiring the next eight before running into trouble in that elusive sixth inning. 

Thoughts of those struggles began to creep back in as he issued back-to-back walks, but the righty was able to calm himself and retired the next two to escape the threat.

“I’m not going to lie when that happened it came into my mind again,” Peralta admitted. “I was just focused and telling myself I have to get the job done and I was able to do it -- still getting better and I know there’s a lot more in there.”

Peralta finished with three runs (one earned) on four hits, three walks, and six strikeouts as he completed six innings for just the second time this year. 

The effort ended up being wasted, though, as Luke Weaver gave up a go-ahead two-run homer to CJ Abrams in the top of the eighth to result in another ugly Mets loss. 

“I think it’s frustrating because we all want to win,” Peralta said. “We’ve been putting the work in every day to win but this game is really hard and things are not going our way right now.”

Thurday Bantering: Springer Hitting Leadoff

Apr 29, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Blue Jays designated hitter George Springer (4) congratulates catcher Brandon Valenzuela (59) on hitting a solo home run against the Boston Red Sox in the eighth inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images | John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images

George Springer is back in the lineup and hitting lead off in the first of four games against the Twins.

And Pinango is in the lineup too. It looks like they are going to give him some playing time. Brandon Valenzuela gets a start again, after a great game yesterday.

Austin Martin is having a great start to the season, with a .311/.476/.426 line in 27 games

Today’s Lineups

BLUE JAYSTWINS
George Springer – DHByron Buxton – CF
Jesus Sanchez – RFTrevor Larnach – LF
Vladimir Guerrero – 1BRyan Jeffers – C
Kazuma Okamoto – 3BJosh Bell – DH
Daulton Varsho – CFAustin Martin – RF
Ernie Clement – 2BKody Clemens – 1B
Yohendrick Pinango – LFLuke Keaschall – 2B
Andres Gimenez – SSBrooks Lee – SS
Brandon Valenzuela – CRoyce Lewis – 3B
Kevin Gausman – RHPBailey Ober – RHP

And there is a bunch of ‘injury news’:

  • Addison Barger will start a rehab assignment Sunday. It might be as short as three games.
  • Jose Berrios will throw his between start bullpen in Buffalo tomorrow and then they will decide if he will start against the Twins Sunday or have one more start with the Bisons.
  • Alejandro Kirk has started throwing the ball, but he won’t be hitting or catching for a bit yet.

The life of a manager:

NBA Playoff Thursday dicussion

Apr 28, 2026; New York, New York, USA; Atlanta Hawks forward Onyeka Okongwu (17) drives to the basket against New York Knicks forward OG Anunoby (8) and center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) during the third quarter of game five of the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images | Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Use this space to chat about tonight’s games!

Penguins Young Goalie Should Build Off Strong Postseason

The Pittsburgh Penguins' season came to a heartbreaking end with their 1-0 overtime loss to the Philadelphia Flyers in Game 6. The Penguins worked hard to try to force a Game 7 after going down 3-0 in the series, but they fell just short. 

While the Penguins lost in Game 6, Arturs Silovs certainly cannot be blamed. The 25-year-old goaltender gave the Penguins everything he had, as he stopped 31 out of 32 Flyers shots he faced. Unfortunately, the Penguins were unable to solve Flyers goalie Dan Vladar. 

Silovs was excellent for the Penguins throughout the series, too. After taking over Pittsburgh's crease in Game 4, Silovs helped lead the Penguins to two straight wins due to his strong goaltender. In Game 4, he stopped 28 out of 30 shots he faced. He then stopped 18 out of 20 shots in Game 5. 

With this, Silovs finished the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs with a 1.52 goals-against average and a .939 save percentage in three games. There is no question that the young Penguins goalie had a strong postseason, and he certainly should build off this for next season.

Silovs demonstrated during this postseason that he has good upside. It will be interesting to see what kind of campaign that he can put together next season, but it seems that the 2019 sixth-round pick may not have hit his ceiling just yet. 

Steph Curry’s sneaker free agency auction raises $1.7 million for charity

INGLEWOOD, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 15: Stephen Curry #30 of the Golden State Warriors reacts during play against the Los Angeles Clippers in the first half of an NBA play-in tournament game at Intuit Dome on April 15, 2026 in Inglewood, 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 Ronald Martinez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In today’s Dub Hub:

Golden State Warriors fans might hear the words Steph Curry and free agency and immediately think trouble—but in this case, it was all for a good cause.

During the 2025–26 NBA season, Curry, who had famously been partnered with Under Armour for the past 13 years, stepped away from the brand and became a sneaker free agent. This meant that for the first time in over a decade, he was able to take to the court in a variety of different shoes instead of just his own signature line.

Curry’s pregame sneakers quickly became a viral storyline throughout the season. From Kobes to Jimmy Butler’s JB4s and other player tributes, Curry used each appearance as an opportunity to highlight the culture of basketball while showing respect to those still shaping the game today.

As it turns out, Curry’s sneaker free agency became much more than a viral fashion statement—it turned into a powerful fundraiser.

After the season, he announced that he would auction off the entire collection of sneakers, with all proceeds benefitting his Eat.Learn.Play. Foundation. The results were massive as Curry’s sneaker free agency run generated $1.7 million for charity.

For Curry, what started as a new chapter in his sneaker journey turned into something far more meaningful. This time, the impact wasn’t just felt on the court, but in the communities he continues to uplift, serving as yet another reminder that his influence extends well beyond the game.

For more on this and other news around the NBA, here is our latest news round-up for Thursday, April 30th:

Warriors News:

Sources: Warriors’ brass meet with Kerr; will reconvene next week | ESPN

Both sides described the meeting as productive, but there remains no resolution nearly two weeks after the Warriors’ season ended in Phoenix. Kerr, Lacob and Dunleavy plan to reconvene next week to continue discussions, league sources said.

Kerr will take a previously planned golf trip to close out this week as those around him continue to describe Kerr as torn about his own side of the choice.

“It’s April,” one source said. “We don’t need to rush.”

2026 NBA mock draft: UNC’s Caleb Wilson could make this a Big 4 at the top | The Athletic

11. Golden State Warriors

Yaxel Lendeborg | 6-9 big | 23 years old | Michigan

Even though Lendeborg gutted through an ankle injury in the Final Four, he led Michigan to a title and transformed his game. His counting numbers were down from his heights at UAB, but he averaged 15.1 points, 6.8 rebounds and 3.2 assists while playing aggressive defense. He showcased serious switchability, often picking up lead ballhandlers at the point of attack as well as playing against power forwards when Mara or Morez Johnson Jr. would leave the court. He’s also an active help defender with excellent hands.

He drilled 37.4 percent of his 3s for the season, thanks to a hot streak at the end of the year in which he made 48.1 percent over his final 16 games — and that includes a 0-of-5 mark when he was clearly hobbled against UConn in the title game. The Warriors could use another big wing next to Stephen Curry and Draymond Green as they near the end of their careers.

Draymond Green Reacts To Steve Kerr’s New Yorker Article, NBA Lottery Changes & NBA Playoffs

NBA News:

4 takeaways: Cade Cunningham, Paolo Banchero engage in duel for the ages in Game 5 | NBA

Cunningham played almost 44 minutes, cut down on his costly turnovers – “Just pass the ball to our team instead of theirs,” coach J.B. Bickerstaff had deadpanned – and found the ideal blend of hero ball and facilitating his teammates in the final quarter.

“There’s a handful of them in the league, right?” Bickerstaff said of Cunningham’s leadership. “They’re unique. They’re special. To put the work in, have the talent, even then [to] understand his responsibility and what he means to this team, he wasn’t going to let us go down tonight.”

Not bad for a guy who suffered a collapsed lung in a game six weeks ago.

Rockets’ Kevin Durant to miss Game 6 vs. Lakers

In case you missed it at Golden State of Mind:

Is the tide shifting towards Steve Kerr returning to the Warriors?

The “take a week or two” for a coach is like couples therapy in a relationship: it’s doing due diligence for something that, more often than not, already has a predetermined fate.

But that might not be the case in Kerr’s situation, and it feels like the tide is starting to turn, and the momentum has shifted towards a Kerr return. An article published on Wednesday by ESPN’s Shams Charania, Ramona Shelburne, and Anthony Slater reports that Kerr met with Joe Lacob and Mike Dunleavy Jr. for a few hours on Monday, and that the trio will meet again next week. That points to something fairly obvious: if Kerr wanted to leave, he would have done so already.

Follow @unstoppablebaby on X for all the latest news on the Golden State Warriors.

Knicks at Hawks, Game 6: start time, TV, streaming, radio, game thread

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - APRIL 23: Onyeka Okongwu #17 and Jalen Johnson #1 of the Atlanta Hawks react after their 109-108 wi over the New York Knicks in game three of the Eastern Conference first round playoffs at State Farm Arena on April 23, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. 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 Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Atlanta Hawks (2-3) need this to stave off elimination and force a Game 7 against the New York Knicks.

Jock Landale (right high ankle sprain) has been ruled out.

Starting lineup:

  • CJ McCollum
  • Nickeil Alexander-Walker
  • Dyson Daniels
  • Jalen Johnson
  • Onyeka Okongwu

Please join in the comments below as you follow along.

Where, When, and How to Watch and Listen

Location: State Farm Arena, Atlanta, GA

Start Time: 7:00 PM EDT

TV: ESPN

Radio: Sports Radio 92.9 the Game (WZGC-FM)

Streaming: Watch ESPN, Fubo, NBA League Pass (out of market)

20 Stats to explain Cavs 125-120 Game 5 win over Raptors

Apr 29, 2026; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Cleveland Cavaliers guard Donovan Mitchell (45) celebrates his three-point basket against the Toronto Raptors in the first quarter of game five of the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Rocket Arena. Mandatory Credit: David Richard-Imagn Images | David Richard-Imagn Images

CLEVELAND — The Cleveland Cavaliers regained momentum in the series after gutting out a 125-120 victory in Game 5 to take a 3-2 lead over the Toronto Raptors.

The stats in the table below are taken from Cleaning the Glass. As a note, the percentiles are in comparison to other playoff games, which influences the sample size.

Offensive RatingEffective Field Goal PercentageOffensive Turnover PercentageOffensive Rebounding PercentageFree Throw Rate
Cavs123.8, 81st percentile65%, 97th percentile14.9%, 52nd percentile19.5%, 8th percentile26.6, 73rd percentile
Raptors120, 70th percentile54.8%, 57th percentile15%, 49th percentile38.9%, 89th percentile18.1, 26th percentile

Now, let’s dive into the numbers.

  • The Cavs took 39% of their shots at the rim (80th percentile). The offense stalled out in games 3 and 4. They failed to register over 105 points in both losses, largely due to an inability to get to the rim. Cleveland took just 26% of their shots in the restricted area in Game 3 (29th percentile) and 28% in Game 4 (34th percentile).
  • Cleveland completed 76.9% of their shots at the rim (74th percentile). The willingness to get to the basket was coupled with the ability to finish there. Relentlessly attacking the basket caused the defense to shift, which opened up the rest of the offense.
  • The Cavs knocked down 50% of their threes. That’s up considerably from the 31.1% they hit in Game 3 and the 25% they converted in Game 4. This shouldn’t come as a surprise. The Cavs are an inside-out team, not the other way around. When they’re getting to the basket and causing the defense to collapse, the ball gets kicked out for open catch-and-shoot threes. When they aren’t, they’re usually settling for stagnant pull-up jumpers. In general, if you’re ever wondering why the Cavs aren’t hitting their threes, it’s probably because they aren’t getting inside enough.
  • Toronto destroyed the Cavs in transition, as they were in the 100th percentile in points added in the open court. Cleveland has mostly done a good job of keeping Toronto from getting out on the break. They didn’t in Game 5. Allowing a team to get out and run in transition comes down to many different factors, but the Cavs ineffectiveness on the offensive boards partially led to this. It’s much easier to get out and run off missed shots if you don’t have to crash the boards as hard as the Raptors needed to at times earlier in the series.
  • The Cavaliers’ ability to control the paint made up for this, as Toronto converted just 58.6% of their shots at the rim (25th percentile).
  • Toronto struggled against a set defense, as they registered a 90.9 half-court offensive rating (43rd percentile). When the Cavs kept the Raptors from running, the defense was good. When they didn’t, things got out of control as they did in the second quarter when the Raptors put up 40 points.
  • The Raptors picked up 28 points off turnovers. This was the second-fewest turnovers the Cavs committed in a game this series, but the Raptors were still able to capitalize. This was most evident in the second quarter when Toronto converted six Cleveland miscues into 14 points heading the other way.
  • Toronto still won the possession battle with 15 offensive rebounds. This led to 13 second-chance points and allowed the Raptors to take 14 more shots from the field. Head coach Kenny Atkinson has talked about how important the possession battle is in this series. The Cavs lost that handily and were still able to win.
  • The Cavs held the Raptors to just 17 points in the fourth quarter. There are several reasons why this happened. Brandon Ingram leaving the game in the first half with a heel injury put more of the playmaking and scoring burden onto Scottie Barnes and RJ Barrett. That caught up with both as Barnes had no points on 0-5 shooting while Barrett was held to just three points on 1-7 shooting in the fourth.
  • Cleveland committed no turnovers in the fourth. This helped the Cavs’ defense immensely. The lack of turnovers helped limit the Raptors to just four fastbreak points in the quarter. When the Cavs keep possession, good things have happened this series.
  • The starters with Max Strus lost the 10 minutes they played by 11 points. On the series, that five-man lineup has been outscored by 24 points in as many minutes. Conversely, the starting unit with Dean Wade has outscored the Raptors by 17 in 38 minutes.
  • Dean Wade still leads the Cavs in plus/minus as a +39 for the series. Cleveland has lost the 118 minutes he hasn’t played by 37. If this series has taught us anything, it’s that the Cavs need more Dean Wade, not less.
  • The Cavs played their best basketball with Sam Merrill on the court as they won his minutes by 19 points. Merrill’s off-ball gravity as a shooter changes the game. This led to the Cavs posting a 152.1 offensive rating when he was on the court.
  • Cleveland lost the minutes Donovan Mitchell played by nine. Being outscored when Mitchell is on the floor was rare for the Cavs this season. Overall, they’ve been seven points better per 100 possessions with him on the court than when he’s off (86th percentile).
  • Of the 70 regular season game Mitchell played, the Cavs have only lost his minutes 21 times. They’re 5-16 in those contests, meaning they were 40-9 when the Cavs won Mitchell’s minutes. That trend has continued in the playoffs. This was the third-straight game Cleveland has lost Mitchell’s minutes. They’re now 1-2 in those situations.
  • To further that point, this was the first game in this series that the Cavs won when Mitchell had scored fewer than 21 points. The Cavs have gone as Mitchell’s scoring has throughout the regular season. They were 7-11 when he played and failed to score over 20 points.
  • Mitchell is still struggling to finish in the paint, as he went 4-10 there in Game 5. This included going 3-6 in the restricted area. This has been a trend all series. Mitchell is converting just 52% of his shots at the rim (18th percentile) after completing 66% of them (60th percentile) during the regular season.
  • Dennis Schroder scored 19 points in Game 5, after compiling just 18 points in the first four games combined. To say this performance was unexpected based on recent form would be an understatement. Schroder only scored in double figures four times in the 24 regular-season and playoff games he’s played since the beginning of March, coming into this game. This was only the third time he’s scored 19 or more points since being traded to the Cavs.
  • Evan Mobley’s 16 second-half points flipped the momentum of the game. This performance ties the fourth-most points he’s scored in a second half this season.
  • Mobley’s three triples are one off his high for the season. This was also the first time he’s made all of his outside shots while taking more than one in a game this year.

Braves vs. Tigers series recap: April ends on a high note

ATLANTA, GA - APRIL 29: Matt Olson #28 of the Atlanta Braves celebrates his walk-off home run with teammates against the Detroit Tigers at Truist Park on April 29, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Kevin D. Liles/Atlanta Braves/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Heading into this series, this matchup felt like a very tricky proposition for a Braves team that came into this rolling at a very high level. Atlanta was clicking but they’d have to deal with three formidable starting pitchers in the form of Casey Mize, Framber Valdez and Tarik Skubal. If the Braves were going to keep their run of not dropping series going, it was likely that they’d be put to the test — whether that meant simply outlasting the opposition and getting into Detroit’s bullpen or just plain ol’ beating the Tigers at their own game.

As it turned out, the Braves ended up getting just enough offense on Tarik Skubal that they were able to get into Detroit’s bullpen and win it (in dramatic fashion) and that was after they took advantage of Casey Mize going down with an unfortunate injury in the first game. The Braves ended up passing the test after all and now it’s time to see exactly how they managed to pull it off.


Tuesday, April 28

Braves 5, Tigers 2

For everybody who’s been waiting to see Ronald Acuña Jr. really get going this season, this game was proof that he’s still got it in him to make a significant impact on any given game. Both of the hits that he had in this one were doubles — he had both of those by the third inning and his second one plated Mike Yastrzemski to put the Braves up in the third inning. Matt Olson brought Acuña home with a sacrifice fly to make it 2-0 and then later on in the fourth inning, Acuña made a jumping catch at the wall to ensure that Kevin McGonigle didn’t at least extend the inning with an extra-base hit.

Once the final three innings of the game rolled around, the Braves were still in control thanks to Martín Pérez delivering five scoreless innings while only giving up two hits. He did walk four batters but he struck out five batters as well, so Pérez was once again able to deliver positive value from his spot in the rotation. That was a good thing, since Yaz was able to provide some insurance with an RBI single in the seventh inning and then Ozzie Albies crushed a two-run dinger to make it a 5-0 game. Aaron Bummer gave up a dinger to Wenceel Pérez in the ninth to ruin the shutout but it didn’t ruin the result as the Braves picked up a pretty solid win to get the series going.

Wednesday, April 29

Braves 4, Tigers 3

This one essentially came down to the Braves bookending this game with two big flies. The first one gave the Braves a 2-0 lead in the first inning when Ozzie Albies continued his hot run by hitting a dinger at the expense of All-World pitcher Tarik Skubal. Sadly for the Braves, the lead didn’t last too long.

Detroit tied it up on their first attempt in the top of the second after Kevin McGonigle delivered an RBI single on a looping liner and then JR Ritchie made a rookie mistake by throwing away a pickoff attempt on an 0-2 count with two outs. The error brought in another run and just like that, the game was tied. The tie was eventualy broken in the third inning after Riley Greene hit a long ball that put Detroit in front. Tarik Skubal had a lead to work with and eventually cruised his way through seven innings of work.

Fortunately, Ritchie went 5.1 innings and Atlanta’s bullpen was able to hold the Tigers at just three runs. That was crucial since the game really got going again once Detroit’s beleaguered bullpen got involved. It took a lot of effort on Kyle Finnegan’s part to keep the Braves from tying it in the eighth inning but Kenley Jansen wouldn’t be as fortunate. In fact, Jansen failed to get just one out — Ozzie Albies coaxed a walk out of him (which should’ve been the first sign that Jansen was in real trouble) and then Matt Olson took what he saw from that plate appearance and waited until he got a cutter that was middle-middle and sent it flying into the night sky. By the time it landed, the Braves were winners and Truist Park was in complete bedlam.

Thursday, April 30

Tigers 5, Braves 2

This one got off to an encouraging enough start, as the Braves got off to an early lead after pushing across one run in both the second and third innings. Eli White delivered the first RBI knock and then Maurcio Dubón followed it up with an RBI single of his own to give the Braves an early 2-0 edge. Bryce Elder delivered another strong six innings of work where he only gave up one run on his way out. He did have to deal with a bunch of traffic as he gave up six hits and three walks but he escaped most of the jams he found himself in and managed to make sure that the Braves held the lead while he was out there.

Framber Valdez was able to match Elder’s six innings and he kept the Tigers in the game. This time, it was Atlanta’s bullpen that eventually stumbled. Joel Payamps got the ball for the eighth inning and the Tigers jumped on him immediately with a Kerry Carpenter triple and an RBI double from Matt Vierling that tied the game up at two. While Payamps was able to strike out Dillon Dingler to get his first out, he left the game right after that with two men on and one out for Aaron Bummer to work with.

Bummer walked the bases loaded and then surrendered a sacrifice fly to make it 3-2 Detroit. Bummer actually didn’t do too badly keeping it at 3-2 but unfortunately, José Suarez had another rough outing which put the game to bed. Suarez got the first two outs but walked Wenceel Pérez (who had come into this game with a wRC+ of 25 (twenty-five), mind you), who ended up scoring on an RBI single that was exacerbated after Mike Yastrzemski booted the ball in the outfield while attempting to field it. Dillon Dingler delivered the finishing blow with an RBI double and the three-run deficit proved to be too much for the Braves on this particular day. You can’t win ‘em all!


As far as this series goes, it was certainly huge for the Braves to get the series win out of the way with the first two wins — the win during the Skubal game was particularly big as well, as it’s always a bonus to pick up a win with that dynamo on the mound for the Tigers. Aside from the mistake pitch to Ozzie Albies, Skubal was very tough on the Braves. Fortunately, Atlanta was able to take advantage of Detroit’s bullpen in both of the first two games of the series and that ended up giving them the edge.

The Braves are now done with the month of April and they’re 12 games over .500. Again, this is a reminder that Atlanta spent a grand total of one (1) day over .500 during the entire 2025 season and the last time the Braves had reached these heights was back in late-September when they were busy fighting and clawing for a Wild Card spot.

Needless to say, things have gotten a lot better for the Braves and the fact that they were able to keep this up for a whole month and also able to do it with a few key players still on the inured list or struggling a is a very good indicator for the future. The team isn’t perfect and there’s still some shoring up that needs to be done as the pitching starts to slow down a bit but at the same time, they’ve done this while banking in 22 wins in their first 32 games. The gap between them and the rest of the NL East is still there and as long as the Braves can at least maintain a decent type of form, Atlanta’s going to be A-OK going forward as the season progresses.

They will now be embarking on another gauntlet of sorts — nine games on the road against West division clubs. A trip to Coors Field is always tricky and unpredictable, the Mariners could also provide a tough test in Seattle and the Dodgers are the Dodgers. For now, it’s good to know that the Braves will embarking on that long trip with plenty of confidence and wins under their belt so far. Long may it continue!

Mets standing pat for now as they enter May in middle of prolonged crisis

The eighth inning of Thursday’s loss to the Washington Nationals summed up the stunning, collective disintegration of the 2026 New York Mets.

On a day when enough had gone right that the Mets had a one-run lead and their three back-end relievers available to hold it, one of them faltered yet again.

This time, it was Luke Weaver, who surrendered a two-run, go-ahead homer to Nationals shortstop CJ Abrams that put the Mets down a run.

Still, trailing by a run in the bottom of the eighth, the Mets received a gift: The Nationals once again decided to pitch to Juan Soto. He rewarded their generosity with a ringing double high off the center field wall that put the tying run in scoring position with no one out and the No. 3, 4, and 5 hitters in their lineup coming up. The tide was turning.

Then it went back out: Austin Slater grounded out. Mark Vientos lined out. Tyrone Taylor lined out. The chance slid away and so did another game. The Mets lost another series. They will have the worst record in baseball on the first of May.

“Not good enough, obviously. Not a secret,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “That’s not gonna do it. We’ve gotta start winning series. That’s not good enough.”

As the Mets suffered through a 12-game losing streak, then continued to sputter after it ended, two other struggling teams in major markets fired their managers. Mendoza’s future has been a topic of whispered conversations around the industry and on-screen conversations beamed around the country.

But neither Steve Cohen nor David Stearns nor any players have pointed to Mendoza’s leadership as a problem in recent weeks. If anything, Cohen and Stearns have indicated a desire to be patient, and an understanding that if change is needed, Mendoza is not the only place to make it.

As of late Thursday afternoon, as reporters filed into the Mets clubhouse where players solemnly packed bags for Anaheim, no indications surfaced that a change was coming. Indeed, that eighth inning – set up in part by the run that scored after Mendoza asked MJ Melendez to bunt against a lefty in the sixth despite Melendez homering earlier against a righty – made another argument that the Mets' problems are more structural than managerial.

For example: The man who stepped to bat after Soto doubled was Slater, the second-latest right-handed hitter added to the Mets dilapidated roster this week, pinch-hitting for the lefty Melendez. The Mets added Slater to their roster earlier this week after he struggled in early-season duty with the Marlins. In his second at-bat in the last week, and second ever as a Met, Slater grounded out to shortstop.

Then came Vientos, hitting cleanup because someone had to do it. Luis Robert Jr. hit the injured list, where fellow candidates Francisco Lindor and Jorge Polanco are also currently at. The day game after the night game was Francisco Alvarez’s day off. In fairness to Vientos, he had come through with a go-ahead hit two innings earlier. But this time, he lined out to second. Vientos is hitting .236 with a .638 OPS this season. League average is .242 and .714.

The Mets’ last chance was Taylor, also picked for platoon advantage, but by no means a part of this team’s initial vision for the heart of its order. Taylor hit the ball well but lined out to left field. Soto never moved. The Mets are similarly stuck.

So far, Stearns has been as patient with his lineup as he has been with his manager. In giving Tommy Pham a shot, then trying Slater instead, and cycling recently acquired infielder Eric Wagaman onto the roster to replace Robert on Thursday, Stearns has only made moves when forced to do so around the margins. Depending on how the Mets play over the next few weeks, his relative patience will look either admirable or unconscionable.

He and the Mets did make another move for a hitter Thursday, claiming veteran infielder Andy Ibáñez off waivers from the Athletics. He can play second, third, and first and has also played some major league games in the outfield in parts of six big league seasons. He has 28 career homers and a .688 career OPS.

Exactly how they will use him remains to be seen, and he is hardly the only player on the roster whose path to contributing is not clear. David Peterson and Sean Manaea, both of whom struggled in the Mets’ 14-2 loss to the Nationals Wednesday night, are also in sustained limbo.

The Mets’ willingness to give both repeated chances to rediscover their old form made sense in the first few weeks of the season, just as it did with Kodai Senga. The sample was small and the urgency less great.

But Peterson has not missed enough bats and Manaea’s stuff has not been explosive enough to give him any margin for error. And as the sample has grown, the urgency has, too.

The Mets placed Senga on the injured list with lumbar spine inflammation this week, the most comfortable answer to the question of how to remove the struggling veteran from the rotation without giving him away.

Manaea is being paid $25 million this year. Even for Cohen, that is a lot of money to pay someone cut in May. Plus, Manaea at his best was a crucial part of the Mets rotation that somehow carried them to the National League Championship Series in 2024.

But the Mets are also through churning through middle relief options these days: Reserving a spot for a struggling starter-turned-long-man in Manaea means losing one that could be used for the kind of helpful short reliever the Mets need. Peterson appeared to be a reliable long reliever during his seven innings of relief work over two outings last week. But the Mets already have a reliable long reliever in Tobias Myers. Traditionally constructed teams do not usually carry two.

And yet, even with all those shortcomings, the Mets still found themselves six outs away from a series win Thursday afternoon before these 2026 symptoms surfaced again.

“It just feels like there’s a little bit of a culture that’s just adapted to it unintentionally. It’s just how winning and losing goes,” Weaver said. “… Sleep is lost. Your mind wanders. You just kind of get into a fixation you don’t really need to be in. I think the answers are kind of in those words: It’s simplifying the process and maybe doing less. Maybe it’s less reps. Maybe it’s more about just enjoying why you do this for a living, trying to find your inner kid and the joy of why you play the game.”

Some things are improving. 23-year-old Carson Benge, for example, seems to be learning how to contribute in the majors the way he did in the minors early in his career. Mets hitting coaches advised Benge to close his stance a bit and the change seems to be working. The rookie is 8 for his last 24 in his last seven games.

“I feel like I can get in [swing] positions that would take me longer if I was more open," Benge said. “So it just kind of cuts down time.”

And Thursday’s starter Freddy Peralta, who had only finished the sixth inning once in his first six Mets starts, found a way to push through the mental block he admitted had been forming around that frame.

“One thing I know for sure is we are all preparing the right way here,” Peralta said after allowing one earned run in six innings Thursday. “… Unfortunately, things are not going our way. But I want to say that we are preparing to win some games and we are trying hard.”

Maybe that cloud of pressure Weaver admitted has settled in over the Mets can only be vanquished with drastic action. Maybe, and maybe soon, Cohen and/or Stearns will decide that firing Mendoza is their best chance to jettison it. Maybe a roster shakeup of some kind, perhaps via trade, will feel more likely to help. For now, they are not changing anything and will begin May in a state of prolonged crisis. Nothing has changed for their Mets, either.

Mets claim Andy Ibáñez off waivers from A’s

Andy Ibáñez #77 of the Athletics warms up prior to the game between the Athletics and the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium on Thursday, April 9, 2026 in New York, New York.
Andy Ibáñez | (Photo by Michael Urakami/MLB Photos via Getty Images)

The Mets have claimed Andy Ibáñez, a 33-year-old infielder who was recently designated for assignment, off waivers from the A’s. In very limited major league playing time this season, Ibáñez hit .118/.167/.118 with a -24 wRC+ to start this season.

Before this season, Ibáñez had spent parts of the previous five seasons in the big leagues with the Rangers and Tigers. In total, he hit .254/.305/.389 with 28 home runs, 10 stolen bases, and a 92 wRC+ in 1,220 plate appearances over that span.

A right-handed hitter, Ibáñez is out of options, and whether the Mets add him to their active roster or attempt to send him to Syracuse remains to be seen. The vast majority of his major league innings have come at second and third base, positions that are occupied by everyday players Marcus Semien and Bo Bichette, respectively. At the moment, the Mets’ lone backup infielder on the big league roster is Eric Wagaman, who was called up earlier today. He has options remaining and could be sent to Triple-A Syracuse.

Ranking the 13 most unlikely draft lottery winners in NBA history

One of the most exciting moments for a basketball franchise is if they learn they have won the NBA draft lottery, especially when it's unexpected.

Lottery odds formatting have changed several times since the system began in 1985 when the New York Knicks selected Patrick Ewing. In the future, the format might change again to help prevent tanking from league bottom-dwellers.

The upcoming 2026 NBA Draft Lottery is on May 10 in Chicago and will determine which teams will have a chance to draft top prospects like AJ Dybantsa, Cameron Boozer, Darryn Peterson and Caleb Wilson.

14 teams will have a chance at No. 1 overall and with that in mind, here are all of the lottery winners who received the pick despite less than 10 percent odds.

1. Orlando Magic (1993)

The Orlando Magic make Chris Webber in the 1993 NBA Draft. Orlando would trade Webber to Golden State for Anfernee Hardaway and three future first round picks.

Player: Chris Webber

Record: 41-41

Odds: 1.52% (11th)

This pick was included in a trade to the Golden State Warriors involving Penny Hardaway and future first-round picks.

2. Chicago Bulls (2008)

No. 1 draft pick for the Chicago Bulls, Derrick Rose walks to the stage during the 2008 NBA Draft at the Wamu Theatre at Madison Square Garden June 26, 2008 in New York City.

Player: Derrick Rose

Record: 33-49

Odds: 1.70% (9th)

Rose, who is originally from Chicago, was named 2009 NBA Rookie of the Year and won NBA MVP in 2011.

3. Cleveland Cavaliers (2014)

Andrew Wiggins shakes hands with NBA commissioner Adam Silver after being selected as the No. 1 overall pick to the Cleveland Cavaliers in the 2014 NBA Draft at the Barclays Center.

Player: Andrew Wiggins

Record: 33-49

Odds: 1.70% 9th

Before his rookie season, he was traded to the Minnesota Timberwolves for a deal involving Kevin Love. He was named 2015 NBA Rookie of the Year.

4. Dallas Mavericks (2025)

Cooper Flagg poses with NBA commissioner Adam Silver after being selected as first overall by the Dallas Mavericks in the first round of the 2025 NBA Draft at Barclays Center.

Player: Cooper Flagg

Record: 39-43

Odds: 1.80% (11th)

This was shortly after Luka Dončić was sent to the Los Angeles Lakers for a trade involving Anthony Davis. Flagg was recently named 2026 NBA Rookie of the Year.

5. Los Angeles Clippers (2011)

Kyrie Irving greets NBA commissioner David Stern after he was selected No. 1 overall by the Cleveland Cavaliers in the 2011 NBA Draft.

Player: Kyrie Irving

Record: 32-50

Odds: 2.80% (8th)

Before the draft, the Clippers traded the rights to this pick to the Cleveland Cavaliers. Irving was named 2012 NBA Rookie of the Year and won a championship with the Cavaliers in 2016.

6. Atlanta Hawks (2024)

Player: Zaccharie Risacher

Record: 36-46

Odds: 3.00% (10th)

Risacher was named first-team NBA All-Rookie and is a contributor for the Hawks in the 2026 NBA postseason.

7. New Jersey Nets (2000)

Player: Kenyon Martin

Record: 31-52

Odds: 4.40% (7th)

Martin played four seasons for the Nets, earning an NBA All-Star nod in 2004.

8. Portland Trail Blazers (2007)

Player: Greg Oden

Record: 32-50

Odds: 5.30% (7th)

The big man was selected one pick before Kevin Durant and he played just three seasons in the NBA.

9. New Orleans Pelicans (2019)

Player: Zion Williamson

Record: 33-49

Odds: 6.00% (7th)

This pick was shortly after the Pelicans traded Anthony Davis to the Los Angeles Lakers. Williamson is a two-time NBA All-Star who has not yet made the playoffs.

10. Milwaukee Bucks (2005)

Player: Andrew Bogut

Record: 30-52

Odds: 6.30% (6th)

The Australian big man was named first-team NBA All-Rookie and played for the Bucks for seven seasons.

11. Toronto Raptors (2006)

Player: Andrea Bargnani

Record: 27-55

Odds: 8.80% (5th)

The Italian forward was named first-team NBA All-Rookie and played for the Raptors for seven seasons.

12. Houston Rockets (2002)

Player: Yao Ming

Record: 28-54

Odds: 8.90% (5th)

The Chinese big man played eight seasons for the Rockets and made the NBA All-Star team each campaign.

13. Golden State Warriors (1995)

Player: Joe Smith

Record: 26-56

Odds: 9.40% (5th)

Smith made first-team NBA All-Rookie and was traded to the Philadelphia 76ers midway through his third season with the Warriors.

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NBA draft's 13 most unlikely lottery winners

Ex-Sabres Defender To Be Scratched For Must-Win Playoff Game

The Dallas Stars are set to face off against the Minnesota Wild in Game 6 on Thursday. This is a must-win game for the Stars, as a loss would officially knock them out of the playoffs.

A former Buffalo Sabres defenseman won't be on the ice for this contest, as the Stars are expected to scratch blueliner Tyler Myers in Game 6. 

Myers being a healthy scratch for Game 6 is undoubtedly notable news. The Stars acquired him from the Vancouver Canucks ahead of the 2026 NHL trade deadline in exchange for a 2027 second-round pick and a 2029 fourth-round pick. 

Myers has had a tough start to the playoffs for the Stars, as he has zero points and a minus-5 rating in five games. Now, he will be sitting out for Game 6 because of it, and the Stars will be hoping that this decision pays off. 

Myers appeared in 73 regular-season games split between the Canucks and Stars in 2025-26, where he had one goal, 10 assists, 11 points, 85 hits, 121 blocks, and a minus-23 rating. 

Myers was selected by the Sabres with the 12th overall pick of the 2008 NHL Entry Draft. In 365 games over six seasons with the Sabres, the 6-foot-8 defenseman had 45 goals, 106 assists, 151 points, and 485 hits. 

Raptors could be without key player in Game 6 vs. Cavs

TORONTO, CANADA - APRIL 26: Brandon Ingram #3 of the Toronto Raptors drives to the basket during the game against the Cleveland Cavaliers on April 26, 2026 at the Scotiabank Arena in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. 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 Vaughn Ridley/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers have pushed the Toronto Raptors to the brink of elimination with a 125-120 victory in Game 5. The Raptors have persevered through numerous obstacles already this series, including having to play without starting point guard Immanuel Quickley.

Their road to stealing the series just became more difficult. Toronto could be without its leading scorer from the regular season, Brandon Ingram. He left Game 5 in the first half with right-heel inflammation. This was a previous injury that he was playing through, but aggravated in the second quarter. He’s officially listed as questionable for Game 6.

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It’s fair to point out that Ingram has struggled this series. The Cavs have done a good job of keeping him from being a lethal midrange scorer by sticking defensive specialist Dean Wade on him. They’ve also sent a fair amount of double teams his way, especially in late shot clock situations.

This has added up to him averaging an underwhelming 12 points on .324/.444/.769 shooting splits in five playoff games. Scoring just one point in Game 5 brought these averages down. Even so, those numbers are considerably less than the 21.5 points on .477/.382/.820 shooting splits he had during the regular season.

Despite the poor player, not having him on the court would hurt Toronto’s offense. The Raptors are already at a play creation deficiency without Quickley. Losing Ingram just puts more on the plate of Scottie Barnes and RJ Barrett, who were both already shouldering a large offensive load.

Ingram’s absence will mean that the Cavs can shift more of their defensive attention and better defenders towards Barnes and Barrett. This could make what was already a difficult task even harder.

On the other end, the Cavs have a clean injury report heading into Friday’s matchup.

The Short Porch is looking at the Cubs battered bullpen

The Chicago Cubs are 19-12 and sitting just a game back of the division-leading Reds despite running what has essentially been a rotating cast of relievers in the late innings for the better part of three weeks. Caleb Thielbar was Craig Counsell’s de facto closer in Daniel Palencia’s absence before landing on the injured list himself. At peak injury chaos, the Cubs found Palencia, Thielbar, Phil Maton, Porter Hodge, Riley Martin, Shelby Miller, Ethan Roberts and Hunter Harvey all on the injured list simultaneously. That’s not an injury list, it’s a catastrophe.

The fact that Ben Brown has been quietly excellent through all of this has been clutch. Brown’s thrown 22.2 innings with five earned runs and 22 strikeouts on the young season. In San Diego he threw some of the highest leverage work of his career, including a bases-loaded, no-out, game saving escape act before also getting two outs in the ninth [VIDEO].

There are rumors that Palencia might return as soon as this weekend according to The Athletic’s Patrick Mooney:

Honestly, that can’t happen fast enough. Craig Counsell clearly does not trust Brown to get the last out of a game, which is why he opted for the platoon advantage that (checks notes) Hoby Milner provides to secure the series victory against the Padres. Don’t get me wrong, it worked and I’m grateful for every out the 35-year-old lefty has recorded so far in 15 innings this season. I’m just also extremely skeptical it will keep working with just five strikeouts, four walks and 10 hits during those innings. I’m also not sure any of our nervous systems can take the type of stress a 2.40 ERA built on a 5.39 FIP induces for more than a few weeks.

A note of caution: while Palencia’s return is welcome, the injury he was dealing with is concerning. What was originally called a left oblique strain was later clarified as a lat strain. Neither diagnosis is particularly comforting for a pitcher whose entire value proposition is built on explosive arm action throwing 102 MPH gasolina.

Maton could be a candidate for saves as Palencia works his way back. Once Harvey and Thielbar rejoin the team, which could happen later in May, Counsell will once again have a deep roster of genuine late-inning arms to deploy. And who knows, maybe an added bonus of this bullpen injury disaster is that Ben Brown gets the experience and confidence to be added to that high-leverage crew.

At the risk of handing it to Jed Hoyer and company, the fact that the organization had the depth to weather a storm like this for any amount of time is impressive. The fact that they’ve done it with a .613 win percentage is almost miraculous. The collection of cost-effective veterans with injury histories, alongside a trusted development pipeline, has been stress-tested hard this April and has largely passed with flying colors.

California Classic NBA Summer League showcase back for 8th year

The California Classic is back for its eighth year this July.

It's a basketball invitational, a kickoff to the NBA Summer League, hosted by the Sacramento Kings and Golden State Warriors as rookies from the 2026 NBA Draft, second-year players, among other athletes are out to prove themselves, vying for spots on NBA and G League rosters.

The summer showcase has returned to its dual-city, three-day format between Sacramento and San Francisco from July 3 to 6.

Games at Chase Center, presented by Carmax, will be on July 3, 5 and 6 with the Warriors, Los Angeles Lakers, Miami Heat and San Antonio Spurs. The three-day tournament at Golden 1 Center is presented by Ticketmaster, and will take place from July 4-6, featuring the Kings, Brooklyn Nets, Milwaukee Bucks and Warriors.

A Battle of NorCal showdown between the Kings and Warriors at Golden 1 Center on July 5 where the Mitch Richmond Trophy will be awarded.

Passes for the three-day event are available at Kings.com/CAClassic. Passes for the July 3 and 5 showcases in San Francisco are available at chasecenter.com/california-classic. The July 6 games at Chase Center will be available via broadcast only, the venue's website said.

California Classic schedule

Here's the schedule for the California Classic between July 3 to 6, according to NBA.com.

All times are Pacific Standard Time.

Friday, July 3

  • Heat vs. Spurs: 5 p.m. at Chase Center, San Francisco
  • Warriors vs. Lakers:7:30 p.m. at Chase Center, San Francisco

Saturday, July 4

  • Warriors vs. Bucks: Noon at Golden 1 Center, Sacramento
  • Kings vs. Nets:2 p.m. at Golden 1 Center, Sacramento

Sunday, July 5

  • Bucks vs. Nets:Noon at Golden 1 Center, Sacramento
  • Lakers vs. Heat: 1:30 p.m. at Chase Center, San Francisco
  • Kings vs. Warriors: 2 p.m. at Golden 1 Center, Sacramento
  • Warriors vs. Spurs:4 p.m. at Chase Center, San Francisco

Monday, July 6

  • Warriors vs. Heat: 4:30 p.m. at Chase Center, San Francisco
  • Nets vs. Warriors:5 p.m. at Golden 1 Center, Sacramento
  • Spurs vs. Lakers:7 p.m. at Chase Center, San Francisco
  • Kings vs. Bucks:7 p.m. at Golden 1 Center, Sacramento

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NBA Summer League California Classic returns in July with 2026 rookies