BET MGM: Islanders Have 10th-Worst 2027 Stanley Cup Odds

With the Carolina Hurricanes winning the Stanley Cup on Sunday, the sports books already have lines for who they think will lift Lord Stanley in 2027. 

The Colorado Avalanche, who were swept by the Vegas Golden Knights in the Western Conference Finals come in at +750 while the Hurricanes are looking to repeat at +750. 

The Golden Knights round out the top three, coming in at +1000. 

Where do the New York Islanders land?

Heading into the 2025-26 season, the Islanders came in at +15000 to win the Cup.

Now, they are coming in at +6,600, the 10th worst odds. 

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The cross-town rival New York Rangers sit behind Long Island at +8,000. 

The Islanders have some work to do before becoming a true Stanley Cup contender.

Flyers 2027 Stanley Cup Odds: Worse Than Expected?

The Philadelphia Flyers are not exactly widely expected to do what they did last season again in the upcoming season.

With a late-season surge after the 2026 Winter Olympics, the Flyers carried an electric run of form into the Stanley Cup playoff spot, clinching a berth in Game 81 and then eliminating the rival Pittsburgh Penguins in six games.

The eventual Stanley Cup champion Carolina Hurricanes put a commanding halt to that with a sweep of the Flyers in the second round, and that was the end of it.

Although those Flyers put up about as good a fight as you can in a series sweep, especially against a suffocating team like the Hurricanes, they have done little to improve their odds at a Stanley Cup of their own.

Now that the Hurricanes are officially Stanley Cup champions, BetMGM released its early odds for the 2027 Stanley Cup winner, placing the Flyers 17th overall at +5000.

Flyers Legend Rod Brind'Amour Joins Exclusive Company in NHL HistoryFlyers Legend Rod Brind'Amour Joins Exclusive Company in NHL HistoryPhiladelphia Flyers Hall of Famer Rod Brind'Amour is now a member of one of the most exclusive clubs in sports after winning another Stanley Cup with the Carolina Hurricanes.

At those odds, the Flyers are tied with the likes of the Columbus Blue Jackets and Washington Capitals, both of whom missed the playoffs and play in the same division.

Ahead of the Flyers are teams such as the New Jersey Devils (missed), the Utah Mammoth (Round 1 exit), the Anaheim Ducks, the Los Angeles Kings (swept by Colorado) and, somehow, the Ottawa Senators (swept by Carolina).

Admittedly, it is strange that the Mammoth, (+3000), Kings (+3500), and Senators (+1800) all have significantly better odds than the Flyers, who at least won a playoff round, even if it was against the Penguins.

The Senators, who lost to the same playoff opponent as the Flyers, showed nothing in their four games to justify such a massive gap between the two teams.

Out West, the Mammoth are probably about equal to the Flyers, and the Kings are annual pretenders, not contenders. At least the Flyers have some upward momentum.

With a strong showing at the 2026 NHL Draft and in free agency, the Flyers can easily position themselves to make such mediocre odds look short-sighted.

Phillies news: All-Star vote, trade targets, Spencer Strider

TORONTO, CANADA - JUNE 9: Bryce Harper #3 of the Philadelphia Phillies looks on against the Toronto Blue Jays during the sixth inning in their MLB game at the Rogers Centre on June 9, 2026 in Toronto, Canada. (Photo by Mark Blinch/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Phillies News:

MLB News:

Orioles news: A daunting West Coast trip looms

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - JUNE 09: Manager Craig Albernaz #55 of the Baltimore Orioles watches the game in the second inning against the Seattle Mariners at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on June 09, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Greg Fiume/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good morning, Camden Chatters.

If you’re looking to unplug from the Orioles for a while, you’ve got an easy excuse for the next week and a half. The Orioles are off to the West Coast, where six of their next nine games will start at 9:40 PM EST or later. That’s a lot of late, late nights for us viewers in the eastern time zone, and the Orioles haven’t exactly shown that they’re worth giving up sleep for.

This nine-game road trip is the Orioles’ longest since August 2024. It’s also the first time in two years that the O’s will play three different opponents on one trip. And two of those foes are first-place teams, one more daunting than the other. Starting tonight the O’s have a rematch against the 37-36 Mariners, who lead the AL West, after splitting a four-game series in Baltimore last week. Then the Birds will head to Los Angeles to take on the two-time defending champion Dodgers, who are running away with the AL West with a 45-27 record. The only sub-.500 team the O’s will play on this trip is the last-place Angels next Monday through Wednesday.

The Orioles, at five games under .500, are hanging on to the fringes of the weak AL Wild Card race, but they’re going to need to make a push sooner than later. Their losing homestand against the M’s and Padres didn’t exactly inspire confidence that they’re about to rattle off an extended winning streak, and now they’re heading to the other side of the country for their longest road trip in years against some tough opponents. It’s not ideal.

If the O’s can tread water with a 4-5 record or so on this road trip, I guess that would help them survive a while longer, even if it won’t push them any closer in the postseason race. At least that would beat the worst-case scenario of three series losses (or sweeps), which could be the nail in the coffin for the Orioles’ hopes of contention.

Come on, Orioles. On behalf of the sickos who will be staying up to an ungodly hour watching you play, don’t make us witness the death knell of your 2026 season. Let’s make this West Coast trip memorable — or at least slightly tolerable.

Links

Orioles players on track to be shut out in MLB All-Star fan voting – The Baltimore Sun

No real surprise here, as no Oriole is the best player in the AL at his position, and most aren’t particularly close. Which is kind of why they’re in this mess.

What’s the latest on Orioles’ Ryan Mountcastle? | MAILBAG – BaltimoreBaseball.com

I keep forgetting that Ryan Mountcastle exists. I might continue to forget until the day he returns, which sounds like it’s at least a month away,

O’Neill leaning on experience as O’s slugger potentially turns corner – MLB.com

O’Neill’s contract, and a lack of viable outfielders in the O’s minors, will give him plenty of leash. But I’m gonna need to see more than a 7-for-20 stretch before I believe that he’s “turning the corner.”

The biggest win of Ryan Helsley’s season? His young daughter can hear. – The Baltimore Banner

I’m not crying. You’re crying.

MLB Issues Three-Game Suspension To Ron Marinaccio – MLB Trade Rumors

Marinaccio is appealing his suspension for throwing at Gunnar Henderson on Saturday. No truth to the rumor that he’ll be calling Craig Albernaz to speak in his defense.

Orioles birthdays and history

Is today your birthday? Happy birthday! Three former Orioles were born on this day, including lefty Joe Saunders (45), whose improbable Wild Card Game win over Yu Darvish and the Rangers in 2012 is the stuff of Birdland legend. Enjoy your day, Joe. Other ex-Orioles with June 16 birthdays are infielder Chris Gomez (55) and the late right-hander Ernie Johnson (b. 1924, d. 2011).

On this date in 2015, the Orioles set a franchise record by hitting eight home runs, powering a 19-3 shellacking of the Phillies at Camden Yards. Right fielder Chris Parmelee mashed two dingers in his Orioles debut, and Manny Machado added a pair, while Jimmy Paredes, Chris Davis, David Lough, and Ryan Flaherty each hit one. Phillies reliever Dustin McGowan coughed up five of those homers and never pitched for the team again.

Random Orioles game of the day

On June 16, 1983, the Orioles lost a walkoff to the Brewers in 11 innings, 2-1, at County Stadium in Milwaukee. This one was a heartbreaker for O’s starter Scott McGregor, who carried a 1-0 lead into the bottom of the ninth and retired the first two batters, putting him one out away from a shutout win. But Cecil Cooper kept the Brewers alive with a double and Ted Simmons singled him home to tie the score.

McGregor ended up pitching 10 innings with just that one run of damage, but reliever Tim Stoddard surrendered a walkoff homer to Rick Manning in the 11th. Meanwhile, the O’s offense squandered plenty of scoring opportunities, scoring just one run on 10 hits. They went 0-for-13 with runners in scoring position and stranded 13 runners on base.

No biggie. That season turned out pretty well for the Orioles anyway.

Detroit Tigers look to clinch series win at Houston Astros on Tuesday

The Detroit Tigers took the series opener against the Houston Astros, 9-3, at Daikin Park on Monday night in a game that saw AJ Hinch’s team strike out 18 times but still nearly put up double-digit runs. Only one of those Ks belonged to Colt Keith, who homered in his other three at-bats and racked up six RBIs to power the good guys to the win.

Taking the mound on Tuesday for the Tigers is left-hander Framber Valdez, who will face his former team for the first time ever. The 32-year-old has alternated good and bad starts over his last six outings, with his most recent one being of the latter variety, surrendering four runs on six hits (two home runs) and two walks while striking out two over five frames to take the loss in a 6-4 final against the Minnesota Twins.

For the Astros, right-hander Hunter Brown will return from the injured list, where he has been shelved since the end of March after making just two starts. However, before going down with a Grade 2 right shoulder strain, the 27-year-old had looked sharp, albeit in a small sample size.

Brown last faced Detroit in last year’s American League Wildcard Game, in which he tossed 5 2/3 innings of one-run ball, surrendering a pair of hits (including a solo home run) and two walks while striking out nine in a game that the Tigers ultimately prevailed in, 5-2.

Here is a look at how the two match up on Tuesday night.

Detroit Tigers (30-42) vs. Houston Astros (33-41)

Time (ET): 8:10 p.m.
Place: Daikin Park, Houston, Texas
SB Nation Site:The Crawfish Boxes
Media: Detroit SportsNet, MLB.TV, Tigers Radio Network

Game 74: LHP Framber Valdez (3-5, 4.40 ERA) vs. RHP Hunter Brown (1-0, 0.84 ERA)

PlayerGIPK%BB%GB%FIPfWAR
Valdez1477.217.98.549.64.470.6
Brown210.239.514.050.01.600.5

VALDEZ

BROWN

St. Louis Cardinals Rotation Shuffle On the Horizon?

ST LOUIS, MISSOURI - MAY 30: Kyle Leahy #62 of the St. Louis Cardinals looks on during a game against the Chicago Cubs at Busch Stadium on May 30, 2026 in St Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Joe Puetz/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Cardinals President of Baseball Operations Chaim Bloom has been much more aggressive over the last couple of weeks in churning through young players on the roster than was originally expected. Victor Scott II, Nolan Gorman, and Yohel Pozo are currently in AAA Memphis, and Catcher Pedro Pages has been relegated to backup as Chaim Bloom has shown a greater willingness to shake things up as of late. Platoon thumper Nelson Velazquez, Lefty Catcher Jimmy Crooks, and corner infielder Blaze Jordan have overtaken the spots on the roster and have made a notable improvement in offensive output since.

The potential for churn and change could be on the horizon for the pitching staff, as both Kyle Leahy and Matthew Liberatore are not flourishing in their current roles, and the bullpen could benefit from some additional proven firepower to elevate it to the next level. Both Leahy and Liberatore were accomplished relievers before becoming starters over the last 2 seasons.

The thing that made Kyle Leahy so successful last season in his multi-inning reliever role was the shorter bursts allowed his stuff to play up and allow him to leverage the very best performing pitches in his arsenal. Having to throttle some of his stuff down to last longer in the game, which he isn’t particularly doing anyway, takes away from that and is proving to make him a below-average starter. I would argue for two elements. 1. It was a good idea to test their internal hypothesis that Leahy could be a big league starter. The value of his doing so would be a long-term benefit to the organization if it were successful. 2. It’s clear that it’s not the correct role for his capabilities, and he still has the capacity and opportunity to positively impact this roster with a shift back to the bullpen and jettisoning the ever-unlucky or ineffective Chris Roycroft from the 40-man.

The other part to this, and the more unfortunate, appears to be that the first half of last season was the aberration in Liberatore’s production, and the 2nd half of Libby was more of the real thing. Dating back to July 5th of 2025, Matthew Liberatore has pitched 130 IP and posted a 4.85 ERA and a 5.21 FIP. Liberatore has recently seen an uptick in strikeout rate, and perhaps taking that element to the pen would afford the Cardinals an additional weapon from the left side and prevent overexposure for Justin Bruihl, who performs effectively in lower leverage opportunities.

So, who takes their place?

Naturally, Hunter Dobbins would be the first name to step in for Kyle Leahy, and we’ve seen Dobbins have the ability to get into a groove and can provide the Cardinals with more length and the ability to provide production from a starter’s workload.

The other replacement? Cardinals 2024 MiLB Pitcher of the Year Quinn Matthews. It’s been a struggle for Quinn as he has taken a little longer than expected to adjust to the big league baseball in AAA, and he also dealt with a shoulder issue last season that delayed his development. Much like in 2025, Matthews struggled with his command but has seemed to figure something out in his last 2 starts. 2-0 12 IP, 0 ER, 15K’s, 2 BB’s. Remember how I recommended removing Roycroft from the 40-man roster earlier? It would be to add Matthews to it.

Adding both Dobbins and Matthews to the starting rotation would benefit the short and long term. Right in the Chaim Bloom wheelhouse. Moving Leahy and Liberatore to the bullpen while both have 4 years of control remaining benefits both the short and long term of the organization… You know where I’m going with this. The Cardinals have shown a willingness to make aggressive improvements with both the short and long term in mind, and it is yet to be seen if they will follow suit on the pitching side of things. The options are presenting themselves. The roles appear to be clear-cut as to how you maneuver the 40-man, but who would be the odd man out in the bullpen after Roycroft is unclear. I’m sure most of you would make the argument that it would be just removing Bruihl, and I wouldnt give that much push back on that, but I’m not sure how the Cardinals would feel about exposing Bruihl to waivers. I suppose we can chalk that up to the ol’ TBD on that front, but it will be something to keep an eye on moving forward.

(Stats via Baseball Savant, Prospect Savant, and FanGraphs)

-Thanks for reading

Shaikin: The Dodgers are ruining baseball! Stop them! But first let me vote for all their players

Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani walks to the plate during the first inning of a 4-3 win over the Tampa Bay Rays.
Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani is the NL's leading vote-getter at designated hitter. Never has this Dodgers dynasty had four players start an All-Star Game, but they're poised to do so, powered by a deep, star-laden roster and a vast fan base clicking digital ballots. (Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Times)

If fans all around the major leagues are sick and tired of the Dodgers, they have a funny way of showing it.

The Dodgers win too much and spend too much, so offensive to so many outside Los Angeles that the league shutting down next season has somehow become an acceptable outcome if the Dodgers cannot be stripped of their payroll advantage.

So, a pox on all their honors, right?

Apparently not. When Major League Baseball unveiled its initial batch of All-Star voting results Monday, four players from the team that so bothers the rest of America were in position to make the National League starting lineup.

Shohei Ohtani leads at designated hitter, Freddie Freeman at first base, Max Muncy at third base, and Andy Pages in the outfield.

“You look across the league, across baseball, and we have a lot of recognizable names,” Muncy said. “We have really talented players who have been playing really well this year.

“For a lot of us, the game has been speaking for us.”

Read more:The hardest days are when calls don’t go through: Andy Pages opens up about family in Cuba

Maybe not all four hold their leads in voting. Or maybe the Dodgers get more, as they seem to do in everything: Mookie Betts ranks second at shortstop, and Will Smith ranks second at catcher. Never has any team had six players start an All-Star Game.

In all the years Andrew Friedman has assembled super teams here, never have the Dodgers had four players start an All-star Game. That has happened once in franchise history, in 1980: infielders Steve Garvey, Davey Lopes and Bill Russell and outfielder Reggie Smith.

Love the Dodgers, or love to hate them, fans are voting for them.

“We’ve played well the last couple of years,” Freeman said. “We’re playing well again.

“A lot of eyes are on us. A lot of fans know all of us. And we’re playing good baseball.”

Dodgers shortstop Mookie Betts makes the throw to first base after forcing out Tampa Bay Rays right fielder Austin Slater.
Mookie Betts, throwing to first base after forcing out Tampa Bay's Austin Slater at second on Monday, is second in NL voting at shortstop. (Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Times)

In olden times, voting was conducted largely on paper ballots distributed at the stadium. With digital ballots, you can vote from anywhere, to the delight of a team that has extended its fan base to Japan.

“There’s no question we have a very, very strong fan base, domestically and internationally,” Dodgers president Stan Kasten said. “There’s no question that’s an advantage.

“But, in every case this year, the players that are up there this year certainly deserve it. It just speaks to the quality of the players we have.”

But, sir, your team is ruining baseball. Haven’t you heard?

“Who ever said that?” Kasten said. “I’ve always said the opposite. I think we have been good for baseball, and I think everyone in baseball would agree.”

Said Freeman: “I think that’s just noise. We’re good for baseball. You just saw it in Chicago.”

The Chicago White Sox average 22,000. The Dodgers showed up over the weekend, and the White Sox sold out — all three games, at 38,000 per game.

“To say we’re bad for baseball,” Freeman said, “I think that’s what Doc would say is a lazy statement.”

Doc is Dave Roberts, the Dodgers’ manager. He laughed. He already branded popular critiques of the Dodgers as “lazy” once this season. He didn’t want to say it again.

But, if the Dodgers give people what they want to see, how can they be ruining the game?

“That’s a great point,” Roberts said. “I think people still love talent. They love the way our guys play. And they should be showcased in the midsummer classic.”

Read more:Once-dominant Dodgers bullpen unravels again in loss to White Sox

This year’s All-Star Game is in Philadelphia, home to the most passionate of fan bases. The Dodgers and Phillies each represent the National League, but can you imagine what the Phillies fans might have to say about four — or more — Dodgers introduced in the, er, home team lineup?

People love to hate the Dodgers. Philly fans love to hate, period.

“It would probably be a lot of fun,” Muncy said. “At the All-Star Game, you’re just there to celebrate the best players in baseball.

“Obviously, there will be boos and cheers for everybody. You’re just there to celebrate the talent, and not necessarily what team they’re playing for.”

If they’re playing for the Dodgers? Philly fans booed Santa Claus. Shohei Ohtani, you have been warned.

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Yankees prospects: Summer leagues sweep with double-digit outbursts

Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders: Off-day

Double-A Somerset Patriots: Off-day

High-A Hudson Valley Renegades: Off-day

Low-A Tampa Tarpons: Off-day

Florida Complex League Yankees:W, 9-2 at FCL Tigers

3B Richard Matic 1-4, 1 RBI, 1 R, 1 BB
LF Wilberson De Pena 3-5, 2 HR, 3 RBI, 3 R, 1 SB — 11 homers this year, had five all of last year
LF Isael Arias 0-0
C Queni Pineda 1-5, 1 R, 3 K, 1 SB
2B Leni Done 3-5, 2 2B, 2 RBI, 1 R, 1 K, 1 SB
CF Jose Castro 3-5, 1 HR, 2 RBI, 1 R, 1 K
RF Robbie Burnett 1-2, 1 2B, 1 R, 1 BB, 1 K
RF Estivenzon Montero 0-2, 2 K
SS Dexters Peralta 0-3, 1 BB, 1 K
DH Francisco Vilorio 0-3, 1 BB, 2 K
1B Christofer Reyes 0-3, 1 R, 1 BB, 2 K

Danny Flatt 2.2 IP, 2 R, 4 H, 1 BB, 2 K, 1 HR
Alexander Almonte 3.1 IP, 0 R, 3 H, 1 BB, 1 K (win)
Jorge Luna 2 IP, 0 R, 1 BB, 2 K
Austin Breedlove 1 IP, 0 R, 1 BB, 2 K, pickoff error

Dominican Summer League Yankees:W, 11-1 (7) vs. DSL White Sox

CF Isaias Castillo 0-4, 3 K
SS Stiven Marinez 1-4, 1 HR, 1 RBI, 2 R, 1 K, throwing error
RF Yostin Pena 1-4, 1 RBI, 1 R, 2 K
2B Juan Torres 2-3, 1 2B, 2 RBI, 3 R, 1 SB
DH Manuel Aguilar 2-2, 1 2B, 2 RBI, 2 R, 2 BB
3B Abrahan Pichardo 0-4, 1 K
C Cesar Lopez 1-4, 1 RBI, 1 R
1B Jose Peralta 1-1, 2 RBI, 1 R, 2 BB
LF Kendry Diaz 1-3, 1 RBI, 1 R, 1 K

Hector Moreno 1.2 IP, 0 R, 2 H, 1 BB, 2 K
Fredy Penuelas 4.1 IP, 0 R, 3 H, 6 K (win) — 0.75 ERA in 12 innings, had a 10.23 ERA in 22 frames last year
Jose Vargas 1 IP, 1 R, 1 H, 2 BB, 1 K

Dominican Summer League Bombers:W, 14-11 at DSL Twins

DH Daniel Santana 0-3, 1 RBI, 3 R, 3 BB, 1 K, 3 SB
SS Mani Cedeno 2-4, 1 2B, 3 RBI, 3 R, 2 BB, 1 CS
2B Carlos Bello 2-4, 2 HR, 6 RBI, 2 R, 2 BB, 1 SB, 1 CS — second blast was a three-run shot to complete a six-run ninth and take the lead
RF David Carrera 1-5, 1 2B, 1 R, 1 BB, 2 K
C Alessandro Rodriguez 3-5, 1 2B, 1 RBI, 1 R, 1 K, throwing and pickoff error
1B Poly Ojeda 0-3, 1 R, 1 BB
3B Germayhoni Beltre 2-3, 1 2B, 2 RBI, 1 R, 1 BB, 2 SB, throwing error
LF Richard Meran 0-3, 3 K
PR-LF Sebastian Pinto 0-1, 1 CS
CF Alfiery Matos 1-4, 2 R, 1 BB, 2 SB — classic DSL game, eight steals and three caught stealing as a team

Randy Angomas 3.2 IP, 3 R, 2 H, 4 BB, 3 K
Kevin Centeno 3.1 IP, 4 R, 2 ER, 3 H, 3 BB, 4 K, 1 HR
Diego Carrillo 1 IP, 4 R, 3 ER, 1 BB, 2 K (win, blown save)

2026 Brewers Minor League Roundup: Week 12

Milwaukee Brewers shortstop Cooper Pratt takes batting practice during spring training workouts Monday, February 17, 2025, at American Family Fields of Phoenix in Phoenix, Arizona. | Dave Kallmann / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Welcome back to the Minor League Roundup!

As a reminder, you can find this roundup — covering everything you need to know about each of the Brewers’ minor league affiliates — every Tuesday morning right here on Brew Crew Ball. For consistency, all organizational prospect rankings will reference MLB Pipeline unless otherwise noted.

Triple-A Nashville Sounds (41-25)

Opponent this week: vs. Durham Bulls (Tampa Bay Rays)

Record this week: 3-3

Standout performances:

Eddys Leonard: 8-for-15, 3B, HR, 3 RBI, 2 BB, 1 K
Akil Baddoo: 6-for-14, 2B, 3B, 2 HR, 11 RBI, 5 BB, 1 K
Luis Matos: 5-for-16, 6 RBI, 1 BB, 3 K
Luke Adams (No. 11): 5-for-17, 2B, HR, 2 RBI, 2 BB, 2 K
Kaleb Bowman: 4 IP, 3 H, 1 ER, 1 BB, 4 K
Tyson Hardin (No. 16): 11 IP, 6 H, 3 ER, 2 BB, 16 K

As you may have heard, the biggest news out of Nashville this week is the promotion of shortstop prospect Cooper Pratt (No. 4), who will join the Brewers on Tuesday for their upcoming series against the Guardians.

Pratt got off to a slow start in his first Triple-A season, but he’s been seeing the ball better lately, hitting .267/.357/.430 with a .787 OPS over the last month. During that stretch, he led all Sounds players in hits (23) and RBIs (15, tied with Akil Baddoo). For more on Pratt’s promotion, check out Dave’s coverage from when the news broke on Sunday afternoon.

After missing the last four games of last week’s series against the Jacksonville Jumbo Shrimp, the recently-extended Luis Lara (No. 5) played in all six games this week, going 5-for-21 with a pair of RBIs. Lara, who’s hitting .329 with a .919 OPS and seven home runs on the season, should be the first outfield prospect promoted should any of the Brewers’ starting outfielders miss time.

Eddys Leonard paced the Sounds in batting average, going 8-for-15 with a homer and a triple. Leonard isn’t nearly as highly regarded as Pratt or Jett Williams (No. 3), but he’s been more productive at the plate than both. His .930 OPS and 10 home runs both lead the Sounds.

Luke Adams also had a great week, going 5-for-17 (.294) with a home run. Like Pratt, he’s started to heat up with the weather, posting a 1.066 OPS over the last month.

Luis Matos has also been solid for the Sounds. At just 24 years old — he won’t turn 25 until January — he’s still young enough, and has enough upside, to earn another opportunity with the Brewers. However, Matos is out of minor league options and had to clear waivers just to join Nashville, which complicates any potential path back to Milwaukee.

As for the pitching staff, Tyson Hardin continues to shove since his promotion to Triple-A. Over two starts this week, he allowed just three runs while racking up 16 strikeouts in 11 innings. After struggling to start the season in Double-A, Hardin now has a 1.89 ERA and 0.93 WHIP through his first six Triple-A starts.

Junior Fernández, Gerson Garabito, Reiss Knehr, and Craig Yoho all each pitched at least two scoreless innings. Brett Wichrowski, promoted to Nashville last week, has now given up eight runs through his first 10 2/3 innings in Triple-A.

Next week’s opponent: @ Memphis Redbirds (St. Louis Cardinals)

Double-A Biloxi Shuckers (32-29)

Opponent this week: @ Birmingham Barons (Chicago White Sox)

Record this week: 4-3

Standout performances:

Jesús Made (No. 1): 9-for-29, 2 2B, 2 RBI, 2 BB, 6 K
Mike Boeve: 10-for-25, 2 2B, 7 RBI, 6 BB, 7 K
Jacob Hurtubise: 6-for-17, 2B, 3B, 3 RBI, 4 BB, 3 K
Blake Burke (No. 15): 8-for-26, 3 2B, HR, 5 RBI, 3 BB, 9 K
Jack Seppings: 5 IP, 2 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 3 K
Tanner Gillis: 6 IP, 2 H, 1 ER, 2 BB, 4 K
Jaron DeBerry: 6 IP, 2 H, 2 ER, 2 BB, 6 K
Stiven Cruz: 5 2/3 IP, 4 H, 3 ER, 2 BB, 6 K
Bishop Letson (No. 8): 5 IP, 4 H, 3 ER, 3 BB, 5 K

Death, taxes, and Jesús Made raking. Made’s OPS is actually under .800 (.785), but he’s hitting .280 with six home runs — as many as he had last year. Nothing to see here. He’s still the best prospect in baseball.

Mike Boeve, who was a top 10 organizational prospect at the beginning of last year before dropping out of the top 30 entirely, has quietly had a bounce-back season in Biloxi. He’s still not really hitting for power, but he’s hitting .276 with a .347 OBP over the last month — roughly in line with his season-long stats (.259 average, .351 OBP).

Blake Burke added an opposite-field home run this week, pushing his season total to 14. His power numbers have been in a class of their own; Darrien Miller and Matthew Wood rank second on the team with eight homers apiece.

Other than Made, Boeve, Burke, and Jacob Hurtubise, no Shucker hit over .300. Biloxi went 4-3 this week on the strength of their pitching. Five different pitchers — Jack Seppings, Tanner Gillis, Jaron DeBerry, Stiven Cruz, and Bishop Letson — pitched at least five innings while allowing three runs or less. Cameron Wagoner and Jesús Broca both pitched three scoreless innings.

Next week’s opponent: vs. Columbus Clingstones (Atlanta Braves)

High-A Wisconsin Timber Rattlers (33-26)

Opponent this week: vs. Great Lakes Loons (Los Angeles Dodgers)

Record this week: 4-2

Standout performances:

Andrew Fischer (No. 6): 6-for-13, 2B, 2 HR, 6 RBI, 7 BB, 6 K
Josh Adamczewski (No. 10): 7-for-16, 2B, 2 RBI, 4 BB, 2 K
Josiah Ragsdale (No. 30): 5-for-14, BB, 4 K
Juan Baez: 4-for-12, 2B, 3 RBI, BB, 4 K
Daniel Guilarte: 3-for-10, HR, 2 RBI, BB, 5 K
Quinton Low: 4 2/3 IP, 4 H, 1 ER, 3 BB, 6 K

The Timber Rattlers have had a great season, but their lineup took a significant hit on Sunday when Andrew Fischer and Josh Adamczewski earned promotions to Double-A Biloxi.

Fischer is already up to 20 home runs on the season, so much ado has been made about his performance, but Adamczewski’s promotion might be even more overdue than Fischer’s. He’s hit above .320 in each of his three seasons in the minor leagues, a stat that seems borderline unbelievable. In 166 games with Wisconsin this season, he’s slashing .331/.464/.572 with nine home runs and 21 extra-base hits.

The jury is still somewhat out on Adamczewski’s eventual defensive home. He began his professional career as a middle infielder but has spent the entire season in left field (save for 1 1/3 innings at second base). As we’re seeing with Lara, the Brewers may not have much room in the outfield if he’s ready soon. Still, Adamczewski’s hit tool has always been his calling card, and players who can hit tend to find their way into the lineup one way or another.

Other than Adamczewski and Fischer, not a lot of gaudy hitting numbers out of Wisconsin this week. Josiah Ragsdale, who’s been having a breakout season, was the only other Timber Rattler to hit over .300. Ragsdale, a seventh-round pick in 2025, hit .300 in 70 at-bats with the Warbirds (then the Carolina Mudcats) last year, so it’s not like he was completely off the prospect radar. Still, Ragsdale’s slugging percentage has jumped from .314 last year to .438 this season. With 169 at-bats under his belt, that improvement is becoming increasingly difficult to dismiss as a fluke. He’s looking like a legitimate find by the Brewers’ scouting department.

Pitchers Braylon Owens (5 1/3 IP, 6 H, 5 R, 4 ER, 3 BB, 5 K) and Ethan Dorchies (4 IP) had less than inspiring outings this week. Dorchies only allowed three hits but walked three batters and gave up three runs in his outing. Quinton Low went 4 2/3 innings, allowing four hits but only a single earned run, and Josh Knoth pitched 3 2/3 scoreless innings while striking out five.

Knoth, the No. 33 overall pick in 2023, missed all of last season after undergoing Tommy John surgery. In his first four games with the Timber Rattlers, he has a 2.19 ERA with 12 strikeouts and seven walks over 12 2/3 innings pitched. Knoth, who was highly regarded coming into the draft, is a name to keep an eye on as he starts to get his feet under him.

Next week’s opponent: @ Quad Cities River Bandits (Kansas City Royals)

Single-A Wilson Warbirds (34-29)

Opponent this week: @ Hill City Howlers (Cleveland Guardians)

Record this week: 3-4

Standout performances:

Juan Ortuno: 6-for-22, 3 2B, 3 RBI, 4 BB, 4 K
José Anderson: 5-for-26, 4 HR, 9 RBI, 12 K
Brady Ebel (No. 13): 3-for-17, 2 HR, 6 RBI, 5 BB, 6 K
Enniel Cortez: 4 2/3 IP, 3 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 1 K

Much has been made of Andrew Fischer’s strikeout numbers, but José Anderson is closer to what Fischer’s skeptics fear he might be. After this week’s four homer showing, Anderson has already hit a whopping 16 home runs. He’s also struck out 104 times in 214 at-bats and is hitting just .182 with a .284 on-base percentage. Of his 39 hits, 16 (41%) have been home runs.

Anderson is still just 19 years old, so his troubling strikeout and on-base numbers don’t automatically rule out a major league future. At the same time, he clearly possesses major league caliber raw power. The combination makes him one of the most intriguing — and difficult to evaluate — prospects in the Brewers’ system.

Other than Anderson and Juan Ortuno (6-for-22 with three extra-base hits), the hitting stats out of Wilson this week aren’t anything to write home about. Brady Ebel cooled off with a 3-for-17 showing, although he hit two home runs. Handelfry Encarnacion went 2-for-24 with a pair of singles, although he only struck out three times. Pedro Ibarguen went 3-for-18 with a pair of doubles. Jadyn Fielder, who went 3-for-9, was the only Warbird to hit over .300.

As for the pitchers, Miqueas Mercedes threw three scoreless innings to bring his ERA down to 4.15. Mercedes, Enniel Cortez (4 2/3 IP, 3 H, 0 ER), and Bryce Schaum (1 2/3 IP, K, 2 BB) were the only pitchers to record scoreless weeks. That doesn’t include infielder Luis Lameda, who threw a scoreless inning at the end of the Warbirds’ 12-6 loss on Tuesday. The 20-year-old Lameda isn’t a pitcher, but this is a nice excuse to bring up that he’s hitting .296 with a .785 OPS after hitting just .211 in Single-A last year.

Next week’s opponent: vs. Charleston RiverDogs (Tampa Bay Rays)

Player of the Week

It has to be Andrew Fischer, who hit two home runs before his promotion to bring his season total to 20. Since the Timber Rattlers became a High-A affiliate in 2021, no player had hit more than 16 home runs in a season. Fischer’s 20 homers in just 54 games leave him two shy of the franchise record of 22, shared by Khris Davis (2010), Victor Roache (2013), and Clint Coulter (2014).

Fischer finishes his Timber Rattlers tenure with an extremely encouraging .298/.443/.675 slash line, offering an exciting glimpse of what could be in store for the 2025 first-round pick.

Play of the Week

Nice catch and a nicer throw by Juan Baez.

2025-26 Season in Review: Ilya Solovyov

BUFFALO, NEW YORK - FEBRUARY 05: Ilya Solovyov #7 of the Pittsburgh Penguins skates against the Buffalo Sabres during an NHL game on February 05, 2026 at KeyBank Center in Buffalo, New York. (Photo by Bill Wippert/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Vitals

Player: Ilya Solovyov
Born: July 20, 2000 (25 years old)
Height: 6’3”
Weight: 208 pounds
Hometown: Mogilev, Belarus
Shoots: Left
Draft: Seventh round pick (205th overall) in 2020 by the Calgary Flames
2025-26 Statistics: 0 goals and 5 assists for 5 points in 14 regular-season games; 0 points in three playoff games.
Contract Status: Signed through 2026-27 ($850,000 cap hit)

Story of the Season

The Penguins acquired Solovyov’s expiring contract in January by sending Valtteri Puustinen and a 2026 seventh-rounder to the Colorado Avalanche.

At the time Solovyov had skated in 16 games with the Avalanche and three games with the team’s AHL affiliate.

The trade came around the time Kris Letang was sidelined for two games with an upper-body injury. He suffered a fractured foot about a week and a half later that gave Solovyov a chance to slot into the lineup.

Solovyov spent most of his time in the regular season the bottom pairing with Connor Clifton.

He made his playoff debut in Game 4 as a substitute for Clifton on the right side of Ryan Shea. The Flyers never scored a goal with Solovyov on the ice, which was enough for head coach Dan Muse to keep dressing him over Clifton until the Penguins’ Game 6 elimination.

The Penguins re-signed Solovyov in May to keep him under contract for one more season before he hits unrestricted free agency in 2027.

Monthly Splits

via Yahoo

Solovyov was traded to the Penguins on Jan. 20. He saw his ice time climb after the trade from 11:34 per game in Colorado to over 14 minutes per game in Pittsburgh.

Regular season 5v5 advanced stats

Data via Natural Stat Trick. Ranking is out of 11 defensemen on the team who qualified by playing a minimum of 150 minutes.

Corsi For%: 52.21 (2nd)
Goals For%: 51.85 (3rd)
xGF%: 57.16 (1st)
Scoring Chance%: 56.84 (1st)
High Danger Scoring Chance%: 56.99 (1st)
5v5 on-ice shooting%: 15.56 (1st)
On-ice save%: .833 (11th)
Goals/60: 0
Assists/60: 1.57 (1st)
Points/60: 1.57 (1st)

These numbers come with the major caveat that Solovyov played just 14 games this season with the club. Within that small sample size, however, Penguins were generally excellent at generating scoring chances and poor at stopping opponents from scoring when Solovyov (generally paired with Clifton during the regular season) was on the ice in a sheltered role.

Charts n’at

Via Advanced Hockey Stats and NHL Edge

Solovyov is dealing with a limited sample, but he is a player that WAR sees some positive and encouraging signs for the minutes that he has played by being able to put a nice impact offensively and defensively overall in what he’s been asked to do. The goals and finishing will likely come down in time once he plays more, but it shows some tools. One possible issue is taking penalties, Solovyov was called for five minor penalties in 15 games with the Penguins (and three more in 16 games with Colorado), he’ll want to cut down on the amount of times he gets whistled for infractions relative to the small amount of time he’s played in the future.

Solovyov does have some power on his shots and as shown in the lower left chart, had the versatility to spend time on the left and right points during different stretches. He doesn’t have a lot of dynamic puck skills but that nice shot power could be part of the reason to get him into games in the future.

Solovyov’s skating is functional, he’s good in short areas and making pivots when needing to defend. His straight-line speed and acceleration is in-line with his 6’3, 210 pound frame to not exactly be thought of as one of the speedier skaters in the league.

Highlights

Solovyov assisted on a Ryan Shea goal in his Penguins debut on Jan. 29.

He later fed Avery Hayes for the breakaway that allowed Hayes to score in his own NHL debut on Feb. 5.

Questions to Ponder

After extending Solovyov, the Penguins have Sam Girard, Ryan Graves, Parker Wotherspoon, Caleb Jones and Owen Pickering as some of the left-shot defensemen signed through next season.

With Shea hitting free agency and potentially set for a raise that could push him out of the Penguins’ pay range, will Solovyov be able to win a more regular roster spot in training camp? If not, he could be set to head into next season in a similar seventh-defenseman role to what Clifton (also a pending free agent) played last season.

Ideal 2026-27

Solovyov spent three seasons as a fringe roster player and part-time AHL player with the Calgary Flames and Colorado Avalanche. His ideal 2026-27 season would likely include him earning a spot in training camp and playing his first full-time campaign in the NHL.

Bottom line

The Penguins saw Solovyov in a limited sample size and mostly in a sheltered role last season, but he served as a largely reliable bottom-pairing option when called into the lineup. There’s a chance a strong training camp could earn him a longer look at the NHL next season.

Pensburgh Grade: B

Canadiens’ Highly Touted Prospect Played Through Injury

It’s well known that the Montreal Canadiens have one of the deepest pools of prospects in the NHL, thanks to years of high draft picks. One of their most successful prospects this past season has been right-shot defenseman Bryce Pickford. The third-round pick who was selected 81st overall by the Habs at the 2025 draft has had a season for the ages with the Medicine Hat Tigers in the WHL.

On Monday, the CHL announced that Pickford had been named the defenseman of the year, thanks to an 83-point season, which included 45 goals and saw him finish the campaign with a plus-55 rating. No defenseman has scored more goals than Pickford in the last 40 years, and he’s impressed the Canadiens so much in the early goings of the season that he was signed to his ELC just before Christmas.

The Canadiens Won’t Have To Imitate The Hurricanes
Canadiens Potential Draft Target: Xavier Villeneuve
Three Former Canadiens Are Now Stanley Cup Champions

However, the news wasn’t all good on Monday, as The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler reported that the prospect may need shoulder surgery this offseason after playing through an injury this season. While this is definitely not good news, it’s impressive that he was able to perform the way that he has, considering the injury.

While Pickford has had a dominant season in the WHL, it’s important to remember that the step between that junior league and professional hockey is a steep one. Given where the Canadiens are in their rebuild, it will also be interesting to see whether they choose to let him develop or include him in a package for some immediate help.

Some would advocate that trading a right-shot defenseman when he has that much potential would be ill-advised, and it’s certainly not a course of action that would have been entertained back in 2022, but things have changed since then. The playoffs have made it obvious that the Canadiens need another right-shot defenseman, preferably one who can handle top-four minutes.

If the Canadiens aren’t convinced that David Reinbacher can be that player, they may need to go outside of the organization to fill that need. You have to give something to get something, as they say, and they won’t get an established right-shot blueliner if they do not dangle an enticing asset in front of a possible trade partner.


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Serena Williams back at Wimbledon after being granted doubles wildcard with Venus

  • Williams sisters have won six doubles titles at SW19

  • French Open finalist Chwalinksa awarded wildcard

Serena and Venus Williams will rekindle their doubles partnership at Wimbledon this month after receiving a wildcard into the women’s doubles draw. The All England Club announced the recipients on Tuesday morning in one of the most highly anticipated wildcard announcements in recent memory considering Serena’s return this month after four years of retirement.

Serena, a seven-times singles champion, did not request a singles wildcard and the 44-year-old has remained coy about whether she plans to return for singles. Venus, a five-time singles champion, has also not received a singles wildcard. Venus has competed on the tour since her debut in 1994, only stopping due to health-related issues. She turns 46 on Wednesday.

Continue reading...

Chicago Cubs vs. Colorado Rockies preview, Tuesday 6/16, 7:05 CT

Tuesday notes…

  • ITEM ONE:
  • ITEM TWO:
  • ITEM THREE:
  • ITEM FOUR:

Cubs lineup:

Rockies lineup:

Edward Cabrera, RHP vs. Ryan Feltner, RHP

This is a pitching rematch of the game last Thursday at Coors Field.

Edward Cabrera threw 5.2 innings and allowed five hits and two runs, striking out five. Both of the hits were solo homers.

The Cubs hit Ryan Feltner hard, scoring six runs in 4.1 innings, with the big blow being Seiya Suzuki’s grand slam.

We’ll take another one just like that, please.

Here is the weather forecast for the area around Wrigley Field.

Today’s game is on Marquee Sports Network.

Here is the complete MLB.com live streaming page for today.

MLB.com Gameday

Baseball-reference.com game preview

Please visit our SB Nation Rockies site Purple Row. If you do go there to interact with Rockies fans, please be respectful, abide by their individual site rules and serve as a good representation of Cub fans in general and BCB in particular.

The 2026 game discussion procedure has been changed, so please take note.

You’ll find the game preview, like this one, posted separately on the front page two hours before game time (90 minutes for some early day games following night games).

At the same time, a StoryStream containing the preview will also post on the front page, titled “Cubs vs. (Team) (Day of week/date) game threads.” It will contain every post related to that particular game.

The Live! (formerly “First Pitch”) thread will still post at five minutes to game time. It will also post to the front page. That will be the only live game discussion thread. After the game, the recap and Heroes and Goats will also live on the front page as separate posts.

You will also be able to find the preview, Live! thread, recap and Heroes and Goats in this section link. The StoryStream for each game can also be found in that section.

Discuss amongst yourselves.

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Will we see the other divisions gain separation?

CLEVELAND, OHIO - SEPTEMBER 14: José Ramírez #11 of the Cleveland Guardians reacts after striking out during the first inning against the Chicago White Sox at Progressive Field on September 14, 2025 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Yankees are welcoming one of the AL Central leader into town tonight, and it’s not the Cleveland Guardians team that they’ve played so much of recently. No, after shuffling back and forth once more it is the Chicago White Sox sitting atop the Central by tiebreaker at this moment, surprising everyone by jumping out to a 38-32 record and escaping the cellar of the division. However, you’d be forgiven for not thinking that could’ve been a possibility, both because of that record being only a few games above .500 and for the fact that they’re sitting at a meager +12 run differential heading into Tuesday’s action.

They’re far from the only ones struggling in that department. The White Sox’s main competition, and the team that was alone in first place just a week ago, is actually negative in run differential. The Guardians have been outscored by three runs this year, yet sit in prime position to contend for a postseason berth with a 39-33 record. The same is true in the AL West, where the competition is even more bunched up: the 37-36 Mariners control first place by a half-game and have the second-highest run differential in the AL, but all that’s good for is a +20 mark when the Yankees lord above them with +107. The Athletics are dead even at 36-36 but would occupy a Wild Card slot if the season ended today, and they have a whopping -42 run differential! The Rangers are barely below .500 and barely above in the run differential discussion being positive by four runs, but they’re only a game out of a Wild Card.

The Yankees are busy trying to get some separation from the Rays, but they’re a piece of that puzzle as well — the only other team in the AL to have cracked 40 wins thus far, Tampa sits at a +7 in run differential after dropping a nail-biter to the Dodgers on Monday. The rest of the AL East is under the bus as a result of their poor play, but the Rays have been one of the few outliers to separate themselves from the pack and contest the Yankees, thanks in no small part to having swept them early in the year and taking a split in their latter meeting. They’re the only ones standing in New York’s way at the moment though, and as Jake discussed yesterday morning, it’s not exactly early in the season anymore. But we’ve taken the microscope to the East already, so I want to point it at the rest of the cast today.

Chicago and Cleveland sit a fair bit over the rest of the AL Central, but the gap is hardly insurmountable, especially given how both teams have been dealt blows to their roster. Munetaka Murakami was one of the biggest revelations of the early season after getting looked over in the offseason, but his injury took a big chunk of Chicago’s offensive engine out with him. Cleveland sits in a similar boat with a much-more established face, having lost Jose Ramírez for the next few months. Does that open the door for a team like the Twins, who have sat in mediocrity for most of the year but have rarely left the middle of the pack? They lack the depth of those two teams, but they’re only six games out and have played better ball in June than how they ended May. Could that be the glimmer of hope for the Tigers, thought to be dead in the water after losing Tarik Skubal and falling into the cellar after being picked as preseason favorites? Skubal is back now, and despite a terrible record are only nine games out of it — they blew a bigger division lead just last year, so perhaps this could be their revenge. The Royals are probably the hardest sell of the bunch, deserving of their last place position, but they have an MVP frontrunner in Bobby Witt Jr. and could perhaps will themselves into Wild Card talks if no one else takes the reins.

Out in the West, things are even more chaotic. The Mariners are ahead only after getting themselves out of their early season doldrums, and seeing their offense start to come to life. The rotation is one of the scariest in the league, even with a rather ineffective Luis Castillo, but that hasn’t netted them any ground in the standings at the end of the day. The A’s defy rhyme or reason, boasting a strong enough offense but have been buried by their inability to prevent runs, and yet for a long portion of the year they led this division and still find themselves a mere half-game out. Texas has had the inverse problem, with a stellar rotation buoyed by an offense that has had role players step up but lacked any meaningful production from their stars. Somehow Houston, who looked dead and buried after an abysmal April that saw them weather an onslaught of injuries, is only four games out of the Wild Card and 4.5 out of the division outright. I’m willing to write off the Angels (sorry Mike Trout, nice to see you doing well again though), but everyone else in this division looks ready to scrap their way to 87 wins and potentially come out with the crown. It’s wild to see.

If push came to shove, I couldn’t name a single one of these teams that I feel confident in separating from the pack. I could see logic in picking any one of them, but not enough to rule out the reasons that the others have kept them within arm’s reach this whole time. A week ago Cleveland looked to be the one closest to breaking out, but they lost their homegrown hero and suddenly that gap has gone up in smoke again. I do think the Tigers have a run in them that’ll keep the Central bunched up, while the West is anyone’s guess — I think the A’s will finally play to their strength level and fall behind the pack, but I don’t know if that will be the Mariners outclassing them so much as it will be them just fading away after a decent enough start. I think the last thing anyone out west wants to see is Houston get any closer, but Yordan Alvarez might be willing that team to just that. Is there a team that you believe will cut themselves out of the net? Who are they, and what gives you that belief if you have it?


We’ve got a busy day ahead of us, so let’s run through the docket quick. Matt starts us off with a look at the White Sox pitchers the Yankees will face in this upcoming series, and then I’ll be back to break down the Rays’ loss to the Dodgers in detail as our only feature game of the Rivalry Roundup. Jeff gets to wish a current Yankee a happy birthday as Will Warren turns 27, Michael covers the last week down in the minor leagues, Sam examines some potential parallels to the 2019 Next Man Up Yankees, and Nick delivers the Yankee Reliever Confidence Index for June.

Today’s Matchup

New York Yankees vs. Chicago White Sox

Time: 7:05 p.m. EST

Video: YES Network, Chicago Sports Network

Venue: Yankee Stadium, Bronx, NY

The year of New York and the Thunder weren’t inevitable: 15 things we learned from the NBA playoffs

The New York Knicks celebrate with the Larry O'Brien trophy after defeating the Spurs in Game 5 of the NBA finals on Saturday in San Antonio.Photograph: Darren Abate/AP

The year of New York

Sometimes it’s just your year. When infectiously optimistic young mayor Zohran Mamdani was elected this past fall, there was a palpable vibe shift in the city. That’s not to say that there’s a direct correlation between the New York Knicks being NBA champions and the era of buoyant positivity permeating the city, but it’s also not to say there’s not one. Other American cities will, inevitably, have their moment in the sun again soon. But 2026 is the year of New York (someone get that memo to the Mets).

Related: Knicks in five and the NBA is alive: New York’s era-defining title is a win for the believers

The Spurs aren’t going anywhere

It may come across as condescending to you’ll get ‘em next time a group of professional athletes who were on the verge of a championship, but the it doesn’t feel like the San Antonio Spurs just squandered a golden opportunity. If anything, they far, far overachieved this year: it’s almost entirely unheard of for a young team to make it all the way to the finals in their first rodeo. The core of Victor Wembanyama (22 years old), Stephon Castle (21) and Dylan Harper (20) certainly took their lumps along the way, and lessons learned are often painful. But it’s not looking through rose-colored glasses to say that this Spurs team will be rodeo-ing for many seasons to come.

The Thunder are not inevitable

As the saying goes, that’s why they play the games. I’m old enough to remember nine months ago, when the Oklahoma City Thunder seemingly didn’t know how to lose and everyone in the NBA media ecosystem was talking about how they were going to cruise to a repeat championship. Flash forward to the present: where the formidable Thunder met their end against the pugnacious Spurs in Game 7 of the Western Conference finals. Oklahoma City will absolutely be heard from again, and it wouldn’t be shocking if they wound up back in the finals next year. But let this be a lesson: in an era of parity, dynasties are best left labeled in hindsight, not prematurely.

LeBron shouldn’t retire yet

A 41-year-old with a beard full of grey being the guy to single-handedly backpack his team to a first-round playoff victory sounds fantastical. But there is one timeline in which it’s possible: the one with LeBron James. James has been asked about retirement relentlessly for the past several seasons, and the question is understandable. He is old enough that his own son is now his teammate. But he is, quite frankly, still too damn good to hang it up. When the Lakers found themselves without their top two scorers – All-NBA first-teamer Luka Dončić and guard Austin Reaves – the then-third option had to pull his cape out of the closet. He responded by dragging Los Angeles through the first round almost by force of will. Wherever James ends up next season, it simply cannot be retirement.

Related: ‘He is him’: indomitable Jalen Brunson quiets doubters as Knicks end 53-year wait

It’s a 48-minute game

Everyone who has played any level of organized basketball has heard the same refrain: “We gotta play all 48.” But it’s rare that playing 46 or 47 minutes worth of high-level hoop comes back to bite you … anywhere besides the NBA playoffs. This year’s eventual champions, the Knicks, are that fact personified: clawing back from down 29 points in the second half of Game 4 to complete the largest comeback in NBA finals history. They knew what all great, connected, fearless teams know: it’s never over until it’s over. All it takes is, as captain Jalen Brunson put it after the Game 4 comeback, “chipping away”.

Steph needs help

Listen, maybe it’s just over. But Stephen Curry is still really, really good, and I for one am tired of watching him flame out in the play-in or, at best, the first round year after year. At this point, the 2022 championship feels like a fever dream. Maybe the answer is a 2024 Olympics-style reunion with old rival LeBron James. Maybe the long-rumored Giannis Antetokounmpo pipedream somehow comes to fruition. The Golden State Warriors are running short on time. They need solutions, and quickly. Otherwise, the flashes of brilliance Curry still delivers every spring will become increasingly fleeting, until one day they’re gone.

The Twitter DMs were real

Do we have concrete proof that the controversial, mean (and, if we’re honest, occasionally hilarious) Twitter DMs leaked earlier this season actually came from the keyboard of Kevin Durant? Not exactly. But the evidence is mounting. The most damning exhibit may have been the first round of the playoffs, where Durant’s Houston Rockets were bounced by a Lakers squad relying on meaningful postseason minutes from not only LeBron James Sr, but also junior. Death by Luke Kennard is a pretty scathing indictment all by itself. The Rockets were a walking reminder that talent and chemistry are not the same thing. They looked discombobulated and unmoored with or without Durant in the lineup, but they often seemed to be having a lot more fun when he wasn’t.

Related: Burner account or not, Kevin Durant is bitter, petty and entirely relatable

The Hawks will be great next season

The Knicks won 16 of 19 games during their march to the title, but two of those three losses came in the first three games of the opening round. The opponent? A feisty Atlanta Hawks team that finally admitted defeat on the Trae Young experiment and embraced the future in the form of Jalen Johnson and his Most Improved Player running mate Nickeil Alexander-Walker. In exchange for Young, Atlanta landed the perfect veteran steward in CJ McCollum, who, as shocking as it may sound, was the only player in the entire postseason to consistently make the Knicks look mortal. Add in all that athleticism and depth, plus the No 8 pick in this year’s draft courtesy of the New Orleans Pelicans, and the Hawks should enter next season with a puncher’s chance in what promises to be a fascinating Eastern Conference.

Philly need to turn the page

Speaking of embracing the youth movement, there’s another team in the Eastern Conference that could stand to do the same. For a brief moment – around the start of the second round – it looked as though the stars were finally aligning for this moribund version of the Philadelphia 76ers. Joel Embiid looked like an MVP candidate again. Paul George didn’t look like a walking contractual albatross. Everything was clicking in a way that seemed to validate the grand vision that Daryl Morey had spent years chasing. Then the wheels came off. Morey is out of a job, and the underlying reality has reasserted itself. If there’s a path forward for Philadelphia, it probably doesn’t involve squeezing one more run out of Embiid and George. It involves turning the page, embracing the future, and building around Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe instead.

The Celtics should shake it up

There will be several coaches on the hot seat this summer. Joe Mazzulla, fresh off a Coach of the Year award, probably won’t be one of them. But he showed some serious warts in these playoffs – and, honestly, last year’s too – with his apparent unwillingness to stray from a three-point-heavy dogma even when circumstances demanded it. The pithy press conference quotes are cute and all. They become a lot less charming when your team keeps running aground on the same shoals every postseason. Beyond any tactical adjustments, the Boston Celtics have a major personnel decision to make. Jaylen Brown, the mercurial star who appeared to relish his months-long stint as the team’s No 1 option, may never have more trade value than he does right now. My takeaway? Sell high on Brown, and use the return to retool both the roster and the philosophy underpinning it.

Related: Ecstasy and chaos grip New York City after Knicks win long-sought NBA title – in pictures

The Timberwolves lost the trade

There was a time, not all that long ago, when the blockbuster trade that sent Julius Randle and Donte DiVincenzo to the Minnesota Timberwolves in exchange for Karl-Anthony Towns looked like a genuine win-win. While Towns didn’t exactly cover himself in glory during the title-clinching Game 5 of the NBA finals, that debate was settled this postseason. Randle once again proved more liability than asset when the games mattered most, while DiVincenzo will spend most, if not all, of next season recovering from an achilles tear. Meanwhile, Towns was indispensable during the Knicks’ march to the championship. He was particularly brilliant in Games 1 and 2 of the finals, helping set the tone for a dominant series victory and validating the gamble New York made when it acquired him.

Don’t make too much (or too little) of the regular season …

Somewhere between “the NBA regular season is irrelevant” and “the NBA regular season is the bible” lies a more nuanced truth: there is plenty to be gleaned from the six months between October and April, but none of it is definitive. Take, for example, the Detroit Pistons, who steamrolled the Eastern Conference for much of the regular season but carried glaring playoff-centric flaws that were obvious to anyone looking closely enough. Or the Knicks, who faced the opposite problem: a team that wasn’t blowing the doors off opponents during the 82-game marathon because it was clearly ironing out wrinkles in preparation for the 16-game sprint. The signs were there all along, not least when they captured the NBA Cup in December. On the other side of the ledger sat the Spurs. Their regular-season dominance over the Thunder turned out to be more than a curiosity; it was a preview. When the Spurs knocked Oklahoma City out in the conference finals, the warning signs had already been there for months. So by all means, take lessons from the regular season. Just don’t mistake them for gospel.

… and don’t trade for James Harden

There’s a famous meme, born from a scene in Arrested Development, in which one character asks: “Did it work for those people?” The response: “No, it never does. I mean, these people somehow delude themselves into thinking it might ... but it might work for us.” That, in a nutshell, is the James Harden experience. Every few years, a different NBA front office succumbs to a kind of selective amnesia. Executives are charmed by Harden’s remarkably regular-season production and convince themselves that this time will be different. They willingly suppress the memory of the playoff shortcomings that have followed him throughout his career until, inevitably, those memories come flooding back in painful fashion. Then comes the disappointment. Then the trade request. Then the wheel spins again. I will never fully understand how the optimism persists, but the Cleveland Cavaliers became the latest franchise to learn the same lesson as so many before them: when the calendar turns to April, May and June, Harden simply cannot be treated as a dependable No 1 option.

Related: When I chose the New York Knicks, I was also choosing to live. This title moment is what it was all for

A savvy front office is paramount

There was one trait shared by the three best teams in the playoff field – the Thunder, Spurs and Knicks – they were run by smart, shrewd front offices. Their intelligence manifested in different ways. Oklahoma City and San Antonio largely built through the draft. New York took a more aggressive path, assembling their core through trades and free agency. But all three organizations excelled at the same fundamental task: roster construction. You may not have the Thunder’s seemingly endless depth. You may not have the Spurs’ lottery fortune. You may not possess the je ne sais quoi, culture and sheer stubborn resilience that powered the Knicks to a championship. But putting smart people in charge is one of the few competitive advantages available to every franchise.

You can win with a small guard

Becky Hammon is a brilliant basketball mind, a damn good coach and, unfortunately, the source of a quote that will live in infamy. “If your best player is small, you’re not winning,” Hammon said in 2023 while arguing that Brunson, listed at 6ft 2in, could never be a true No 1 option on a championship team. Given that Brunson now possesses both an Eastern Conference finals MVP and an NBA finals MVP trophy, it goes without saying that the take did not age particularly well. If the NBA teaches the same lesson over and over, this season hammered it home more forcefully than most: there is no single blueprint for superstardom. Brunson has flaws. Plenty of them. He is also one of the most outrageously clutch players the league has ever seen. The goal is not to find a flawless basketball demigod molded in the image of ames or Michael Jordan. The goal is to find a truly great player, one capable of leading a locker room and elevating teammates, then intelligently and relentlessly build a roster that amplifies his strengths. The Knicks’ radio broadcaster Tyler Murray captured it perfectly in his final call of the season: “The 2026 New York Knicks will forever be remembered as the team that proved no lead is too big, and no guard is too small.”