OG Anunoby appears to be ready for the Eastern Conference finals.
For the second straight day, he practiced fully, and while the standout two-way wing wouldn’t guarantee he would be available for Game 1 on Tuesday against either the Cavaliers or the Pistons, it sure sounds that will be the case.
For starters, he is able to sprint.
“Getting better each day,” Anunoby said after Saturday’s practice, which included some full-contact work. “Feel good today.”
OG Anunoby has been working his way back from an injury. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post
The Knicks may have dodged a bullet, unlike two years ago when a hamstring injury sidelined Anunoby early in a second-round series loss to the Pacers.
He injured the hamstring in Game 2 of that series and tried to play in Game 7, but clearly wasn’t healthy. When this injury happened, he didn’t get flashbacks.
“It wasn’t like the previous ones, for sure,” he said. “So, it was better than before. … I never think about the past. Just dealing with it in the moment. It didn’t feel as bad as it had in the past when it happened, so just knowing that, just trying to improve it day-by-day.”
Getting Anunoby back is obviously a major plus for the Knicks, even if they did crush the 76ers by a combined 44 points in the two games that he missed. Both Landry Shamet and Miles McBride played well in his absence. But Anunoby is a difference-maker at both ends of the floor.
At the time of his injury, he was averaging 21.4 points, 7.5 rebounds, 1.9 steals and 1.1 blocks in the playoffs. He was also shooting a sensational 53.8 percent on 4.9 attempts from 3-point range, and the Knicks were outscoring the opposition by 20 points per 100 possessions with him on the court.
“To go through that is not fun during this time of the year, because a lot of things come into play. We’re trying to get to the top of the mountain during this time of the year. You need some luck, you need some skill, you need everybody to be healthy to a certain degree,” coach Mike Brown said. “All that stuff, you want, knock on wood, to be going the right way for you whenever game time comes.”
New York Knicks forward OG Anunoby speaking to the media after practice at the Knicks Training facility in Tarrytown, New York on May 16, 2026. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post
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While much has been made of the Knicks’ extended, nine-day layoff following their sweep of the 76ers, the one major bonus is it has given Anunoby time to get healthy.
He will have had 12 days off by the time Game 1 rolls around on Tuesday.
“He’s been back. He looks good to me,” Mikal Bridges said. “So, I think maybe the crowd, maybe the fans and media worried a little bit more, but I know how OG works and how his body is. I think he’ll be alright.”
Anthony Edwards and the Timberwolves ended their playoff run with Friday night’s 139-109 loss to the Spurs.Photograph: Abbie Parr/AP
The Minnesota Timberwolves are out of the NBA playoffs. It’s a miracle it took this long. In their first-round series against the Denver Nuggets, they saw two starters and another key reserve suffer significant injuries. The Nuggets entered the series on a 12-game winning streak and were favored from the jump. After somehow winning that series in six games, finding Denver’s weak points and pummeling them until they broke, the Wolves met an even more daunting opponent in the San Antonio Spurs. Though they’d have been forgiven for tiredly accepting a sweep, the Wolves swiped Game 1 on the Spurs’ home floor, then a close Game 4 at home. After that, the tank finally ran empty. But even in the losses – including Friday night’s in Game 6 – the Wolves found ways to frighten. They’d go down 18-3 and then tie the game by the end of the first quarter. They’d tighten a 29-point deficit to 12 entering half-time. The tenacity and spite they played with was a finite resource, but at times this postseason it was potent enough to convince me otherwise.
The Wolves were not the deepest team in these playoffs, nor the most consistent. They may lie closer to the bottom of those categories than the top. After their elimination, coach Chris Finch and players alike admitted they’d failed to take the regular season seriously enough, failing to set themselves up well for the high-stakes games of April and May. (My old teachers probably shared a similar sense of disappointment in me before finals.) And yet this odd bunch regularly play some of the most soulful basketball in the NBA. Anthony Edwards can take over a game at any time, either by shooting deep threes or acrobatic layups. French albatross Rudy Gobert anchors the defense, which the team plays with astonishing vigor at its best. The best athletes are sometimes so clinical that they produce a rather emotionless watching experience, but certain passages of Timberwolves basketball inspire in me feelings of pure glee.
The Wolves are also mercifully resistant to caring about how others perceive them. A segment from a news conference after Game 2 against Denver played out like a scene from The Office. Edwards chose the phrase “beat that shit” to describe his aspirational rebounding performance, making teammate Julius Randle dissolve into giggles. During the Nuggets series, Wolves forward Jaden McDaniels announced the team’s plan: they would go right at the opposition, attacking the rim, because Denver’s players were “all bad defenders”. McDaniels then proceeded to list several Nuggets, including those who are generally considered good defenders. (Naturally, he wore a black hoodie while delivering this quote, hood up.) At the end of Game 4, McDaniels hit a layup with two seconds left, the Wolves’ lead already safe, which angered the Nuggets’ Nikola Jokić into sprinting down the court to get in McDaniels’s face with a vigor rarely seen in his defensive efforts. McDaniels simply laughed, untroubled by the seething 6ft 11in man-mountain. Then he coolly scored 32 points in Game 6, the best performance of anyone that night, to close out the series.
Nikola Jokic sprints after Jaden McDaniels layup highlights
Even against the Spurs, the Wolves showed their cunning. After losing the opener, the Spurs took the next two games and appeared in full control. “I’m built for this,” an elated Victor Wembanyama, the Spurs’ irreplaceable 7ft 4in dynamo, said of the challenging physicality of the playoffs. “I love this more than anything else.” Just as everyone was talking about Wemby’s implacable calm, his God-given mindset, the Wolves made him snap. In Game 4, McDaniels and Naz Reid picked and poked away at Wemby’s inflatable-bendy-man body until the typically calm Frenchman nailed Reid in the face with a vicious elbow. Wemby was ejected, and in his absence the Wolves secured a narrow win. “Today is Mother’s Day,” Edwards said after the game, his mother having died in 2015. “I couldn’t lose this game for her.” As for Reid, don’t worry about his neck. “Pain is weakness leaving the body,” he declared, to chuckles from his teammates.
It’s a small tragedy that the Wolves almost certainly won’t win a championship without drastic changes to their roster. The Oklahoma City Thunder, who eliminated the Wolves en route to winning the Larry O’Brien last year, are primed to begin a dynasty. The Spurs are young and have almost no playoff experience; they may already be good enough to win the title this year, but they’re still nowhere near their final form. In those transcendent moments when the Wolves are operating with full intensity in sync with one another, they can match those teams. But they can’t do it over the course of a seven-game series. Talk now will turn to trading Randle, who could rarely get his offense going during these playoffs.
Still, the Wolves’ legacy as an occasionally brilliant motley crew who delight in upset victories is a good one. Very few analysts picked them to beat the Nuggets this year, or the Lakers in last year’s playoffs, or the Nuggets the year before that, but the Wolves won all those series. Though they don’t have the silverware to show for it, they’re as responsible for injecting entertainment into the playoffs as any other team. I look forward to furiously defending their honor when NBA fans of the 2040s blame them for not going deeper into the playoffs during this era.
The Wolves’ run ending here is probably for the best. Oklahoma City are waiting in the next round, and since December, it’s been clear that only the Spurs are capable of asking the Thunder potentially unanswerable questions. The entire season has been building towards that dialogue spread over a series, and now we’ll get to see it. I’ll relish those games when they come, but for now, I’m sad I won’t get to watch the playoff Wolves again until next year.
Apr 22, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Detroit Tigers starting pitcher Casey Mize (12) throws a pitch against the Milwaukee Brewers in the first inning at Comerica Park. Mandatory Credit: Lon Horwedel-Imagn Images | Lon Horwedel-Imagn Images
Casey Mize returned in fine form in this one, but the Detroit Tigers remain hamstrung offensively. The Toronto Blue Jays are having similar issues, but they pulled this one out in the tenth against Tyler Holton, and Louis Varland closed out the Tigers to even the series at a game apiece on Saturday afternoon.
Saturday’s matchup featured a sight for sore eyes, as Casey Mize returned to the bump after a few weeks out with a minor groin strain. The Tigers need him, and plenty of other players, back in action. Mize settled in pretty nicely in the top of the first. George Springer grounded out, and after Yohendrick Piñango reached on a swinging bunt, Mize got Vladimir Guerrero Jr. to ground to Hao-Yu Lee at third, and Lee started a double play to end the inning.
Lefty Mason Fluharty was on the mound for the Blue Jays as the opener, prompting AJ Hinch to bat Hao-Yu Lee third, playing third base, in order to get his a bat against the southpaw. Kevin McGonigle’s rough stretch continued with a soft fly out to start things off. Dillon Dingler was the DH in this one, and he and Hao-Yu Lee had trouble with Fluharty’s extreme angle to the plate, taking called strike threes.
Mize whiffed Kazumo Okamoto for the first out of the second, and Dalton Varsho lined out sharply to center. Jesus Sanchez dug in and he too struck out over a splitter, shooting Mize some looks at he accepted his fate.
Matt Vierling led off the bottom half with a single back up the middle. Riley Greene was rung up on a pretty tough checked swing call. That was the end of Fluharty’s job with Greene dispatched, and John Schneider took the ball and gave it to Spencer Miles as the bulk guy. Spencer Torkelson whiffed on a mistake slider at the top of the zone. As Zach McKinstry fell behind 1-2, Vierling broke for second but didn’t get the best jump and was cut down by Tyler Heineman.
Mize went through the Blue Jays 7-8-9 in order to start the third inning. We’ve seen him a little sharper this year, but for his first start back he really didn’t look like he’d missed a beat.
Zach McKinstry flared a single into right field to start the bottom half. Wenceel Perez flew out, and Jake Rogers struck out. McGonigle pulled a single that moved McKinstry to third with two outs. Dillon Dingler followed by drawing a walk to load the bases, and Hinch turned to Gage Workman to pinch-hit for Lee instead of Colt Keith. It didn’t work out, as Workman chased a flurry of breaking balls and struck out.
Mize started the fourth with a nasty slider to punch George Springer. Piñango flew out and Guerrero’s struggles continued as he popped out to Torkelson to end the frame. The Tigers weren’t dialing in on Miles’ breaking stuff yet, and Vierling and Greene grounded out to start the bottom half. Torkelson missed a curveball over the middle for strike three, and it was on to the fifth.
Okamoto lifted a fly ball out to Riley Greene to start the inning. Varsho got a splitter that hung up over the middle of the plate first pitch and drilled a double to right field to give the Blue Jays their first threat in the game. Mize turned from splitters in the first at-bat against Sanchez, to sliders in this one and carved him up. Lenyn Sosa popped out to Workman to strand Varsho as Mize continued to look very good.
The Tigers weren’t having any luck against Miles. A pop-up from McKinstry to Okamoto saw the third baseman juggle the ball and then snatch it out of the air bare-handed. Wenceel Pérez’s struggles continued with a ground out to Okamoto. Pérez is striking out just 13.5 percent of the time and somehow cannot buy a hit this year. Jake Rogers came to the plate with a more cagey plan and stayed patient until Miles walked him. Miles stayed heavily breaking ball against McGonigle, bouncing one that got away from Heineman as Rogers scampered to second base. In a 1-2 count, Miles tried a front door swingback sinker and got a called strike three, but it was a ball and McGonigle correctly challenged it. He then swung over a curveball for strike three anyway.
After trying to be patient early on and getting chopped up by Mize’s splitter, the Blue Jays started swinging earlier through the middle of the game, but all it did was make for quick innings. Andrés Giménez flew out down the left field line as Greene made a fine sliding catch in foul territory. Heineman popped out, and Springer flew out, and Mize was through six scoreless with a pitch count at 71.
However, with Mize back off the IL with no rehab work, the Tigers didn’t want to push him too far, and so that was it for him, and it was a heck of a return to action. 6.0 IP, 0 ER, 2 H, 0 BB, 4 K. Mize got 10 whiffs on 42 swings, with the slider and splitter accounting for eight of those. With that, Mize’s ERA drops to 2.43 on the year, with a FIP of 2.67. The breakout year continues.
However, Spencer Miles day was done. RHP Braydon Fisher took over to face Dingler, Workman, and Vierling in the bottom of the sixth. On a 2-1 pitch, a called strike was challenged correctly by Dingler to get to 3-1 instead, but he ultimately grounded out. Workman struck out, but Vierling got an 0-1 slider over the middle and lined it into the Tigers’ bullpen for a 1-0 lead. Greene struck out on a slider, and we were onto the seventh with the Tigers up a run.
Of course, trying to take it easy on Mize meant that the Tigers bullpen would have to collect nine outs to win. Instead, Kyle Finnegan took over and immediately gave up a solo shot to Piñango, the first of his young career, on a first pitch splitter that carried just inside the right field foul pole. 1-1 game. Guerrero Jr. grounded out, and Okamoto flew out to Pérez. Finnegan walked the dangerous Varsho to put one on and Jesus Sanchez at the dish, but the right-hander got ahead 0-2 and Sanchez bounced out harnlessly to second.
Right-hander Tommy Nance took over for the Blue Jays in the bottom of the seventh and quickly dispatched Torkelson on a swinging strike three. McKinstry grounded one to Guerrero ranging toward second base, and the first baseman couldn’t hit the moving target that was Nance covering the bag. McKinstry reached, and Pérez worked ahead in the count. A couple of breaking balls evened the count at 2-2, and Pérez’s troubles with contact continued as he popped out to Heineman at home plate. With Jake Rogers down 0-1, McKinstry tried to steal second on a breaking ball thrown for strike two, but he was cut down by Heineman pretty easily, and we were onto the eighth.
Connor Seabold returned from the injured list yesterday, with Ricky Vanasco optioned to Toledo, and Seabold took over in the eighth from Finnegan. Lenyn Sosa grounded out to McGonigle to start things off. Giménez also grounded out to McGonigle. Davis Schneider pinch-hit for Heineman. A 1-1 fastball away was called a strike. Schneider challenged it incorrectly, leaving it 1-2 and the Blue Jays down to one challenge. A good fastball blew Schneider away to wrap up a brisk inning from Seabold. Welcome back, Connor.
Tyler Rogers, the closest thing to a submariner we seem to have left in the game, took over for the Blue Jays and punched out Rogers. McGonigle striped a hard ground ball just fair down the left field line for a single, but a nice play from Piñango prevented him from taking second. Dingler popped out to Okamoto at third, and Workman grounded out to Sosa to send us to the ninth.
As he did last night, Hinch turned to Kenley Jansen to hold the Blue Jays in place. The veteran closer got Springer to pop out in foul territory, with Gage Workman coming all the way over to the railing of the Tigers’ dugout to haul it in. Jansen tied Piñango in knots with a high, inside cut fastball for a whiff. That left it up to Guerrero, and the big man’s struggles contiinued as Jansen got in on him with a cutter a bit and he grounded out on a nice lunging play from McGonigle. Jansen is finally putting together consistent innings, which is a plus.
And so, it was walkoff time again, hopefully.
It wouldn’t be easy against hard-throwing Louis Varland. Vierling started it off with a ground out. Varland was firing 98-99 mph darts and got ahead of Riley Greene 0-2. Varland missed twice with soft stuff trying to get him to chase, and Greene eventually lined a single to left field. For some reason, Varland wasn’t trusting his fastball, and lollypopped a 2-2 slider over the middle. Torkelson was shortened up properly, and just lined a single up the middle. McKinstry stepped in, and surprisingly Hinch didn’t pinch hit Colt Keith. McKinstry grounded one to Sosa, who forced Torkelson at second while Greene took third. And finally it was Colt Keith time, hitting for Pérez.
Varland dropped in a knuckle curve for a first pitch strike, and then Keith chased a changeup well away. Another changeup bounced on the plate and Keith whiffed. The ball got away from Brandon Valenzuela, who replaced Heineman at catcher, but he was able to pounce on it and throw Keith out in time. On to the 10th.
Tyler Holton took over with Guerrero Jr. starting on second and this is where the lack of a lefty with better strikeout ability makes this situation a tough fit for the Tigers’ pen. Zack Short entered as the second baseman, taking over for Keith for defensive reasons. The Blue Jays were swinging away on the road, and Okamoto grounded one deep to third base, but Workman’s arm was plenty. The main reason for Holton was to try and control Varsho, but he couldn’t. Varsho lined a sinker back into center field for an RBI single, and a 2-1 Blue Jays lead.
Myles Straw pinch-hit for Sanchez to get the platoon matchup but flew out to McKinstry in right. Holton threw a cutter well down first pitch, and Sosa just golfed it to left field for a double. Greene was able to get the ball in to prevent Varsho scoring, but the situation was grim as Ernie Clement pinch-hit for Giménez. He lifted a harmless fly ball to left for the final out, but the Tigers now had to answer back.
With Short at second, Jake Rogers started things off, breaking his bat and grounding out to Clement at shortstop with Short unable to advance. McGonigle grounded a Varland offering to Guerrero at first for the second out, and Dingler chased a knuckle curve down for strike three to end it.
The Tigers pitched and defended well in this one, and it’s encouraging to see that on back-to-back days considering how they’ve been tracking. Still not enough production coming out of this lineup though, particularly in the power department.
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After the Yankees took Game 1, the Subway Series resumes tonight in Queens.
The Yankees’ ace, Cam Schlittler, allowed just one run — a Juan Soto homer — in 6 ²/₃ innings on the mound, in the 5-2 Game 1 victory. A three-run third inning opened up scoring for the Yankees, who added runs in the fifth and ninth innings as well.
In addition to losing the game, the Mets also lost starting pitcher Clay Holmes to a fractured fibula after his leg got hit with a line drive going 111-mph.
Yankees vs. Mets: what to know
When: May 16, 7:15 p.m. ET
Where: Citi Field (Queens, New York)
Channel: FOX
Streaming: DIRECTV (try it free)
Game 2 of the Subway Series is airing on a different network than last night’s game — here’s everything you need to know to tune in.
Yankees vs. Mets start time (May 16)
The second game of the 2026 Subway Series is scheduled to begin at 7:15 p.m. ET tonight, May 16.
How to watch Yankees vs. Mets for free
If you don’t have cable or a TV antenna, you’ll need a live TV streaming service to catch tonight’s game for free.
DIRECTV is our top pick for watching sports live for free — the five-day free trial of both its MySports and MyNews genre packs includes FOX, where tonight’s Subway Series game is airing. When the trial is over, you’ll pay as low as $.99/month for your first two months and gain access to 20+ live sports or news channels, depending on the pack you choose.
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Yankees vs. Mets starting pitchers
Carlos Rodón (0-0, 6.23 ERA) will start for the Yankees; Huascar Brazobán (2-1, 2.14 ERA) starts for the Mets.
This article was written by Angela Tricarico, Commerce Streaming Reporter for Post Wanted Shopping, Page Six, and Decider.com. Angela keeps readers up to date with cord-cutter-friendly deals, and information on how to watch your favorite sports teams, TV shows, and movies on every streaming service. Not only does Angela test and compare the streaming services she writes about to ensure readers are getting the best prices, but she’s also a superfan specializing in the intersection of shopping, tech, sports, and pop culture. When she’s not writing about (or watching) TV, movies, and sports, she’s also keeping up on the underrated perfume dupes at Bath & Body Works and testing headphones. Prior to joining Decider and The New York Post in 2023, she wrote about streaming and consumer tech at Insider Reviews.
WASHINGTON, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA - MAY 15, 2026: Natty the new mascot for the Washington Nationals plays with chew toys on the field during batting practice prior to an interleague game against the Baltimore Orioles at Nationals Park on May 15, 2026 in Washington, District of Columbia. The Nationals beat the Orioles, 3-2. (Photo by Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images
Last night was tense at the end, but the Nats pulled out the win thanks to Daylen Lile and solid pitching. Now they will have a chance to get back to .500. The last 15 times they were in this position, they have come up short. Hopefully, the 16th time can be the charm.
The Nats are rolling out a lefty heavy lineup against Chris Bassitt. Jose Tena will get the start at third base and hit third. Nasim Nunez will be back in the lineup at second base. Jorbit Vivas stays in the lineup as the DH. Keibert Ruiz will get the nod behind the plate in this one. Cade Cavalli will be the man on the mound as the Nats attempt to reach that .500 milestone.
The O’s are only making one change to their lineup. Leody Taveras will be in center field over Colton Cowser. Other than that we are seeing the same O’s squad as last night. Gunnar Henderson had a couple hits last night, so hopefully that is not the start of an explosion for the O’s struggling star. Veteran right hander Chris Bassitt will be on the mound this afternoon.
This is a big game for the Nats. Not only is it a chance to get to that .500 mark, it is also a chance to get a series win over the O’s. The crowd was great last night and it should be packed again today. Hopefully the boys put together another good performance. Follow along down below in the comments and let’s go Nats.
KANSAS CITY, MO - APRIL 22: Chris Bassitt #40 of the Baltimore Orioles pitches during the game between the Baltimore Orioles and the Kansas City Royals at Kauffman Stadium on Wednesday, April 22, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Tanner Gatlin/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
Where to watch: MASN/MASN+ or FS1 (National)
Probable pitchers: RHP Chris Bassitt (3-2, 5.21 ERA, 26 K) vs. RHP Cade Cavalli (1-2, 4.02 ERA, 44 K)
After an incredibly unlucky night for the offense on Friday, the Orioles look to even this season’s first Battle of the Beltways series tonight in DC. Most of Birdland doesn’t want to hear luck as an excuse for another Orioles’ loss, but it was an undeniable part of last night’s 3-2 loss in the District. Baltimore put up a staggering 16 hard-hit balls against Zack Littell and the Nationals’ bullpen—only to be rewarded with six hits and two runs.
Strikeouts and clutch hitting were still ever-present problems for Baltimore in the loss. The O’s struck out 10 times to raise their season total to 414—the fourth-worst mark in baseball. The Birds also went 1-f0r-6 with RISP, as they failed to raise their mediocre season average of .246 with runners on second or third (16th in MLB). Still, their frequency of quality contact would have yielded more runs on a different night and possibly have helped the O’s steal Game 1.
Baltimore will look to right those offensive wrongs tonight against a relatively unknown opposing pitcher. The Nats send 2020 1st-round pick Cade Cavalli to the mound, looking to limit the talented-but-inconsistent Orioles order. The 27-year-old right-hander made his debut in 2022, but only has 20 Major League appearances since then, thanks to two separate Tommy John surgeries.
The Orioles will want to attack Cavalli early and sit on the Oklahoma natives’ big fastball. Cavalli is averaging just 4.5 IP per start this season, and has only completed 5+ innings in four of his starts. The 6’4” righty’s best pitch this year has been his changeup vs. lefties, but his fastball has been hit so hard that it’s hard for him to set up the offspeed pitch. Left-handed batters are hitting .525 with a .750 slugging percentage against the four-seamer that sits in the upper 90s but has below-average movement.
Opposing Cavalli is the frustratingly inconsistent Chris Bassitt. The 37-year-old right-hander has four starts this season in which he has allowed one or fewer earned runs. In his other four starts, he’s allowed 19 combined earned runs and an opponent batting average of .382.
Despite his inconsistent nature, the Orioles seem to win a lot with Bassitt on the mound. Baltimore has won six straight Bassitt starts while scoring an average of 6.8 runs/game in those outings. Bassitt has made two career starts in Nationals Park, both in 2022 with the Mets. The now-Orioles right-hander dominated in those outings, tossing 13 combined shutout innings, while limiting Washington to nine hits and striking out 12. In 21 career innings vs. the Nats, Bassitt has yet to allow a run.
The Athletic recently took a look at one free agent who each NHL team should try to sign during the off-season. When it came to the Montreal Canadiens, The Athletic's Arpon Basu argued that the Habs should consider making a push for former New York Rangers captain Jacob Trouba if he hits the market this off-season.
"This pick is more in theory than in practice, because the Canadiens tried hard at the trade deadline to add a physical, right-shot defenseman. With the uncertain status of prospect David Reinbacher and the continued right-left imbalance on their blue line, a player such as Trouba on a short-to-medium-term contract would be helpful," Basu wrote.
While Basu noted that there is a real chance that Trouba probably wouldn't sign with the Habs, he would have the potential to be a good fit on their blueline. The 32-year-old blueliner showed this season with the Anaheim Ducks that he can still be an impactful top-four defenseman. With this, he could provide the Canadiens' blueline with a nice boost if signed this off-season.
Trouba appeared in 81 games this season with the Ducks, where he recorded 10 goals, 25 assists, 35 points, 143 hits, and 149 blocks. With numbers like these, he not only provided the Ducks with a lot of physicality but also showed that he can still provide some offense from the point. With this, he could be a good fit on the Canadiens.
If the Canadiens signed Trouba this off-season, he could work well in their top four and on their penalty kill. Yet, even if Trouba played on Montreal's bottom pairing, he would still have the chance to be a nice pickup for the Habs. Let's see if they target him from here.
NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 15: Clay Holmes #35 of the New York Mets walks off the mound after pitching during the fifth inning against the New York Yankees at Citi Field on May 15, 2026 in the Queens borough of New York City. (Photo by Ishika Samant/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Mets officially placed starter Clay Holmes on the 15-day IL after suffering a fractured fibula in last night’s game against the Yankees. To take his place on the roster, the Mets called up right-handed reliever Joey Gerber from Triple-A to take his spot on the roster.
Holmes suffered the fractured fibula in the fourth inning after taking a comebacker off the bat of Spencer Jones. The ball was hit 111.1 mph off the bat and led to a visit from Carlos Mendoza and the trainer. Holmes was able to stay in the game for the fifth inning, which seems improbable now given the diagnosis. Mendoza didn’t mince words after the game, saying that the team’s de facto ace and ERA leader “be down for a long time”.
The team has not yet given a timeline for Holmes’ return to action, though it seems safe to say it would come after the All-Star Break. The team won’t need a replacement starter until Wednesday’s game against the Nationals. Until then, they will roll with Huascar Brazobán (as an opener) and David Peterson as the bulk arm today, Freddy Peralta in tomorrow’s series finale, Christian Scott on Monday, and Nolan McLean on Tuesday.
The options to replace Holmes in the rotation include moving Tobias Myers or Sean Manaea from the bullpen to the rotation, or exploring some of the young arms in Triple-A, including Jack Wenninger, Zach Thornton, and Jonah Tong. For now, they will go with Gerber, who will likely stick around until Tuesday. Gerber, who was acquired in a trade with the Rays over the offseason, has made one appearance for New York this season. In that relief appearance, he tossed two scoreless innings, recording five of his six outs via the strikeout. He walked one and allowed two hits.
Did someone leak the “script” for the NBA’s Eastern Conference finals?
In a mistake sure to motivate the Pistons and provide fodder for conspiracy theorists who believe sports are fixed, ABC affiliates from Alabama to California, South Carolina and Nebraska aired a commercial promoting the Knicks-Cavaliers conference finals series, according to Awful Announcing.
The only problem is that the Pistons beat the Cavaliers, 115-94, in Game 6 of their conference semifinals series Friday night, setting up a winner-take-all Game 7 at 8 p.m. ET on Sunday.
ABC wants to get you hyped up for Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals between the Knicks and the… Cavaliers? pic.twitter.com/YLj9NvDXTA
— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) May 16, 2026
New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson reacts after scoring during the first quarter during Game 4 against the 76ers. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post
The Pistons are a 4.5-point favorite at FanDuel.
ABC and ESPN will air the entire Eastern Conference finals.
“The Cavs eye another upset,” the commercial began, showing video of the Cavaliers with an advantage over the Pistons, “while the Knicks carry the dreams of all of New York.”
The tease then showed a promo for Cavaliers at Knicks in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals at 3:30 p.m. Sunday, when it would have been the standalone game.
All that would have been the case if the Cavaliers had finished off the Pistons in Game 6 at home Friday night, but Detroit rebounded from a tough home overtime loss in Game 5 to force Game 7.
The promo that aired … for a game that won’t happen. @awfulannouncing/XCleveland Cavaliers’ James Harden (1) shoots between Detroit Pistons’ Jalen Duren (0) and Daniss Jenkins (24) in the second half of Game 6 of a second-round NBA basketball playoffs series Friday, May 15, 2026, in Cleveland. AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki
Star Cade Cunningham led Detroit with 21 points in a balanced effort, while Donovan Mitchell had a rough night for the Cavaliers with a minus-25 rating despite scoring 18 points.
Instead, the series will start Tuesday night — either with the Cavaliers at Madison Square Garden or with the Knicks visiting the Pistons in a rematch from last year’s first-round series.
So, the network has plenty of time between Sunday night’s Game 7 in Detroit and Tuesday night to promote the correct two teams squaring off without getting button-happy.
It's looking more and more likely that OG Anunoby will be ready to return when the Knicks start the Eastern Conference Finals next week after going through another full round of practice Saturday.
Anunoby, who has missed the final two games of the 76ers series due to a right hamstring injury sustained late in the Knicks' Game 2 win, got through a full practice on consecutive days and told the media afterwards, including the Associated Press' Brian Mahoney, that he feels good.
“It didn’t feel as bad as the past when it happened,” Anunoby said. “So knowing that, just trying to improve it day by day.”
Anunoby isn't a stranger to injuries, but this particular strain seemed less severe from the start. SNY's Ian Begley reported last week that the strain was "minor" and there was optimism Anunoby would be back sooner rather than later.
The Knicks listed Anunoby as questionable for both Game 3 and 4, but the forward's services were not needed as New York handled their business in completing the four-game sweep of the Sixers. Now, with the series between the Cavaliers and Pistons going the distance, wrapping up on Sunday, Anunoby and the Knicks will have until Tuesday before Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals begins.
“I think everyone’s excited for the games to start, so just letting the other series play out,” Anunoby said. “So if it was tomorrow — it’s going to be Tuesday now — just be ready whenever it is.”
“He’s been back and he looks good to me,” Mikal Bridges said. “So I think maybe the crowd, maybe the fans and media worried a little bit more, but I know how OG works and how his body is, so I think he’ll be all right.”
Anunoby is averaging 21.4 points in the postseason while shooting 61.9 percent, including 53.8 percent from three-point range. He's also been the team's best defender and overall best player through the first two rounds of the postseason. They'll need Anunoby's production and defense to go up against either Cleveland or Detroit if they hope to make it to the NBA Finals for the first time in almost three decades.
LeBron James should retire from the NBA, according to one Hall of Famer.
But his reasoning has nothing to do with James’ current skillset.
Paul Pierce said James should hang up his sneakers because he believes critics are harsh on him as a 41-year-old in the NBA.
Pierce added the believed some of the NBA’s greatest players in James’ class did not receive the same treatment in the twilight years of their respective careers.
Paul Pierce says he thinks LeBron James should retire:
“Just like for the simple fact that at the age that he still receives the criticism that he still does. The greats wasn’t getting this criticism late. Nobody was criticizing Kobe when he wasn’t going to the playoffs in his… pic.twitter.com/1gzMrMvQwi
“Yeah, I think he should, man,” Pierce said on former Celtics and Nets teammate Kevin Garnett’s “KG: Certified” podcast. “Just like for the simple fact that at the age that he still receives the criticism that he still does. The greats wasn’t getting this criticism late. Nobody was criticizing Kobe [Bryant] when he wasn’t going to the playoffs in his last year. They was just enjoying his moments. Like, the same with [Michael] Jordan in Washington.”
The Lakers’ season ended in the second round of the playoffs earlier this week when they were swept in four games by the defending champion Thunder.
Following the loss, James said he wasn’t sure what his future in the game held.
Sources told The California Post the same message, that James was unsure and had not yet decided what his next steps were.
“Obviously, we’re still fresh from losing — I don’t know what the future holds for me as it stands right now,” James said. ”I got a lot of time. I’ll sit back, like I said last year after we lost to Minnesota, I [will] go back and recalibrate with my family, talk with them and spend some time with them. And then when the time comes, obviously, you guys will know what I decide to do.”
LeBron James of the Los Angeles Lakers slams the ball during the first half at Barclays Center, Tuesday, Feb. 3, 2026, in Brooklyn, NY. Corey Sipkin for NY Post
The four-time league MVP and 22-time All-Star still played at a high level for Los Angeles this year with 20.9 points, 7.2 assists and 6.1 rebounds per game.
In the Game 4 loss to OKC, he recorded a 24-point, 12-rebound double-double.
Pierce added that he believes the critics who have harped on any of James’ issues have not put his age into the right perspective.
“For the simple fact that the man is 41, and we still critiquing him like he 25 and should be winning championships still,” Pierce said. “Just the criticism he gets still. He still gets criticism.”
PHILADELPHIA, PA - APRIL 30: The sneakers worn by Jayson Tatum #0 of the Boston Celtics during the game against the Philadelphia 76ers during Round One Game Six of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on April 30, 2026 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 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 Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MAY 15: Mason Miller #22 of the San Diego Padres reacts after getting the final out to beat the Seattle Mariners 2-0 at T-Mobile Park on May 15, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Olivia Vanni/Getty Images) | Getty Images
It was a pretty standard night for the San Diego Padres. Starter Randy Vásquez pitched six shutout innings (and probably could have gone deeper), the high-leverage relievers covered the seventh and eighth innings before Mason Miller closed out the game for his MLB-leading 14th save. All signs pointed to a 2-0 win for the Friars.
It wasn’t nearly as simple as that. The bullpen made it a little more difficult than they needed to, allowing the tying and go-ahead run to reach the plate multiple times for the Seattle Mariners. It was an uncharacteristic night in that regard. But, each time, they worked themselves out of the jam.
The gem from Vásquez rested the majority of a somewhat beleaguered bullpen. That will certainly help to back up Walker Buehler in tonight’s game, as well as Lucas Giolito in his debut Sunday.
Taking the mound
Logan Gilbert (SEA) v. Walker Buehler (SD)
Since 2022, Gilbert has been one of Seattle’s aces, posting an ERA below 3.50 in all but one year. That ability to take the mound consistently and pitch to solid results has marked his career as a valuable pitcher for the club. He’s been off to a similarly good start this season, pitching to a 3.78 ERA and 1.16 WHIP in 50 innings.
But he’s been even more dominant in his last seven starts, posting a 2.97 ERA and averaging 5 2/3 innings. The Padres will have to take advantage of the few mistakes that Gilbert makes if they hope to take Game 2.
Buehler has been a solid back end option for the Friars, but hasn’t impressed enough to ensure his roster spot. His performance has been the lesser of two evils more than its stood out from the rest. He owns a 5.20 ERA in 36 1/3 innings.
His last start against the St. Louis Cardinals was solid. He gave up two runs over six full innings against the Cards. Buehler has yet to find a consistent rhythm on the mound. If he can do that tonight it would be a major relief for any rotation concerns that popped up with starter Griffin Canning’s tough performance on Thursday against the Milwaukee Brewers (6 ER, 1.2 IP).
Batter up!
The majority of the Padres’ lineup doesn’t have an abundance of experience against Gilbert, but some have produced well in their careers against him. Xander Bogaerts, Nick Castellanos and Gavin Sheets each have a batting average over .270, with Castellanos batting .375 with a 1.125 OPS against the right-hander. Expect those three to be in tonight’s lineup.
Jackson Merrill, CF
Fernando Tatis Jr., 2B
Manny Machado, 3B
Gavin Sheets, 1B
Xander Bogaerts, SS
Miguel Andujar, DH
Ramón Laureano, LF
Nick Castellanos, RF
Rodolfo Durán, C
It’s unlikely to be the offensive blowout the Friars need, but they should be able to scratch some runs across the board to back Buehler up. The Padres didn’t face Gilbert in their last series against Seattle, they’ll need to solve him to ensure a series win tonight.
Relief corps
It was somewhat of a surprise for Vásquez to exit after the sixth. He had been efficient, needing just 79 pitches to get through the first six frames. But a trio of left-handed batters were due up in Luke Raley, J.P. Crawford and Dominic Canzone.
Manager Craig Stammen decided to go with lefty Adrian Morejon for the more favorable matchup. The Mariners countered by pinch-hitting with righties Connor Joe and Rob Refsnyder, but Morejon made it out of the inning.
Setup man Jason Adam pitched a shaky eighth inning. After allowing two runners to reach base on a single and a walk, Adam was relieved for Miller who would pitch a four-out save.
Miller had to work to get out of the eighth, throwing 12 pitches to do so. He loaded the bases when Randy Arozarena singled on a broken-bat infield single. But he struck out Joe in a seven-pitch battle to end the threat. He gave up a walk and a single in the ninth but achieved all three outs via the strikeout to slam the door on Seattle.
Tonight, that means Miller will likely be unavailable since he threw 34 pitches. But Jeremiah Estrada, Alek Jacob, Ron Mariaccio, Yuki Matsui, Wandy Peralta and Bradgley Rodriguez. The Friars have a nine-man bullpen until Giolito is activated to the roster Sunday, so Jacob will likely be used in tonight’s game before he is sent back to Triple-A.
The Mets have recalled right-hander Joey Gerber from Triple-A Syracuse, the club announced Saturday.
The move is the corresponding move to officially placing right-hander Clay Holmes on the 15-day injured list after the starter sustained a fractured fibula in Friday night's 5-2 loss to the Yankees.
Gerber made one appearance with the Mets earlier this season. He allowed two hits and a walk while striking out five over 2.0 innings on April 13 before he went on the IL himself with a right finger blister. For his career, the righty has appeared in 20 big league games, with 17 of them coming in his debut season of 2020 with Seattle.
Gerber, acquired in an offseason deal for cash with Tampa, has a 3.27 ERA and 1.091 WHIP over 22 innings with 15 strikeouts to six walks over three seasons.
The 29-year-old has surrendered 10 runs (nine earned) on 13 hits and four walks and nine strikeouts over 10.0 innings and nine bullpen appearances at Triple-A this season
The injury to Holmes occurred when a Spencer Jones hard-hit liner up the middle struck the starter's leg. The veteran was shaken up, but remained in the game and recorded one out in the fifth inning before he was removed.
"He's going to be down for a long time," manager Carlos Mendoza said after the game, adding the injury was a "huge blow" for the club.
DETROIT (AP) — The Toronto Blue Jays could be without right-hander José Berríos for the remainder of the season after the veteran pitcher is scheduled to undergo elbow surgery Wednesday.
Blue Jays manager John Schneider said Saturday that Dr. Keith Meister will repair a stress fracture in Berríos’ elbow and also evaluate possible ligament damage during the procedure. The team will not know the full extent of the injury or Berríos’ timetable for recovery until the surgery is completed.
“There may be some ligament stuff going on,” Schneider said.
Berríos, 31, has not pitched in the majors this season after elbow inflammation was first detected during a routine MRI while he was attempting to join Puerto Rico for the World Baseball Classic in spring training. A later examination revealed the stress fracture.
Berríos tried to work his way back, making four rehab starts at Triple-A Buffalo, but continued discomfort after his May 3 outing prompted another visit with Meister. He struggled during the rehab assignment, with a 10.67 ERA over 14 1/3 innings.
Last season, Berríos went 9-5 with a 4.17 ERA in 31 appearances for Toronto before landing on the injured list in September with elbow inflammation. He missed the postseason as the Blue Jays fell to the Los Angeles Dodgers in the World Series.