Knicks Bulletin: ‘There’s no room to feel sorry for ourselves’

ATLANTA, GA - APRIL 23: Josh Hart #3 of the New York Knicks drives to the basket during the game against the Atlanta Hawks during Round One Game Three of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on April 23, 2026 at State Farm Arena in Atlanta, Georgia. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Adam Hagy/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Shout-out Mike Brown for losing Game 3 by one point, going four-against-five for the whole first half.

Shout-out Mikal Bridges, for helping folks forget about him and teaching the world that basketball was meant to be a four-player sport.

Here’s the latest from the ATL.

Mike Brown

On the Game 3 loss and the series outlook:
“The reality of it is, it’s a seven-game series for a reason. Stuff’s going to happen. Plenty of teams have been down 1-2, even OKC was down 1-2 last year and they ended up winning it. I’m not saying we’re going to win. … This should sting. We gave ourselves a chance knowing we didn’t play our best basketball, so it should sting. We need to feel it and be locked in for the next games.”

On his late-game play around Brunson:
“We cleared the side of the floor for him. That’s what we wanted to do. We wanted to zipper on the top of the floor and clear that right side of the floor for him ‘cause that’s what he’s comfortable doing and told him, ‘go win it.’”

On the free-throw discrepancy in Game 3:
“They’re closing out hard. And when they close out hard, we gotta drive the basketball. I do think it’s a tough game for the officials to officiate. But I know we got fouled on a few of the drives that didn’t get called. It’s tough to see 20-26 in a one-possession game when you know for sure there were a couple of fouls that should’ve been called.”

On his lineup decisions going forward and the possibility of benching Bridges:
“I mean, I’m not even thinking about that right now. But in the same breath, I’ve said it before, like you said, we have to look at everything, but I’m thinking still about the game and what we could’ve done better and all that other stuff before we get into that.”

On Bridges’ performance and the need for a bounceback:
“I’m not concerned. Mikal is a pro. He’s been there. He’s played hundreds of basketball games, so he’ll be fine.”

On choosing a small lineup for the final defensive play:
“The way the game was being played, the different runs we made and the different combinations I threw out there, I just went with what I felt the game called for at that time.This is what the game called for, and that’s what I went with.”

On what hurt the Knicks:
“They did a good job of taking care of the basketball. They were pretty aggressive. Atlanta, they’re trying to get up in us, they’re trying to speed us up, they’re playing physical, and when you face that type of defense, you can’t play on your heels. You can’t be passive at all. You got to be able to rip that ball through and get to the rim. Or if they close out hard, you gotta be able to snap drive and get to the rim. That group did a pretty good job of it. They did a pretty good job of trying to get out in transition, too. And then they did a pretty good job of trying to get stops defensively. That’s something that we all have to recognize and embrace.”

On why Robinson is barely playing:
“We need something from everybody, and the reality of what happened was — we ended up going with KAT. KAT played a significant amount of minutes for us because he was rolling in that second half.”

Jalen Brunson

On failing to execute the game plan:
“I think he’s been great in making sure we’re in the right positions to be successful. It’s just on us to execute them.”

On what went wrong at the end of Game 3:
“I wish I had a better answer for you. I don’t know right now. There are a lot of things I need to be better at. That’s a missed opportunity for sure.”

On Knicks fans on the road:
“Whenever we play and we see Knicks fans here, Knicks fans make it known. So it’s always a pleasure. It’s always a very cool thing to hear. When you’re in the opposing arenas.”

Mitchell Robinson

On the Knicks’ coaching staff getting them ready for everything:
“[Our coaching staff] gets to every detail of the game, literally everything. They break it down, see what needs to be changed, what doesn’t, what we need, you know: bring more intensity out of us and stuff like that. I mean it’s been great learning from him. It’s been amazing.”

On the lack of physicality in Game 2:
“Hell no, we weren’t physical at all. So physicality, make everything get physical. You know, just play ball and stay locked in and just fight.”

On embracing the playoffs:
“Hell yeah, I love this (expletive). This (expletive) is fun. This is what it’s about. Getting in, getting active. I’m ready to go.”

On the Hack-a-Mitch strategy:
“I mean, yeah, I feel like they want to get me off the court, so I know I’m threatening they ass and it be like that.”

On his free-throw confidence:
“I’ve been shooting a lot of free throws. I’ve been getting the ball in the air. Routine is straight. So I’ve been shooting it good. Sometimes, it go in; sometimes, it don’t. Confidence still high, so still ready to go.”

On playing posteason games on the road:
“I like playing away. I think I play better away than I ever do at home. I don’t know, the energy. It’s like me versus the world.”

Mikal Bridges

On his turnovers in Game 3:
“Had more turnovers than I had the two games combined. Just sloppy overall. But I’ve just got to be better so I can be out there.”

On taking accountability for his no-show job:
“There’s no other way…it’s a tough one, I’ve got to take it on the chin and handle it how I’m supposed to. It’s going to suck, it is what it is. I’ve got to be better and help my team out there.”

On his overall struggles in Game 3:
“Just a bad turnover day for me. Got to clean that up, it’s on me. We’ve got to put it all together. Starts with me, I’ve got to be better. We’ve got to play as a team and fight for all 48.”

Karl-Anthony Towns

On the Game 3 loss:
“It hurts when you give yourself a chance to win – last game, this game, it hurts that we put ourselves in a position to win and we just didn’t close – it’s tough, but we have to keep our heads up.”

On what his stats mean in a loss:
“It don’t mean anything if you don’t win, honestly. That’s the answer.”

Josh Hart

On the urgency in the first-round series:
“We’re down, 2-1. Right now, there’s no room to feel sorry for ourselves. We’ve got another one on Saturday at 6 o’clock. So it’s a quick turnaround. We’ve got to make sure we regroup and go out focused for Game 4.”

On defending McCollum:
“I just tried to make it tough for him. That was the biggest thing, just try to make it tough for him, force him into tough shots.”

On his Game 3 shooting:
“I just…they just didn’t go. I thought the corner one was good. I gotta make ’em.”

On the 3-point shooting failing to work:
“I feel like we had good shots. We didn’t knock them down.”

MLB Batting Order Report: Sal Stewart cleaning up, Ben Rice getting more chances against lefties

Injuries continue to reshape lineups across the league, but a notable group of rookies and young players are settling into regular roles. A few weeks into the season, the trends are starting to come into focus.

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Arizona Diamondbacks

Geraldo Perdomo, Ketel Marte, and Corbin Carroll are always inside the top-three. Adrian Del Castillo has been hitting fourth or fifth against most RHP with Gabriel Moreno (oblique) sidelined, but Moreno is expected back next week. Lourdes Gurriel Jr. has started four of five since returning from his ACL tear, batting 4-5. Ildemaro Vargas has played 14 of 15 games between 1B and 2B. Jose Fernandez has filled in at multiple positions given some of the injuries this lineup has faced early on.

Athletics

Shea Langeliers has started all but one game this year. Both he and Nick Kurtz hit in the top three every day. Carlos Cortes is in the lineup against right-handers and often hitting third. Tyler Soderstrom plays against all left-handers. Zack Gelof is seeing some time in center field with Denzel Clarke (foot) sidelined.

Atlanta Braves

Drake Baldwin has started and hit second in every game this season. Dominic Smith is the regular DH against righties. Mauricio Dubón is the primary shortstop. Mike Yastrzemski plays left field against right-handers.

Baltimore Orioles

Adley Rutschman is back from the IL. Samuel Basallo has started against one of four lefties. He usually hits fifth when he plays. Jeremiah Jackson is the everyday second baseman. Leody Taveras is mostly in center field with Colton Cowser and Dylan Beavers in corner outfield/DH platoon roles.

Boston Red Sox

Ceddanne Rafaela has hit inside the top-two with Roman Anthony banged up the past two days. Jarren Duran's playing time has been a little sporadic of late. He could also be impacted by an Anthony injury. Marcelo Mayer is the starter at second base, but only in a strong-side platoon role. Masataka Yoshida has drawn starts against four of the past five RHPs, but again Anthony's back will determine how much opportunity persists.

Chicago Cubs

Seiya Suzuki has played all but two games since returning from the IL, and he continues to hit in the heart of the order. Pete Crow-Armstrong hasn't hit in the top half of the order since April 8th. Moisés Ballesteros is the regular DH against right-handed pitchers. Matt Shaw has started just five of 13 games since Suzuki returned.

Chicago White Sox

Munetaka Murakami hit sixth on Opening Day. He's hit 2-4 in every start since then, sitting just once. Miguel Vargas is an everyday, heart-of-the-order hitter. Colson Montgomery bats cleanup against RHP, sixth against LHP. Sam Antonacci has started six of eight since his debut, including one of three vs. LHP. Everson Pereira is playing close to every day and hitting 4-5 since returning from the IL.

Cincinnati Reds

Sal Stewart has hit cleanup in every game for the Reds. He's made two starts at second base. Matt McLain is still the primary two-hole hitter. Dane Myers has taken TJ Friedl's leadoff role against lefties. Rece Hinds has played seven of nine games in right field since Noelvi Marte was optioned to Triple-A.

Cleveland Guardians

George Valera has played seven of eight games against right-handers since returning, but he's sat against both lefties Cleveland has faced. Brayan Rocchio continues to handle shortstop with Gabriel Arias sidelined. Juan Brito is the primary second baseman. Kyle Manzardo has drawn just one start against seven southpaws this season.

Colorado Rockies

Edouard Julien has hit leadoff against 15 consecutive RHP. Mickey Moniak is a platoon hitter in a premium lineup slot against righties. Kyle Karros is the everyday third baseman. Brenton Doyle isn't an everyday player.

Detroit Tigers

Kevin McGonigle has only sat twice all year and bats 1, 2, or 3 in every start since April began. Colt Keith and Kerry Carpenter are 0-for-5 in starts vs. southpaws. Wenceel Pérez has played nine of 13 since being recalled from Triple-A.

Houston Astros

We spent all winter wondering where everyone would play, but for now it's been solved with Jeremy Peña (hamstring) on the IL. Christian Walker at 1B, Isaac Paredes at 3B, and Carlos Correa at SS. Cam Smith remains the everyday right fielder. There's outfield opportunities on this team with Jake Meyers, Joey Loperfido, and Taylor Trammell all sidelined.

Kansas City Royals

Carter Jensen is the primary No. 5 hitter against right-handers. Michael Massey was already taking the bulk of playing time at second base before Jonathan India (shoulder) hit the IL. Jac Caglianone has drawn two starts against six lefties this year and primarily bats seventh against righties. Lane Thomas is Kyle Isbel's CF platoon partner.

Los Angeles Angels

Nolan Schanuel is in the lineup against most lefties since Jeimer Candelario was sent to Triple-A. Yoan Moncada sits versus some lefties in favor of Oswald Peraza. Josh Lowe is 1-for-8 starting against lefties. Adam Frazier and Vaughn Grissom are forming a platoon at second base.

Los Angeles Dodgers

Dalton Rushing has started five of eight, but that includes one at DH and one at 1B, so playing time will remain sporadic. Andy Pages has been in CF in all but one game. Hyeseong Kim is the primary shortstop against RHP with Mookie Betts (oblique) sidelined. Miguel Rojas spells him here and there, while also filling in for Alex Freeland at 2B at times.

Miami Marlins

Jakob Marsee has played every game this season, batting leadoff against righties and third against lefties. Kyle Stowers has appeared in three of four since returning from the IL, hitting second or fourth. Xavier Edwards is in the two-hole or cleanup spot versus RHP and plays everyday, dropping to seventh against LHP. Liam Hicks and Owen Caissie start against all righties but are each 1-for-7 in starts against lefties. Graham Pauley and Javier Sanoja are in a third base platoon.

Milwaukee Brewers

Gary Sánchez has started nine straight since Christian Yelich (groin) went on the IL. Garrett Mitchell plays against all right-handers but is 0-for-7 vs. LHP. Jake Bauers is 1-for-7 vs. LHP. David Hamilton, Joey Ortiz, and Luis Rengifo split shortstop and third base between them.

Minnesota Twins

Trevor Larnach bats second against righties. Austin Martin does so vs. lefties. Josh Bell has only missed one game and hits in the heart of the order. Kody Clemens is a platoon hitter. Matt Wallner is in the lineup most every game. Brooks Lee is the regular shortstop.

New York Mets

Bo Bichette stuck to third base in Francisco Lindor's absence on Thursday, with Ronny Mauricio up from Triple-A to play short. Mark Vientos has been at 1B with Brett Baty in RF, but we'll see how long Juan Soto is limited to DH for. MJ Melendez had been the primary DH before Soto returned.

New York Yankees

Ben Rice sat against four of the first five lefties the Yankees faced. He has played five of six since. Trent Grisham has hit leadoff in every game against a RHP. Giancarlo Stanton is the primary DH, batting fourth or fifth. Jazz Chisholm Jr. has mostly hit sixth or seventh this year.

Philadelphia Phillies

Bryson Stott has only started three of 11 games against southpaws. Alec Bohm hit cleanup through April 8th, but hasn't been higher than sixth since. Justin Crawford plays against all right-handers and most lefties.

Pittsburgh Pirates

Oneil Cruz has played every game but one, including five of six against left-handers. Ryan O'Hearn is batting 2-5 vs. all righties and draws some starts against lefties. Konnor Griffin has played 17 of 19 since debuting, batting 6th through 8th. Nick Gonzales seemingly has the inside edge at third base over Nick Yorke.

San Diego Padres

Fernando Tatis Jr. is up to three starts at 2B. Ramon Laureano is the regular leadoff hitter. Jake Cronenworth has only sat twice this season. Gavin Sheets, Miguel Andujar, Ty France, and Nick Castellanos split 1B and DH.

San Francisco Giants

Adames/Arraez/Chapman/Devers is the usual 1-4. Casey Schmitt is the regular DH. Drew Gilbert has been in center field every game since being recalled from Triple-A to fill in for Harrison Bader (hamstring).

Seattle Mariners

Cal Raleigh has played all but one game. Luke Raley and Dominic Canzone are strict platoon hitters while Cole Young has been in the lineup every game this year, including 7-for-7 against lefties.

St. Louis Cardinals

JJ Wetherholt had started all but one game this year and has hit leadoff in each of them. Iván Herrera has played and hit second in every game this year. Jordan Walker became the regular cleanup hitter in early-April. Nolan Gorman bats fifth against righties.

Tampa Bay Rays

Chandler Simpson has hit leadoff against nine straight RHP. He's drawn three starts of five versus lefties. Cedric Mullins sits against most lefties in favor of Jonny DeLuca. Jake Fraley and Richie Palacios play most but not all games against righties. Taylor Walls is the everyday shortstop.

Texas Rangers

Joc Pederson has hit fourth and second in the two games since Wyatt Langford (forearm) went on the IL. He's platooning with Andrew McCutchen at DH. Jake Burger hits third or fourth nearly every game. Evan Carter plays against all RHP but no lefties.

Toronto Blue Jays

Nathan Lukes is the leadoff hitter against righties with George Springer (toe) sidelined. Ernie Clement has played every game this year and has hit second in five straight. Jesús Sánchez hits cleanup against righties. Kazuma Okamoto has been batting seventh more regularly.

Washington Nationals

CJ Abrams has hit cleanup in seven straight. Brady House gets most of the time at 3B, but he splits with Jorbit Vivas. Nasim Nuñez is the regular starter at second base. Joey Wiemer and Curtis Mead are bench players.

Platoons are not the problem with the Royals offense

KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - MARCH 30: Manager Matt Quatraro #33 of the Kansas City Royals stands in the dugout prior to the game against the Minnesota Twins at Kauffman Stadium on March 30, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Royals are tied for the worst record in baseball, and manager Matt Quatraro has been the target of ire for many fans. When a team loses, the manager will bear a brunt of the criticism. It is more than fair to hold him accountable, since ultimately performance is judged by wins and losses. Fans have criticized Quatraro for his bullpen management, for the poor fundamentals the team exhibits, for playing too many different lineups, and even for not shaking the lineup up enough!

One familiar complaint has been that the team platoons too much – they sit left-handed hitters against left-handed pitchers, and sit right-handers against right-handed pitching. Fans argue the team should play the “hot hand”, that hitters need to learn how to hit against pitchers with the platoon advantage, that the numerous lineups exhibit overthinking and an excessive reliance on analytics.

But what looks like excessive platooning is really just….baseball. The Kansas City Royals aren’t reinventing baseball strategy. They’re doing what teams have always done when trying to get the most out of a roster – trying to put their players in the best possible position to succeed.

At its simplest, a platoon is when a team splits playing time at one position between two (or more) players based on matchups, most commonly pitcher handedness. Instead of one everyday starter, you might have a right-handed hitter who starts against left-handed pitching and a left-handed hitter who starts against right-handed pitching, with each player put in situations that play to their strengths. Most hitters (certainly not all) do better against pitchers of the opposite hand. They can track the ball better coming out of the pitcher’s hand, and the ball is coming into their swing zone, rather than away from it.

You can see how all MLB hitters have performed in 2026, broken down by platoon matchups.

Platooning has been embraced by analytics, but it is hardly new. Earl Weaver built a dynasty with the Orioles in the 1970s and frequently employed platoons, famously using the left-handed-hitting John Lowenstein and right-handed hitting Gary Roenicke in an outfield platoon. Whitey Herzog, perhaps the most successful manager in Royals history, was also a believer in platoons. When the team traded first baseman John Mayberry away after the 1977 season, Herzog filled the void with a left-handed hitting Pete LaCock and right-handed hitting John Wathan. Jay Jaffe at Fangraphs found that Herzog had the platoon advantage 68.7 percent of the time, the highest for any manager during his era.

More teams are using platoons to maximize offensive potential. The Royals may not be using platoons enough. A look at how often Royals hitters face opposite-handed pitching shows they are actually below league average in holding the platoon advantage.

And when they have the platoon advantage, they fare much better, even as compared to the league as a whole.

There are always going to be individual exceptions of course. And there is some evidence that a “hot hand” effect may be real, although a common baseball adage is “momentum is only as good as the next day’s starting pitcher.”

The Royals have precious little roster depth in the offense. Quatraro needs to squeeze every ounce of offensive potential as he can. That generally means putting hitters in the best position to succeed and giving them the platoon advantage.

What to expect from Riley Cornelio in his Washington Nationals debut

HARRISBURG, PENNSYLVANIA - JULY 27, 2025: Riley Cornelio #29 of the Harrisburg Senators pitches during an Eastern League game against the Akron RubberDucks at FNB Field on July 27, 2025 in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. The Senators beat the RubberDucks, 7-0. (Photo by Thom Wood/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

As we all know, the Nationals badly need talented pitchers. After yesterday’s game, they called up one of the more promising arms in their system in Riley Cornelio. The 25 year old was the Nats 7th round pick in 2022 who broke out last season before taking another step this year. Now, he is getting a chance to prove himself in the big leagues.

Today, Cornelio will be part of a rotating cast of characters who combine with Miles Mikolas to give the Nats length. This plan worked perfectly last time the Nats utilized it. PJ Poulin opened before Mikolas fired four scoreless innings. After Mikolas left the game, Andrew Alvarez threw 4.1 scoreless innings of his own to secure a shut out for the Nats.

The hope is that the Nats can repeat the trick, this time with Cornelio. In my opinion, Cornelio is more talented than Alvarez and has a higher ceiling. He throws harder than Alvarez, sitting in the mid-90’s, while also having a really sharp slider to pair with his heater.

Over the last couple of years, Cornelio’s heater has taken massive strides. He added three ticks between 2024 and 2025, and added another tick this offseason. It is not just pure velocity for Cornelio either. He has a unique fastball shape that gets ride and run. This season, he has leaned heavily on his dynamic heater, throwing it over 60% of the time.

Before this season, Cornelio was more known for his wipeout slider than his heater. That devastating slider is still there, and it is a massive weapon for him particularly against right handed hitters. He throws the slider 45% of the time to righties, and gets a ton of whiffs. 

Cornelio has been racking up the strikeouts all season so far. In his four starts, Cornelio has 27 strikeouts in 18.1 innings. These kinds of strikeout numbers are new for Cornelio, who had 9.4 K.9 last year. This season he has raised that number to 13.25 K/9. 

The Nats are going to use Cornelio in a bulk relief role to start, but I would be intrigued by him as a higher leverage bullpen arm. He is basically a two pitch guy, only throwing his changeup 6.6% of the time. Having a shallow arsenal causes him to struggle when facing a lineup for a second or third time. I am also not sure how he would fare if teams stacked their lineup with left handed hitters.

He is far from a perfect prospect, but Cornelio has good stuff and solid command. The Nats have too many guys on the staff who just do not have dynamic stuff. Cornelio will at least provide that. He can get plenty of whiffs and has two pitches he can lean on.

Hopefully Cornelio will stick around for a little while. I understand the logic, but it is frustrating to see guys like Andrew Alvarez and Orlando Ribalta demoted immediately after having good outings. Utilizing optionable arms is smart, but in this bullpen, I want to see more guys who look good. 

While he is not a mega-prospect, Riley Cornelio is a guy with plenty of helium who has taken massive steps the last couple of seasons. Last year we saw Brad Lord come out of seemingly nowhere, and I think Riley Cornelio can do something similar. Congrats to Riley and I can’t wait to see him pitch in the big leagues.

Derrick White wins Sportsmanship Award (Feed post of the day)

Derrick White is a great guy. Here’s proof.
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - APRIL 07: Derrick White #9 of the Boston Celtics reacts during warmups before a game against the Charlotte Hornets at the TD Garden on April 07, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Brian Fluharty/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Call this a make-up for the fact that we didn’t run a full story on this news item yesterday (no disrespect due to Derrick, who is perfect in every way – it just got lost in the shuffle).

I mean, what else is there to say. Derrick is a wonderful human being.

I guess it is also worth noting that this award has gone to a few players with ties to the Celtics in the past.

Astros Prospect Report: April 23rd

WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA - MARCH 19, 2026: Cole Hertzler #35 of the Houston Astros throws a pitch during the fifth inning of a spring training Spring Breakout game against the Miami Marlins at CACTI Park of the Palm Beaches on March 19, 2026 in West Palm Beach, Florida. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

Another day of minor league baseball is in the books. See the results below.

AAA: Sugar Land Space Cowboys (13-10) POSTPONED

Game One – lost 5-3 (BOX SCORE)

Pearson got the start in game one and went 2 innings allowing 1 run. The offense got on the board in the bottom of the first inning on an Alexander 2 run home run. The teams exchanged runs in the 5th inning. The Express got one in the 6th to tie it and the game went to extras. In the 8th, the Express scored two but the Sugar Land offense was quiet as they dropped game one 5-3.

Note: Nelson is hitting .333 in Triple-A.

Game Two – lost 12-5 (BOX SCORE)

Ullola got the start in game two but struggled allowing 6 runs over 2.2 innings. The offense got 4 runs back in the 4th inning on a Biggers 2 run double, run on a wild pitch and Salazar RBI double. Sugar Land got another in the 6th on a Biggers solo HR. The Sugar Land pen struggled through allowing another 6 runs as they dropped game two 12-5.

Note: Biggers has 2 home runs this season.


AA: Corpus Christi Hooks (10-8) lost 3-0 (BOX SCORE)

Hicks got the start for the Hooks last night and went 5 innings allowing 3 runs while striking out 5. He was relieved by Mancini who was great striking out 7 over 3 perfect innings. Unfortunately the offense was quiet collecting just 3 hits as they were shutout in the 3-0 loss.

Note: Mancini has 14 K in 8.1 innings in Double-A.


A+: Asheville Tourists (5-13) won 7-6 (BOX SCORE)

Asheville got off to a nice start picking up a run in the first on a Frey RBI double and then 4 runs in the second inning on a Schiavone grand slam. Hertzler got the start and pitched well striking out 8 over 4 scoreless innings. After the Drive got 3 in the 5th inning, Asheville got one back on a Walker sac fly. In the 8th, the Drive scored 3 more runs to tie it. The game went to extras and in the bottom of the 10th, Hernandez walked it off with sac fly.

Note: Hertzler has a 1.62 ERA this season.


A: Fayetteville Woodpeckers (6-12) won 7-1 (BOX SCORE)

The Woodpeckers jumped out to an early lead scoring 4 runs in the first inning on a Sierra walk, 2 runs on an error and a Vasquez groundout. They got 2 more run the 2nd inning on Monistere and Sierra RBI doubles. Ochoa added a solo HR in the third inning. Perez got the start and was great striking out 7 over 6 innings allowing just 1 unearned run. Weber went the final 3 and struck out 6 as he closed out the 7-1 win.

Note: Perez has 26 K in 19 innings this season.


Today’s minor league starters:

SL: TBD – 7:05 CT

CC: Brandon McPherson – 7:05 CT

AV: TBD – 5:35 CT

FV: TBD – 6:05 CT

Royals with Crown Center Future, But Present Struggles are Undeniable

A new stadium on the horizon — but can the Royals fix what’s happening on the field?

In this episode of the Royals Rundown Podcast, hosts Jacob Milham and Jeremy Greco break down the latest developments in the Kansas City Royals’ proposed stadium project at Crown Center, including funding structure, land control, and the broader implications for the team and the city. The discussion explores the pros and cons of the move, from economic impact and urban development to fan accessibility, public perception, and long-term franchise stability.

On the field, the conversation shifts to the Royals’ recent struggles, focusing on fundamental breakdowns, inconsistent execution, and questions surrounding coaching and preparation. Using insights from a recent Royals Review article, Jacob and Jeremy examine how issues like defensive lapses, bullpen inconsistency, and lineup construction may point to deeper systemic concerns rather than just player performance.

The hosts also analyze pitching trends, offensive flashes, and the fine margins in close games, emphasizing how discipline and attention to detail can define outcomes at the major league level. With a focus on accountability, communication, and development, the episode takes a critical but constructive look at what needs to change for the Royals to turn things around.

Need your Royals fix? Head to royalsreview.com for news, analysis, and to engage with Royals fans around the world! Follow us online:

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– Jeremy Greco: @hokius.fromthehawkseye.com
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Early season struggles continue; TinCaps have best week

The bad weather continues for much of the minor league system and the records remain poor with the upper-level teams despite multiple standout players at all four levels. Fort Wayne had the best week, breaking even over their six games. El Paso has lots of pitching issues with multiple offensive players doing better than the pitchers.

Lake Elsinore Storm (8-9 record, 2nd in California League South)

With multiple new players coming into the system this season via draft and free agent/international signings, there are a handful that have distinguished themselves early in 2026.

RHP’s Jesus Castro and Carlos Medina, both from Mexico, are making themselves comfortable with Lake Elsinore. In their Low-A debut, Medina has a 2.25 ERA in 12 innings pitched with 13 strikeouts to one walk. Castro has started three games with 11.2 innings pitched with a 4.63 ERA and seven strikeouts to five walks.

LHP Kruz Schoolcraft has somewhat righted the ship after two disastrous starts. He started April 17 and completed three innings with four hits, one earned run, two walks and three strikeouts. His fastball sat 92-94 mph, up from his previous starts.

The two undrafted free agents signed by the Padres that are playing for the Storm have made a big impact so far. Infielder Bradley Frye has played in 15 games and 48 at-bats with a .417/.463/.563 line and 1.025 OPS. He has four doubles, a home run and 10 RBI. Not to be outdone, OF Conner Westenburg has played in 15 games with 49 at-bats with a .367/.426/.490 line and a .916 OPS. He has two doubles, two triples and 11 RBI. He has 10 out of 10 stolen bases, two more than OF Ryan Wideman.

Wideman, the third-round pick in the 2025 draft, is hitting .304/.388/.551 and .938 OPS with six doubles, a triple, three home runs and 18 RBI. Catcher Ty Harvey, the fifth-round pick in 2025, has a .353/.450/.471 line with a .921 OPS with two doubles and four RBI.

Not a bad start for many of the Padres new prospects.

Fort Wayne TinCaps (6-11 record, 6th in Midwest League East)

OF Jake Cunningham, who was drafted by Baltimore in 2023, signed with the Padres as a free agent in January of this year. He currently leads Fort Wayne with a .350 average, a .700 SLG and a 1.081 OPS. He has four home runs and six RBI with two stolen bases in 13 games and 40 at-bats. OF Kasen Wells leads the team with a .393 OBP with a .260 average and 11 walks, he has stolen three bases in four attempts.

OF Alex McCoy continues to smoke the ball with a .328/.355/.586 line and .941 OPS. He has six doubles, three home runs and nine RBI in 16 games and 58 at-bats. Both infielder Rosman Verdugo and C/1B/DH Lamar King Jr. have seven RBI each, with two and one homer respectively.

On the pitching side, LHP Kash Mayfield has a 0.00 ERA after three starts and 12 innings pitched. He has 16 strikeouts and five walks. Mayfield has dominated with his fastball/changeup combination as his command has been stellar so far. RHP Carson Montgomery, in his return from injury which kept him out all of last season, has two starts and eight innings pitched with a 2.25 ERA with seven strikeouts and four walks.

Reliever Clay Edmondson has two saves in his six games and seven innings pitched with a 1.29 ERA and nine strikeouts to three walks. Reliever Tucker Musgrove, on almost everyone’s watch list for this year, has had a rough start. He has appeared in three games for 2.2 innings with three runs allowed for a 10.13 ERA in the small sample. He has five strikeouts and three walks.

San Antonio Missions (5-12 record, 5th in Texas League South)

Free agent OF/1B Leandro Cedeño, 27, who spent a few seasons in the NPB before signing this past offseason, has played in seven games and 21 at-bats with a .381 average and .500 OBP. He has a double, two RBI and five walks. IF Carson Tucker, 24, was a highly regarded prospect (No. 1 pick) in the Guardians system who was released after suffering injuries that slowed his progress. He signed with the Padres in the offseason. In 12 games and 38 at-bats he has a .316/.381/.368 line and .749 OPS with a double, three RBI and 4-for-4 stolen bases. The strikeouts are high at 12 with four walks. A 33% K-rate needs to be watched.

Catcher Ethan Salas, working back into the mix after a lost 2025, has played in 13 games with 42 at-

bats and a .238/.304/.310 line and .614 OPS while getting back to himself behind the plate. He has a 25% caught stealing rate and has had no errors in 10 games caught.

RHP Eric Yost, who has both started and been in relief, has a 1.32 ERA in 13.2 innings pitched with 16 strikeouts and eight walks. RHP Miguel Mendez, who has flashed 100 mph fastballs this season, has a 1.42 ERA in 12.2 innings pitched in three starts. He has 14 strikeouts (26.9% K-rate) and six walks. RHP Francis Pena, who had a poor second half of 2025, has bounced back with 6.2 innings pitched in his five appearances with a 1.35 ERA and 10 strikeouts to nine walks. The high walk rate is concerning but his previous effectiveness seems to be returning.

El Paso Chihuahuas (10-13 record, 4th in Pacific Coast League East)

OF Carlos Rodriguez leads with a .300 batting average. IF Pablo Reyes is tops in OBP with .433 and OF Jase Bowen has a .636 SLG, .989 OPS and also leads with five home runs. Bowen also has a 26.3% K-rate with 22 strikeouts. IF Sung-Mun Song, who is hitting .293/.369/.320 with a .689 OPS also has 21 strikeouts in his 75 at-bats. Song has 12 RBI but only two XBH and nine walks. He has not attempted to steal any bases.

IF Jose Miranda leads the team with 16 RBI and is hitting .296/.321/.556 with a .877 OPS. The Padres depth both on the bench in San Diego and waiting to help, if needed, in El Paso is a vast improvement over many past seasons. Miranda has an opt out in June with his contract.

RHP Griffin Canning started on April 22 for El Paso but didn’t make it out of the second inning. He threw 45 pitches with 1.2 innings pitched and two runs with two walks. He currently has a 5.40 ERA in 10 innings pitched with 14 strikeouts and 11 walks. He must be activated by May 4.

LHP Yuki Matsui has had all one inning appearances so far with El Paso. He has 6.2 innings pitched over seven games and a 4.05 ERA with eight strikeouts and one walk.

Injured list

LHP Luis Gutierrez (San Antonio) and RHP Jeferson Villabona (Fort Wayne) were both placed on the IL on April 21.

The Notes: Banks Breaking Heads, Bullpen Injuries, and Rotation Depth

There weren’t many bright spots for the Phillies week or Tanner Banks. He carries a 5.59 ERA and is probably too on the current depth chart because of their injuries (more on this later).

But he put together a fun three pitch sequence to Seiya Suzuki for a called third strike.

He pinpointed an up and in cutter for a called strike, Suzuki sort of backed up a because of the movement.

JT calls for a fastball in, Suzuki looks ready for a fastball in but sometimes missing your spot can be a good thing. Thats what happens here and Banks gets a whiff.

It’s 0-2 and Banks has struggled to get right handed hitters out. He has allowed a .727 OPS against right handed hitters for his career.

Suzuki knows this, so it’s fair to assume Banks is looking for chase. Especially if the ball starts down, it’s probably going to be a backfoot sweeper right?

Nope.

The looking strikeout on a fastball down the middle is one of my favorite little things in the sport. It’s easy for anyone, from the brightest in the game to the casuals who watch a handful of games a year. They might all think “that was right down the middle”.

Bullpen injuries

While the offense has caught headlines and the starting rotation has struggled during their eight game losing streak, the bullpen injuries have begun hurting them. Zach Pop, Jonathan Bowlan, and Jhoan Duran are currently on the injured list.

Take that Banks game for example, he faced five straight right handed hitters at the top of the Cubs order because there aren’t many other options with the bullpen injuries.

On Sunday night against the Atlanta Braves, Andrew Painter can’t an out in the fifth so the club has to call on Tim Mayza, who signed a minor league deal during the off-season. Thomson leaves him in because of how thin the depth is and Ozzie Albies made them pay.

Or it’s just trying to come up with an opener for Taijuan Walker. They go with Kyle Backhus, so Craig Counsell moves Michael Busch down to the five hole to stack the top of the order with righties. They ended up scoring a first inning run.

Jonathan Bowlan could’ve played a key role in at least two of those games as a viable middle of the bullpen option for Thomson. Not having Jhoan Duran to close games out means that Brad Keller can’t even be considered until the 8th or 9th inning.

Rotation Depth

The Phillies released Taijuan Walker before Thursday’s finale against the Chicago Cubs in Wrigley after he had an ERA over 9 in five appearances, either as a starter or as a bulk reliever to follow an opener. There is no clear-cut number six option at this point.

Alan Rangel is the most likely option at this point. He pitched in mop-up duty against the Cubs Wednesday night and looked serviceable. He got the fastball for strikes and showed off a promising changeup, even if the control of it was shaky. In three innings, Rangel struck out five and allowed only one run.

Rangel was also performing like the best Lehigh Valley IronPigs starter by a wide margin. There are a few notable other options because of previous MLB experience but there probably isn’t anyone to stabilize the fifth spot if required.

Jean Cabrera has an ERA over 9 with a 12.3% walk rate, Tucker Davidson and Bryse Wilson have ERA’s over 8, and Ryan Cusick is over 5. Unless things change quickly, Rangel is the clear frontrunner if a rotation need arises. It’s pretty bleak.

Caleb Wilson projected second overall in Yahoo Sports’ latest NBA Mock Draft

Feb 7, 2026; Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA; North Carolina Tar Heels forward Caleb Wilson (8) with the ball as Duke Blue Devils forward Cameron Boozer (12) defends in the first half at Dean E. Smith Center. Mandatory Credit: Bob Donnan-Imagn Images | Bob Donnan-Imagn Images

Caleb Wilson hasn’t gotten to go through the NBA Draft combine yet, but there’s already a lot of buzz that he could be drafted top three overall. What wasn’t expected, however, is Yahoo Sports projecting that he could go higher than that. In their latest mock draft, they have Wilson being picked second overall by the Atlanta Hawks.

For the better part of what we will call the NCAA/NBA basketball season, it was largely projected that Wilson would be drafted as the fourth overall pick. But there were moments throughout the 2025-26 UNC season when fans had to start wondering if he could climb even higher. He is one of the better athletes in the draft, has a really high ceiling, and most importantly, he could become one of the better players on a NBA team right now. It is hard to say that about Darryn Peterson, for instance, but it’s understandable to see AJ Dybantsa, Cameron Boozer, and Caleb Wilson as interchangeable. But this is the first time Wilson has been projected as a top-two pick to our knowledge, which means this draft could get really interesting for the Georgia native.

Here’s what Yahoo Sports’ Kevin O’Connor had to say about the All-American:

“Front office executives around the NBA increasingly believe Wilson could be the second player taken in June’s draft. While his exact spot won’t be clear until after the Draft Lottery, once each pick is determined, some teams value the high-flying North Carolina freshman above the more ground-bound Cam Boozer from Duke. Others view Wilson as having similarly high upside as Kansas guard Darryn Peterson with dramatically lower downsides due to Peterson’s availability concerns.“

It is interesting that O’Connor stated that some teams would value Wilson’s aerial abilities over Boozer’s gravity-shackled game, but it is also not surprising. Objectively speaking, it would make more sense for some teams to take Boozer over Wilson, but there are some NBA teams that do not have a guy that is wired quite like Wilson. Where he is actually drafted will likely depend on what team has one of the top 2-3 picks, but hearing that front office executives are increasingly confident that Wilson can be the second player off the board is huge.

What do you think of Yahoo’s projection? Do you think Wilson could go #2 overall? Do you think there’s a possibility he can go #1 overall? Let us know in the comments below.

NBA officiating is in crisis mode, and the players have a point

OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA - APRIL 22: Devin Booker #1 of the Phoenix Suns handles the ball while being defended by Alex Caruso #9 of the Oklahoma City Thunder during the first half in Game Two of the Western Conference First Round NBA Playoffs at Paycom Center on April 22, 2026 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Joshua Gateley/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The NBA may or may not have an officiating crisis. But it definitely has a crisis of confidence, which is the only kind that matters.

Even in the age of big data and AI-generated LeBron songs, we still do not have a reliable way to track if an NBA game was officiated well. This isn’t automatic balls and strikes; we’re talking about whether Giannis Antetokounmpo’s elbow intentionally struck Al Horford in the head during that poster dunk, if Shai Gilgeous-Alexander initiated contact when his defender stupidly jumped at a pump fake for the 19th time, whether Jaden McDaniels gave Jamal Murray adequate landing space on his shot despite every player jumping different distances when they shoot and McDaniels understandably is not staring at Murray’s feet when he’s shooting a three. That kind of stuff.

So people clamor for accountability. Players freak out, including Devin Booker saying in a press conference that Alex Caruso asked the ref to call a technical on Booker and he just did for some reason? Fans of teams that feel they got jobbed lose it, demanding changes (what changes?), oversight (how?) and to please please please stop allowing Gilgeous-Alexander to magnet-pull himself to a defender and get two free throws!

But refereeing is such a stupid concept that there is no possibility to improve, only to complicate. Sure, we have Last Two Minutes reports, but those are simply compiled by other referees offering a different interpretation with the assistance of slow-motion replay — or as I like to call them, completely useless since no referee could ever review every single call of the last two minutes in slow-mo in real time lest they want to make the game completely unwatchable. 

Refereeing basketball games is not an exact science; in fact, it’s probably not a science at all. When you consider all the contact, all the dust-ups, all the arm-flailing, all the pump-fake magnetism and all the floppity flops, officiating this environment is far closer to oil painting than it is mathematical proofs. Fouls are interpretations of a fluid game in which contact is legal, and referees must use words like “wind-up,” “follow-through,” “incidental,” and “reckless” (what does any of that mean?) to determine if something is a foul, a flagrant, a technical or nothing at all. 

In short, there is really no way to officiate a sport where contact is kind of legal. It’s not like football and hockey (which have plenty of officiating problems), where contact is mostly legal and something has to be fairly heinous to result in a foul for being too physical; basketball allows contact to a certain extent. What that extent is has evolved over time, such as throwing elbows, hand checking, the block-charge and more fun stuff we all complain about. All NBA refs are really doing is trying to keep the game safe and reasonably fair; an impossible task, but one they are heroically trusted with anyway.

The NBA has thus complicated officiating to no end, only watering the roots of an issue that have continued to grow. A blatantly incorrect reading of this situation is that the Oklahoma City Thunder foul-bait more than any other team — they were 17th in free throw attempts per game this season. Nor is it statistically provable to say that teams foul-bait more than ever, as team fouls-per-game has gone down sharply in recent NBA history. 

But teams have exploited the infinite complication of officiating to great effect, notably how pace, size and explosive super-athletes can create impossibly subjective interactions. Gilgeous-Alexander bears the brunt of this criticism, given that he’s likely about to be the league’s back-to-back MVP winner, but he wasn’t even first in free-throw attempts this season. Everyone does it, and I think we really peaked with 2022 Giannis Antetokounmpo, who, for two playoff rounds, barreled into Nikola Vucevic and Grant Williams and whoever else dared to oppose him with impossible speed, power and extreme arm-angles that were always some kind of foul. On who? On Giannis? Who knew.

The root problem is that a shooting foul is the most valuable offensive action in basketball. With league-average shooting percentages, two free throws have an expected point-value of 1.57, while a three-pointer is worth 1.08 points and an at-rim look worth 1.20 points (shoutout to Ian Levy for pointing this out to me; it changed my life). If you can get your free-throw percentage up above average (>78 percent), now we’re really cooking something spicy. Gilgeous-Alexander shoots 88 percent from the line, so by far his best option on every possession is to get to the line. 

Like with tanking and the draft lottery, if the NBA’s rules provide a clear best option to succeed, smart players and teams will always figure out how to maximize their return. It’s like when the MLB figured out walks were actually good — whatever macho man mentality (and steroids) sustained the “always swing and swing for power” world died in the darkness wrought by sabermetrics and taking a 3-1 fastball that’s a little high.

The NBA public freaking out about officiating these playoffs doesn’t actually want fewer fouls, they just want fouls to feel like fouls — you know, things that aren’t allowed,rather than the calculated, orchestrated manipulations of a subjective rule set and mathematical reality that they have become. A fix would be a point of emphasis from officials that radically expands the scope of “who initiated contact” and categorically refuse to call fouls when the offensive player visually initiates the interaction. 

But we all know how that would end: teams and players would reset, take some time to analyze the situation and then find whatever the new best way to get to the free-throw line is. Short of a literal free-throw quota, an insane idea that would turn the game into gladiatorial combat, teams will figure out how to foul-bait even if foul-baiting is outlawed. But an emphasis against offensive player-initiated defensive fouls would be a good start, given that this is all a visual question anyway — as said before, the total number of fouls has decreased in recent years. We’re solving a crisis of confidence, not an actual crisis.

Sports have their own built-in honor codes that are unique and deeply personal, but not flopping is generally agreed upon as lame by the people of the world. And those same people will shed blood, sweat and tearful Tweets when they believe the sanctity of the game they love is under assault. Maybe it isn’t, but it looks like it is. And keeping up appearances is key.

Knicks vs. Hawks: 3 keys for New York in Game 4 of first-round playoff series

After suffering another loss that came down to a final possession, the Knicks trail the Atlanta Hawks, 2-1, in the first round. 

In New York’s 109-108 loss to the Hawks, there were several moments to note. OG Anunoby emerged with 29 points. The Knicks outscored Atlanta, 56-40, in the paint. But the Hawks shot better from the three-point line (39 percent).

As New York tries to even the series on Saturday night, here are three keys to Game 4...

Absent starters need to come through

New York's starters scored 78 points on Thursday night, but 76 of those points came from the trio of Anunoby,Jalen Brunson (26 points), and Karl-Anthony Towns (21 points). The other two starters -- Mikal Bridges and Josh Hart --combined for just two points in 61 minutes. 

Bridges was scoreless in 21 minutes, attempting just three shots. He was also a -26 and had four turnovers, leading to him being benched for much of the second half in favor of Deuce McBride. That turned out to be the right decision as McBride was instrumental in New York’s comeback attempt.

The absent offensive performance was another notable moment in an uneven two-year stretch for Bridges. The external noise around the Knicks trading five first-round picks for Bridges only grows louder after performances like this. Hart had two points on 1-for-9 from the field and he missed all four of his attempts from the three-point line. 

Hart and Bridges have made significant contributions defensively in this series, and Hart did have nine rebounds and six assists on Thursday. But both players have played a part in New York’s substandard offensive play. New York will need more from both Bridges and Hart on the offensive end in Game 4.

The next logical step is head coach Mike Brown possibly making a change to the starting lineup. As SNY’s Ian Begley noted, one of the burning questions for Game 4 is if McBride will replace Bridges.

Limiting miscues

Creating turnovers on defense is crucial to the Hawks’ strategy. Not a great halfcourt offense, the Hawks have been able to thrive off playing fast and creating transition scoring opportunities.

As this series has worn on, miscues have become a concern for the Knicks. New York had 11 giveaways in the series opener, followed by 14 in the second game. In Game 3, the Hawks forced a series-high 18 Knicks turnovers and scored 21 points off those errors.

New York Knicks guard Josh Hart (3) reacts to a call against the Atlanta Hawks in the fourth quarter during game three of the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at State Farm Arena
New York Knicks guard Josh Hart (3) reacts to a call against the Atlanta Hawks in the fourth quarter during game three of the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at State Farm Arena / Brett Davis - Imagn Images

Atlanta has athletic finishers like Jalen Johnson and Jonathan Kuminga, who benefited from easy baskets that came from either turnovers or long rebounds. Johnson broke out for his best performance in the series on Thursday with 24 points, 10 rebounds, and eight assists. Kuminga had 21 points off the bench.

Keeping those two players in the halfcourt will be crucial for Game 4. Taking care of the rock is of significant importance, especially when thinking of how each of the last two games have gone.

The plan for Mitchell Robinson

The series was supposed to be made for Robinson. With Atlanta’s diminutive roster, Robinson was expected to dominate off the bench. But so far we’ve seen scant minutes for the seven-footer. Over three games, Robinson is averaging 14.7 minutes.

Two factors seem to be weighing on Robinson’s limited minutes. One is the potential for the Hawks to intentionally foul the notoriously poor free-throw shooter. Brown has also noted that lineups with both Towns and Robinson on the court haven’t been as effective.

When Robinson has played, he hasn’t dominated the offensive glass. Despite Robinson not seeing increased minutes, the Knicks have actually rebounded well on both ends of the floor. New York is sixth among the 16 playoff teams in offensive rebound rate, recovering 33.1 percent of misses, per NBA Stats.

Guardians vs Blue Jays Prediction, Odds & Home Run Pick for Tonight's MLB Game

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Toronto Blue Jays infielder Ernie Clement has been Mr. Consistent this season, picking up where he left off in October. 

He is sitting just one hit shy of the MLB hits lead, and I’ll bet on him closing the gap tonight with another big game at the plate against the Cleveland Guardians. 

Read on to see why in my Blue Jays vs. Guardians predictions and free MLB picks for April 24. 

Guardians vs Blue Jays predictions

Guardians vs Blue Jays best bet: Ernie Clement O 1.5 total bases (+120)

Ernie Clement has picked up where he left off last postseason, currently sitting one hit shy of the MLB lead, while averaging 1.75 bases per game so far this season 

He’s had multiple hits in four of his last five, averaging 2.8 bases per game in that stretch

Additionally, the pitching matchup favors Clement tonight. 

Cleveland Guardians starter Gavin Williams throws a heavy dose of the sweeper to right-handed batters, and it’s gotten him a lot of swing and miss this season. 

Clement has just a 17% whiff rate against the sweeper this season, with a .444 average against the pitch. 

Covers COVERS INTEL:Clement is hitting .417 with four XBH in five games since being moved into the two-hole of the Jays' lineup. 

Guardians vs Blue Jays same-game parlay (SGP)

Nathan Lukes is starting to swing the bat well after a slow start to the season. He has a hit in four of his last five games with a 1.132 OPS in that stretch. 

Lastly, I’ll take Over 1.5 walks for Williams. The Cleveland starter ranks in the 13th percentile in walk rate, averaging 3.4 walks per game this season. The Jays' lineup as a whole owns a combined .410 OBP against him with five walks in just 34 at-bats. 

Guardians vs Blue Jays SGP

  • Ernie Clement Over 1.5 bases
  • Nathan Lukes Over 0.5 hits
  • Gavin Williams Over 1.5 walks
img loading="lazy" width="100%" height="null" src="https://img.covers.com/editorial/2026/jaysmlcbp.jpg" alt="Canada’s best price for Jays"
Get the best Jays ML odds at BET99 — every game.

Guardians vs Blue Jays home run pick: Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (+510)

I’ll make this a half-unit wager.

Firstly, if Lenyn Sosa gets a start today and a home-run market pops up for him, I’d sprinkle a little there. He leads the Jays in hard-hit rate and is 4-for-6 with two home runs against Williams in his career.

However, my official home run pick will be Vladimir Guerrero Jr., who owns a 1.319 OPS against Williams himself. 

It’s a good matchup for Guerrero, too, as Williams gives up a lot of hard contact with a 48.3% hard-hit rate, while ranking in the 7th percentile in average exit velocity. 

Additionally, Williams has given up one home run in four of his five starts this season. 

Mike DiStefano's 2026 Transparency record
  • Best bets: 5-18, -10.35 units
  • SGPs: 2-21, -13.50 units
  • HR picks: 4-19 -0.85 units

Guardians vs Blue Jays odds

  • Moneyline: Cleveland -126 | Toronto +108
  • Run line: Cleveland -1.5 (+124) | Toronto +1.5 (-160)
  • Over/Under: Over 8 (-105) | Under 8 (-115)

Guardians vs Blue Jays trend


The Toronto Blue Jays have hit the 1st Five Innings (F5) Team Total Under in 11 of their last 15 games at home (+6.65 Units / 37% ROI). Find more MLB betting trends for Guardians vs. Blue Jays.

How to watch Guardians vs Blue Jays and game info

LocationRogers Centre, Toronto, ON
DateFriday, April 24, 2026
First pitch7:07 p.m. ET
TVSportsnet One
Guardians starting pitcherGavin Williams
(3-1, 2.12 ERA)
Blue Jays starting pitcherMax Scherzer
(1-2, 7.16 ERA)

Guardians vs Blue Jays latest injuries

Guardians vs Blue Jays weather

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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'We're right there.' Frustrated Kings on the brink of another first-round playoff exit

LOS ANGELES, CA - APRIL 23: Colorado Avalanche left wing Artturi Lehkonen (62) celebrates with right wing Logan O'Connor (25) after scoring a shorthanded goal against Los Angeles Kings goaltender Anton Forsberg (31) during the third period in game three of a Western first round NHL playoff game at Crypto.com Arena on Thursday, April 23, 2026 in Los Angeles, CA. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
Colorado Avalanche left wing Artturi Lehkonen, right, celebrates with right wing Logan O'Connor after scoring a short-handed goal during Game 3 of their first-round series against the Kings Thursday night at Crypto.com Arena. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

Kings coach D.J. Smith gave his team the day off Friday, but he sent his players home with a message: if they don’t show up for work Sunday, they’ll have the rest of the spring and summer off, too.

Players don’t like to call any game a “must-win” because of the pressure it brings, but there’s no other way to look at Sunday’s game for the Kings. After losing the first three games of their best-of-seven playoff series with the Colorado Avalanche, the Kings are one loss away from being eliminating in the first round for a fifth consecutive season.

“Must-win game,” agreed defenseman Drew Doughty, who hasn’t played on a winning team in a playoff series since the Kings last won the Stanley Cup in 2014. “Everyone's going to give everything and we’ve got to win that one. And then hopefully go back to Denver.”

Read more:Kings lose again to Avalanche, who take commanding 3-0 series lead

The most recent loss came Thursday when the Avalanche scored two fluky goals on pucks that bounced in off the skates of Kings players and put another one into an empty net in a 4-2 victory that pushed the Kings to the brink of elimination.

“You don’t like the result,” Smith said. “And it’s tough to swallow.”

For Colorado, the best team in the NHL during the regular season, it hasn’t been the most stylish of postseasons. But after a pair of hard-fought 2-1 wins at home, the Avalanche have a chance to sweep a playoff series for the first time since 2022, when they won their last Stanley Cup.

“All the games have been tight. We’re right there,” forward Quinton Byfield said. “Each guy, including myself, we just have to give a little bit more.

“We're doing the right things, we just have to dig in a little bit more."

It’s hard to say how. The Kings’ power play has been good, scoring a goal in each of the three games, and their penalty kill even better, shutting out the top-scoring team in the NHL on nine tries with a man advantage.

The Kings have been physical and fast and goaltender Anton Forsberg has been brilliant in his first career playoff series, making 90 saves in the three games. Yet none of that has paid off with a win.

“Sometimes you play real well for stretches and you don’t get the results. And then you’ll win a game you don’t deserve to win,” Smith said. “Maybe we didn’t stay with it long enough.”

“Those games are over with,” a frustrated Byfield added. “You can’t look back at those games. It’s just on to the next one, that’s our focus.”

Doughty said the Kings need to wear down the Avalanche, something they clearly couldn’t do in the two games played in Denver’s mile-high altitude. They might have a better chance Sunday at sea level.

“I don’t think we’re creating enough Grade-A chances,” he said. “They’re statistically one of the best teams in the neutral zone. So for us to beat them, we’ve got to wear them down in the D zone, make them tired and score goals that way. We haven't done that enough.”

Every team has its kryptonite and for the Kings that appears to be the first round of the playoffs. Over the past dozen seasons, the team has gone 9-27 in the postseason, taking a series to a seventh game just once in six tries. Along the way they’ve changed general mangers twice, changed head coaches five times and even changed their opponents, facing the Avalanche this year after losing four straight series to the Edmonton Oilers.

None of that has changed the results.

Smith, in fact, is an interim coach, having taken over for Jim Hiller with 23 games left in the regular season. He figures to be coaching for his future Sunday since a playoff sweep won’t look good on his resume.

Read more:Kings let late Game 2 lead slip away and lose to Avalanche in overtime

“There’s no quit in there,” Smith said of the Kings’ locker room. “We’ll get reset with practice [Saturday] and I think you’re going to see our best effort.

“Now we’ve got to make a few changes and see if we can spark something.”

If that works, the Kings will be heading back to Denver. If it doesn’t, they’ll be heading home for another long summer.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Jim Furyk to reportedly lead US Ryder Cup team after Tiger Woods’ withdrawal

  • Furyk in line for second stint as US captain

  • Woods steps aside after arrest and treatment

  • Europe chasing third straight win in Ireland

Jim Furyk is returning as US Ryder Cup captain for the 2027 matches in Ireland as the Americans try to get back on track against a European team that has dominated the last three decades, the Associated Press has learned.

Furyk would be the fourth US captain to get a second chance dating to 1979, considered the modern era of the Ryder Cup when continental Europe became part of it.

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