Mets Notes: Why Edwin Diaz wasn't used for a second inning; defensive inconsistencies

The Mets did a great job of plating two runs in the ninth to send Saturday's matchup with the Washington Nationals into extra innings, but could the outcome have changed if manager Carlos Mendoza had left Edwin Diaz for a second inning?

Diaz pitched a seven-pitch, scoreless 10th inning, but Mendoza went with Tyler Rogers -- pitching for the third straight day -- to handle the 11th. While Rogers was close to pitching a clean inning, Daylen Lile hit a two-run, inside-the-park homer to put the Nationals ahead. We'll never know if Diaz being on the mound would have changed the outcome, but it's a fair question to ask the Mets skipper.

So when Mendoza was asked if he considered using Diaz for a second inning, the second-year manager said he didn't.

"He pitched two nights ago, got hot yesterday," Mendoza explained. "We're only tied. One inning today."

Diaz tossed 15 pitches, striking out two batters, on Thursday to finish off the Padres and pick up the series win. He was warming up in the ninth inning of Friday's series opener against the Nats when Chris Devenski started to pitch into trouble. Diaz did sit back down once Devenski righted the ship. 

After pitching 53.2 innings in 54 games last season -- the first since returning from knee surgery -- Diaz has eclipsed that, tossing 59.1 innings across 57 games. 

Mets spoil chances to win

In the ninth, the Mets were in prime position to walk off the Nats and their closer, Jose Ferrer. 

Ferrer had allowed two runs to allow the Mets to cut their deficit to 3-2 in the eighth inning, but Nationals interim manager Miguel Cairo asked his closer to try and get three more outs in the ninth and couldn't. 

The Mets had bases loaded with one out when Brandon Nimmo came to the plate. The lefty Ferrer got Nimmo down swinging on a 1-2 slider in the dirt to pick up the important second out. Starling Marte followed, striking out swinging on a 1-2 sinker that went 100 mph away from the veteran slugger, stranding the winning run at third.

"He made pitches, we had some really good at-bats, had the bases loaded with a guy up, you feel good about your chances, even though Ferrer can be tough left on left, you take your chances with Nim putting the ball in play," Mendoza said of the situation in the ninth. "He got him that time. He executed, then he got Marte with two outs. All the way to that point, the guys took some really good at-bats there."

The Mets would have another chance to win in the 10th with runners on first and second and no out, but Francisco Alvarez grounded into a double play and Ronny Mauricio lined out to left field with the winning run again at third base. 

New York finished the game 3-for-16 with runners in scoring position and left 13 on base.

Defensive inconsistencies

After officially making an error with a few defensive miscues mixed in during Friday's win, the Mets batted the ball around again during Saturday's game.

The biggest miscues came in the third inning. Down 1-0, Riley Adams hit a bloop single to left field that Juan Soto tried to play on a bounce, but it skipped over his glove and rolled to the wall, allowing one run to score. The next batter, Pete Alonso threw the ball high to Nolan McLean, giving the Nats an extra out and the team's second error of the inning. With two outs, McLean threw a wild pitch, allowing an unearned run to score from third base.

"We’ve been inconsistent," Mendoza said of the team's defense. "We go through stretches where we play clean and then go through stretches where that happens. We don’t have too much time, but the one thing we can do here is turn the page because we have a 1 o’clock tomorrow. Even though we didn’t play a clean game early, guys battled back and we were in the position to win that game, just didn’t do it."

 

Blackhawks Goalie Prospect Is Player To Watch

Drew Commesso (© John Jones-Imagn Images)

The Chicago Blackhawks have some interesting prospects to watch this season. One of them is goaltender Drew Commesso, as the 23-year-old will be looking to take another step forward in his development.

Commesso just completed his second season in the American Hockey League (AHL) with the Rockford Ice Hogs, and it was a solid year for the Norwell, Massachusetts native. In 39 games for the AHL squad on the year, he posted an 18-15-4 record, a .911 save percentage, and a 2.54 goals-against average. He then followed that up with a 4-3 record, a 2.35 goals-against average, and a .926 save percentage in seven playoff games for Rockford this spring.

With numbers like these, there is no question that Commesso demonstrated good promise this past campaign. Now, he will be looking to build off that during the 2025-26 season.

Right now, the Blackhawks currently have Spencer Knight and Arvid Soderblom as their NHL goaltenders. While this is the case, it would still be significant if Commesso can take that next step and give the Blackhawks another solid option to consider for their NHL roster. This is especially so if the Blackhawks end up dealing with more injury trouble between the pipes at all this campaign.

Ottawa Senators Winger Fabian Zetterlund Ready To Prove Himself This Season

Of all the players on the ice for the first on-ice session of the Senators' training camp, few players have more to prove than Fabian Zetterlund.

The Swedish winger arrived at the 2025 NHL trade deadline for Zack Ostapchuk and a 2025 second-round pick, carrying expectations to provide quality depth and secondary scoring for one of the lowest-scoring five-on-five teams in the league.

Unfortunately, that production failed to materialize.

Zetterlund's two goals and five points in 20 games are well-documented. His numbers were a constant source of messageboard and talk radio fodder over the offseason.

General manager Steve Staios and the organization were certainly unfazed by Zetterlund's surface stats, rewarding the 26-year-old with a three-year contract carrying an average annual value of $4.25 million.

If Zetterlund was concerned about the pressures placed on him, he refused to let it show. When he arrived for a one-on-one interview following his group's gruelling on-ice skating session on the second day of training camp, Zetterlund was all smiles.

It is the most engaging and comfortable that I have seen him be since arriving last March.

"The body is fresh. (My mind) is fresh," said Zetterlund enthusiastically. "I want to start the season well, and that's been one of my main focuses the whole summer. Now I'm here, and I feel ready."

During his exit interviews with the coach and general manager, Zetterlund listened to their feedback and constructive criticism before acknowledging that their respective sentiments aligned with his own.

"I know what I want to do better, and they pointed out the same things," Zetterlund remarked. "So, that's what I've been working on. I feel fresh, ready, and quick out there. Strong and hungry.

"Overall, (I need to) be a prick out there," the winger said while outlining what the organization asked him to work on. "I need to be hard to play against every day, and be strong on the puck. I need to hold on to it, use my shot, and hit the net more."

Zetterlund's preparations for the 2025-26 campaign began back home in Sweden, where he trained and spent most of his free time enjoying the company of friends and family.

The winger returned to Ottawa on September 1st to participate in Brady Tkachuk's organized 'Captain's Skates', providing himself with an extra three weeks to skate and build chemistry and camaraderie with his teammates ahead of the opening of camp.

The hope is that the experience will benefit Zetterlund this season, but what should really help him is his familiarity with the coaching staff and the team's systems and structure.

"I know exactly what to do out there," Zetterlund stated. " Structurally, our system is easy, and I've been playing for (26 games, including the postseason) now.

"I know exactly where to go and how to handle things out there. Now it's just up to me to do it."

What may also help Zetterlund is that he experienced a similar stretch of poor production after being dealt from New Jersey to San Jose at the 2023 trade deadline. Zetterlund was a younger player trying to establish himself as an NHL regular at the time. Nonetheless, in the 22 games after the deadline, he was held goalless while adding only three assists.

The winger followed that stretch up by having the most productive campaign of his NHL career in 2023-24. Zetterlund played in each of San Jose's 82 games and led the team with 24 goals and 204 shots. His 44 points trailed only Mikael Granlund (60) and William Eklund (45).

When asked whether he could draw any parallels between his two post-trade deadline stretches, or whether the experience and success of his first full season in San Jose could serve him well now, Zetterlund expressed a preference to focus on the future.

"That's the past," the winger affirmed. "I forgot about that, but I'm just looking forward to a new season and being with the Ottawa Senators from the start. It's gonna be fun."

When Zetterlund joined the Senators, it was obviously exciting to join a team that was on the verge of clinching its first postseason berth in eight years. Under the surface, however, the Swede arrived at a challenging time.

At the time of the trade, the collection of forwards playing in the Senators' top nine was playing really well, relegating Zetterlund to a fourth line role that afforded him time to acclimatize to his new surroundings.

He would eventually get opportunities on the power play and to play with the team's more skilled players, but the goals and points did not come.

The encouraging part is that Zetterlund's underlying numbers were incredibly strong.

Of the forwards on the team who logged more than 200 five-on-five minutes, only Brady Tkachuk, a noted volume-producing machine, generated a higher rate of shots (iCF/60), shots on goal (shots/60), and individual expected goals (ixG/60) than Zetterlund per NaturalStatTrick. The problem was that his five-on-five shooting percentage (3.13%) was the fifth-lowest on the team, ahead of defencemen like Nik Matinpalo, Nick Jensen, Artem Zub and Travis Hamonic.

When I told Zetterlund about how strong some of his analytics were and whether he felt like he was creating a high volume of chances, he deflected and expressed a desire for the team's success.

"I don't know what to say," he admitted. "I try to work hard every shift out there. It doesn't matter if the puck goes in or not.

"I still want to help the team win. That's the most important thing. We had a good stretch last year, and we want more (success) this year for sure. I want to produce. I want to be a goal scorer, of course. But when the puck doesn't go in, you're going to do other stuff out there to help the team, and that's what I'm trying to bring every day. It's just a bonus if the puck goes in."

As a career 9.6 percent shooter, it is reasonable to believe that Zetterlund's shooting percentage will normalize. When it does, it will provide some of the incremental gains this organization is looking for to help this team rise in the Atlantic Division.

By Graeme Nichols
The Hockey News Ottawa

More Sens Headlines From The Hockey News Ottawa:
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Xavier Bourgault Is "Best Player At Sens Rookie Camp"
Senators GM Steve Staios On Why He Brought Back The Same Group
Can The Senators Still Avoid Losing Their 2026 First Round Pick?
Sens Radio Play-By-Play Team Won't Travel To Road Games This Season

Mets, Cedric Mullins discuss 'tough' play in outfield that led to Daylen Lile's go-ahead inside-the-park home run

The Mets had done everything they could to come back and force extra innings against the Nationals on Saturday, but it wasn't enough after an unbelievable inside-the-park home run decided the game.

With one out in the 11th inning and a runner on first, Tyler Rogers threw a 2-2 sinker to Lile, who launched it deep to center field. Cedric Mullins raced back, but it went over his head and off the wall, allowing the speedy Lile to scamper all the way home and give the Nationals a two-run lead. The home run was enough for Washington to hold on for the win and even the series.

"It’s a tough one there, but once you realize that you have no chance on that play, maybe you give yourself a better chance to play it off the wall," Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said of the play after the game. "But if [Mullins] stops, once it hits that part of the wall with the angle like that and bounces toward right field, there’s not much he could do there. Maybe he stops earlier, plays it off the way, but still, he’s not going to have a chance there."

"First thought was make a play on the ball," Mullins said. "Little shifted over because Rogers is a unique pitcher, defensive alignment is a little different, [Lile] got a good swing on it, thought I got a decent jump. Once I realized I wasn’t going to have a play, tried to stop myself to read it off the wall, but just got on me pretty quick."

Mullins added, "More or less an instinctive type play. Just do what you can. I knew what I was trying to do there, just didn’t execute." 

The Mets still had a chance to extend or win the game in the bottom half of the inning, but Mullins popped up to lead off before Francisco Lindor lined out and Juan Soto struck out looking to end the contest.

Lile's inside-the-park homer was the first at Citi Field in eight years and snapped Washington's 11-game losing streak in Flushing.  But more importantly, it stopped the Mets' momentum. They entered Saturday winners of four of five games and two games up on the Reds for the final wild card spot. 

However the standings bear out when play starts Sunday, the Mets continue to control their own destiny. With seven games remaining, they'll look to take the rubber game of their series with the Nationals before hitting the road to end the season.

 

Penguins' Training Camp: Observations From Day Three

Group C kicked off Saturday's training camp session, and there wasn't as much systems work compared to Friday's session. Instead, we got to see a fair amount of line rushes and a lot of odd-man rush opportunities. 

Filip Hallander skated on a line with Rickard Rakell and Bryan Rust during drills and looked just as comfortable as he did on Friday. Speaking of Rakell, he had a great practice and was showcasing his one-timer throughout the 90-minute session. He was one of the only players to beat goaltender Sergei Murashov during those drills. 

Rakell's hoping to have another big season after finishing with 35 goals and 70 points last year, since the 2026 Olympics are on the horizon. He wants to make Team Sweden after playing for his country during the 4 Nations Face-Off.

“It’s huge for me," Rakell said after practice. "For the Penguins, for me to have a better season than last year, it was important for me to have a good summer and just try to improve all the things I wanted to improve from last year. Obviously, getting a chance to play in the Olympics… never really had a chance before, so that would be cool for me and a great motivator for this year.”

Outside of Rakell, Murashov stood out again, which shouldn't surprise anyone. He's been a total freak in the crease and the best goaltender at camp so far. Sometimes it feels like he's not even trying when making some saves because of how natural everything looks to him. 

The Penguins don't want to rush his development, which is why it's still highly likely that he starts the season in Wilkes-Barre. Getting him the bulk of the starts in WBS this year should be the goal before he's potentially NHL-ready next year. 

Oct 4, 2024; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins defenseman Harrison Brunicke (45) skates with the puck against the Columbus Blue Jackets during the third period at PPG Paints Arena. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

Group A

The Sidney Crosby group was next up on Saturday, and outside of Crosby being his usual self, Owen Pickering had himself a really good day. He looks to be faster and has more command of his skating compared to last season. Pickering was paired with Harrison Brunicke again for a lot of drills, especially with Crosby and Ville Koivunen, and never looked out of place. 

Speaking of Brunicke, he talked about his pairing with Pickering after practice and likes how the pair is developing. 

"I think good," Brunicke said. "We are taking it each day, just learning and growing together, so it's been a lot of fun. We're creating some chemistry here and looking to keep progressing."

This is a pair that fans could see down the line in the NHL once both players are NHL-ready. 

Forward Aidan McDonough has flown a little under the radar since camp started on Thursday. He has showcased some strong puck skills and has an underrated release when he has time and space to use it. He should give the WBS Penguins solid depth for the 2025-26 season after he was signed to an AHL deal. He had 10 goals and 16 points in 16 games for the Charlotte Checkers last season.

Finally, Erik Karlsson was having the time of his life on Saturday. He was into the practice like it was a regular-season game and was shouting so loud that people in the other rink could probably hear him. Karlsson was paired a lot with Parker Wotherspoon for the second straight day, which could be a sign that they will be on the top pair to start the season.

Mar 15, 2025; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks goalie Arturs Silovs (31) handles the puck against the Chicago Blackhawks in the second period at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images

Group B

The Evgeni Malkin and Kris Letang group rounded out Saturday's training camp practice, and once again, goaltender Arturs Silovs was the biggest standout. He was locked in during the 90-minute practice and made some outstanding saves during a swath of different drills. His positioning continues to really shine in this camp. 

Outside of Murashov, Silovs has been the best goaltender at camp thus far and is in the driver's seat to be Tristan Jarry's backup this year. Jarry and Blomqvist have both been totally fine at camp, but the former two have been locked in since Thursday. 

'There's No Place I'd Rather Be': Tomasino Eager To Prove Himself In Pittsburgh This Season'There's No Place I'd Rather Be': Tomasino Eager To Prove Himself In Pittsburgh This SeasonAfter a third consecutive season of missing the playoffs, the long offseason was a grueling one for the Pittsburgh Penguins. Players were eager to get back in action, and some knew they were going to have to come into training camp this season with a purpose.  

Towards the end of the session, Evgeni Malkin and Anthony Mantha took turns firing slap shots that turned into goals when the group was doing a 3v3 drill with one net set up along the left side of the boards and another on the right side. It was very fast-paced and only involved a few skaters at a time, but the shots drew some oohs and ahhs from the crowd. 

The Penguins will have an off day on Sunday before playing their first game of the preseason on Monday against the Montreal Canadiens. There will be a morning skate for the players who will play in that game before they fly to Montreal. 

The next training camp practice will start at 8:45 a.m. ET on Tuesday.


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Nolan McLean impresses against Nationals despite Mets' defensive miscues

Nolan McLean has opportunely carried the Mets' rotation since making his major league debut last month, but neither he nor his supporting cast helped make his latest outing blemish-free.

The lauded rookie's spotless ERA at Citi Field received its first smudges on Saturday afternoon, as a handful of second-inning defensive blunders hampered the Mets early in a frustrating 5-3 loss to the division-rival Nationals in 11 innings.

With a pristine 1.19 ERA entering the weekend -- the lowest mark through six starts in Mets history -- minor hiccups were inevitable for McLean. But only one of the three total runs that he allowed was earned, and he ultimately completed five innings with six punchouts on 92 pitches.

"I felt like my stuff felt good," McLean said. "The first couple of innings, I could've done a much better job getting ahead. Also once I got the two strikes, I could've done a better job expanding the zone and throwing a few more putaway pitches."

After allowing a leadoff infield single in the second that popped out of Francisco Lindor's glove at short, McLean saw a subsequent single trickle to the right field warning track due to a misplay from Juan Soto. The ugly error allowed a run to score, and the string of bad luck didn't end there.

Just two pitches later, a well-placed chopper toward Pete Alonso on the grass at first produced a looping underhand toss that prevented McLean from stepping on the bag in time. While the play was initially ruled an out, the Nationals challenged the call and replay showed that the runner was safe.

McLean recovered nicely after the messy sequence, inducing a pair of swinging strikeouts with runners on the corners. But before completing the inning, he sailed a two-strike fastball past catcher Francisco Alvarez that allowed another run to cross the plate. The lone earned run charged to him came in the first inning, on an RBI groundout.

"We didn't make a couple of plays behind him, but I thought stuff-wise, he was really good again," Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said of McLean. "They ran his pitch count up for five innings there. But I think other than the execution when he was ahead, he was pretty good."

McLean will have to settle with an equally sweet 1.27 ERA through seven appearances, and in spite of the few mistakes, he generated eye-popping run on his two-seamer and baffling horizontal break on his sweeper. 

He also made more MLB history, becoming just the second pitcher ever to record 45-plus strikeouts with six or fewer runs allowed across their first seven big league outings. Sheer dominance from a 24-year-old with ace-level makeup and expectations.

While the Mets' rotation plan for a potential NL wild-card berth is anything but concrete, McLean couldn't be more valuable to the staff. He's lined up to make one last regular season start next weekend, in a road matchup against the Marlins.

Ryan O'Reilly impressed by Brady Martin's skill, delighted by his attitude during Predators training camp

Ryan O'Reilly, with one tooth missing, was grinning ear to ear when talking about what it's been like to have center Brady Martin at Nashville Predators training camp. 

The 18-year-old was drafted by the Predators fifth overall in the 2025 NHL Draft, and after a busy summer, is locked in on earning a spot on the Predators roster. 

O'Reilly, entering his 18th NHL season, has been enticed by Martin's skill, energy and overall positive attitude. 

"It's fun getting to know him [Martin]," O'Reilly said. "It takes me back to when I was young and I was excited to be at NHL training camp. He's got a lot of energy and always has a smile on his face. It's fun to see." 

O'Reilly remembers that similar excitement, but said there's a wide skill gap between Martin and himself when he was 18, in that Martin is better. 

"He's a lot better than I was at that age," O'Reilly chuckled. "He skates a lot better and I kind of ran on the ice a bit." 

That's been an area of Martin's game that he's been improving on over the summer. He said that he worked a lot off the ice, mainly with a track coach, to transition that explosiveness to the ice. 

It was the skill that Martin believed he "sharpened" the most this offseason. 

"We just did a lot of explosive exercises off the ice and worked a little bit of skating too," Martin said. 

Martin's ability to battle for the puck stuck out to O'Reilly as well. His strength on the stick is what played into his draft stock. In juniors, he was a bigger player who was hard to take the puck off of. 

"He's [Martin] very strong on the stick just in those little battles and pushing on him," O'Reilly said. "When I was younger, that was something that could've given me a leg [up] in being strong on pucks...you can tell he's got that strength. That farm boy strength." 

Martin's abilities on the puck were put to the test in Friday's scrimmage as he went up against 6-foot-6-inch Michael McCarron. 

Gold team forward Brady Martin (44) shoots against Blue team T.J. Semptimphelter (31) during the Future Stars Game at the Ford Ice Center Bellevue in Nashville, Tenn., Saturday, July 5, 2025.

"He's tough. He's a big boy," Martin said on facing McCarron. "It's tough to beat him, but it's just about taking little tips and seeing what he does and trying to beat him. It's a good challenge." 

While Martin and McCarron faced off earlier this week, they both play a critical role in bringing up the Predators' center depth. Both likely could play significant roles down the middle in bringing up the center depth in the bottom six. 

The effort is led by O'Reilly, who will likely center the first line at the start of the regular season. 

However, in the first week of training camp, Martin is looking to showcase his skills and continue proving that he's deserving of a spot on this season's roster. 

"I'm just going out there and working my tail off in every opportunity I get," Martin said. "I'm just trying to work hard and show the coaches what I have to bring." 

Will Smith has hairline hand fracture, putting his Dodgers playoff availability in question

Los Angeles Dodgers' Will Smith throws to first base during the fourth inning.
Dodgers catcher Will Smith throws to first base during a game against the San Diego Padres on Aug. 22. (Orlando Ramirez / Associated Press)

Dodgers catcher Will Smith has a hairline fracture in his right hand and is doubtful to return before the end of the regular season, according to manager Dave Roberts.

The Dodgers are “hopeful” Smith will be available for the postseason, but whether he will be ready for the very start of the playoffs — which likely will be Sept. 30 — remains “up in the air,” Roberts said.

Smith, the three-time All-Star catcher who led the National League in batting average in the first half of the season before slumping through August, first got hurt when a foul ball hit his dangling throwing hand behind the plate on Sept. 3 in Pittsburgh.

Read more:Shaikin: Clayton Kershaw was always at the heart of the Dodgers' franchise revival

After missing the Dodgers’ next five games, he returned to the starting lineup on Sept. 9 against the Colorado Rockies, and doubled in his first at-bat. However, the 30-year-old was a late scratch from the lineup the next day after his hand swelled up, and was placed on the injured list last weekend in San Francisco.

Initially, both an X-ray and an MRI on Smith’s hand came back clean, which is why the Dodgers allowed him to return to action as soon as they did. But his injury lingered and the Dodgers sent him back for another MRI at the end of this past week.

This time, the scan showed what both Roberts and president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman described as a “small” fracture.

"It sounds like from the doctors that it's so small and in such a small part of the hand that it didn't show up initially but did on the subsequent [scan],” Friedman said. “They seem to say [that] is common. I haven't seen it, but I also haven't seen a broken bone in that area very often. It makes sense why it was slow to rebound. I'm glad we have clarity on it. We're going to do everything we can to strengthen and heal and get it back.”

To this point, the Dodgers have managed without Smith, who was batting .296 with 17 home runs and 61 RBIs. In the 14 games he has missed since getting hurt, the team is 8-6 and averaging more than five runs per game.

A big reason why: The emergence of journeyman replacement Ben Rortvedt, a minor-league addition at the trade deadline who has come to the majors and produced capably as a fill-in for Smith and backup catcher Dalton Rushing (who missed 10 days this month after fouling a ball off his leg).

After joining the team as a career .186 hitter in four MLB seasons, Rortvedt has batted .294 in 13 games with the Dodgers with two doubles and two sacrifice bunts. Dodgers pitchers also have a 2.74 ERA with him behind the plate.

Even with Rushing healthy again, Roberts said Rortvedt will likely get the “lion’s share” of playing time in Smith’s absence.

“The way he's helped lead our pitching staff has been awesome,” Friedman said. “He really has that servant leadership mentality behind the plate, which has really ingratiated himself with a lot of our pitchers.”

Still, to be at top form, the Dodgers need Smith in the middle of the batting order.

Friedman said the team will keep giving treatment to his hand until “he gets to a point where he doesn't have symptoms, we'll re-X-ray.”

“We're optimistic that it's going to heal quickly, but we're at the mercy of how quickly that happens,” Friedman said. “We don't really know, but we're optimistic it'll be pretty fast.”

Read more:Clayton Kershaw delivers another 'perfect' L.A. moment as Dodgers clinch playoff berth

Graterol not expected back

It’s not much of a surprise at this point, but the Dodgers are not expecting reliever Brusdar Graterol to return this season.

Graterol has not pitched this year after an offseason shoulder surgery, and his recovery “hasn't gone as smoothly as he would like, as we would like,” Friedman said.

“It's been hard to kind of ramp up the volume that he would need to get back. My expectation is he will not be back this year."

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Phillies waste early lead, fall 4-3 to Diamondbacks

Phillies waste early lead, fall 4-3 to Diamondbacks originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

PHOENIX  – Rob Thomson has said in the past that he is a constant scoreboard watcher for out-of-town games.

He probably didn’t like what he saw Saturday. Not only did his Phillies drop a 4-3 decision to the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field, the Milwaukee Brewers won their game with the St. Louis Cardinals and pulled three games ahead of the Phillies for the top seed in the National League.

The Phillies pulled out to a 2-0 lead in the first inning when Harrison Bader walked on four pitches to start off the game and sprinted home on a double by Kyle Schwarber off Arizona starter Zac Gallen. Schwarber moved to third on a groundout by Bryce Harper then score on J.T. Realmuto’s sacrifice fly to deep center.

Arizona tied the game 2-2 with solo runs in the first and third off Nola, but he was given the lead back in the fourth when Alec Bohm homered to center for a 3-2 lead.

“I think I’m just getting through the ball better, not cutting my swing off and just kind of the way I feel. Just feels getting through the ball better,” said Bohm. “For a little while there I was just kind of stuck. Just keep building on the consistency of it. Today when I swung I put the ball in play which is more on par for what I do. When I’m good, when I decide to swing at a pitch, and make the right decision, the ball is getting put in play.”

As the manager said, a lot of good things despite a loss that dropped them to 92-63.

“It was nice to see Schwarber get a couple of hits, the double to left-center was a good sign,” said Thomson. “Bohm is swinging the bat well, Stott had a couple base hits, great at-bat in the ninth. Lot of good things today.”

But the Diamondbacks got to Nola in the sixth when, with one out, Blaze Alexander doubled off the wall in centerfield and scored a batter later when James McCann doubled to right-center. Tanner Banks relieved Nola and struck out pinch-hitter Tim Tawa, but Ildemaro Vargas blooped a single just over the head of shortstop Bryson Stott and Arizona grabbed a 4-3 lead.

An error by third baseman Alexander on a ball hit by Otto Kemp and a walk to Bryson Stott by Gallen gave the Phillies two men on with two out in the seventh, but Harrison Bader grounded into a fielder’s choice to end that threat.

The Phillies got a pair of runners on again in the eighth when Kyle Schwarber led off with a single but was forced at second on a great play by Geraldo Perdomo who dove and snagged a Bryce Harper grounder to force Schwarber at second. Harper advanced to third on a single to right by Realmuto, but Brandon Marsh struck out looking and Bohm flew out softly to center.

Should the Phillies need a fourth starter in the playoffs Nola helped himself on Saturday, if there is indeed a competition for that spot between him and Walker Buehler. Nola went 5 1/3 innings and gave up seven hits, four earned runs, a pair of walks and struck out 4 while throwing 55 of his 84 pitches for strikes.

“I could have been a little more aggressive, a lot better than last outing,” said Nola. “Body feels good. I’m 100 percent finally. I feel great. My arm feels good, so overall I feel really good. They’ve got a pretty good lineup. They’re scrappy, hit the ball both ways.”

“I thought he was pretty good,” said Thomson. “Encouraging. I thought his fastball command was good, 93, 94. Landed his curveball early in counts and behind in counts, so that was a good sign. Yeah, 65 percent strikes, got some whiffs. It was good.

“Today was really encouraging to me just because his fastball command, velocity was up and he held it for most of the game. I’m not sure if there’s not some fatigue setting in, just because he hasn’t had a full season. Sometimes that’s good. Really, with the amount of starts he’s had he’s still kind of building back. I don’t know whether there’s some fatigue setting in but I liked where he was at today.”

Gallen, the Bishop Eustace product, kept his hot pitching streak alive by picking up the win as he improved to 13-14 on the season. In his last 10 starts, he is 6-2 with a 2.82 ERA after giving up three earned runs in seven innings to the Phillies.

“His secondary pitch was really good,” said Thomson. “The changeup to lefties, the curveball to righties and lefties. Really good.”

'You Don't Always Have Control': 1-on-1 With Devils' Nico Daws

At 24 years old, Nico Daws may not have experienced it all, but he has been around long enough to have a clear understanding of the business side of hockey. 

After Saturday afternoon's practice, the young goaltender spoke to The Hockey News, reflecting on this being his fifth training camp with the New Jersey Devils organization. Over the years, he played 98 American Hockey League (AHL) games and 52 NHL games. 

In his second professional season, Daws was named to the 2022-23 AHL All-Star Classic. In 2024, he shined under the lights of MetLife Stadium, making 45 saves in the Devils' 6–3 victory over the Philadelphia Flyers in the NHL Stadium Series. 

© Ed Mulholland-Imagn Images

Looking back on his first few years, he spoke about maturity. 

"I feel like my first few years, I kind of had that feeling of Do I really belong?" he explained. "You are so young, and guys are older, but now I am coming into myself more and having a lot more confidence in my game and as a person, too. It's been nice." 

Daws has experienced the highs and lows that any developing player experiences throughout their career, but with age comes comfortability.

"Obviously, it takes a while to get your game comfortable at this level, and being able to do it on a consistent basis," he said. "There are so many hard lessons you have to learn. I feel like I have learned a lot of them, but obviously, there is still a lot of room to grow and areas to improve in. 

"I feel really good about where I am at right now." 

Daws is entering camp understanding that the Devils' goaltending tandem will be veterans Jacob Markstrom and Jake Allen. The 6-foot-4 netminder wasn't surprised to see Devils general manager Tom Fitzgerald sign Allen in free agency, saying the 35-year-old is a great goalie and a great person. 

This leads to an unknown for Daws and his future in New Jersey. He will require waivers to be assigned to the Utica Comets (AHL). If the Devils need Daws' services at any point during this season, there is a risk that another NHL team could claim him and take on his contract. 

"Whatever happens, happens," Daws said when asked if he thinks about getting claimed off waivers. "My job stays the same. That is all I am focused on: making sure I am ready to go when the season starts."

His response aligns with his easy-going and adaptable personality, which reporters have come to appreciate.   

While there were some struggles last season in Utica, Daws showed well in the four games he started for the Devils last season, earning a 3-1-0 record with a .939 save percentage and a 1.60 goals-against average. For the 2025-26 season, he is on a one-way deal at $850,000 at the NHL level.  

"At the end of the day, you gotta play as good as you can," he said. "You don't always have control of where you end up or what happens. That is just the realistic side of pro hockey. You have to be able to put your head down and work through the circumstances, no matter what."

Make sure you bookmark THN's New Jersey Devils site for THN's latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more.

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Newly Signed Goaltender Will Make His First Preseason Start With The Wild

ST. PAUL, Minn - The Minnesota Wild announced its starting goaltender for Sunday's game against the Winnipeg Jets in Winnipeg.

Cal Petersen will get the start between the pipes for Minnesota in Winnipeg for the Wild's first preseason game.

Petersen, 30, was signed on a one-year deal worth $775,000. He went 13-15-3 with a 3.14 goals-against average (GAA) and .885 save percentage (SV%) in 31 games last season with the Lehigh Valley Phantoms of the AHL.

The native of Iowa has played in 106 NHL games in his career across six seasons. He is 46-44-10 with a 2.96 GAA, .903 SV% and has four shutouts.

He was signed as some extra insurance if Filip Gustavsson or Jesper Wallstedt get injured. Wallstedt will back him up on Sunday in Winnipeg.

For action-packed issues, access to the entire magazine archive and a free issue, subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/free. Get the latest news and trending stories by subscribing to our newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com.

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Bryce Eldridge's first MLB hit highlights unforgettable night for his family

Bryce Eldridge's first MLB hit highlights unforgettable night for his family originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

LOS ANGELES — On Saturday night, Bryce Eldridge picked up his first MLB hit by smoking a fastball from former All-Star Tyler Glasnow off the wall in left field. The milestone came at Dodger Stadium in front of a sellout crowd, and it cleared the bases. 

It was a big moment. It was not, however, enough to make him the star of the family group chat. 

Eldridge’s mom, Beth, was at Dodger Stadium with her twin sister and other son to watch as the 20-year-old made his fourth start in the big leagues. In the top of the fifth, with Eldridge on deck, Beth caught a foul ball that Matt Chapman hit behind the first base dugout.

“She said someone was trying to wrestle her for it and she kind of whacked their hand out of the way,” the rookie first baseman said, smiling. “She’s feisty. She gets what she wants.”

Eldridge’s family members stood and cheered wildly after his three-run double in the first, which got him on the board in the big leagues. They did it again after Beth wrestled away that foul ball. 

On the rest of this night, there wasn’t much for anyone affiliated with the Giants to celebrate. 

The lineup let Glasnow off the hook after the Eldridge double, scoring once more in the inning but failing to take advantage of his rising pitch count. He ended up going five, and the Dodgers clawed their way back and then took the lead with four homers, ultimately winning 7-5.  

This has become the norm for the Giants, who never imagined their bullpen looking like this. They can’t hold late leads. They also can’t hold big early leads. For the third time in eight days, the lineup scored four early runs but then shut it down. The Giants have lost all three games. 

This defeat was their seventh in eight games since they briefly moved into a tie for the National League’s third Wild Card spot. They can be eliminated from the postseason as soon as Monday, which would make the final week at Oracle Park 100 percent about looking toward the future. 

Eldridge will be a huge part of it, and he should make his debut at first base in the coming days. As a DH, he has shown the power that made him one of the game’s top prospects shortly after the Giants took him in the first round of the 2023 MLB Draft

While Michael Conforto bungled his route in left, the ball was hit hard enough the other way that it would have been a homer in eight ballparks. At Chase Field earlier this week, Eldridge hit two similar balls. He also lined out to deep right on Thursday. 

That first homer is only a matter of time, and Eldridge is hopeful he gets it Sunday at Dodger Stadium. 

“This is one of the places I grew up dreaming of playing in,” he said. “In this environment and this time of year. It’s pretty cool.”

Eldridge felt some nerves last Monday at Chase Field. In the three starts since, there has been nothing but a drive to contribute. He excelled with runners in scoring position in the minors and picked up his first three RBI on Saturday. 

“I think I hit my best when there’s people in scoring position,” he said. “I was just confident in that moment that I was going to score a run and I’m just glad I got the job done. That’s what we’re here to do.”

The milestone came on his mom and aunt Alison’s birthday. It was a night the family will never forget, for a lot of reasons. 

“I wouldn’t want it any other way than in a big spot here off a guy who has had a lot of success in this league, on my mom and my aunt’s birthday,” Eldridge said. “It was pretty cool.”

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Five NHL Teams That Could Be A Good Fit For Defenseman Matt Grzelcyk Despite Blackhawks PTO

After months of waiting for the right offer in the UFA market this off-season, defenseman Matt Grzelcyk signed a PTO with the Chicago Blackhawks

It was puzzling to see Grzelcyk go unsigned after he put up a career-high 39 assists and 40 points last season with the Pittsburgh Penguins. Not to mention that he is 31 years old with multiple seasons left in the tank to be a serviceable D-man for any team that wants him.

Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic reported that, despite coming off a one-year, $2.75-million contract and a great season, Grzelcyk received an offer from a Western Conference team to sign a one-year contract worth $1 million. Ultimately, the blueliner rejected the offer.

Even though he signed a PTO with Chicago, LeBrun added that four destinations could be interested in Grzelcyk’s services, depending on how training camp and pre-season go for each team, and for Grzelcyk.

Here’s a ranking of which team would make the best fit for Grzelcyk.

1. Colorado Avalanche

The Colorado Avalanche currently have a hole on the left side of their defense. Although that hole won’t last for long because defenseman Samuel Girard is expected to return from his lower-body injury for opening night of the regular season.

Nonetheless, that doesn’t mean there isn’t a fit for Grzelcyk on Colorado’s back end. There’s an opportunity for him in the bottom four of that D-corps. With Girard, Josh Manson and Brent Burns likely safe in their spots, that leaves one more spot free.

Grzelcyk would have to compete with D-man Sam Malinski for that final spot. Malinski is a right-handed defenseman, giving the edge to Grzelcyk in terms of pairing positions. Furthermore, Grzelcyk has plenty more NHL experience and effectiveness compared to Malinski, who has played just 99 NHL games at the age of 27.

However, there would be no need to kick Malinski to the curb, as he’d still be an asset to Colorado’s defense. While Burns has been a great D-man for most of his career, he is now 40 years old and naturally on the decline. Malinski could find consistent ice time filling in for the aging Burns. 

2. Chicago Blackhawks

The Blackhawks seem like a team that could likely take Grzelcyk on a one-year deal following camp and pre-season. Chicago has one of the younger teams in the NHL, and bringing on someone with Grzelcyk’s experience certainly couldn’t hurt the team’s chances at being more competitive this season. However, there is a tradeoff that goes with being more competitive with him on the roster.

Grzelcyk will be taking a spot on the team that could go to a younger defenseman. That could hinder the development plans of the Blackhawks’ young D-core, including Alex Vlasic, Ethan Del Mastro, Wyatt Kaiser, Kevin Korchinski and Nolan Allan, who all play on the left side.

3. Ottawa Senators

It seems unlikely that the Ottawa Senators would be the ones to sign Grzelcyk, but it's not impossible. One half of Ottawa’s defense seems to be set in stone. That would include Jake Sanderson, Thomas Chabot and Artem Zub. Outside of them, Nick Jensen, Jordan Spence, Tyler Kleven and Nikolas Matinpalo are a bit lower on the depth chart, but still solid NHL defensemen.

With this roster, it’s tough to find a regular spot for Grzelcyk, but there is an opportunity there. For instance, Jensen, 34, is coming off a serious hip surgery in the off-season. That leaves some question marks about the near future of his health and spot on the team.

4. New York Islanders

At this point, the New York Islanders are supposed to be a team that is looking to develop young players, especially after drafting defensemen Matthew Schaefer and Kashawn Aitcheson, as well as right winger Victor Eklund, in the first round of the 2025 draft. However, there isn’t an issue with bringing on a veteran or two to guide the youngsters.

The only issue with that ideology is that the Isles are overflowing with veteran defensemen. Even with the subtraction of Noah Dobson, New York still has Alexander Romanov, Adam Pelech, Ryan Pulock, Scott Mayfield and Tony DeAngelo. Not to mention Ethan Bear and Adam Boqvist, who are still in the defensive mix, even if they’re given AHL roles this season.

The truth is, on the Islanders, there isn’t much room for Grzelcyk to be an effective, everyday NHL player.

5. Anaheim Ducks

The Anaheim Ducks are in a great place with the hire of Joel Quenneville and the wave of excellent players between the ages of 20 and 25. On left defense, Olen Zellweger, Jackson LaCombe and Pavel Mintyukov carry the load, and they’re all showing great promise to be top-pairing D-men one day.

The Ducks have a loaded abundance of young defensemen that they likely won’t want to be tinkered with, at least when the direction they’re heading is considered. It’s not to say that Grzelcyk wouldn’t have an impact on the team, but Anaheim seems to be set. Grzelcyk would be more fitting as a trade deadline acquisition rather than a committed acquisition at this point in the year.

For action-packed issues, access to the entire magazine archive and a free issue, subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/free. Get the latest news and trending stories by subscribing to our newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com.