CLEARWATER, MEXICO - MARCH 14: Jean Cabrera #16 of the Philadelphia Phillies pitches during the game between the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Philadelphia Phillies at BayCare Ballpark on Friday, March 14, 2025 in Clearwater, Florida. (Photo by Mike Carlson/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
We are officially in the “eh, sure” stage of ranking the Phillies’ prospects. They have a shallow farm system once you get past the top five in the group, so if you lump enough of them together, maybe one or two will stick.
It’s a bit of a sad state of affairs.
Jean Cabrera – 72 Mavis Graves – 69 Zach McCambley – 32 Yoniel Curet – 10 Keaton Anthony – 8 Carson DeMartini – 7 Griffin Burkholder – 7 Alex McFarlane – 5 Cody Bowker – 3 Seth Johnson – 2
Cabrera is starting give off whiffs of Adonis Medina: guy who has the prospect pedigree of being a solid mid- to backend starting pitcher, yet the team never really gives him a chance to even make a spot start. As the probable 7th or 8th option in the team’s pecking order this season, he might finally make his debut, if not next year at least. We’re getting close to needing to see what he’s got, else he might just wither on the prospect vine.
Cabrera still does the things one looks for in a steady, back-of-the-rotation starter. He’s limber and athletic, he repeats his delivery well and with little violence, he has demonstrated that he has season-long big league starter stamina (he worked 137 innings last season), and he has the toolkit to thwart both left- and right-handed hitters. Issues with his fastball’s shape and playability forced Cabrera to lean more heavily on his slider as a strike-getting pitch in 2025, and subsequently use his changeup (which played like a plus pitch for the second consecutive year) more as a finisher.
With each new post, we’ll reveal who won the voting for that particular slot, then post new players for you to vote on, adding another one to the list each time until we get to our final tally of 20. Once we get to 20 top prospects, we’ll do an honorable mention post at the end. If a player gets traded to another team, we’ll just chuck him right on outta here and all the players will move up a spot. If a prospect gets acquired, we’ll ask where he should go on the list.
Probably the most important thing about this whole process – please vote. Give us a few minutes of your time, just click a button and then we can discuss other players and things in the comment section, but don’t forget – VOTE!
ARLINGTON, TX - SEPTEMBER 24: Jonah Heim #28 of the Texas Rangers looks on during a game against the Minnesota Twins at Globe Life Field on September 24, 2025 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Bailey Orr/Texas Rangers/Getty Images) | Getty Images
With the 2025 Texas Rangers season having come to an end, we shall be, over the course of the offseason, taking a look at every player who appeared in a major league game for the Texas Rangers in 2025.
Today we are looking at catcher Jonah Heim.
Man…I don’t even know what to say about Jonah Heim. What the hell happened here? How did a guy who looked like he would be a nice first division catcher for the team suddenly become terrible?
The reflexive reaction is that, well, Heim had a career year in 2023 like seemingly everyone else did for the Rangers that year, and then went back to being who he was. But that’s not true! I mean, yes, Jonah Heim had a career year in 2023 — was terrific defensively, and was slashing .280/.337/.479 when he landed on the injured list in late July — but he was good in 2022 as well. Heim had a 2.7 fWAR and 2.4 bWAR in 2022, as he hit fine for a catcher and was good defensively.
In 2024, Heim cratered offensively, slashing .220/.267/.336. He also went from being great at throwing out runners in 2023 to bad at that in 2024, but his framing — his strongest measurable trait defensively throughout his career — was still very good.
In 2025, Heim once again hit poorly, with a .213/.271/.332 slash line, but also wasn’t good at blocking pitches (38th percentile per Statcast) and, perhaps most alarmingly, he was only in the 33rd percentile in framing. This, after being in the 98th percentile in framing in 2021 and 2022, in the 95th percentile in 2023, and the 74th percentile in 2024.
How does that happen? How does a catcher suddenly go from being an elite framer to a really good framer to a below average framer in a two year span?
I wish I knew the answer.
Offensively, Jonah had much the same problem in 2025 as he did in 2024 — he got eaten up by fastballs and he stopped pulling the ball in the air. Last offseason I noted that the biggest discrepancies for Heim between 2023 and 2024 was his walk rate dropping and his hitting fewer balls in the air, particularly to the pull side. After having over 25% of his balls in play being pulled in the air in 2022 and 2023, that dropped to 17.3% in 2024. If Heim was going to go back to being the hitter he was in 2022 and 2023, that trend would have to reverse.
And early on in 2025, it looked like it was. Heim homered twice in the second game of the season — Kyle Higashioka got the start on Opening Day — and at the end of April was slashing .273/.325/.455. It looked like, offensively anyway, Heim was back.
But no. From May 1 through the end of the season, Heim slashed .198/.258/.302. And while his walk rate improved — he walked 7.4% of the time, still below his 2022 and 2023 rate of 8.5%, but better than his 5.3% walk rate in 2024 — he actually got worse in regards to his fly ball/ground ball tendencies.
In 2022 and 2023, Heim hit the ball in the air 61.1% and 63.7% of the time, respectively, compared to a major league average of 55.8%. That dropped to 58.2% in 2024 and 58.7% in 2025.
Heim pulled the ball 50% and 45% of the time in 2022 and 2023. In 2024, it was 38.3%, and in 2025, it was 40.7%.
And when he did pull the ball, more and more often, it was on the ground — 24% of the balls Jonah Heim put into play in 2025 were pulled ground balls. Only 16.7% of balls in play from Heim in 2025 were pulled in the air — even worse than his disappointing 2024 number.
The inclination is to put some of it on the much-discussed issue of the Shed killing fly ball hitters in 2025 — Heim had a slash line of .204/.266/.282 at home last year, compared to .220/.275/.374 on the road — but his xwOBA, which shouldn’t be impacted by that, was still .276, the worst of his career, and a mark that put him in the 4th percentile in MLB, per Statcast. So we can’t really place the blame on the Shed for Heim’s offensive struggles.
Fun fact — after hitting two home runs at the Shed on Opening Day, Heim only hit one more homer at home the rest of the season.
No, you’re right, that’s not really a fun fact.
Heim has also shouldered a very heavy workload the past several years. Since the start of 2022, Heim has appeared in 513 games — the second most of any player who has made at least 80% of his appearances at catcher, behind only Cal Raleigh, who has appeared in 576 games.
Early in spring training, there was a story about how the team “had some stern conversations,” as then catching coach Bobby Wilson put it, in the 2024 exit interviews about the improvements Heim needed to make in his offseason conditioning:
Getting Heim back to his 2023 form started at that exit interview.
What would his offseason look like? What would the strength and conditioning schedule be? How does the training staff keep Heim healthy?
Whatever it was that they were doing, it doesn’t appear to have worked.
Heim has gone from an All Star in 2023 to, in 2026, someone who settled for a $1.25 million deal with the Atlanta Braves on the eve of camps opening, and who might not have a major league job once the Braves’ starting catcher, Sean Murphy, returns from hip surgery.
It has been a precipitous fall for someone who, at one point, appeared to have made the Rangers’ catching position a strength for years to come.
BOSTON, MA - FEBRUARY 6: Payton Pritchard #11 and Nikola Vucevic #4 of the Boston Celtics talk during the game against the Miami Heat on February 6, 2026 at TD Garden 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. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
We’re back! Welcome to the Celtics’ Top-5 Highest IQ Plays of the Week!
Sure, we love the high-flying dunks and the deep, off-the-dribble step-back threes, but this is a place for the under-the-radar plays that might not get the credit they deserve. The plays that get the basketball sickos and nerds out of their chairs. The plays that even YOU could make in your weekly rec league game.
Each week, the plays will be ranked from five to one—one being the smartest—and will only be taken from games that occurred within the past week. For this week, games from February 6th to February 13th are considered. The Celtics went 2-1 this week, with wins over the Heat and Bulls but a tough loss to the Knicks. Onto the All-Star break!
Pritchard is all about efficiency, even when it comes to saving a few seconds. Let’s be honest—he’s just trying to get him and his teammates to the All-Star break as quickly as possible. Here, he’s being a good sport and not taking a shot to extend the lead, so he just gives the ball to Sexton instead of getting a shot-clock violation, which would require the ref stopping the game and initiating an inbound for Chicago. PP’s going to be given a turnover anyway, so he might as well just give the ball to the opponent rather than dribble out the clock. And who knows, perhaps those extra 10 seconds of sleep will allow Payton and the rest of the squad to be extra rested post-break.
Basketball is like dominoes. Once you get the defense to commit two defenders to one offensive player, that advantage needs to be KEPT by way of quick decisions that don’t allow the defense to get back into the play. The first advantage should lead to a second advantage, which should lead to a third, and so on. Here, Walsh notices that two defenders lunge at Vucevic, so he immediately cuts to the rim, creating an advantage. When he gets the ball, he swings it quickly to Gonzalez, who swings it quickly to White, who swings it quickly back to Vuc. Everybody already knows what they’re going to do with the ball before it comes to them, because they’re watching the defense rotate while they’re spotting up. Beautiful, decisive basketball.
3. Know your personnel (welcome to the highest IQ plays, Nikola!)
The best basketball players hide their weaknesses and showcase their strengths, and they also bring out their opponents’ weaknesses’ and eliminate their strengths (you have to study them to know what they are, by the way). Vucevic demonstrates on this play that he knows both his weakness (a lack of vertical pop) and KAT’s weakness (uncoordinated, flailing limbs). So, instead of meeting him in the air, Nikola stays grounded and takes the contact from a bulldozing Towns. Way to know yourself, and your opponent, Vuc.
The situation that Gonzalez finds himself in here is one of the most common defensive predicaments in the NBA. After briefly collapsing into the paint for help, Hugo is forced to guard two players on the perimeter at once, until a teammate (usually, although not in this case) flies out to eliminate the advantage. In real time, Gonzalez stunts at Pelle Larson while positioning his body in a good place to also guard the extra pass to Davion Mitchell, the better three-point shooter. But because his stunt is so aggressive, he throws off Larson’s timing and ends up forcing him into a turnover. Oh, and then he makes an awesome pass to Brown in transition. What a two-way play by the rookie.
Could anything be more Derrick White than a no-look steal? It’s so ridiculous that he even has the wherewithal to throw his arms up at all, let alone the IQ and instincts necessary to raise them at the exact time the outlet pass is coming. White crashes hard for the rebound—like he always does—and then he doesn’t even look at Larson before perfectly timing up his hands for the steal. Special stuff from Derrick, but I have to admit I’m not remotely surprised he would make a play like this.
SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - SEPTEMBER 13: Manager Terry Francona #77 of the Cincinnati Reds reacts after being mentioned during the Athletics Hall of Fame induction at Sutter Health Park on September 13, 2025 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Scott Marshall/Getty Images) | Getty Images
As ridiculous question-themed title prompts go, this one might take the cake. It’s not without reference, however, as just last summer ESPN’s Jeff Passan referenced the legendary pixie dust of Cincinnati Reds manager Terry Francona as a means for the Reds to surge forward in the standings, something Tito did while up north in Cleveland for the better part of a decade.
While the science behind said pixie dust is questionable, at best, the reality is that the Reds do have one of baseball’s greatest ever managers in their dugout right now, and he’s entering the second year at the helm. He knows the dugout at this point, and the lack of turnover suggests he’s on-board with how it’s been put together. At this juncture, there’s a familiarity that, in theory, should breed a heightened sense of togetherness in the locker room, something Francona has helped foster at just about every stop in his career.
That career is on the cusp of some even more significance, too.
Tito currently has 2033 career wins as a manager under his belt, good enough for 12th most in Major League Baseball history right now. Of the 11 managers ahead of him on the list, 9 are already Hall of Famers and the other two – Bruce Bochy and Dusty Baker – will undoubtedly be in there in short order. Joe McCarthy currently sits 10th on the all-time wins list at 2125, meaning a 93 win season from this Reds club would vault Francona into the Top 10 in all-time wins.
Francona has also guided teams to the playoffs on 12 different occasions. That’s a number that’s good for fifth most all-time, and making it back to the postseason with this Reds club would give him 13 times in the playoffs – a number that would tie Baker for fourth most all-time.
Only 11 managers in MLB history have won more than a pair of World Series titles, with Tito currently sitting on the two that he won in his days with the Boston Red Sox. Should the Reds go all the way this year and claim a title, he’d be tied with Tony La Russa, Dave Roberts, John McGraw, Sparky Anderson, and Miller Huggins with a trio. Only six managers in MLB history have won more than 3 World Series titles.
It’s a testament to his character, the longevity to reach these potential milestones. It’s a testament to his talent and feel for the position, too. Now, it’s up to this young Reds club to begin to truly embrace what it means to be a Francona-led ball club and take the next step up from simply being slightly better than average, and if they do, the future Hall of Famer in the dugout next to them will find himself in even more rarified air all-time.
The Edmonton Oilers will certainly be a buyer to watch once the NHL Olympic roster freeze lifts. They should be aiming to bolster their roste ahead of the playoffs.
Now, the Oilers are being predicted to land one of the NHL's most interesting trade candidates.
"The Oilers are all-in to chase a championship, but they’re operating with limited cap flexibility while sizing up new pieces. Enter McMann," Johnston wrote.
This is not the first time that the Oilers have been viewed as a potential landing spot for McMann. It is no secret that they could use another top-nine forward, and McMann undoubtedly would give them a boost if they landed him.
McMann is currently in the middle of a strong year for the Maple Leafs as well. In 56 games, the 29-year-old forward has recorded 19 goals, 13 assists, 32 points, and 126 hits. With numbers like these, he would certainly give the Oilers' top nine more secondary scoring and grit if they acquired him
Johnston also brought up how McMann's affordable cap hit makes him a realistic target for a team with limited cap space like the Oilers.
"There won’t be another 20-plus goal man available at this deadline who commands a cap hit below the league’s minimum salary. But the Leafs can get him there with full retention. There’s going to be a premium charged for doing that, but part of being all-in is doing whatever it takes to increase your odds of winning," Johnston wrote.
While McMann would be an excellent addition to the Oilers' roster, the same can be said for just about every other contender. Because of this, there is no question that the Oilers will have competition for his services if the Maple Leafs officially make him available. For example, in the same article for The Athletic, James Mirtle predicted that the Colorado Avalanche will land McMann.
Nevertheless, it will be intriguing to see if the Oilers can end up landing McMann from the Maple Leafs.
Maro Itoje has called on his England side to be “bulletproof” as they seek to clinch a first win at Murrayfield in six years on Saturday. England can keep their grand slam pursuit alive by successfully defending the Calcutta Cup and Itoje has urged his side to create their own history despite their recent wretched form in Edinburgh.
With England on a 12-match winning streak and Scotland suffering a shock defeat by Italy last week, Steve Borthwick’s side are clear favourites for victory. Their only victory at Murrayfield since Eddie Jones’ first game in charge came in miserable weather in 2020, however, with Scotland securing victories in 2022 and last time out in 2024.
One thing the sabermetric revolution has taught us is that batting order doesn’t matter all that much. At least, not in the traditional sense of putting a speedy runner at the the top, someone who can handle the bat and move him over second, and power hitters in the middle. The general consensus now is that a team’s best hitter should hit second with a high-OBP hitter in front of him. But, ultimately, batting order doesn’t have a significant impact on the number of runs a team scores over the course of the season, and the best thing a team can do is arrange the lineup such that its best hitters get as many at-bats as possible.
Roman Anthony is the best hitter on the Red Sox, and he did spend most of last season in the leadoff spot, a strategy that works pretty well for the defending champions. While Alex Cora hasn’t said whether he’ll repeat that this season, he did speak on batting order yesterday, saying that Willson Contreras will bat cleanup. He further implied that Anthony, Jarren Duran, and Trevor Story will occupy the top three spots, though it sounds like he hasn’t yet decided in what order.
Assuming that Cora will want left-right balance at the top of the order — and conceding that Story doesn’t have the OBP chops to leadoff — that really only leaves one possibility:
Anthony
Story
Duran
Contreras
Hitting Anthony second would force Duran and Anthony (both lefties) to hit back-to-back, while hitting Anthony third will inevitably result in a lot of first inning at-bats where he finds himself up with two outs and nobody on, which is exactly what the theory that says your best hitter should bat second tries to avoid.
So what do you think? Do you want to see Anthony in the leadoff spot again or do you have something else in mind?
Talk about that and whatever else you want and, as always, be good to one another.
In what sounds a little like an “if you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em” type of situation, MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred said the league will consider partnering with prediction markets.
Speaking at the end of baseball’s winter meetings in Palm Beach, the commissioner — who as recently as last year was bemoaning the fact MLB was “dragged” into legalized sports betting — said that this may be the only way to protect against more illegal gambling scandals in the sport.
“We thought it was important for the owners to be updated on why prediction markets are different than sports betting, why we might want to consider being in business with prediction markets in an effort to protect our integrity, to get the kind of protections we need,” Manfred said, according to Front Office Sports. “The regulatory framework — very different. Obviously, state by state on the sports betting side, federal on the other.”
Of course, MLB has had its share of bumps and bruises in the post-PASPA era, from a scandal involving Ippei Mizuhara, the interpreter for modern-day Babe Ruth Shohei Ohtani, to the ongoing investigation into Cleveland Guardians pitcher Emmanuel Clase, accused of throwing pitches in accordance with gamblers’ wishes.
Manfred did point out that in all cases where there either has been, or seemed like there was, hinky stuff going on, the league found it out via data partnerships with the sportsbooks and their partners.
“Every situation we’ve had has been based on data that we received from sports betting properties,” Manfred said, according to The Athletic. “That data, kind of generically … would be characterized as patterns, right? That pattern emerges, you know, sometimes it’s betting when a particular player is involved. Sometimes it involves individuals that when it starts, you have no reason to believe — it’s not a player that’s betting, it’s just some guy that is a stranger to us. So sometimes it takes time for those patterns to become clear.”
Manfred: MLB Will ‘Consider Being in Business With Prediction Markets’https://t.co/7hulCGci7z
Manfred also isn’t against the idea of one set of federal rules covering the entirety of the prediction market landscape, instead of the state-by-state patchwork of legalized sports betting.
“The interesting thing about the prediction markets is there’s an opportunity to work with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission,” he said. “If you got where you want it to be, you’d have a nice federal regulation, it’d be the same everywhere. Kind of a nice thing.”
MLB wouldn’t be the first league to sit at the table with Kalshi and company: The NHL has seen teams partner with prediction markets, with more certainly to come.
The NBA and NFL so far have not engaged the prediction markets, but the winds seem to be blowing in that direction, at least for the NFL.
“It’s innovative. That marketplace is dynamic,” Jeff Miller, the NFL’s executive vice president, told Front Office Sports last week before the Super Bowl.
Oct 17, 2018; Los Angeles, CA, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Clayton Kershaw (22) reacts in the first inning against the Milwaukee Brewers in game five of the 2018 NLCS playoff baseball series at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images
Clayton Kershaw, like the Dodgers team as a whole, took a step back in 2018, although they were both still good enough to accomplish similar goals. Kershaw delivered another sub-3.00 ERA, and the Dodgers saw their most difficult division title of this whole Andrew Friedman era come to pass, needing a Game 163 at home to beat out the Colorado Rockies for the NL West crown. A team that severely underperformed its pythagorean win-loss record, winning only 92 games when it indicated it should’ve crossed the 100-win threshold, the Dodgers entered the playoffs without the gravitas of the previous campaign but were still seen as a top candidate to reach the Fall Classic.
The year 2018 marked the first time Kershaw could legitimately be seen as no longer the top option in the Dodgers rotation. Walker Buehler was beyond magnificent in his rookie campaign, starting that decisive Game 163 in a win over Colorado, and it was Hyun Jin-Ryu taking the ball in Game 1 of the NLDS against the Braves after a 1.97 ERA in 15 starts.
As if to have his Michael Jordan’s “and then it became personal to me” moment, Kershaw started game 2 of that NLDS against Atlanta with a vengeance, delivering one of the most efficient postseason outings in the 21st century, covering eight scoreless frames while needing a mere 85 pitches to do so, largely explained by his standard no walks and a surprising only three strikeouts. Still, the Dodgers already led that series 1-0, and for as great as Kershaw was, this wasn’t his most memorable outing during that World Series run.
Quick, if someone tells you to think of the first thing that comes to your mind when hearing the mention of Kershaw against the Brewers in the postseason? You, like me and so many others, might’ve thought about pitcher Brandon Woodruff taking him yard with a home run in Milwaukee, worthy of the game’s premier left-handed sluggers. While the rarity of that moment holds merit, when you assess Kershaw’s track record against the Brewers in the playoffs, there’s a rather transparent argument that it stands out due to the narrative around Kershaw in the playoffs in our subconscious — a narrative built largely on undeniable facts, but one that, at the very least, glosses over the entire story by skipping a few chapters in a quite rude manner. Although not as dominant as in his Wild Card performance in 2020, Kershaw’s most important postseason performance against the Brewers came in Game 5 of the NLCS in 2018.
I had the idea to do a series along these lines for quite a while, and when going back to check Kershaw’s postseason record, none of the previous games we’ve covered stood out as much as this one. For whatever the case, I remembered Kershaw doing well in that Game 5, but not as well as he actually did in what was a pivotal win in a series then tied 2-2 and headed to Milwaukee with someone owning a match point.
The script had been written, the stage was set, and even the “villain” had been properly introduced shortly into the proceedings with a change of starters. Craig Counsell quickly revealed Wade Miley was simply a decoy and threw Woodruff in to cover the bulk of innings one out into the start of the game for the Dodger hitters—the same Woodruff who had homered off Kershaw as the Brew Crew hit around the three-time Cy Young winner in Game 1 of that series.
For those paying attention, there is a consistency from the start of this series of articles: thin margins for Kershaw in each one of these great postseason performances. A large part of why I’m so dismissive of the idea of any logical explanation behind the general struggles of Kershaw in the playoffs is that, on the times he was at his best, of which there were plenty, as we’ve seen, those games were some of the more tightly contested the Dodgers have played, upping the pressure to the nth degree.
Milwaukee scored first in Game 5, once again propelled by a positive at-bat from the hitting pitcher Woodruff, whose one-out walk helped pass the baton to Lorenzo Cain, driving in one on a double — a hit that generated a two-on, one-out situation for Kershaw to navigate through against the heart of the order for Milwaukee. The rally knocked on the door of the future Hall of Famer, and he shut it down with a couple of strikeouts against Christian Yelich and Jesús Aguilar in the middle of a Ryan Braun walk to end the threat.
Out of every one of his nine strikeouts in that game, those two were by far the biggest.
Speaking of pressure, that one run meant the Dodgers trailed in this game until the bottom of the fifth, when finally the bats came alive, but still, throughout his entire seven innings of work, the Dodgers never led by more than two runs., Los Angeles eventually added a couple of insurance runs to help protect his outstanding performance.
Lost in the story of that game, Kershaw played a key part in the Dodgers’ scoring and did so after his outing was finished. The Dodgers’ starter came out to hit in the eighth inning, when the Dodgers led 3-1, and he drew a walk in what ultimately became a two-run frame, upping the Dodgers’ lead to 5-1. With a more comfortable advantage, Dave Roberts went to Pedro Báez and subsequently Kenley Jansen to close the game.
It’s purely speculative, but one might be justified in pondering if a bit more tired Kershaw, having thrown eight and not seven innings, could’ve struggled to secure the final outs he was brought in to do in Game 7. We’ll never know.
Last season, the Knicks were a pretty shallow team.
Outside of their overly used starting five and key reserves Deuce McBride and Mitchell Robinson, they didn’t have any reliable pieces that would be ticketed for regular roles in Tom Thibodeau’s rotation.
Sure, they had Cam Payne, Landry Shamet, Delon Wright, and Precious Achiuwa, who would see time sporadically, but none of them stuck due to inherent flaws. Payne was frozen out due to his lack of defense and erratic shotmaking, Shamet never got in the circle of trust after a serious shoulder injury, Wright was a defensive ace who was only inserted out of need in the Eastern Conference Final, and Achiuwa messed with the spacing and was an awkward fit with Robinson or Josh Hart.
As a result, the young, deep, and talented Indiana Pacers overwhelmed the Knicks en route to the NBA Finals, costing Thibodeau his job in the summer. Mike Brown was brought in to lengthen the rotation by using the regular season to experiment with lineups, and for the most part, he’s done that (aside from continuing to start Hart).
The rotation has been extremely fluid. When the team was healthy early, they leaned on Jordan Clarkson and Guerschon Yabusele off the bench, but it’s evolved to include Shamet, Tyler Kolek, Mo Diawara, and the team’s newest hometown hero, Jose Alvarado.
But, unlike before, when the team is suffering injuries, the rotation is being expanded, not contracted. Those are where guys like Kolek, Kevin McCullar Jr., and Ariel Hukporti get their most opportunities. Even Clarkson, who briefly was Evan Fournier’d, re-joined the rotation.
But here’s the problem. When the Knicks are whole, they’re nearly unstoppable. They’re 13-3 when Brunson-Bridges-Hart-Anunoby-Towns are the first five. But when there’s one piece missing in the team’s core nucleus, whether it’s the captain and head of the snake or a guy like Deuce or Robinson, the house of cards starts to shake, and some nights, it comes crashing down.
When the top-seven is all healthy, they’re 8-4, something that isn’t overtly impressive, but the individual splits of the six (Mikal Bridges is indestructible) tell the story:
Without McBride: 13-7 Without Robinson: 10-6 Without Anunoby: 8-6 Without Hart: 6-6 Without Brunson: 1-4 Without Towns: 2-2
The Knicks are more able to stomach the losses of McBride and Robinson, as they’ve at least had enough games without them to hash out a plan. The team, however, plays dramatically worse when the other five miss time, even if the on-off stats say the team is fine without these players off the court.
It’s obvious that the team struggles without Brunson, with how much he does for this team, but they also play choppy basketball when Towns is sidelined. After a 10-game stretch where the Knicks had the best defense in basketball, the process got tremendously worse when Anunoby went down with a toe injury, as the team yielded miserable performances against the Detroit Pistons and lowly Indiana Pacers. When Hart’s been sidelined this season, the Knicks struggle to generate the hustle he brings.
But it goes deeper than not having them on the court. When these players are available, and just on the bench, they’re being replaced by the team’s very formidable bench. But when the starter is in street clothes, and Coach Brown is forced to go deeper into the bench, the minutes drop off.
With Anunoby, Robinson, and McBride out against the lowly Pacers, the Knicks couldn’t defend. They had nobody who could even put a body on Pascal Siakam, despite the best efforts of a small Josh Hart and inexperienced Mo Diawara. The lack of McBride, who would stick with Andrew Nembhard, didn’t help either, nor did the absence of Robinson with Ariel Hukporti struggling to make an impact.
Against the Pistons last week, the Knicks were never competitive, which is inexcusable regardless of personnel. That said, with Anunoby, McBride, and Towns sidelined, the lineups that the team ran were not ones that could survive against any playoff team.
Brunson was reduced to leading lineups that had one or two other players who could score. Bridges had a strong game, but he isn’t a ballhandler. Clarkson also saw an increased role, but lineups with him and Brunson have been catastrophic defensively all season. Kolek has the same problem on the defensive end.
But if the Knicks leaned on defense around Brunson, they would be incapable of putting the ball in the basket, especially considering the captain’s struggles that night. Putting guys like Diawara, Hukporti, Hart, and McCullar around Brunson leads to lineups that see JB trying to navigate a maze to break down the defense, only to not have any reliable knockdown shooters to pass to.
When the Knicks are whole, they’re a formidable group that can hang with anyone in the association, and that’s because they mask each other’s flaws.
Brunson’s creation on offense, both for himself and others, allows the players around him to play an efficient, off-ball role. Towns’ rebounding and gravity, both inside and outside, generate extra possessions and free up space. Anunoby and Bridges’ defense help keep lineups that contain both Brunson and Towns afloat. Hart’s hustle and intensity can carry the team through low-energy slogs and rough shooting stretches.
The Knicks aren’t the only team that is one or two injuries away from everything falling apart, but it makes what they do to manage the workloads of their key players down the stretch crucial. If any player has a nagging ailment and they miss a few extra games, this will be why. They need to be whole to have a chance at ending the team’s 53-year title drought.
MIAMI, FLORIDA - AUGUST 5: Jesus Sanchez #4 of the Houston Astros celebrates after hitting a double in the third inning during a game against the Miami Marlins at loanDepot park on August 5, 2025 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images
So this I didn’t expect.
The Jays traded 26-year-old left-handed hitting, outfielder Joey Loperfido to the Astros for 28-year-old, left-handed hitting Jesús Sánchez.
Sánchez has played six seasons in the MLB, 580 games, for the Marlins and, last year, the Astros, hitting .239/.307/.420 with 73 home runs. Last year, he hit .199/.269/.342 with 4 home runs in 48 games.
Loperfido has played in 122 games over four sseasons, with a .248/.297/.392 line.
Sánchez is out of options and will make $6.8 million this year. Lopefido still has an option and will be getting the major league minimum..
I don’t understand the trade at all. But I don’t make the decisions. Steamer thinks Sánchez will hit .250/.319/.438 with 15 home runs this year.
The Jays traded Yusei Kikuchi to the Astros to get Loperfido and Will Wagner, at the deadline in 2024.
The first 54 games of the Boston Celtics’ 2025-26 season were an overwhelming success. Boston arrived at the All-Star break sitting 16 games over .500 while owning the second-best record in the Eastern Conference and the third-best net rating in the league.
So many of the questions that hovered around an overhauled roster entering the season have already been answered. Jaylen Brown hasn’t just thrived in the 1A role, he’s muscled his way into the MVP conversation. Big man Neemias Queta has the seventh-best net rating in the league (+11.6) after elevating to a starting role with a new-look center depth chart. Joe Mazzulla scoffed at all the gap year suggestions and deserves Coach of the Year consideration for the way he’s pushed all the right buttons, particularly in how he’s dispatched role players on a team that’s far deeper than most anticipated after some painful summer alterations.
All of this while the Celtics prep for the potential in-season return of All-NBA forward Jayson Tatum.
Which, of course, headlines Boston’s potential post-All-Star to-do list. Despite all the success, there are a bunch of checklist items for the Celtics to navigate over the final 28 games of the season and before the playoffs arrive. That list includes:
1. The reintegration of Jayson Tatum
The Celtics could (very) soon have the very best sort of problem. Tatum is now nine months removed from Achilles surgery and seems to be ticking the final boxes on his own rehab checklist. His potential return would force the Celtics to shuffle their rotation a bit, particularly as he ramps himself back up at the start of his return.
But even Tatum at, say, 75 percent of his peak powers will be an impact presence. His rebounding and defensive versatility will further shore up areas in which the Celtics have already made tremendous strides in since the start of the season. The No. 2-ranked offense in the NBA will add one of the game’s elite scorers, as well as a player that’s been top six in MVP voting in each of the past four seasons.
In much the same way that the Celtics had to figure out how to thrive in Tatum’s absence, they must now figure out how morph when he returns. There will be obvious rust for Tatum. Things could occasionally look clunky for the Celtics as usage rates are redefined. There are a handful of new faces that Tatum has never played with. And yet the core of this team remains largely intact, and that group has thrived on the biggest stages. We don’t suspect it’ll take long for the Celtics to figure out how this collection works best with Tatum again.
Tatum’s presence alone ought to improve the shot qualities for players like Derrick White and Payton Pritchard, who have encountered more attention in his absence. Imagine what Brown will be capable of when teams can’t load up on him to the level he’s seen without Tatum.
Despite Tatum’s very self-aware trepidation about not wanting to rock the boat upon his return, the best and most championship-worthy version of the Celtics features him on the court. His return gives an already thriving Celtics team a legitimate chance to contend for a title.
After working diligently to get out of the luxury tax at the trade deadline, president of basketball operations Brad Stevens will (slowly) fill out the end of the roster before the end of the regular season.
The Celtics, lingering just south of the tax line, must navigate a delicate series of roster moves that is likely to start with elevating rookie two-way players and, eventually, culminate with rostering at least one player of longer service. Each day matters given Boston’s financial constraints, but the Celtics will (slowly) get back to the league-mandated 14 roster players.
As for buyout pursuits, especially those players waived before the March 1 playoff-eligibility deadline, the Celtics can only window shop for now. But keep in mind that the Celtics already have too many bodies for available minutes, and that’s before Tatum even hits the floor.
3. Figuring out the playoff rotation
When the playoffs arrive, it seems fair to suggest that Tatum, Brown, White, Pritchard, Queta, Sam Hauser, and newcomer Nikola Vucevic are going to see the majority of minutes. Mazzulla must determine how to deploy that talent, and that includes continuing to integrate Vucevic after his acquisition. The team got immediate returns in shuffling Pritchard back to the bench, and we’re intrigued to see what becomes of the team’s end-of-game lineups.
The real question might simply be which of Boston’s young wings will emerge as consistent postseason presences. Jordan Walsh, Baylor Scheierman, and Hugo Gonzalez have each gotten long auditions (and departed Josh Minott did as well earlier in the year, while two-way wing Ron Harper Jr. has provided strong minutes in recent opportunities).
Scheierman has clearly won Mazzulla’s trust, as emphasized by starting four of the five games before the All-Star break. His blend of defensive versatility and 3-point shot-making has been accentuated in bigger minutes. Jordan Walsh had a stretch earlier this season where his defense and energy had opponents raving about his potential, and he tapped into that energy in the first-half finale against the Bulls on Wednesday. Gonzalez has the best net rating (+17.0) among all players with 40+ appearances this season and brings a positive chaos each time he touches the floor.
Players have thrived in Mazzulla’s “ready when called upon” strategy, and maybe that’s how it will remain into the postseason. But that each of those young wings can make a strong case for minutes emphasizes again just how good and how deep this group has been.
4. Planting seeds
The Celtics figuring out the best version of themselves ought to be the priority over the final 28 games, but despite all the laments about the state of the East, seeding could be important to how the postseason plays out.
The Celtics enter the break with a half-game lead on the Knicks, while the James Harden addition has helped Cleveland surge to within 1.5 games of Boston. The jockeying for the No. 2 seed could be a featured storyline down the stretch.
Securing the No. 2 seed ensures a play-in opponent in Round 1, delivers home court in Round 2, and helps avoid the top seed until the conference finals. What’s more, having home court in, say, a 2-3 matchup versus either New York or Cleveland, could be very beneficial given the challenges those teams pose.
The Celtics play the Cavaliers and Knicks — both on the road — one more time over the final two months of the regular season. Those games could very well impact the final seedings in the East, or at least provide playoff-like environments in the ramp to the second season.
5. Heavy lifting over the final 28
The Celtics have the fifth-hardest remaining schedule, and the second-most challenging in the East behind only the Bulls (who have seemingly traded in their yearly play-in fast pass for a much-needed lottery pursuit).
What’s more, Boston’s final 28 games …
Starts with a daunting four-game road trip out West, including a potentially emotional start while going up against an Al Horford/Kristaps Porzingis combo in Golden State. That trip ends with a back-to-back against Nikola Jokic and the Nuggets.
Features two matchups with the defending NBA champion Oklahoma City Thunder.
Includes a trek to play Wemby and the Spurs in a gauntlet trip in mid-March that takes Boston from Cleveland to San Antonio to Oklahoma City.
Features the potential Horford/Porzingis homecoming when Golden State visits TD Garden on March 18.
Needless to say, March, with only one two-day break in the entire month, could be filled with storylines and quality games.
Rest up at the All-Star break. The Celtics have enjoyed a lot of success to this point, but the final 34 percent of the regular season ought to bring a whole bunch of intrigue as well.
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — By the time manager Dave Roberts dropped by the Dodgers’ spring training facility on Thursday, Shohei Ohtani had been in camp for well over a week.
“Shohei,” Roberts said, “looks fantastic.”
Yoshinobu Yamamoto received a similar evaluation from Roberts, as did some of the other players who were at Camelback Ranch before the reporting date for pitchers and catchers.
But as the team gathers over the following handful of days, Roberts doesn’t expect everyone to be as built up as Ohtani or Yamamoto, who are preparing for the World Baseball Classic in March.
If anything, Roberts anticipates more players to be behind where they would usually be.
The days of players using spring training to work their way into shape are something of the distant past. Most of them show up to camp already in shape, as they are paid enough to be able to train year-round and not have to find odd jobs in the winter.
But many veteran Dodgers didn’t have that luxury this winter, as their team played through October in each of the last two years, requiring many of them to prioritize recovery in the offseason.
Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts, right, and first baseman Freddie Freeman shake hands during DodgerFest at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
Dodgers Baseball AP
“Most of the guys I’ve talked to have been on the same program I’ve been on,” Max Muncy told Foul Territory recently. “We haven’t started any baseball activity until the middle of January.
“Just trying to give your body as much rest as possible.”
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This is what a World Series hangover really is: the physical and mental aftereffects of a seven-month season. The manager nicknamed “Doc” will be tasked this spring with treating the symptoms, which could be especially pronounced on a team in which many key players are in their mid-30s.
Freddie Freeman is 36. Max Muncy is 35, and Mookie Betts and Teoscar Hernandez are 33.
“It does change the ramping-up process,” Roberts acknowledged at Cactus League media day.
Roberts could use some players sparingly in the early stages of the exhibition season. He and pitching coach Mark Prior could slow down certain pitchers’ throwing programs.
“I don’t know what it looks like for each individual, whether it’s pitching, whether it’s a younger player that’s been around, a veteran position player, for example, Freddie Freeman,” Roberts said. “It’s going to be individualized.”
Roberts said he will have a better idea what this camp will look like after he checks in with his players.
“I do think that I’m prepared to use all six weeks to get guys up to speed and ready,” he said. “It’s fair to say that it’s going to be a slower ramp-up for most guys because of the last two seasons that we’ve had to endure.”
Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts chats with reporters during DodgerFest at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong) AP
Already, Blake Snell has talked about taking a more deliberate approach to building up his arm after a season in which his shoulder never felt right. Snell’s status for Opening Day is uncertain. Tommy Edman is recovering from offseason ankle surgery and will also be slow-played.
This is only the start for Roberts, who will have to monitor the condition of his players throughout the season.
Freeman said a couple of weeks ago that he wanted to play 162 games this year.
“Great,” Roberts said jokingly.
Adopting a more serious tone, Roberts continued, “I think that I’ve already come to understand and respect that every player wants to play every game, should want to play every game. Certainly a guy like Freddie, who’s done it.
“And for me, I don’t have a set number right now on games played. I still probably got the under on 162.”
On the other side of the spectrum are the players who will leave the team to represent their countries in the WBC: Ohtani, Yamamoto, Will Smith, Edwin Diaz and Hyeseong Kim.
Roberts expects them to be featured in Cactus Leagues games before they join their respective national teams, with Yamamoto possibly making two starts in the first week of the exhibition season. Because Ohtani will be limited to hitting in the WBC, Roberts said he wouldn’t pitch for the Dodgers until after the tournament.
Whether it’s players such as Ohtani or Yamamoto who are ramping up early for the WBC or players such as Snell or Muncy who are taking it slower, Roberts is looking to guide them with the objective of ensuring they are healthy in October.
The players understand. The World Series hangover is real. When the Yankees won three consecutive championships from 1998 to 2000, their regular-season win total decreased every year, from 114 to 98 to 87.
“Knowing that if we want to make another run to November, you’ve got to be as rested as you can to get through the summertime,” Muncy said. “Spring training this year is going to be more like it was in the old days, where spring training is almost like your offseason.”
Aug 20, 2025; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; Washington Nationals relief pitcher Jose Ferrer (47) throws pitch against the New York Mets during the ninth inning at Nationals Park. Mandatory Credit: Rafael Suanes-Imagn Images | Rafael Suanes-Imagn Images
Shameless self-promotion alert: I (Kate) am hijacking Becca’s links post to say that this Saturday, so tomorrow, my friends who took over Kate’s Pub in Wallingford—now known as The Rebel—are hosting a Heated Rivalry watch party/trivia night starting at 5 PM. I spent all night making buttons for it and it’s going to be very fun, if that sounds like your sort of thing and you don’t have Valentine’s Day plans. It is also my actual literal birthday so if you feel like stopping in please do! I’ll be there at open (4 PM) if Heated Rivalry is not your thing but you still want to say hi. Pic of said buttons attached for tax, sorry this is not about baseball, I am invoking birthday privilege okay bye sorry Becca.
Spring Training is truly underway. Next week will be the first full week of practice leading up to the first preseason games a week from today.
In the early days of camp, teams often limit their starters to a few innings every other day to avoid injury or burnout before the 162-game marathon begins. Fans heading to the first few games at Hohokam expecting to see Nick Kurtz, Brent Rooker and Jacob Wilson may instead find a lineup featuring Michael Stefanic, Cade Marlowe and other non-roster players.
Yet, that is the magic of spring training and a great way for a player to make a strong first impression on his new team’s coaching staff. Every spring training game features multiple lineup changes halfway through the game, ensuring everyone from starters to top minor-league prospects to lesser-known players has the opportunity to make an impact.
This spring, much of the spotlight will be on the A’s stellar young offensive core, along with three of the organization’s top prospects: shortstop Leo De Vries and left-handed starting pitchers Gage Jump and Jamie Arnold.
All three are among the 31 non-roster invitees in camp this year. They will have the chance to show why the A’s think so highly of them. Additionally, these next few weeks serve as a showcase for the likes of Stefanic and other non-roster players to vie for organizational roster spots, most likely with the A’s Triple-A affiliate Las Vegas Aviators.
Last spring, Justin Sterner entered camp relatively unknown and earned a spot in the Opening Day bullpen after tossing 12 scoreless innings. With the A’s bullpen one of the weakest and most in-flux aspects of the team, there is an opportunity for a non-roster reliever to follow in Sterner’s footsteps. Veteran Nick Anderson is in camp after struggling last season with the Colorado Rockies, while GustavoRodriguez recorded a 2.27 ERA last year with the Aviators.
What are you looking forward to as spring training ramps up? Which players will be the surprises and disappointments of A’s camp?