Mets Morning News: Urge to Believe: Rising

May 17, 2026; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets right fielder Carson Benge (3) celebrates with left fielder Juan Soto (22) after defeating the New York Yankees in ten innings at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images | Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Meet the Mets

Every good Mets season needs That Game. You know, the one that you look back on in a year or 20 and say “remember that game?” Perhaps Sunday afternoon was That Game for the 2026 New York Mets. Coming against the Yankees, that’s just a bonus.

Choose your recap: Amazin’ Avenue, Faith and Fear in Flushing, MLB.com, Newsday, New York Daily News, New York Post, The Athletic

The Mets had lost 91 consecutive games when trailing entering the ninth inning until Tyrone Taylor and Carson Benge ended that dastardly streak.

Clay Holmes said on Sunday that there is an outside chance that he may need a stabilizing plate surgically inserted into his broken fibula, but the most likely outcome is a natural healing.

Jorge Polanco’s Achilles bursitis probably won’t be going away this season, so the Mets’ hope is that they can get it to a point where Polanco can play mostly comfortably.

During the Subway Series, things just feel right to remember the tenure and times of upcoming Mets Hall of Famer Bobby Valentine.

Howie Rose left Sunday’s Subway Series finale before the final pitch, but when you’re going to meet Paul McCartney, exceptions can be made.

Around the National League East

Taylor Walls cleared the bases against Eury Perez with a triple and the score never flipped again as the Marlins dropped the Rivalry Weekend finale to the Rays, 6-3.

Richard Lovelady was given the opener assignment for the second time as a National, but took the loss against the Orioles in a 7-3 contest.

Not even Paul Skenes is enough to stop the Mattingly Phillies as they completed a sweep of the Pirates and moved to 15-4 since changing managers.

Around Major League Baseball

For the first time in a long time, the Mets are the cause of a column highlighting the failures and faults of a losing team. In this case, the subject is the Yankees.

The Seattle Mariners called up top prospect and recent extendee Colt Emerson for the first and, if all goes right, only time in his career.

With their pitching staff in various states of injured and hobbled, the Dodgers traded some tasty cash considerations to the Blue Jays in order to acquire starter Eric Lauer.

In his Padres debut, Lucas Giolito was scoreless into the sixth inning and even got a perfect 1-0 record for his troubles.

As Adam Macko takes his first steps onto a big league field, the Blue Jays pitcher will become the first MLB player born in Slovakia.

The tweak that knocked Jose Altuve out of the game in his last at bat on Saturday ended up being an oblique strain which earned him a swift trip to the injured list.

This Date in Mets History

Happy birthday to Mets Legend and New York native Nelson Figueroa.

Yankees vs. Blue Jays: Series Preview

DETROIT, MICHIGAN - MAY 17: Vladimir Guerrero Jr. #27 of the Toronto Blue Jays high fives teammates after scoring a run against the Detroit Tigers during the top of the third inning at Comerica Park on May 17, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. (Photo by Nic Antaya/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Yankees got run out of Queens this weekend, dropping back-to-back contests to the Mets—the latter in particularly ignominious fashion—to lose the Subway Series and their third straight series overall. Adding to their woes is the Rays’ continued success, which leaves them three games back in the divisional road. Now seems like a less-than-ideal time for the Yanks to face a team that was a true nemesis for them in 2025: the Blue Jays. Fresh off going 11-6 against them in 2025 (including the playoffs), Toronto returns to the site of their ALDS Game 4 clincher to begin a new four-game series tonight.

The Jays have battled inconsistent hitting and a rash of pitching injuries to start their year, as they enter action at 21-25. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. is in the midst of one of his rather frequent power outages (though he did go deep yesterday), and the cast surrounding him hasn’t flexed much muscle this year. NPB free agent Kazuma Okamoto has been their most reliable slugger, but much of the core that brought them within a few feet of winning the World Series has failed to repeat their success. That said, the Jays remain flush with talent and have won six of their last eight series. This four-game rumble promises a bevy of fascinating pitching matchups. Let’s dig in.

Monday: Ryan Weathers vs. Patrick Corbin (7:05 pm ET)

Both teams will open this series sending a portsider to the mound. Ryan Weathers was invincible for most of his last start against the Orioles. He didn’t allow a hit until the seventh inning, at which point he was chased from the game and Coby Mayo’s go-ahead home run off Brent Headrick spoiled all the fun. Weathers, whose father David was a Blue Jays draftee in 1986, will face them for just the second time in his MLB career. His first time at Rogers Centre marked a nice finale to his 2024 season with Miami: 6.1 innings of one-run ball with three hits, two walks, and six strikeouts.

Patrick Corbin always comes back. He signed in Toronto when the season was already underway to shore up an undermanned rotation which was reeling from preseason injuries to José Berrios, Shane Bieber, and Wednesday night’s starter Trey Yesavage. Corbin has performed better than your typical replacement-level arm so far, with a 3.93 ERA through seven spins of the wheel. He’s always going to be pitching around a good amount of traffic, but his slider remains a weapon after all these years.

Tuesday: Will Warren vs. Dylan Cease(7:05 pm ET)

Warren got decidedly more aid from his lineup than from his defense in Tuesday night’s win against the Orioles—a bevy of misplays in the field cost him a chance to complete six frames, but he wound up with a win regardless thanks to a big third inning. Warren will return to the barn where he got eaten alive last playoffs, wearing the rest of the Blue Jays’ relentless onslaught during ALDS Game 2, in relief of Max Fried. But he does so having grown into his repertoire a lot more than his up-and-down rookie year. Regardless, this will prove a psychologically important start.

Cease is the Jays’ shiny new ace, channeling Dave Stieb in more ways than just his striking mustache. The 30-year old is on a roll, having finished seven innings in three straight starts. His last effort was almost wasted, as the Rays rallied against the Toronto bullpen to force extra innings; the ultimately Jays prevailed 5-3. Cease’s command is always liable to fly away on any given day, but you’ll take the chance because he has 75 strikeouts, the most in the AL so far.

The only MLB pitchers with a higher fWAR than Cease’s 2.2 thus far are the Phillies’ Cristopher Sánchez at 2.5 and the 6-foot-6 Yankee I’m about to discuss.

Wednesday: Cam Schlittler vs. Trey Yesavage(7:05 pm ET)

You get the feeling we’ll be seeing this exact pitching matchup in the AL East for years to come. Both breakout stars of the 2025 playoffs have repeated their brilliance in 2026, but Schlittler’s first 10 starts have been in a class unto themselves in the Junior Circuit. Cam exceeded 100 pitches in a start for the first time his last time out against the Mets; a leadoff home run from two-out walk to Brett Baty was all that stood between him finishing seven innings. Revenge may be on his mind after his Game 4 loss to Toronto, which sent the Yankees home last October.

Yesavage stole the spotlight from Schlittler in those playoffs as his team’s playoff run went all the way to Game 7 of the World Series. The big righty with the extreme top-down delivery had a shoulder issue that delayed his encore, so he’s only four starts into his campaign. His latest outing against the Tigers was his first to complete six innings, and he limited Detroit to two runs on four hits while striking out exactly six batters for the third straight appearance. Seeing these two sorcerers of the slab go toe-to-toe should be a delight.

Thursday: Carlos Rodón vs. TBD(7:05 pm ET)

Carlos Rodón would be the first to tell you that his first two starts of 2026 “didn’t go well at all.” The left-hander departed Saturday’s start before the end of the fourth inning thanks to command issues and a pair of gaffes on one play in the third which gave the Mets the lead. Room for optimism exists: Rodón’s issues have almost exclusively come after getting two outs in an inning. The two-out numbers have been rather grisly: the Mets and Brewers combined went 4-for-11 with three walks and five runs scored. As long as he can continue to obtain the first two outs without too much trouble, those troubles should even out over time. Toronto was an outstanding two-out offense in 2025, but have not been quite the same force this season.

This slot in the Blue Jays’ rotation used to belong to Eric Lauer, but he struggled so mightily to begin the year that the Jays designated him for assignment last week. On Saturday against the Tigers, Toronto turned to a bullpen game in which lefty reliever Mason Fluharty opened ahead of rookie Spencer Miles. Miles proved effective in the bulk man role last time, pitching 3.2 scoreless innings with two runs and two walks on five hits. Depending on how much (or how little) the Yankees make the Jays’ bullpen work in the first three games, Miles may be compelled to eat up more of this contest than that affair in Detroit—a 10-inning 2-1 victory.

ACC transfer portal scorecard: Best adds, worst losses, biggest remaining needs

The ACC massively improved last season, and that trend is expected to continue after how hard it went in the transfer portal.

There may be no conference that did the portal better. Even though teams lost plenty of talent, the ACC restocked it and four of the top seven transfer portal classes hail from the ACC, according to 247Sports. That also includes getting arguably the best available players.

It's clearly become a better conference, but how does the entire league stack up in the transfer market? Let's look at all the addition and losses for the 18 teams heading into the 2026-27 season.

Boston College basketball transfer portal analysis

  • Best add: Money Williams (Montana). Luke Murray sure hopes Williams is money after he was cash at Montana. He was the top scorer for the Grizzlies, but he erupted in the Big Sky tournament when he dropped 40, 32 and 19 to nearly get Montana in March Madness. He only had three games of scoring less than 10 points.
  • Worst loss: Jayden Hastings (Cincinnati). One of the starters that made solid contributions, Hastings was mostly productive on the defensive end, leading the Eagles in blocks.
  • Biggest remaining need: Energy. This program has been in the dumps, last appearing in the NCAA Tournament 17 years ago. Boston College needs to show signs of life and give people a reason to invest in one of the toughest jobs in the sport.

Cal basketball transfer portal analysis

  • Best add: Jake Wilkins (Georgia). The son of Basketball Hall of Famer Dominque Wilkins, the sophomore is looking for an elevated role in Berkeley. He didn't do a whole lot at Georgia, but he did showcase the explosiveness he has, just like dad.
  • Worst loss:Dai Dai Ames (Tennessee). Cal had one of its best seasons in recent memory because of Ames. He started every game and averaged 16.9 ppg on impressive shooting numbers. His late game play will be something the Golden Bears will desperately miss.
  • Biggest remaining need: Roster continuity. Again, Mark Madsen is having to retool his roster after star players bolted elsewhere. The guards will again rely on some inexperience, and it makes for a challenge to build upon last season.

Clemson basketball transfer portal analysis

  • Best add: Cole Certa (Notre Dame). Certa made big strides in his sophomore season that should pave the way for a staring role with Clemson. He averaged 16.1 points per game, but turned it on down the stretch, asserting himself as a bucket-getter. It also doesn't hurt he's one of the best free throw shooters in the game (89.2%, first in ACC).
  • Worst loss:Jake Wahlin (BYU). You knew what you were going to get when it came to Wahlin. He didn't do much in terms of the stat sheet, but he was a consistent presence in the lineup that helped with the frontcourt.
  • Biggest remaining need: Frontcourt. Brad Brownell has done well with forwards, and Clemson relied heavily on its bigs last season. They are out of eligibility, making it important for the Tigers to restock the position.

Duke basketball transfer portal analysis

Wisconsin Badgers guard John Blackwell (25) passes against the High Point Panthers during the first half of a first round game of the men's 2026 NCAA Tournament at Moda Center.

  • Best add: John Blackwell (Wisconsin). The rich get richer. Not only does Jon Scheyer have another elite recruiting class, he adds a certified bucket-getter in Blackwell. His 19.1 ppg was a major reason Wisconsin had one of the best offenses, with the ability to score from anywhere on the court (38.9% from 3-point land). He expands Duke's offense which has focused on getting to the paint.
  • Worst loss: Nikolas Khamenia (Connecticut). In addition to the one-and-done departures, Duke loses another five-star prospect. Khamenia had to come off the bench, but he played all 38 games and came up big against quality opponents in terms of crashing the boards.
  • Biggest remaining need: Clutch time. A consistent problem for Duke in March is not having the experience needed to avoid late game crumbles, no matter how talented it is. Does the addition of Blackwell and Drew Scharnowski (Belmont) do enough for the Blue Devils to finally capture a post-Coach K national title?

Florida State basketball transfer portal analysis

  • Best add: Sebastian Rancik (Colorado). The Seminoles will enjoy the versatility Rancik brings on the floor, able to lead the offense while take on the tough matchups defensively, no matter if its a guard or big. He put up 12.3 points and 5.6 rebounds per game with the Buffaloes.
  • Worst loss:Martin Somerville (West Virginia). Florida State could have used retaining someone with starting experience. Somerville mostly came off the bench, but he had some games where he was just locked in, including a 23 points outing against Virginia Tech.
  • Biggest remaining need: Experienced defenders. Luke Loucks wants to keep the momentum going in Tallahassee, and while he's bringing in several talented freshmen, he'll need more help on the defensive side. It was a struggle last season and there are too many question marks on that side of the court.

Georgia Tech basketball transfer portal analysis

  • Best add: Colby Garland (San Jose State). One of the top scorers in the country hopes to inject life into Georgia Tech. Garland's 20.3 points per game was 26th in the NCAA, and he specializes in scoring around the 3-point line with a solid mid-range shot. He's also an ironman having played 40 minutes in eight of the last 11 games of the season.
  • Worst loss: Mouhamed Sylla (West Virginia). There was a ton of promise with Sylla before he got hurt, and it was very apparent how much the Yellow Jackets missed him. He was a double-double machine and a catalyst for helping control tempo.
  • Biggest remaining need: Wings. Scott Cross has brought a good mix of transfers for his first season, but there's more needed with the forwards. There's not a ton of experience there, and it will mean having to shift lineups that are either big heavy or small.

Louisville basketball transfer portal analysis

Kansas Jayhawks forward Flory Bidunga (40) against the Arizona State Sun Devils at Desert Financial Arena.

  • Best add: Flory Bidunga (Kansas). The best transfer leads to the best portal class. The Cardinals stacked their roster and have Bidunga ready to command the paint. He's a menace inside by swatting away about any shot near him (2.6 per game, fourth in Division I), but his offense took a giant leap last season, positioning him to be one of the top players in the country.
  • Worst loss:Sananda Fru (Marquette). Louisville could have had one of the best backcourts had Fru stayed. The 6-11-inch forward wasn't as effective toward the end of the season appeared in every game and was a solid post presence, leading the team with 6.1 rebounds and 1.4 block per game, along with his highly efficient 9 points per game.
  • Biggest remaining need: Putting it together. There's no debating how loaded Louisville is, but the games aren't played on paper. It has to show it can jell together to be a title contender. If it can shed the inconsistencies that plagued last season, this is team is Final Four bound.

Miami basketball transfer portal analysis

  • Best add: Acaden Lewis (Villanova). Jai Lucas gets a young guard to lead the offense after showing promise in his freshmen campaign. Lewis was an excellent floor general, averaging 12.2 points along with 5.3 assists, a Villanova freshmen record and the most for the program in the 21st century, leading to a unanimous choice on the Big East all-freshman team.
  • Worst loss:Tru Washington (Xavier). Washington was one of the bright spots on Miami's defense, leading the team in steals with 1.8 per game. You've seen the confidence grow offensively as well, making strides each season to make him a valuable player in the rotation.
  • Biggest remaining need: Perimeter defenders. Miami wants to improve on its 3-point shooting, but it also needs to get better at defending it after it was last in the ACC in defensive 3-point percentage (35.8%).

North Carolina basketball transfer portal analysis

  • Best add: Terrence Brown (Utah). The Tar Heels are meant to have playmakers, and Brown fits the mold of what's expected in Chapel Hill. He was the star for a struggling Utes team, leading them in points (19.9) and assists (3.8). He did have some off-shooting nights, but if this guy gets in a rhythm, he boosts the offense immensely.
  • Worst loss:Derek Dixon (Arizona). There's still a chance Seth Trimble returns, so until then, the biggest departure is Dixon. He was a late bloomer, proving to be extremely valuable down the stretch and earning his spot in the starting lineup for the last 16 games. His 3-point shooting was extremely valuable, asserting himself as one of the top shooters in the Power conference ranks.
  • Biggest remaining need: Backcourt depth. North Carolina has addressed its frontcourt, but the forwards and centers are a mystery. There's a lot of hope being put into international center Sayon Keita, but regardless if he lives up to the hype, the Tar Heels need more in the post.

NC State basketball transfer portal analysis

  • Best add: Christian Hammond (Santa Clara): A guy that knows how to be the No. 1 player on the court, Hammond flourished leading the Broncos with 15.6 ppg to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 1996. He can play through contact and creatively finds ways to score, and stepped up his game in the three meetings with Gonzaga.
  • Worst loss:Matt Able (North Carolina). It's rough losing a player to an in-state rival. Able was NC State's top recruit last season and showed why with some notable performances in ACC play, including a 19-point effort against the Tar Heels. He was poised to finally crack the starting lineup, and had big upside with more minutes.
  • Biggest remaining need: Interior presence. Justin Gainey had to build an entire new roster at his alma mater, and it still lacks some big men. Kyle Evans (UC Irvine) was an underrated get that can become a valuable asset, but there's plenty left to be desired in the department.

Notre Dame basketball transfer portal analysis

  • Best add: Logan Duncomb (Winthrop). Notre Dame gets the Big South player of the year after he tore up the conference, averaging a double-double during league play. He will try to impose his physical style of play in the ACC, and not only is he good at getting to the foul line, but he's a solid free throw shooter.
  • Worst loss:Markus Burton (Indiana). One of the best players in Micah Shrewsberry's tenure is out. Last season was meant to be a big year, but he was limited to 10 games due to injury and Notre Dame really suffered from it. He was the key toward the Fighting Irish getting out of ACC cellar.
  • Biggest remaining need: Scoring guards. The top three scorers from last season are all gone, and they were all guards, so Notre Dame needs that guy that can help Braeden Shrewsberry. Braeden Smith is more of a facilitator, and it can't all fall on Dumcomb in the post.

Pitt basketball transfer portal analysis

  • Best add: Baye Ndongo (Georgia Tech). Rebound reinforcements are on the way with Ndongo moving to Pitt. Ndongo is a model of consistency, coming off a season where he averaged 11.8 points and 8.1 boards per game, including five double-doubles. He's as experienced as they come with 90 starts with the Yellow Jackets.
  • Worst loss: Roman Siulepa (Ole Miss). One of two players that started all 33 games, the Australian native impressed in his freshman season. He was known for his defensive prowess, but he was a huge asset in getting second chance opportunities, leading the ACC in conference play offensive rebounds (3.8).
  • Biggest remaining need: Shooting. Jeff Capel replenished the roster that needs all sorts of fixing, but the main problem will be getting consistent scoring after the offense really set the team back last season. The Panthers also got to make their free throws.

SMU basketball transfer portal analysis

  • Best add: Rowan Brumbaugh (Tulane). A true jack of all trades as Brumbaugh did everything for Tulane, leading the team in scoring (19.1), rebounds (4.9), assists (4.6) and steals (1.6). It allows him to take on a plethora of roles each game, whether it's scoring or focusing on distributing the ball.
  • Worst loss: Samet Yigitoglu (Indiana). It will have to be a whole new lineup in Dallas with Yigitoglu the last remaining starter now gone. He played to his 7-2-inch frame, leading the Mustangs with 7.9 rebounds per game along with 10.7 points, leaving a big hole in the roster.
  • Biggest remaining need: Size. Not only does SMU need to replace its production, but it's looking to be a small ball lineup with no true center. That could prove to be a problem considering SMU was already the worst defensive team in the ACC.

Stanford basketball transfer portal analysis

  • Best add: Austin Maurer (Seattle): The lone addition through the portal, the 7-foot center played his way into a starter at Seattle. He had a big 19-point performance in the upset win over Washington, and helped the Redhawks have one of the best defenses in the West Coast.
  • Worst loss:Oskar Giltay (Connecticut): The Belgium-native had a limited role off the bench for Stanford, but still had a noticeable defensive presence, including top 10 in the ACC in blocks.
  • Biggest remaining need: Elite scorer. It's a lot easier said than done, but Stanford has to figure out how to replace Ebuka Okorie after he did it all for the Cardinals. The recruiting class offers promise, but it's unlikely they can produce like Okorie.

Syracuse basketball transfer portal analysis

  • Best add: Gavin Doty (Siena). Gerry McNamara isn't coming to his alma mater alone, bringing his top guy from Siena. Doty put up 18 points and 6.9 rebounds per game for the Saints, and he turned heads when he put up 21 points against Duke in the NCAA Tournament first round.
  • Worst loss:Donnie Freeman (St. John's). It's always tough to convince the top player to stay in a new regime. Freeman was by far the bright spot for the Orange last season, leading the team in points (16.5) and rebounds (7.2) while being able to play any spot on the floor.
  • Biggest remaining need: Point guard. McNamara has his work cut out to bring glory back to Syracuse, but one glaring issue is a ball-handler. Right now, that relies on transfer Garwey Dual (McNeese State) and freshman Ryan Moesch. That position feels thin and needs a proven commander.

Virginia basketball transfer portal analysis

  • Best add: Jurian Dixon (UC Irvine). The Cavaliers are primed to remain a highly productive offense with the addition of Dixon. The guard put up 15.9 points last season, and he specializes in the 3-point shot with a 38.5% mark from deep. He's the type of guy that quickly start runs with his shot.
  • Worst loss: None. A rarity, Ryan Odom was able to keep all players with eligibility.
  • Biggest remaining need: Depth. With its core back, Virginia doesn't need any drastic changes in the lineup. Instead, it could use more bench pieces to take that next step in taking over the ACC.

Virginia Tech basketball transfer portal analysis

  • Best add: Jaylen Curry (Oklahoma State): A true point guard, Curry plays a type of ball that will make any coach happy. Even though he came off the bench, he averaged 3.5 assists and didn't turn the ball over often. Even better, he led the Cowboys in steals and can improve a defense with more minutes.
  • Worst loss: Neoklis Avdalas (North Carolina). The Hokies looked like they had a steal in Avdalas, who showed how high of a ceiling he has as a dynamic forward that can play like a guard. He can score, distribute and crash the boards, making him such a highly sought transfer.
  • Biggest remaining need: Clutch scoring. Virginia Tech could have been a tournament team if it was able to close out games. Now needing a brand new start, the Hokies need someone they can rely on to score when the game is in the balance, as those results could be the difference in making the bracket.

Wake Forest basketball transfer portal analysis

  • Best add: Kevair Kennedy (Merrimack). It was a big start to college for Kennedy, winning MAAC player and rookie of the year after leading the Warriors with 18.4 points and 4.2 assists per game and a regular season title. He thrives in a high tempo offense, making the Demon Deacons a great fit for the guard.
  • Worst loss:Juke Harris (Tennessee). This loss severely hurts as Harris became one of the best players in the ACC. His 21.4 ppg was 14th in Division I, and he led Wake Forest in rebounds (6.5). It's going to be extremely hard to replace how good Harris was against Power conference teams.
  • Biggest remaining need: Defensive pressure. For as much the Demon Deacons need to figure out offensively, it won't matter if the defense doesn't improve. Controlling the glass and stopping teams from driving around the bucket are necessary.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: ACC transfer portal breakdown: Best adds, what all teams still need

Sixers' front office search: Which sort of executive would be a good fit?

Sixers' front office search: Which sort of executive would be a good fit?  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Nothing was narrow about Bob Myers’ description of the ideal candidate to replace Daryl Morey.

As Myers outlined, he’s not searching for a specialist. 

“I’m a big believer in character and leadership and I’m looking for a person that embodies those things,” Myers, the president of sports for Harris Blitzer Sports and Entertainment, said Thursday. “But there’s many characteristics under that which I believe qualify in making a modern GM a success.

“There’s front-facing responsibilities. There’s responsibilities in managing star players. There’s responsibilities in managing up to ownership. There’s contract negotiations, there’s the draft process, there’s evaluating analytics, there’s (working with) the medical staff. 

“You go down the line and these jobs have an enormity to them. So I’m looking to find someone that can check as many of these boxes as possible, but also (someone) that can raise their hands and say, ‘Actually, I’m not good in this space. I’m going to need some support.’” 

So, which front office executives out there would be a strong fit for the Sixers? 

In terms of specific names, Marc Stein reported the following Sunday night on the Sixers’ search: 

  • There’s a “widespread belief” that Myers would “want to explore trying to hire (Hawks general manager) Onsi Saleh,” but “the likelihood relayed to me … is that Saleh is expected to remain with the Hawks.”
  • “There have also been rumbles about potential Philadelphia interest in (Timberwolves president of basketball operations) Tim Connelly for some time, but the 76ers would naturally face the same obstacles that Dallas did recently if it chose to act on that interest.”
  • “Other names that have been mentioned in connection with Philadelphia at this early stage: Sixers consultant Neil Olshey (who has long been close with Myers) and Oklahoma City executive Vince Rozman (who joined Sam Presti’s front office with the Thunder after a lengthy stint in Philadelphia).”

Saleh finished second in the NBA’s executive of the year voting for his work in his first year as Atlanta GM. Connelly’s T-Wolves were just eliminated in the second round of the playoffs by the Spurs. He ran the Nuggets’ front office from 2013 to 2022 and assembled the core of Denver’s 2022-23 championship-winning team. 

Olshey took Damian Lillard with his first pick as the Trail Blazers’ general manager and led the team’s basketball operations until 2021. He was fired after an investigation into a “toxic, hostile work environment in which staff members were allegedly subjected to intimidation and profanity-laced tirades, among other bullying tactics,” according to Yahoo Sports. Rozman worked for the Sixers from 2006 to 2022 before becoming the Thunder’s vice president of identification and intelligence.

On paper, Rozman’s résumé seems like it should naturally draw the Sixers’ interest. 

He’s familiar with the kind of collaboration-heavy dynamic that Myers wants and knows the current ownership group. Rozman spearheaded much of the Sixers’ pre-draft process in 2020 and the team wound up making three excellent selections in Tyrese Maxey (No. 21), Isaiah Joe (No. 49) and Paul Reed (No. 58). 

Rozman’s seen just about every side of NBA life since starting out as a Sixers intern. And it doesn’t hurt that he was part of OKC’s front office as the team rose to contender and then to NBA champion last season. 

“When you’re bad, you can try anything,” Myers said. “And if it doesn’t work, you’re still bad. But if you’re good, you have to risk something to go to great. So that’s why it is harder to go from good to great — because you risk something. You risk making a mistake and falling back to bad. … When you’re bad, if it doesn’t work, you’re still bad.”

One of the essential questions to answer for Myers’ candidates will be just how close the Sixers are to a championship level.

If a candidate has a convincing vision for immediately turning the Sixers into the Eastern Conference’s best team, Myers will surely listen. However, the Sixers were just swept in the second round and the series was bookended by blowout losses.

Being realistic about the state of the team, a win-now move or two might not be sufficient. Regardless, we imagine the Sixers would be glad to add a well-rounded executive with a good draft track record and a sense of how to develop the team around 25-year-old All-Star starter Tyrese Maxey and 20-year-old Rookie of the Year finalist VJ Edgecombe for years to come. 

“The thing I liked … it’s maybe not completely, but we got to see a healthy team, right? At least in the playoffs, for the most part,” Myers said. “Joel (Embiid) came back. And when you’re healthy in the playoffs, the best part is you don’t have any excuses about why you lost. You lost. I didn’t like going into the playoffs with, ‘Well, so and so was hurt, and if he had been healthy …’ Those hypotheticals aren’t helpful. So what is helpful is we played a team, we were mostly healthy, we lost. Let’s just be honest about that. Let’s acknowledge that. 

“After that, leading up to the draft, what are we missing? … And then the question is going to be, with what we have, how do we get better? And then the final question is going to be, ‘We have the mid-level exception. What do we do with that?’ I want to partner with somebody who I can have those discussions with in a meaningful way, and I’m going to have those discussions with potential candidates.”

Cult hero Mancini delivers derby win for Roma after Serie A scheduling nightmare | Nicky Bandini

After a spring of boardroom civil war, the Giallorossi’s two-goal hero put his side on the verge of a historic return to Champions League

A Rome derby on the penultimate weekend of a Serie A season could never be a low-stakes occasion. Scudetto wins come rarely in Italy’s capital city – Roma and Lazio have only five between them – leaving neighbourly bragging rights as the next-most important prize on offer. It is an intense, bitter rivalry that has produced countless iconic moments – from Francesco Totti taking selfies under the Curva to a cup-winning goal by Senad Lulic – if sadly also many violent clashes between supporters.

And, of course, it matters more when either side has tangible objectives left to play for. As recently as late April that did not appear very likely. Roma were sixth – five points adrift of the Champions League places – and Lazio ninth. But then the Giallorossi got on a roll, just as Milan and Juventus started dropping points. A win in the derby now could propel them into the top four, if either of those sides slipped up again.

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Dodgers notes: Roki Sasaki, Eric Lauer, Ross Stripling

ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA - MAY 17: Roki Sasaki #11 of the Los Angeles Dodgers pitchs during the second inning of a game against the Los Angeles Angels at Angel Stadium of Anaheim on May 17, 2026 in Anaheim, California. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Roki Sasaki had his best MLB start to date on Sunday, issuing no walks and striking out eight in seven innings to beat the Angels in Anaheim, allowing just one run along the way.

Sasaki has tinkered with his pitch mix this season, adding a faster version of his split-fingered fastball while also throwing a slower forkball that he’s used in both years with the Dodgers. David Adler at MLB.com broke down the differences in movement of the pitches, and how Sasaki has been able to incorporate both.

“When hitters have to contend with both the diving splitter and floating forkball with two strikes,” Adler wrote, “Sasaki can keep them way more off-balance.”

Links

The Dodgers acquired Eric Lauer from the Toronto Blue Jays for cash consideration on Sunday. The veteran left-hander will be activated at some point during the series against the San Diego Padres, reports Maddie Lee at the Los Angeles Times, who noted that manager Dave Roberts is “initially picturing Lauer in a length role out of the bullpen.”


Shohei Ohtani tripled home two runs and scored on an error in the eighth inning on Saturday. There was plenty of confusion since the ball bounced in play and then hit and nearly got caught in the netting above the right field wall in foul territory, which per the ground rules in Anaheim was not out of play.

Fabian Ardaya at The Athletic wrote about the Little League home run, including this reaction from Alex Call: “I turned around and Shohei was coming home, and I’m like, ‘What happened?’ I didn’t find out until later. But I guess yeah, the ball’s in play there.”


Former Dodgers pitcher Ross Stripling, who retired from baseball a year ago, has a financial services company and wants to talk to athletes about how to properly prepare for life beyond sports. From Bill Shaikin at the Los Angeles Times:

Stripling believes he can win by concentrating on young athletes, the ones suddenly showered in six- or seven-figure payments from draft bonuses, college revenue sharing payments, and name, image and likeness deals.

“I’ve seen the first-rounders come in and blow money on cars and houses and gambling,” Stripling said, “and I’ve seen the first-rounders like (former Dodgers shortstop Corey) Seager, who probably hasn’t spent a dime of his signing bonus.”

Mannix: Why Celtics should NOT make a Jaylen Brown-for-Giannis trade

Mannix: Why Celtics should NOT make a Jaylen Brown-for-Giannis trade originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Milwaukee Bucks reportedly are “open for business” on trading Giannis Antetokounmpo, and the Boston Celtics are believed to be one of the teams in the market for his services.

From a basketball perspective, the Celtics’ interest in Antetokounmpo would make sense. Celtics president of basketball operations Brad Stevens recently expressed a desire for Boston to have “more of an impact at the rim,” and Giannis fits that mold to a tee as a former Defensive Player of the Year who leads the NBA in dunks per game over the past two seasons.

Of course, the cost to acquire Antetokounmpo would be high. And considering he’s set to make $58.5 million next season, the Celtics almost certainly would have to include Jaylen Brown ($57.1 million salary in 2026-27) as part of the return package.

While Brown just finished sixth in NBA MVP voting after a career year with the Celtics, Antetokounmpo is still the more talented and accomplished player who will fill a glaring need for Boston in the frontcourt.

But if you ask Sports Illustrated’s Chris Mannix, swapping Brown for the two-time NBA MVP still wouldn’t be worth it for Boston.

“I would not trade Jaylen Brown for Giannis straight up. I wouldn’t do it,” Mannix said recently on NBC Sports Boston. “Giannis is too unpredictable. These soft tissue injuries would terrify me. He’s 31 years old, looking for a max contract, coming off his history of injuries. The injury history of Giannis would scare the crap out of me.”

To Mannix’s point, Antetokounmpo played in just 36 games this past season while dealing with significant calf and knee injuries. He’s missed at least 15 games in four of the last five seasons and will turn 32 in December.

Beyond Antetokounmpo’s availability issues, however, Mannix doesn’t see the need to break up Brown and Jayson Tatum, who won a title together just two seasons ago and have helped the Celtics become a perennial contender.

“Don’t mess with success, man,” Mannix added. “Look what you’ve got here. You’ve got success in Boston. Do not screw it up.

“Everybody in the league is trying to get their hands on versatile two-way wings like Jaylen Brown. Somebody will happily take him off your hands if you make him available. As much as I love Giannis, I wouldn’t take him right now over Jaylen Brown.”

As Mannix reported earlier this month, several teams are expected to have interest in trading for Brown this summer, including Brown’s hometown Atlanta Hawks. Brown’s trade value has never been higher, so the Celtics could get massive offers if they make the five-time All-Star available this offseason.

The counterpoint? The C’s have two top-10 players in their primes in Brown and Tatum and absolutely have a path to title contention in 2026-27 if Stevens can surround them with the right supporting cast.

According to Mannix, Boston’s best path forward is keeping the Jays intact rather than hoping Antetokounmpo can regain his MVP form.

Dailyn Swain is ready to impact your team yesterday

SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 26: Dailyn Swain #3 of the Texas Longhorns shoots the ball against Oscar Cluff #45 and Fletcher Loyer #2 of the Purdue Boilermakers during the second half during the second half in the Sweet Sixteen of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at SAP Center on March 26, 2026 in San Jose, California. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After falling to the ninth pick in the 2026 NBA Draft, the Dallas Mavericks now enter a very different section of the board than they were hoping for a few months ago. The top-end “future franchise centerpiece” tier is likely gone by the time Dallas picks, meaning the Mavericks now have to focus on identifying high-level complementary players who fit around Cooper Flagg long term. That shift makes Dailyn Swain one of the more fascinating names in the Mavericks’ range.

Swain’s breakout junior season at Texas was one of the best all-around wing seasons in college basketball. He became the first player in Texas history to win SEC Newcomer of the Year, earned Second-Team All-SEC honors, and finished as a finalist for the Julius Erving Award. More impressively, he became the only player in a major conference to lead his team in points, rebounds, assists, steals, and minutes played. Swain averaged 17.3 points, 7.5 rebounds, 3.6 assists, and 1.6 steals while shooting 54.2% from the field and 81.5% from the free throw line. He also helped lead Texas to the Sweet 16, where he finished with 15 points, 9 rebounds, and 5 assists in a narrow loss to Purdue.

The production is impressive, but the way Swain plays is what really stands out.

The good

Swain feels like one of the safest “winning basketball” bets at the end of the lottery or in the middle of the first round because of how many different ways he impacts the game. At 6-foot-6.5 and 211 pounds with a near 6-foot-10 wingspan, he already has NBA-ready size and physicality for a modern wing. He constantly pressures the rim, plays through contact, rebounds extremely well for his position, and thrives in transition.

The downhill pressure is probably the biggest selling point offensively. Swain consistently creates paint touches, collapses defenses, and forces rotations without needing isolations built around him every possession. He attacks closeouts quickly, pushes the ball after rebounds, and plays with a pace that keeps offenses moving. The advanced metrics back that up, too, as Swain graded near the very top nationally in rim pressure and rim assists among wings.

What makes him especially interesting next to Cooper Flagg is how connected his game feels. Swain does not need the ball for 15 seconds to impact a possession. He rebounds and initiates transition offense, makes quick reads, cuts hard, attacks gaps, and keeps the ball moving naturally. Those are the types of players that elevate lineups around stars rather than slowing them down.

Defensively, there is a lot to like, too. Swain generated steals at a strong rate, consistently disrupted actions without gambling himself out of possessions, and projects as a versatile multi-positional defender. Dallas badly lacked perimeter size, physicality, and point-of-attack resistance for much of last season, and Swain could help solve all three problems immediately.

The bad

Swain’s swing skill is clearly the jumper. While the free-throw percentage at 81.5% is encouraging long-term, the three-point shot itself still feels more functional than truly dangerous. Defenses will likely dare him to shoot early in his NBA career until he proves he can consistently punish teams from outside.

There are also questions about the ceiling of his half-court creation. Swain is extremely effective attacking advantages, but he is not someone you currently project to become a primary offensive engine. He thrives attacking downhill against bent defenses, but creating difficult offense against set NBA defenses remains more theoretical than proven.

That creates some archetype risk. Wings who rely heavily on physicality, transition scoring, and connective offense can sometimes become difficult to maximize if the jumper never fully develops. Dallas also already has several players who prefer to operate inside the arc, so long-term spacing around Flagg remains one of the most important questions the front office must answer.

Player comp

Swain’s game honestly resembles a blend of several different NBA wings. There are shades of Josh Hart and Jaime Jaquez Jr. because of the rebounding, toughness, downhill pressure, and constant activity he brings every night. Offensively, there are stylistic flashes of Gordon Hayward and Evan Turner in the secondary creation and connective playmaking from the wing position.

The higher-end outcome probably looks something like a more athletic version of Jaime Jaquez Jr., where the value comes from versatility, feel, physicality, and two-way impact rather than elite shot creation. Even if he never becomes a true offensive star, Swain feels like the type of wing playoff teams are constantly trying to find because of how naturally he contributes to winning basketball.

Fit with the Mavericks

Swain feels like one of the cleaner fits for what Dallas should be trying to build around Cooper Flagg moving forward. The Mavericks desperately need perimeter athleticism, rebounding, defensive versatility, and secondary playmaking after the roster looked so disjointed last season. Swain addresses all four areas almost immediately.

More importantly, his game complements Flagg naturally. He can defend multiple positions, attack closeouts, rebound, push in transition, and function as connective offensive tissue without requiring heavy usage. That matters on a team where Flagg is clearly going to become the primary offensive engine long term.

He also feels like exactly the kind of player Masai Ujiri and Mike Schmitz would gravitate toward. Swain checks almost every “winning basketball” box organizations prioritize: effort, feel, versatility, physicality, transition offense, and defensive flexibility. Even if the jumper never becomes elite, the baseline NBA role already feels very real.

And if Dallas is serious about building a tougher, longer, more defensive-minded roster around Cooper Flagg, Dailyn Swain feels like exactly the type of player the Mavericks should be paying close attention to throughout the pre-draft process.

Final Thoughts

Dailyn Swain may not have the flashy offensive upside of some of the guards projected near the top of this class, but he feels like one of the safer bets to become a meaningful NBA player. He already impacts games in multiple ways without needing high usage, and those types of players become incredibly valuable in playoff environments.

If Dallas is serious about building a tougher, more versatile, defensive-minded identity around Cooper Flagg moving forward, Swain feels like exactly the kind of player the Mavericks should be paying close attention to throughout the pre-draft process.

Spurs vs. Thunder: Styles, matchups, and X-factors

OKLAHOMA CITY, OK - JANUARY 13: Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs plays defense on Shai Gilgeous-Alexander #2 of the Oklahoma City Thunder during the game on January 13, 2026 at Paycom Center in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Zach Beeker/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

There hasn’t been a playoff series since the 2018 Western Conference Finals that carries as much anticipation as the upcoming Spurs-Thunder clash, and for good reason. Both teams could upset Adam Silver’s precious era of parity, and the only thing stopping one of them from becoming a dynasty is, well, the other.

OKC has already reached the mountaintop, while San Antonio is nipping at their heels. This is the first matchup of what should be the rivalry of a generation, and whoever comes out on top between Wemby and Shai could also grab the title as best in the world.

So, let’s examine some of the key battles that will determine the war.

Rebounding

Rebounding has been OKC’s achilles heel for a few seasons now, and it could be problematic against the Spurs too. In the regular season, the Thunder’s 25.1% offensive rebounding rate ranked 25th in the league, while their 71% DREB was 16th. Meanwhile, the Spurs placed 9th (29.5%), and 1st (74.1%), respectively, in those categories, which played out in their regular season matchup, too: San Antonio scored 13 more second chance points in those games (+2.6 average).

Overall, the Spurs grabbed 12 more OREBs and 4 more DREBs across those five matches. It’s worth noting that those numbers are fattened by their fifth and final game, when the Thunder rested all their stars, and OKC has also been much better in the playoffs, with a 32.3% OREB compared to San Antonio’s 28.4%. On the other hand, the Spurs’ playoff opponents had much more capable frontcourts than what the Thunder faced, and the regular season’s larger sample should be more indicative of both team’s styles.

In such a close series, San Antonio needs to win on the margins, and that means dominating OKC on the glass.

Free throws

For as much hootin’ and hollerin’ there is around Shai’s foul grifting, he is still just one player. Even with his prowess getting to the line, the Thunder were “just” 9th league-wide in free throw rate, at 21.8% — just slightly behind the Spurs, who were at 21.9%. These two teams are neck and neck on the other end, too, as San Antonio was 1st in defensive free throw rate (17.9%) while OKC was second (18.3%), and none of those numbers have changed much in the playoffs. In the four regular season matchups when both Wemby and Shai played, the Spurs shot 15 more FTs than the Thunder did, though the large discrepancy is skewed by an outlier game that saw San Antonio have 17 more attempts in one night.

This will be a battle of strengths on both sides of the ball, and I’m fully here for the toxic discourse that will inevitably follow.

The Wemby mismatch

Wemby is a walking mismatch for every team in the league, but it was most pronounce against the Thunder due to the level of competition he dominated. In their regular season series, OKC had an abysmal 99.6 offensive rating with Wemby playing, which was largely caused by their shots (or lack thereof) at the basket: the Thunder only attempted 25.3% of their shots around the rim, which would’ve ranked 29th league-wide and was 6% lower than their full season average (31.3%). They had no answer to Wemby defensively, as he was always able to roam the paint by either matching up against a non-spacing big (Hartenstein), or sagging off of a guard who struggles to shoot (like Caruso, who went 2-12 from three in one game).

It’s a high risk, high reward strategy since Caruso (and other Thunder guards) has shown the ability to get hot from deep, but the Spurs have counters to that as well. In the Minnesota series, the Wolves forced Wemby to guard Terrance Shannon Jr. at times in the corners, but the Alien recovers so fast that he’s able to get back in the paint without giving the opposition an advantage, and that’s also aided by San Antonio’s impeccable defensive rotations beside him.

Shai hasn’t passed the Wemby test, either. The Alien allows the Spurs’ perimeter defenders (especially Stephon Castle) to guard the MVP aggressively: if they get beat off the dribble, they know that Wemby’s behind them to provide help, and because of this, Wemby’s presence has detered Shai from driving, forcing him to take difficult shots instead.

The one thing OKC can try is using Gortat screens to prevent Wemby from getting in position to contest shots. Minnesota did it multiple times in the first few games to some success, and the Thunder have better personnel to make it a more consistent strategy. It won’t work everytime, but if OKC executes it properly, some key possessions could be swung in their favor.

Offensively, Wemby renders one of the Thunder’s strengths moot. San Antonio made an absurd 70.5% of their attempts at the rim, which is over 10% higher than what OKC normally concedes in that area (60.2%, first in the regular season). Having a 7’5” alien as a lob threat certainly helps, but Wemby’s impact goes far beyond that. His gravity creates open driving lanes for San Antonio’s guards, or cuts that they can make for wide open finishes, like the example below.

In the regular season games, the Thunder used a smaller guard/wing on Wemby, allowing iHart or Chet to roam and provide backline help. This was largely ineffective due to Wemby’s shooting ability, his gravity, and the Spurs off-ball movement, so OKC tried playing Chet straight against him instead. Well, that didn’t even last a half, and OKC seemed lost during all of the Wemby minutes.

Still, Mark Daigneault has had over three months to gameplan against the Alien. He’ll have moree tricks up his sleeve now, and there’s still a wrinkle that was barely employed in the regular season: using one of Chet/iHart against Wemby while the other one acts as a roamer by sagging off of Castle. It’s a risk given that the latter is shooting 44% from three in the playoffs and has dealt with this type of coverage before, but neither Castle nor Wemby has experienced it against an all-time great defense that has had months to prepare for this specific matchup.

If anyone can find an advantage over Wemby and the Spurs, it would be this OKC squad.

X-Factor: Spurs’ 3-point volume vs Thunder’s points off turnovers

As was outlined by Jeje in the series preview, the Spurs allowed much fewer turnovers against OKC compared to the Thunder’s season average, and that resulted in San Antonio scoring more points off TOs than OKC did. Essentially, the Spurs turned off the Thunder’s superpower, which was caused by a few factors. One, OKC’s perimeter defenders weren’t hounding San Antonio’s guards as much as they usually do, instead giving them more space. This is because the Spurs’ guards are the only ones in the league that can match the Thunder backcourt’s physicality and athleticism, so San Antonio could play bully ball and drive past the defense if they were pressed too hard. OKC also wanted to swarm Wemby more, and with none of the Spurs guards being elite shooters, the Thunder were comfortable giving them more space to operate on the perimeter.

Obviously, the drawback to that is the lack of turnovers created. Given the lack of success that this scheme had in the regular season, I expect OKC to go back to their usual aggressive defense, but that would result in more defensive rotations that opens up threes for their opponents. The Thunder have successfully lived with this trade-off for multiple seasons now, finishing tied for first in turnovers forced this past season (16.8%) but also conceding the 6th most threes (40.4% of opponent shots came from beyond the arc) and the most corners threes, too (12.4%). That latter number is especially important because the Spurs generated the most corner threes (12.9%) in the regular season, which increased to 13.8% with Wemby on the floor — one of the highest figures ever.

In other words, the Thunder can either play conservatively on defense and risk losing the turnover battle again, or they can go back to their usual scheme and live with the Spurs shooting threes. This will be the most important stylistic battle to monitor, and whoever comes out on top will have a massive advantage in the series.

Cam Boozer is a consensus top 4 pick, but his destination is still uncertain.

WASHINGTON, DC - MARCH 29: Cameron Boozer #12 of the Duke Blue Devils handles the ball against Jaylin Stewart #3 of the UConn Huskies during the Elite Eight round game of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament held at Capital One Arena on March 29, 2026 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Scott Taetsch/NCAA Photos via Getty Images) | NCAA Photos via Getty Images

The amount of talent in this 2026 draft has been compared to some of the best draft classes the NBA has ever seen, drawing comparisons to the 1996 and 2003 drafts. The 1996 draft showcased names like Kobe Bryant, Steve Nash, Allen Iverson, and Ray Allen. Widely regarded as the most talented class ever, the 2003 draft featured names like LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh, and Carmelo Anthony. With so many comparisons being drawn with this draft, it’s worth taking a deeper look at the peak of this draft, and one of those names is Cameron Boozer.

The basics

Cam Boozer, the 6’9 freshman out of Duke, has widely been deemed a top four pick in this year’s draft, and for good reason. Boozer has been around basketball since birth, being the son of NBA veteran Carlos Boozer. He was born in Salt Lake City, Utah, on July 18, 2007, while his father was playing for the Utah Jazz. He was touted as an elite prospect in high school as a freshman. He didn’t fall short of expectations, leading Christopher Columbus High School in Westchester, Florida, to four 7A state championships. Boozer won Gatorade National Player of the Year as a sophomore and senior and was also named Florida Mr. Basketball and Mr. Basketball USA. In his senior year, he averaged 22.1 points, 11.8 rebounds, 3.2 assists, and 3.4 stocks (blocks + steals) per game.

His elite talent and winning ways made him a consensus five-star recruit and one of the top players in a loaded 2025-2026 NCAA class. Ultimately, he committed to Duke and continued his dominance at the collegiate level. Even in such a talented draft, Boozer stood out in his own unique ways, showing he’s capable of dominating at any level. He averaged 22.5 points, 10.2 rebounds, and 4.1 assists per game. Boozer led the Blue Devils to a 31-3 record, securing a one seed in the 2026 NCAA tournament. They were eliminated on the infamous turnover at halfcourt that led to a UConn Braylon Mullins three, ending the Duke March Madness run at the Elite Eight. In the 73-72 loss, Boozer had 27 points, 8 rebounds, 4 assists, and 2 blocks.

The good

Boozer is an elite offensive player. He stands at 6’9, 250 pounds, with a 7-foot wingspan – and plays like it. His game starts on the inside and moves out. He’s about as close to a mix of old-age and new-age big man as you can get. Boozer shot 55.6% from the floor his senior year, 39.1% from three, and 78.9% from the free throw line.

As far as his shot diet goes, 60% of his shots came in the paint, about 13% came from mid-range, and 26% came from three. Boozer was never perceived as an outside threat in high school but expanded his game at Duke. Most notable was his ability to shoot the three. He shot 42 percent on unguarded catch-and-shoot threes, 39 percent on guarded catch-and-shoot threes, 49 percent on spot-up threes, and 44 percent on pick-and-pops. For not being dubbed a natural “shooter,” these numbers are impressive.

Although the three is in his hip pocket, the meat and potatoes of Boozer’s game is inside of 15 feet. He often operates out of the post and uses a flurry of moves to find a way to put the ball in the basket. He isn’t quite as savvy as a guy like AJ Dybantsa in terms of getting to his spot, but he has good fundamentals and footwork that allow him to get easy buckets inside.

The room to grow

The concerns surrounding Boozer mostly stem from his lack of general athleticism.

For the most part, he plays below the rim, and scouts worry his reliance on brute strength likely won’t be an advantage in the bigger, faster, stronger NBA. Boozer is a good athlete but does not possess top-tier explosiveness like an AJ Dybantsa or Darryn Peterson. This may affect his ability to finish strong at the rim and could limit his effectiveness in transition or when attacking the basket against more athletic defenders. As the NBA moves away from standard big men and more towards shooting and spacing at every position, there is concern Boozer’s skillset may not translate to the NBA.

Another area for improvement is at the defensive end of the floor. Although he’s a smart defensive player, Boozer may not be as dominant a rim protector at the next level. His shot-blocking numbers dropped notably from high school to college, which suggests he might struggle against substantially more athletic big men in the NBA. Boozer averaged just 0.6 blocks per game with Duke, just 2.0% of total shots taken by opponents. All the more reason for scouts to be concerned about his ability to guard length and athleticism. Additionally, his general lack of speed and lateral quickness puts him in vulnerable positions, especially when guarding on the perimeter. He’s not Daniel Gafford bad, but at best, he looks uncomfortable in space.

The good news for Boozer is that the concern teams and scouts have about him can be minimized by continuing to stretch his game outside of 15 feet and add some positional quickness. He’ll never be considered athletic, but his reliance on his size and fundamentals keep him in the top four prospects.

Fit with the Grizzlies (third selection)

As the Memphis Grizzlies continue to build around a young core that includes Cedric Coward, Jaylen Wells, and Zach Edey, selecting Boozer would add a key go-to offensive threat along with creating one of the more dynamic frontcourts in the league. Although the Grizzlies already have solid options at power forward, including Taylor Hendricks and GG Jackson Jr., Boozer’s talent is a huge tier above those guys. He would be the ideal power forward to add to this dynamic core. The Grizzlies were 25th in the NBA this season in offensive rating at 112.9 points per 100 possessions. Adding Boozer would be an incredible shot to the arm offensively. Memphis would still need a year or two to build into a playoff team, but man this team looks a lot more fun with Boozer.

Fit with the Bulls (fourth selection)

The other destination Boozer could find himself landing in, is Chicago. The Bulls have been a mess for the past decade, and this draft is their chance to significantly right the ship. If the Grizzlies were to take Caleb Wilson with the third pick, leaving Boozer on the board for the Bulls, Chicago should salivate at the idea of adding him to a young core of Matas Buzelis and Tre Jones. Jones showcased his ability to be a solid point guard this past season and Buzelis is an athletic, high-flyer, who can be a threat on both sides of the floor. Chicago was 23rd in the NBA in offensive rating this season at 113.0 points per 100 possessions. Cam Boozer would be the ideal offensive fit for a much-needed revival of Chicago basketball.

NBA comparison

Boozer is frequently compared to Paolo Banchero of the Orlando Magic for his combination of strength and the ability to finish inside the paint. His ceiling could be a combination of Banchero with a touch of Tim Duncan’s fundamentals and offensive prowess inside of 15 feet. If Boozer doesn’t reach that level, a slightly smaller Kevin Love is also in the cards. At his peak, Love was an offensive juggernaut who sucked up rebounds like a vacuum cleaner. Either way, Boozer will probably have a very solid NBA career.

Season in Review: Jalen Green made the best of a difficult season

OKLAHOMA CITY, OK - APRIL 22: Jalen Green #4 of the Phoenix Suns looks on during the game against the Oklahoma City Thunder during Round 1 Game 2 of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on April 22, 2026 at Paycom Center in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Zach Beeker/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Welcome to our Phoenix Suns Season in Review series, where we revisit every player who suited up during the 2025–26 campaign through the lens of expectation, reality, and what it ultimately meant.


Player Snapshot

  • Position: SG
  • Age: 24
  • 2026-27 Contract Status: $36.3 million
  • SunsRank (Preseason): 2
  • SunsRank (Postseason): 3

*SunsRank is based on Bright Side writers’ ranking.

Season in One Sentence

Jalen Green proved that he is who he has always been.

By the Numbers

GPMINPPGRPGAPGSTLFG%3PT%FT%OFFRTGDEFRTG+/- (TOTAL)
3225.917.83.62.81.142.2%31.3%74.7%114.2113.5+33

The Expectation

Jalen Green was supposed to come into the season as an electric athlete who could fill up the scoring column in the box score. He was supposed to be the number two scoring option on this team, who could give Booker a rest when needed.

That said, no one thought it was a guaranteed thing that Green was going to fit seamlessly on this team. In September, when Brandon Duenas played devil’s advocate and put forth three reasons the Suns weren’t going to make the playoffs this season, the number one predicted reason was that Booker and Green wouldn’t fit together. How many times have you heard the phrase, “there is only one ball” during your NBA fandom?

The athleticism of Jalen Green really was the main selling point of adding him to this roster. After years of wing rotations that consisted of Devin Booker, Grayson Allen, and Royce O’Neale, a true jump out of the gym, hit your head on the rim-type athlete was supposed to be a breath of fresh air.

On top of it all, Green was an iron man. He missed just 21 out of his first 328 games in the NBA.

The Reality

Unfortunately, an offseason hamstring injury resulted in a huge setback for Green. His first game of the year was on November 6th against the Clippers, the Suns’ 9th game of the year. The very next game, also against the Clippers, Green reaggravated his hamstring and returned to the sideline. He would not return until the Suns’ 44th game of the year, in Philadelphia on January 20th. After that, he played just 4 of the next 11 games. Finally, on February 19th, he returned in full. He played in games 56-80 and was finally back for good.

If you look at his stats for his age 23 season, you won’t see a leap into superstardom. He scored around the same number of points with a very similar efficiency to his averages with Houston.

He was not Phoenix’s second option this season, like many of us expected him to be. He was third in field goal attempts per game for the Suns. By the time Green was regularly in the lineup, Brooks had already established himself as Booker’s number 2.

What It Means

Jalen Green is who he is. He has been almost the exact same player every single year he has been in the NBA. He is not going to replace Booker someday as the Suns’ star shooting guard. So, with that in mind, why keep him? He is going to make $36 million dollars next season, and this team has no starting power forward.

He’s still just 23, he is on a big contract, and he plays a position that makes him redundant to the team’s game plan. At this point, Jalen Green is the Sun that I think makes the most sense to trade this offseason.

If the Suns do keep Green long-term, then expect him to play more games than he did this season, but expect the exact same production. This is just who Jalen Green is.

Defining Moment

Jalen Green was the hero of the play-in, scoring 35 points against the Trailblazers and 36 points against the Warriors.

I am a sucker for a game-winner, though. On February 21st, the Suns played the Magic without Devin Booker and needed a hero as the clock struck zero in double overtime. Jalen Green stepped up and hit this incredible shot

Grade: B

I give Jalen Green a B. We were all disappointed to start the season without him and even more so to get him for so few games in total this year. When he was on the court, Booker and Green never felt like the dynamic inside-out guard duo that we thought they could be. But, outside of injury, it wasn’t a disappointing year. Green came in and performed exactly as he always had.

Next year, he will probably do the same.


Weekly Cupcakes: Makar may be ready for Game 1

DENVER, COLORADO - MAY 05: Cale Makar #8 of the Colorado Avalanche skates against the Minnesota Wild in Game Two of the Second Round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Ball Arena on May 05, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Michael Martin/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images


Colorado Avalanche News

  • That painful night in Dallas still fuels this Avalanche team: ‘You never totally get over it’. [Denver Post]
  • Avalanche finding ‘emotional balance’ ahead of Western Final. [NHL]
  • Avs head coach Jared Bednar thinks all players will be available for Game 1. [Denver Sports]
  • ICYMI: Round Three Forwards Preview, [MHH]

News Around the League

  • Sidney Crosby’s decision to play at worlds surprised Team Canada leaders. [Toronto Sun]
  • Gigantic Oilers goalie prospect crushing it in playoffs, but is his NHL path blocked? [Edmonton Journal]
  • Game 6 couldn’t have gone much worse for the Canadiens. The Sabres score seven unanswered goals in a commanding 8-3 win to force a deciding game. [Montreal Gazette]
  • Wild vets Brodin, Eriksson Ek each had broken foot that kept them out of playoff series loss to Avs. [TSN]
  • Sunday Overreactions: Wild need clarity from Hughes as soon as possible. [Sportsnet]
  • A list of suspensions and fines issued so far during the 2026 playoffs. [The Hockey News]
  • Golden Knights lose pick and coach John Tortorella is fined for boxing out media. [ESPN]

Which series are Giants fans most interested in this week?

SAN FRANCISCO, CA - MAY 08: A general view of Oracle Park during the game between the Pittsburgh Pirates and the San Francisco Giants on Friday, May 8, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Lachlan Cunningham/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Good morning, baseball fans!

A new week of San Francisco Giants baseball begins today, so let’s take a look at what’s on deck for this week.

First up, the Giants keep their west coast road trip going as they begin a three-game series against the Arizona Diamondbacks tonight. After a day off on Thursday, they head back to Oracle Park to begin a three-game series against the Chicago White Sox.

Personally, I’m going to pick the Diamondbacks series this week. The Giants are currently sitting in fourth place in the division and if they can get a couple wins against Arizona, that would move them up a bit to a slightly more respectable third place. One can dream, anyway.

Which series are you most interested in this week?

What time do the Giants play today?

The Giants begin their series against the Diamondbacks tonight at 6:40 p.m. PT.

We’re running out of ways to talk about how bad this Red Sox season is

ATLANTA, GA - MAY 17: Willson Contreras #40 of the Boston Red Sox reacts after hitting a foul ball off of his foot during the MLB game between the Boston Red Sox and the Atlanta Braves on May 17, 2026 at TRUIST Park in Atlanta, GA. (Photo by Jeff Robinson/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

…………………………………..Sometimes I wonder why I watch a team like this, man. I’m so tired already. I can’t even muster the energy to write a fun lil’ intro. You know what the deal is with this team: the deal is that the 2026 Boston Red Sox fuckin’ suck at baseball. So, why waste any time? Let’s get this over with, because we’ve got plenty of stuff to talk about over the past week. Feel like this is gonna be a relatively quick one, since I don’t know how many times I can tell you that we’re watching a bad team.

(Going back to read this intro now that I’m done, and hahahahahahahaha of course I couldn’t keep it short. Who am I fooling? God I’m an ass.)

It’s Monday Morning Brushback time, y’all.

Defense Good, Offense Bad

Say what you want about Chief Baseball Officer Craig Breslow, but he was a man of his word when it came to emphasizing pitching and defense. The Red Sox’s pitching staff has a top-10 ERA in the league following the weekend, while their defense has graded out as by far the best in baseball in terms of defensive runs saved.

Unfortunately, it looks like that’s come at the expense of…well, anything resembling consistent offense. The only team that has a worse combined OPS than the Sox this season (.666; very fitting if you ask me) are the Mets. Boston boasts one of the worst total on base percentages across MLB (.310) and are the posting the second-worst combined slugging percentage (.356; I’ll let you guess which team is putting up the only worse slugging output as of the time of publication).

You know who the suspects are. Three Red Sox hitters qualified for the league’s bottom 10 in OPS as of Sunday morning. Sing ‘em with me: Durbin, Duran, Story.

It’s not just that trio that have sucked complete shit on offense. The only guys who can skate from criticism here are Wilyer Abreu, Willson Contreras, and Ceddanne Rafaela. Those three—along with Nick Sogard (who has had all of four ABs in the bigs this year) and Mickey Gasper (25 ABs to his name, wowwwww such a bigger sample size)—are the only guys this year who are able to say they’ve got an OPS north of .687.

Again: I can sit here and try to dissect exactly what the problems are (I’ve tried to! On this very website! Multiple times this season!!!! In blog posts just like this one!!!!!!). Honestly, there are too many to even name. They can’t move runners over once they actually somehow manage to get into scoring position. They strikeout far too often for a team that has nearly zero slugging potential to speak of. They ground out far too often in general, sans qualifier. Go ahead and name a dozen more problems in the comments; there’s no shortage of them.

So this all comes back to Breslow, especially now that this is official his entire show. Hindsight is 20/20, yes, but what the fuck are we doing here, guys? I’ve been one to complain about stupid defensive mistakes before (again, I’ve done so on OTM many times over the last few years!!!!), but I didn’t want the monkey paw to curl this much to the point where the offense is on life support.

I’m sure in the coming weeks and months we’ll carry out the official autopsy on the 2026 lineup. The larger conversations about Breslow will be shelved, by me at least, for another day (knock yourself out; I just don’t have the energy for it right now……this team is breaking me, man). Those will all come with time. I guess I’m just still shocked at how uninspiring this team is at the plate. Almost everyone looks like they’re hitting with a pool noodle. Here I was trying to find silver linings about the hard hit rate, or strides that were being made by Marcelo Mayer or Jarren Duran. Serves me right for sticking my neck out for perhaps the single worst Red Sox offense I’ve seen in my entire life.

Hope the defensive improvements have been worth it!

It’s Hell-o Watching Bello

(Yes, I’m aware this doesn’t actually rhyme.)

Speaking of sticking my necks out for guys: I think I’m done doing so for Brayan Bello.

Just as I was starting to warm up to him again after a pair of solid outings that were preceded by an opener on the hill, Bello self-destructed once again in Sunday’s finale against Atlanta: seven earned runs coughed up across five innings of work. He surrendered eight hits, several of which went for extra bases, and walked three Braves.

I don’t really know what else to say about his stuff on the mound that I haven’t already touched upon in a previous MMBB this year (with the exception of one point that I’ll get to in a moment). His cutter still sucks, and it’s still a bad idea to make it his number two or three offering (which, to be fair, he only ended up throwing it 9% of the time on Sunday……….I can make a guess why that is, though). So, it made no sense as to why he tried to deploy it as an out pitch with two strikes and two down in the first and a pair of runners aboard against a power hitter in Austin Riley. The Bravos slugger did exactly what he was supposed to do with a 88 MPH cookie that ended up right in his happy zone.

Bello can’t consistently get strikes with his changeup or his curve, and he’s never gonna consistently pile up the K’s. If he’s not spinning to keep the ball on the ground and if he can’t keep batters off balance, it spells trouble for him. Simple as that; nothing you didn’t already know.

Is this pickle’s solution really something as simple as preceding Bello’s “starts” with an opener? I don’t know if two appearances after an opener is enough of a sample size to see something sticky in that idea. But on the other hand………like……..it had been working. He was ass before the opener strategy, manager Chad Tracy and the gang enacted that idea for two starts, he threw 13.1 total frames in those appearances to the tune of just two earned runs alongside eight hits and a pair of free passes (12 strikeouts, too!), they dumped the opener plan for the finale against Atlanta, and then he was ass again.

I think having an opener appear before handing it off to Bello is at least worst revisiting once more. What’s the worst that can happen at this point? That he shits his pants, something he had been doing the entire season thus far without the assistance of someone from the bullpen to be his opening act?

A point on this topic of openers I want to share: Tracy, after Sunday’s loss, said the opener strategy could be back on the table.

Isn’t the onus on Tracy, the rest of the staff, and the organization to set Bello up for success?

I understand that Brayan’s a veteran at this point (one with a not-so-insignificant contract and financial commitment from the club, might I add) and that he should be expected to start a game right away, opener or not. But to quote John Mulaney talking about horses lose in hospitals, we’re well past that. It’s clear that at this point in time, the regular plan for Bello ain’t worth a lick.

So isn’t it the responsibility of Tracy to ensure that he’s getting the best version of number 66 by not burning all of his possible openers? This is especially the case when ace Garrett Crochet has yet to return and when you need guys to eat innings in order to survive in what is a truly putrid American League race (it is insane that we could hypothetically be in a playoff spot by the time Memorial Day rolls around next week). Isn’t the manager supposed to, I suppose, manage these things?

Regardless of what inning Bello toes the rubber in his next outing, though, he’s obviously got to improve. Otherwise, I don’t think an option to Worcester in the near future is out of the question. I’m rooting for him desperately. I’ve defended his pitching profile plenty of times before. I really want to see a homegrown talent succeed here, like he did in 2025. Yet it’s time for the veteran to start pitching like one, opener or no opener.

Oh, and happy belated birthday Brayan.

(What’s The Story) Trev and Sogie?

Trevor Story’s bad start to 2026 got worse this past week, as the shortstop has been placed on the injured list with a sports hernia. Chris Cotillo of The Mexican TimesMassLive reported that all options to get Story on the mend, including surgery, are being considered. As I’m writing this on Sunday before the finale in Hotlanta, it sounds like he could miss at least six to 10 weeks of action.

A trio of points I’d like to make on this front to round us out:

1. As reported in that same MassLive article, Story himself mentioned he’s been playing with this lingering groin issue since spring training.

“Obviously, I haven’t been able to really move like myself out there, so it kind of built up on me. After a few hard days in a row, it popped up and I just couldn’t kick it after that. It’s been a battle for the first month, month-and-a-half. I hang my hat on being able to play and being available, and obviously, now it’s probably a good time to re-evaluate that.”

Maybe that explains some of the struggles we’ve seen from Story, both at the plate and on the infield dirt, to begin 2026. To be frank, he’s looked lost with both the bat and the glove. Not to go all Savant slop on all of you, but the old saying is that a picture says 1,000 words. If that’s the case, I think a screenshot of Trevor’s Savant page can do all the explaining I need.

Bad. Really, really, really bad stuff. And honestly, if you watch the games (which I’d imagine you do if you’re reading this, thank you for doing so), you didn’t need me nor that screenshot to tell you that everything with his game this season has been rough to see.

With that said, here’s hoping the recovery process goes well for Story so that we can maybe get some productivity out of him in the second half of the season. For better or for worse, I think we’re gonna have him on the roster short of a DFA being executed in a few months. I don’t think anyone’s gonna trade for him along with the $25 million deal for 2027 that’s attached to him at this juncture (and that includes the Mets; I saw those rumors too and I don’t buy ‘em). I suppose stranger things have happened, and maybe Story can salvage something from this season, but I guess I’m not holding my breath. Just a shame all around, really.

2. Story’s time on the shelf paved the way for Nick Sogard to be recalled from AAA. While he’s not the absolute pinnacle of the farm system at this point, maybe he can step in and be a serviceable left-handed hitting option within the infield alongside the righty Andruw Monasterio at least for the time being.

For what it’s worth, Sogard has been hitting the ball real well this season for the WooSox: his triple slash prior to being called up to the big club stood at .269/.417/.454 for an .871 OPS across 168 plate appearances at the AAA level, with the five homers sticking out to me as an impressive figure worthy of a shout out.

Is five homers in the minors gonna get me out of bed in the morning? No, not particularly. However, to bring things back to what I spoke about earlier on in the article: this team is starved of offensive output right now, so any positive developments within the organization are a welcome sign and something that’s worth monitoring at the very least.

After all: Sogard’s Prospect Savant page don’t look too shabby. He’s been drawing a healthy amount of walks, he hasn’t been striking out a ton, and his average exit velocities have actually been quite firm. A solid approach at the plate could provide the foundation of some semblance of production, regardless of how long his stint in Boston this season lasts. Watch this space. Let me try to convince myself of something to latch onto, folks. I’m gonna go insane if I can’t, and I’m sure Mr. Secatore and Co. will not appreciate that outcome.

3. Tim Healey of the Boston Globe reported a piece of news regarding Marcelo Mayer prior to Sunday’s game that I was really hoping to see sooner rather than later.

Two words: THANK GOD.

With all due respect to Mr. Story along with his career accomplishments and previous reputation on defense, I think this moves has to happen—nay: had to, as in something that should’ve happened. I don’t think I’d hear much pushback to the idea of Mayer being a better fielder right now than anyone else you could put on the left side of the infield right now outside of, perhaps, Caleb Durbin. Durbin’s been sensational at third, though I’m not sure how he’d fare at short. Meanwhile, I’ve seen Mayer play both quite well. But I digress.

While Mayer’s offensive output has ebbed and flowed thus far in 2026, he’s already shown he’s a major league-caliber fielder. It would behoove the organization to get him over to shortstop now, especially while the incumbent Story heals up. Hell, I would’ve made the change much sooner—but I’m just a mere blogger trying to write this while my dog paws at me to take him to go pee (in a minute, Marshall, I’m writing thousands of words about a sub-.500 ball club…).

Point is: more Mayer at short, please. It’s been long enough. The kid’s got to sink or swim at some point; that means putting him in the lineup against more lefties and letting him get a hold of that position full-time.

Song of the Week: “If Not For You” by George Harrison

A beaut from the best Beatles solo album, of course.

Same time and same place next week, friends! Go Sox.

MLB News Outside The Confines: The most likeable man in baseball

Good morning.