DitD & Open Post – 5/20/26: Sheldon Returns Edition

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - NOVEMBER 22: Head Coach of the New Jersey Devils Sheldon Keefe looks on from his bench during the first period against the Philadelphia Flyers at the Xfinity Mobile Arena on November 22, 2025 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Len Redkoles/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Here are your links for today:

Devils Links

Coaching news:

“Jordan Kyrou’s name has been a constant in trade rumors over the past year and change. If the St. Louis Blues put him back on the market this summer, the New Jersey Devils should make him a priority target. Let’s get into some of the many reasons why.” [Infernal Access ($)]

Hockey Links

The Habs are through:

And we’re down to four:

Playoff scoring leaders:

“The Vegas Golden Knights appealed their NHL-imposed sanctions in New York on Tuesday morning and it was determined shortly afterward that the punishment will remain as assessed, sources told ESPN. The league fined coach John Tortorella $100,000 and stripped the team of its 2026 second-round draft pick for ‘flagrant violations’ of the NHL’s Stanley Cup playoff media regulations.” [ESPN]

More Golden Knights drama:

Adam Foote is out in Vancouver:

We have offer sheet tiers:

Feel free to discuss these and any other hockey-related stories in the comments below.

The Dobes Spring Is In Full Swing For The Canadiens

Almost as soon as the playoffs started, there was some chatter around the Montreal Canadiens about Jakub Dobes being the second coming of Jaroslav Halak. Not because they have a similar style or build, but rather because neither was seen as the team’s number one goaltender before being catapulted into the NHL playoffs in the starting role.

While Halak started the 2010 playoffs for the Canadiens, he didn’t play all the games. In the first round against the Washington Capitals, he had to make way for Carey Price for a game-and-change before coming back with a vengeance and eliminating both the Capitals and the Pittsburgh Penguins in consecutive Game 7s. Just like Dobes, he was spectacular in big games, making phenomenal saves. Meanwhile, Price, who was already tagged as the Habs’ goaltender of the future, was riding the pine.

Canadiens Are The Youngest Team To Make Conference Final Since...
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Newhook’s Big Goal Sends Canadiens Through To Third Round

Fast forward 16 years, and Dobes finds himself right where Halak was. He has eliminated two great teams in two series that went the distance, with the organization’s goaltender of the future, Jacob Fowler, riding the pine. Even Zachary Bolduc did his best to take everyone back to 2010 on Monday night, scoring a goal as Mike Cammalleri did during that special run with one knee on the ice.

Fans, however, will hope this marks the end of the striking resemblance between the two playoff campaigns. Back in 2010, the Canadiens bowed out in the third round, losing the Conference Final to the Philadelphia Flyers in just five games after Halak ran out of gas.

After eliminating the Buffalo Sabres on Sunday night, Dobes dismissed the idea that he could be tired after playing 14 intense playoff games, stating he could play another 40 games. However, those are only words, and we’ll see in the third round if he still has some gas left in the tank.

Those who lived through the Halak spring will also remember that not long after the Canadiens’ elimination, the netminder, who was just about to become an unrestricted free agent, was unceremoniously traded to the St. Louis Blues as the organization elected to stick with Price, who had been the organization’s fifth overall pick at the 2005 draft.

Unlike Halak, Dobes still has a year left on his contract before becoming a UFA, meaning the Canadiens won’t be in a rush to decide when it comes to their goaltenders, at least not for a while. Unless, of course, the team is tempted to sacrifice a goaltender to fill another organizational need (such as a second-line center), but I’d be surprised if that were the case. The Habs still have other exciting prospects coming up through the ranks who could potentially help them complete their top six.

In Dobes and Fowler, the Canadiens have a great goaltending tandem at a very low cost, and neither of them should be on their way out of town anytime soon. Kent Hughes will tread carefully before moving on from one of the two keepers. Besides, he has shown in the past that he can be very persuasive when it’s time to sign players to a team-friendly contract. Who’s to say he couldn’t do just that with Dobes and Fowler? There seems to be something special brewing in Montreal, and who’s to say the duo won’t be interested in sticking around?

It’s becoming increasingly frequent that teams really rely on a tandem of goaltenders around the league these days, and would it be such a terrible thing if the Canadiens found themselves in the same situation as the Boston Bruins were with Jeremy Swayman and Linus Ullmark? For now, the only goaltender the Canadiens should be looking to move is Samuel Montembeault. It’s a shame for the Becancour native, but at this stage, it does look like he would benefit from a new start somewhere else.


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Guardians win 4th straight as Royce Lewis is sent to AAA

CLEVELAND, OH - AUGUST 03: Cleveland Guardians second baseman Daniel Schneemann (10) is tagged out by Minnesota Twins third baseman Royce Lewis (23) attempting to steal third base during the third inning of the Major League Baseball game between the Minnesota Twins and Cleveland Guardians on August 3, 2025, at Progressive Field in Cleveland, OH. (Photo by Frank Jansky/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

I was told the downfall was coming. Was the wording specific enough?

Last night in Detroit, the Guards beat the Tigers for the 2nd night in a row. The 4-game series split has been clinched. A sweep is still on the table.

Cleveland hitters chose a good year to draw a ton of walks. There have been a bunch of high-walk staffs on their schedule lately, and the 2 DET starters have been no exception.

The patient Travis Bazzana arrived at the perfect time for this as well.

Elsewhere, like such as in the Minnesota

• The Twins optioned Royce Lewis to AAA.

• One of MIN’s top prospects, OF Emmanuel Rodriguez, needs thumb surgery.

• Ryan Jeffers is out a while after injuring his hamate bone.

• Byron Buxton returned from his hip injury last night.

Other Guards news

• Peyton Pallette was placed on the paternity list and thus Codi Heuer is back.

• Kolby Allard is also back… on a MILB deal after being released yesterday.

Kentucky Wildcat News: Malachi Moreno Watch Heats Up

Feb 7, 2026; Lexington, Kentucky, USA; Kentucky Wildcats center Malachi Moreno (24), guard Jasper Johnson (2) and forward Braydon Hawthorne (right) celebrate from the bench during the second half against the Tennessee Volunteers at Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center. Mandatory Credit: Jordan Prather-Imagn Images | Jordan Prather-Imagn Images

Good morning, BBN!

Mark Pope and his staff are out on the recruiting trail as they look to make some noise in the high school ranks in the class of 2027. However, their biggest recruiting win might come from an NBA Draft decision by Malachi Morneo.

It is safe to say this decision will likely impact the excitement for next season and could either help get Coach Pope back into the good graces of the BBN or put one nail in the coffin many have already built for him. That is why the tweet from Moreno yesterday afternoon got the fanbase talking.

WHAT COULD IT MEAN?! That is exactly what we all were shouting as we saw it. Moreno has retweeted a few accounts in recent months, but this is actually the first tweet he’s personally sent out since March 19.

Moreno participated in the in the GSL Sports Group Pro Day in Los Angeles on Tuesday in front of all 30 NBA teams. After working out for the New York Knicks and meetings with the Los Angeles Lakers and Boston Celtics, it is expected that Moreno will have a few more workouts to end the week.

With his stock still sitting firmly around the late first round mark, you can find mock drafts that place him as the 23rd pick to Atlanta (Yahoo Sports) or find him slipping into the early second round, as ESPN has him.

One thing is for certain: If he does decide to stay in the draft, the Kentucky native will hear his name called this year. Now it just depends on which option he prefers.

Either way, we should be getting an answer very soon.

Tweet of the Day

Goodman with some strong words. LSU could have an awesome roster or a bunch of guys who are ineligible. It’ll be fascinating to watch it all unfold.

Headlines

Jacob Lang Has Historic Round Two at Bermuda Run Regional – UK

 Lang etched his name into the Kentucky men’s golf record books!

Wave of sixth-inning paper cuts bleeds Kentucky out of SEC Tournament- KSR

The Cats are now right on the bubble.

The BBN helped La Familia lock up home court advantage against Louisville’s TBT team- KSR

Will be a fun summer in the TBT.

Composite 4-star CB commits to Kentucky- Cats Pause

LETS GO!

Ansley Almonor is a champion in Finland (but can’t sing along with his teammates)- KSR

Congrats to the former Cat!

Jason Kidd out as Mavericks coach after five seasons- ESPN

There will be a new head coach in Dallas.

Arsenal win 1st Premier League title in 22 years after Man City draw- ESPN

A big day for Arsenal fans!

Who will be the next American to win NBA MVP?- CBS

Who is your bet?

SEC post-spring power rankings: Texas leads pack while Texas A&M, Alabama headline fluid middle tier- CBS

Where do you think the Cats rank?

Maple Leafs’ Head Coaching Search To Include At Least One Internal Candidate

There have been a lot of names reported as candidates for the Toronto Maple Leafs’ head coaching position. So it’s no surprise to learn that at least one internal candidate will be considered for the position of Toronto bench boss. 

Sources tell The Hockey News that Maple Leafs assistant coach Derek Lalonde will interview for the job.

Lalonde joined the Maple Leafs last summer after associate coach Lane Lambert departed Toronto to become the new head coach of the Seattle Kraken. While Lalonde led the club’s penalty kill, Toronto finished eighth in the NHL with an 81.2 percent efficiency. But defensively, the Leafs struggled all season long, and defense fell under his purview as well.  

When the Leafs struggled in the early parts of last season, many pointed to Lalonde as a potential interim head coach option had they elected to fire Berube mid-season. Toronto instead elected to move on from Berube at the end of the season following the installment of new management led by GM John Chayka and Senior Executive Advisor to Hockey Operations Mats Sundin.  

Lalonde had a successful first stint in the NHL as an assistant coach with the Tampa Bay Lightning under Jon Cooper. There he won Stanley Cups in 2020 and 2021, while going to the Stanley Cup Final again in 2022. From there, Lalonde earned his first NHL head coaching position, becoming bench boss of the Detroit Red Wings at the beginning of the 2022-23 season. In his second season, the Red Wings narrowly missed the playoffs despite a 41-32-9 record. He was fired midway through the 2024-25 season and replaced by veteran head coach Todd McLellan.  

It’s not a real surprise that the Leafs would talk to Lalonde, as Chayka mentioned the process to find a new bench boss would be extensive. The Leafs talked to well over 20 people for the role Chayka occupies now, so this could take some time.  

From a public standpoint, Lalonde has proven to be quite insightful. Who could ever forget his time on the panel during Hockey Night In Canada back in 2023, when he was working during the intermission of the Maple Leafs and Lightning first-round series? It was there where he mentioned that the Lightning had done an internal study showing that goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy was one of the lower-percentage goalies in finding the puck from the point.  

“We actually changed our entire D-zone [coverage] and improved our pass rush,” Lalonde said.

Lalonde’s future is up in the air along with the rest of the Maple Leafs assistants, as a new head coach will likely want to bring a new staff. But he could be a good candidate to stick around in any kind of coaching capacity.

Who’s had the biggest decline the Yankees?

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 18: J.C. Escarra #25 and David Bednar #53 of the New York Yankees celebrate after the final out against the Toronto Blue Jays at Yankee Stadium on May 18, 2026 in the Bronx borough of New York City. The New York Yankees won 7-6. (Photo by Ishika Samant/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Yesterday, Jake opened up the day with a discussion about what the biggest positive development the Yankees have gotten out of this season has been. If you’ll forgive the shameless piggy-backing off of that topic, I’d like to flip the question on its head and ponder what the worst development has been, what decline in the team’s roster has been the most worrisome and in need of addressing. There are, unfortunately, plenty of areas to look at.

The culprit that has made the most commotion recently has to be the bullpen at large, and there are several offenders here but only one that has definitively regressed from what they were in 2025. David Bednar was solid enough for New York last season after coming over at the deadline, but his tendency to cause a mess before getting down to business has backfired tremendously this year. The other relievers struggling to this point, namely Camilo Doval and Jake Bird, were already problems after coming over as part of that deadline overhauling, with Bird infamously getting demoted after just a few games even.

The rotation has been the deepest strength of the team throughout this year, but there’s one candidate you could point to here in Luis Gil. The 2024 AL Rookie of the Year missed a large portion of last season, but when he returned he was still serviceable with a 3.32 ERA in 57 innings. The same cannot be said about his 2026 campaign, as he got all of four starts before he landed on the IL with a gaudy 6.05 ERA that will all but necessitate a lengthy stay in the minors before he gets a shot in the rotation again. The staff is about to be getting a major boost with Gerrit Cole’s return on Friday, but with Max Fried taking his place on the IL indefinitely they remain one bad break away from needing an arm, yet Gil’s place in the organization is deeply in doubt nowadays.

The lineup has its highlights posted front and center, but when you get down to the bottom of it there are some bats that have severely struggled thus far. Jazz Chisholm Jr. has disappointed after emerging as one of the team’s better bats in his first full season with the team last year, Trent Grisham has been one of the most unlucky batters in baseball trying to follow up on his breakout in 2025, Ryan McMahon has gone from being a subpar bat with elite defense to nearly a negative WAR player, and Austin Wells has been a black hole at the plate for far too long. It would be the hardest to make changes with these players, but you could argue that any one of their declines have been more detrimental to the team’s success than the others. With the full field of choices, what would you say? Which one of them needs to turn it around the most? Which one would be the most damaging to future wins if they don’t?


Before we get back to the field with the Yankees looking to secure a series win in this four-game set, there’s a lot we’ve got ready for Wednesday. Peter has a double-feature out of the gate, first focusing on Cam Schlittler and how he’s renovated his sinker to rise to the top before covering the Rivalry Roundup. Matt gives Bobby Murcer his flowers on what would’ve been his 80th birthday, Kento examines Cody Bellinger’s renewed ability to work walks this year, John walks us through the best spots to avoid the Yankee Stadium speaker noise, and Scott rounds us out with a look at Payton Henry ahead of a matchup with his former team in the Lehigh Valley IronPigs.

Today’s Matchup

New York Yankees vs. Toronto Blue Jays

Time: 7:05 p.m. EST

Video: Amazon Prime Video, Sportsnet One, MLB Network

Venue: Yankee Stadium, Bronx, NY

CelticsBlog exit interview: Payton Pritchard, Boston’s best bargain, is about to force a big decision

Apr 26, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Boston Celtics guard Payton Pritchard (11) reacts after making a three point basket against the Philadelphia 76ers during the second half at Xfinity Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images | Eric Hartline-Imagn Images

For most of the last two years, Payton Pritchard’s contract has been one of the easiest things on the Celtics’ books to celebrate.

A four-year, $30 million deal signed in October 2023 for a guard who can shoot, handle the ball, push pace, scrap in the paint, bomb away from the logo and swing games by himself? Yes, please and thank you. No further questions. Please put that receipt in a frame and hang it next to the 2024 banner.

That version of the conversation was fun while it lasted. Sadly for us, though certainly not for PP himself, it’s about to change.

Pritchard is no longer a plucky underdog value story. He isn’t the scrappy bench guard who outperformed expectations and turned into one of Brad Stevens’ better pieces of business. Well, in a way he’s still all of that, sure, but as we’re about to find out, he’s become so much more. After his last couple of seasons, Pritchard has become one of Boston’s more interesting offseason variables.

That’s what happens when a bargain starts playing like something much closer to a pillar.

The contract is still absurd. The role is anything but.

The Celtics are set to pay Pritchard $7.8 million next season. In the NBA’s current financial climate, that number feels like it was discovered in a couch cushion. Boston will owe Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown and Derrick White roughly $145 million combined next season, while no other player on the roster is currently set to make more than $11 million. Pritchard living in that range while producing the way he did is laughably amazing for Boston. It’s one of the reasons the Celtics stayed afloat, and then some, during a season that could have gone sideways fast.

But that’s also where this gets complicated.

Pritchard feels like he’s become more than a “nice to have” player. The Celtics leaned on him too much, and he delivered too often, for him to be treated like a budget-friendly depth piece.

He gave Boston real creation when the offense needed it. He played with pace when the game started to bog down. He punished defenses that lost him. He became more than just a catch-and-shoot threat. There were nights when he wasn’t simply supplementing the stars. He was the star, organizing possessions, creating advantages and forcing Joe Mazzulla’s hand to trust him with more responsibility.

Pritchard plays with the exact kind of irrational confidence that makes sense only after the shot goes in. When it doesn’t, you’re halfway through saying, “Payton, what are we doing?” When it does, you’re nodding like you saw the whole thing coming.

Jaylen Brown said during the season that Pritchard was playing at an All-Star level and that Boston trusted him to run things. That wasn’t a throwaway compliment. It reflected what the games looked like. Pritchard earned more trust because he kept giving the Celtics reasons to offer it.

Now the team has to decide what that trust is worth.

A bargain with leverage

Pritchard is extension eligible this offseason, and that’s where the current bargain starts becoming a bigger question.

Under normal circumstances, this would be easy enough. Pay the guy. Keep the guy. Celebrate the guy. Maybe build a statue of him launching that infamous halfcourt heave in Game 5 of the 2024 NBA Finals.

But Pritchard’s current contract is such a bargain that it limits how much Boston can offer him on an extension. The rules come into play here, and Keith Smith recently laid out the key point: because Pritchard’s salary is below the Estimated Average Player Salary, Boston may be able to offer more than a simple 140% raise off his current number.

That is real money, but it’s also not the same as open-market money.

Pritchard is making $7.8 million next season, which is among the league’s best value deals. But if he believes this past season was a new baseline rather than a peak, waiting could make sense. The cap is going up. The tax line is going up. Teams always need shooting, ball handling and competitive guards who don’t shrink from big moments.

Taking the extension would give Pritchard security now. Waiting could give him leverage in the future.

For once, Boston might not be the only side with it.

And that’s before getting into the roster-building piece of all this. Pritchard’s contract is valuable because he outplays it. That also makes him one of the few movable contracts on the roster that could actually interest other teams. Boston doesn’t have many mid-sized salaries. So, if the Celtics want to chase a center, add more size or reshape the roster in a meaningful way, rival teams are not going to start the conversation by asking for the guys Boston is already mentally Photoshopping out of next year’s team picture.

Pritchard’s value cuts both ways.

The Celtics have to decide what Pritchard means to them

If you extend Pritchard, you’re keeping a player who has become part of the team’s identity. He plays with the exact kind of edge Celtics fans love. He’s annoying in the best way. He rebounds like he has personally been offended by taller people his whole life.

If you move him, you better be doing it for something that clearly raises Boston’s ceiling.

Trading Pritchard because his contract helps make the math work is one thing. Trading him because the Celtics are hunting for a real upgrade is another. There’s a tightrope there, and it’s a narrow one to traverse.

The Celtics don’t have to decide whether Pritchard belongs anymore. He answered that.

The harder question is what kind of player they believe he will be going forward.

Is he the long-term sixth man who stabilizes the offense and closes certain matchups? Is he a possible starter if Boston’s backcourt thins out? Is he the kind of player you extend now because you know the price will only get scarier later? Or is he one of the few non-star pieces valuable enough to help the Celtics make a bigger move?

None of those questions are meant to be insulting. They’re the cost of becoming important.

Pritchard’s contract is still one of Boston’s best bargains. But because of how out-in-the-open good he’s become, the conversation around him can’t stay cheap forever.

Make it make sense: Why are Giants not utilizing top prospect Bryce Eldridge?

It’s like having a Porsche 911 Carrera and being instructed not to exceed 50 miles per hour.

It’s getting a custom Armani suit but told it can only be worn at family barbeques.

It’s like winning an all-inclusive Tahiti beach vacation for two, but your plus-one is your grandmother.

It’s the San Francisco Giants calling up their No. 1 prospect, one of the prized young sluggers in baseball, only to let him rot on the bench.

The Giants, who promoted first baseman Bryce Eldridge two weeks ago from Triple-A Sacramento, are utilizing their batboys more frequently than Eldridge.

Eldridge, called up May 4, has inexplicably started just five games in the last two weeks, and only once in the last four days for a team whose season is already on life support with the second-worst record in the National League.

Please, make it make sense.

This is a 21-year-old who just had the best night of his season on May 18, producing two hits for the Giants, which matched his season total.

His reward?

The bench.

Again.

Really.

“It’s a little bit of a puzzle to solve,” said Giants manager Tony Vitello, “but when you come to work every day and you’ve got a guy that’s always got a smile on his face and he’s willing to do whatever you ask, it makes it a lot easier.”

Easy for who? It’s not Vitello’s development that’s being stymied, it’s Eldridge’s career.

This is a 6-foot-7, 251-pound, first-round pick that’s one of the prized young hitters in baseball.

He’s had 1,216 plate appearances in the minors, hitting .274 with 23 homers, 89 RBI and an .858 OPS at Triple-A, with the Giants, believing he’s ready for the big leagues.

They called him up after a winless road trip, started him three consecutive games like every other team would with call-ups, but inexplicably, he’s being used like a 37-year-old journeyman third-string catcher. The Giants have started him only five times in the last 13 days.

So, instead of getting his experience in the big leagues, or at least continuing his development in the minors, he sits.

And sits. And sits. And sits.

Never, ever, has Eldridge been a bench player in his life.

Not in T-ball. Not in Little League or Pony League, or his high School in Vienna, Virginia. Not in rookie ball, Class A San Jose, High-A Eugene, Double-A Richmond, the Arizona Fall League or at Triple-A Sacramento.

Only now.

“I guess I’m surprised,’’ Eldridge tells USA TODAY Sports, “but it’s not my decision. It is what it is. You can argue every day that playing every day would be helpful, but I’m happy to be here.

“Obviously, it’s a little bit different, but this is where I’ve always wanted to be. I’ve just got to continue to earn my stripes here.’’

Well, if nothing else, Eldridge is quickly learning that there’s nothing remotely fair about this game.

If playing time was based on production, he would have been in the starting lineup Tuesday, only to wake up, look at his cell phone, check out the lineup posted on the Giants’ group chat, and see that his name was not in the starting lineup.

It turns out that Tuesday’s lineup was comprised ahead of time, regardless of how he fared Monday. Even though Diamondbacks starter Ryne Nelson is right-handed, and Eldridge is a left-handed slugger, Vitello said that Nelson’s reverse splits made it a difficult matchup. Nelson (1-3, 5.19 ERA) entered the game yielding a .189 batting average and .644 OPS against lefties compared to a .244 batting average and .789 OPS against righties.

The D-backs wound up using three right-handed pitchers in their 5-3 victory. Eldridge never moved.

Eldridge will be back in the lineup Wednesday against Arizona Diamondbacks veteran Merrill Kelly, Vitello promised, before the Giants head home to play the Chicago White Sox. The plan, at least for now, Vitello said, is for Eldridge not to sit for three consecutive games, which still seems to be two games too long.

“I don’t think we’ve come up with the Jordan rules or anything like that,’’ Vitello said, “but I think that’s a decent baseline. I worked with a guy a long, long time ago, and he said if you go three-plus days without using a skill, that skill is going to go backwards.’’

Still, as Eldridge or really any ballplayer can tell you, sitting around for several days and suddenly stepping into the batter’s box, can be a living nightmare. Your timing is thrown off. You question your own mechanics. Every pitcher suddenly looks like Los Angeles Dodgers co-aces Shohei Ohtani and Yoshinobu Yamamoto, who he got to face in back-to-back nights.

Eldridge, who sat on the bench for the final two games of the Giants’ series over the weekend against the Athletics in Sacramento, felt almost clueless in his first at-bat Monday against Zac Gallen. He struck out on four pitches, watching a 94-mph fastball cross the plate for Strike 3.

Yet, he hit a 103-mph single to right field in the third inning, grounded out in the sixth inning, and hit an opposite-field single in the ninth inning on a change-up, raising his batting average to .143 in just 31 plate appearances.

“It was nice to have something to be positive about going into the next one,’’ said Eldridge, “so that’s good. The past week, there wasn’t much to be confident about.’’

It’s Vitello and the coaching staff’s responsibility to assure that Eldridge’s confidence doesn’t erode rotting on the bench, trying to make sure he gets some at-bats as a pinch-hitter until they decide what to do.

“When you’re young, it’s tough,’’ says Giants veteran catcher Eric Haase, a mentor for Eldridge in Sacramento, and now in San Francisco. “You’re up in the big leagues. You know you’re a big prospect. They have a lot invested in you. You start feeling that pressure.

“I know it might take awhile to get his swing going with these lapses in between games, but you have to be prepared. It’s easy to fall into lulls of like, 'Well, I’m not playing today, maybe I can sit back and rest.' No, you have to have the same routines, the mental space, to be ready.

“He’s a great hitter with a good head on his shoulders. He’s doing everything they’ve asked. I think some steady at-bats are going to follow.’’

Ok, but where?

He’s certainly not going to play first base with the Giants already committed to Rafael Devers and the $255 million they picked up when they acquired him last June from the Boston Red Sox. Casey Schmitt, who has been the Giants’ best all-around hitter (.294, 8 homers, 21 RBI with an .855 OPS), is blocked in the infield with Matt Chapman (6 years, $151 million) at third base, Willy Adames (7 years, $182 million) at shortstop and Luis Arraez (one year, $12 million) at second base, leaving him as the primary DH. And Eldridge is strictly a first baseman and DH.

The only logical move would be sending Eldridge back to Sacramento if they’re not going to play him every day. Their only viable infield trade chip is Arraez, the three-time batting champion who’s hitting .320. But he also happens to be one of their most productive players.

For now, the Giants remain in a holding pattern. They’re not a legitimate playoff team with a 20-29 record, sitting in fourth place in the NL West, 10 games behind the Dodgers, but it’s also too early to punt on their season.

“First of all, we want to win,’’ Vitello said. “But the thing about Bryce is he can [still] help us win. I’ve been in the other dugout. When it’s a guy like that, that can just touch the ball and it goes over the fence, or you can put it in a gap, it changes things a little bit. So even if there isn’t actual production or on the stat sheet, it doesn’t look great, he can help us win by being a presence in the lineup.

“And that’s only going to increase the more reps he gets in the lineup.’’

Of course, that requires being in the actual lineup.

In the meantime, Eldridge waits, watches, and, of course, sits.

“Whether I’m playing or not, I think just being around this environment, and this clubhouse, and being able to watch games,’’ Eldridge said, “I’m trying to make the most of that.’’

Really, what choice does he have?

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Bryce Eldridge, Giants top prospect, isn't playing regularly. Why?

NHL power rankings: Which conference finals team is the best?

The NHL is down to the final four, and two rounds remain before a team gets to lift the Stanley Cup.

The No. 1 overall Colorado Avalanche will take on the Vegas Golden Knights in the Western Conference finals, starting on Wednesday, May 20, and the Carolina Hurricanes are facing the Montreal Canadiens the following day in the Eastern Conference finals.

How do the teams rank heading into what are sure to be intriguing series? USA TODAY Sports offers power rankings of the four conference finals teams, plus two Conn Smythe candidates per team in the race for playoff MVP.

4. Vegas Golden Knights

Mitch Marner is leading the playoffs in scoring, Pavel Dorofeyev is leading in goals and coach John Tortorella has Vegas playing the right way. But the Golden Knights' next opponent, the Avalanche, is formidable and it will be hard to advance, especially with Mark Stone out.

Conn Smythe candidates: Marner, Dorofeyev

3. Montreal Canadiens

They're more than an upstart team. They're a 100-point team that beat two other 100-point teams. Top players Cole Caufield, Nick Suzuki and Ivan Demidov are getting going and Alex Newhook has seven goals, including two Game 7 winners.

Conn Smythe candidates: Newhook, Jakub Dobes

2. Carolina Hurricanes

They have won eight in a row, the first team to sweep the first two series since the first round went to best of seven in 1987. Goalie Frederik Andersen has rediscovered his game and the line of Logan Stankoven, Taylor Hall and Jackson Blake has been dangerous. The Hurricanes haven't made it to the Stanley Cup Final under coach Rod Brind'Amour. Is this the year?

Conn Smythe candidates: Andersen, Stankoven

1. Colorado Avalanche

They were the best team in the regular season and get the nod in the playoffs because they beat the high-powered Minnesota Wild in five games. Colorado was the best offensive and defensive team in the regular season and is averaging 4.11 goals per game in the playoffs. Cale Makar appears to be favoring his shoulder, which could hurt the Avalanche in the long run.

Conn Smythe candidates: Nathan MacKinnon, Scott Wedgewood

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NHL power rankings of the four conference finals teams

Twitter Gold: Ted Williams Spots A Rising Star

NEW YORK - CIRCA 2001: Mike Piazza #31 of the New York Mets bats against the Atlanta Braves during a Major League Baseball game circa 2001 at Shea Stadium in the Queens borough of New York City. Piazza played for the Mets from 1998-2005. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images) | Getty Images

When he was a young prospect, future Hall of Famer Mike Piazza was a nobody. He was drafted in 1988,and only as a personal favor to his father from his godfather, L.A. Dodgers legend Tommy Lasorda. He was the 1,390th pick out of 1,395 prospects.

That’s close to Mr. Irrelevant status. Clearly, not much was expected out of Piazza.

Nonetheless, there were signs, and in this case, anyone with any sense should have listened, because one of the true legends of the game saw his potential immediately.

In this video, Ted Williams, the Splendid Splinter himself, casually observes 15-year-old Piazza hitting some balls and sees something special.

Williams goes on to say that he didn’t think he hit the ball as well as Piazza did when he was 15, and from the greatest hitter in the history of baseball…wow.

He tells his companion that he is sure the scouts are all over Piazza, and then says “I’ll be your agent, buddy!‘

Can you imagine being 15 and listening to Ted Williams tell you you’re on a trajectory of greatness?

That’s pure rocket fuel. What a moment.

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Stanley Cup Final rankings: Which conference finals teams would be best matchup?

The NHL playoffs' Western and Eastern Conference finals are set.

The No. 1 overall Colorado Avalanche will start the Western Conference finals on Wednesday, May 20, against the Pacific Division-leading Vegas Golden Knights.

The next day, the Eastern Conference-leading Carolina Hurricanes will take on the Montreal Canadiens, the lone non-division winner in the group. Montreal advanced by winning two Game 7s on the road and remain alive to try to end Canada's decades-long championship drought.

There are four possibilities for the Stanley Cup Final matchup. Which one would be the most appealing championship series? USA TODAY Sports ranks the potential matchups:

4. Carolina Hurricanes vs. Vegas Golden Knights

Plenty of talent on both sides, but the season series was a mismatch with the Golden Knights winning 4-1 and 6-3. Pavel Dorofeyev, who's leading the playoffs with nine goals, had three against Carolina during the regular season.

3. Vegas Golden Knights vs. Montreal Canadiens

Martin St. Louis, a relative newcomer as an NHL coach, hasn't won a Stanley Cup while behind the bench. But he did win one as a player with the Lightning in 2004. His coach then: John Tortorella, the coach on the other bench in this series. St. Louis was league MVP that season. Montreal beat the Golden Knights in the COVID-shortened 2021 season playoffs and Vegas fans remember that.

2. Colorado Avalanche vs. Montreal Canadiens

The 1993 Canadiens were the last Canadian team to win a Stanley Cup. Could the franchise end the country's drought? Alex Newhook is the lone Canadiens player with a Stanley Cup ring. He did it with the 2022 Avalanche, and Montreal gave up a first-round pick to land him. That has paid off with Newhook scoring the Game 7 winning goals against the Tampa Bay Lightning and the Buffalo Sabres.

Carolina Hurricanes head coach Rod Brind'Amour reacts against the Colorado Avalanche.

1. Colorado Avalanche vs. Carolina Hurricanes

The league powerhouses have combined for one loss (Colorado's) in the first two rounds and would be fun hockey to watch, provided they don't wear their World Hockey Association jerseys. It will be strength against strength. The Avalanche are averaging a league-best 4.11 goals per game and the Hurricanes lead with a 1.25 goals-against average. During the regular season, the Avalanche led in both categories, and the Hurricanes ranked second in offense.

It will be interesting to see if the Hurricanes' relentless pressure can disrupt the Avalanche's attack of Nathan MacKinnon, former Hurricane Martin Necas and Cale Makar. Brent Burns also had played for Carolina. The two-game season series was high scoring with the winner getting five goals.

Also to be answered: Will the Avalanche become the first Presidents' Trophy winner to win the Stanley Cup since 2013 or will the Hurricanes' Rod Brind'Amour get to lift the Stanley Cup as a coach 20 years after he did as Carolina's captain?

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Ranking Stanley Cup Final matchups among NHL conference finals teams

Championship playoffs should restart with Wrexham replacing Southampton, says Windass

  • Saints are appealing against expulsion and deduction

  • Windass: story ‘one of the maddest I’ve seen’

The Wrexham forward Josh Windass has called for the Championship playoffs to be started again, with his team involved, after Southampton’s expulsion on Tuesday. Saints were removed from the post-season competition by an independent commission after admitting to three spying offences, including against Middlesbrough, their playoff semi-final opponents.

Southampton have confirmed they will appeal against the sanctions imposed, with a league arbitration panel being convened on Thursday. The panel could uphold the original decision or reinstate Saints, who also had four points docked for next season.

Continue reading...

15 Takeaways from Cavs forth-quarter meltdown in Game 1 loss to Knicks: ‘It’s one game’

NEW YORK, NY - MAY 19: James Harden #1 and Head Coach Kenny Atkinson of the Cleveland Cavaliers high five during the game against the New York Knicks during Game One of the NBA Eastern Conference Finals on May 19, 2026 at Madison Square Garden in New York City, New York. 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

Being able to bounce back from terrible losses has allowed the Cleveland Cavaliers to advance to the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time in eight years. They’ll need to do so again after they inexplicably blew a 22-point fourth-quarter lead and lost in overtime to the New York Knicks, 115-104, in Game 1.

“We lost, we f****** blew it,” Donovan Mitchell said afterward.

This terrible loss showed two things. Number one, the advantages that you thought the Cavs would have coming into this series proved true. And number two, this team struggles to counter in-game adjustments.

We’ll start with the positives, since those are easy to miss in a game defined by the final quarter.

The Cavs’ defense was up to the challenge.

Defense is the first thing that usually gets blamed when you blow a lead as large as the Cavs did. However, even in the Knicks’ fourth-quarter comeback, it was their inability to create offense that ultimately did them in far more than their defense.

Cleveland’s defense on Karl-Anthony Towns was excellent, especially when the Cavs had two bigs on the floor.

One of Towns’s best skills on offense is being able to pull the center out of the paint and then playmake from there. Having Evan Mobley providing on-ball pressure with Jarrett Allen off-ball at the rim short-circuited that process. This contributed to a few of his seven giveaways on the night.

Having Allen as the primary defender on Josh Hart paid off. The defense dared Hart to beat them off the dribble or with the three-ball. He wasn’t able to do so as he went 1-5 from three and finished with the worst plus/minus of anyone in Game 1 at -23.

Cheating off Hart can be risky because of what he can provide as an offensive rebounder. The Cavs did a good job of not losing track of him in these situations. Having two rim protectors, one to cheat off Hart and clog the paint, and one to guard Towns, worked perfectly

The Knicks weren’t able to generate many outside looks. The best way to defend the three-point line is to keep your opponent from getting those shots. The Cavs limited the Knicks to just 32 outside looks, which translated to a third of their shot attempts (24th percentile). That’s a win for a team that has been on fire from three throughout the postseason.

The Cavs were able to do so while still defending the rim. New York converted just 62.5% of their looks in the restricted area.

These are the signs of a good defensive process. It was their work on this end that led to their 22-point lead.

Offensively, Donovan Mitchell had much more space to operate compared to the previous two seasons. This allowed him to get to the paint more easily, especially during the second and third quarters when the Cavs were playing their best.

Cleveland’s bigs showed that they could be impactful in the paint. The guards didn’t feed them the ball as they should’ve, but when they did, good things happened.

Allen was impactful as an offensive rebounder. He grabbed six second-chance opportunities in a game that felt like it was going to be a reversal of the 2023 series.

The Cavs also generated clean three-point looks. The Knicks sell out more than nearly any other team to protect the basket. This is why they gave up the second-most threes in the league throughout the regular season.

Cleveland took nearly half of their shots from behind the arc. And while you don’t necessarily want to see Mobley attempt eight triples, most of the ones the Cavs did get were clean. The shot quality was good. The issue was that they only converted 32% of their looks. If they keep getting good shots, you’d expect that to turn around at some point.

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Blowing a 22-point lead doesn’t come down to one thing. So many factors worked against the Cavs in the final eight minutes for them to give this away. But if you were forced to blame one thing, the offense’s inability to score down the stretch is what ultimately did them in.

The Cavs scored just 11 points in the final 13 minutes of regulation and overtime. The process went away, as they opted to bleed the clock instead of attacking whenever they saw an opening.

Basketball is a rhythm-based sport. If you halt your pace to waste time, you also take yourself out of the natural flow that allows you to perform your best. And then when you need to get back to it, as the Cavs did in overtime, it’s hard to find that again.

Mitchell and James Harden deserve the most blame for the offense falling apart in the fourth. They both failed to get the bigs involved, weren’t able to get downhill, and needlessly dribbled the air out of the ball.

The lack of aggressiveness from Mitchell was the most puzzling. He attempted just four shots in the fourth quarter, and mostly wasn’t a factor late.

Kenny Atkinson deserves blame for the collapse, most of all with how the team defended Jalen Brunson down the stretch.

New York hunted Harden defensively. They put him in 21 on-ball screens in the fourth quarter and overtime. This resulted in nine isolations, with the Knicks scoring 1.9 points per those possessions.

There’s no excuse for seeing that happen and not adjusting.

We know who Harden is as a defender. There are things that he can do well, given his size and strength. Hanging with a quicker guard like Brunson in isolation isn’t one of them.

If Harden is going to be targeted like that, he probably shouldn’t be on the court. But if you’re insistent on playing him for what he provides offensively, the game plan around him needs to be better.

It’s clear that the Cavs were willing to just give up the switch. Defenders weren’t fighting to stay with their assignment when the screen came. This strategy worked with Hart in the game; it didn’t when New York opted for shooting.

The Cavs weren’t prepared for a small-ball version of the Knicks.

Harden was able to be targeted because Landry Shamet (a shooter) was in place of Hart (not a shooter). If one of the bigs was able to roam off Hart, the paint still would’ve been clogged, and Brunson wouldn’t have been able to get going.

Not being prepared for this caused the Cavs to try to double these actions late, but it’s clear this wasn’t something they could execute. The double was more passive than anything, and the backside rotations weren’t where they needed to be for this to work.

This collapse was more a failure of preparation — which is understandable given the turnaround from Game 7 in Detroit — than anything else. The Cavs have the personnel to defend this better and have done so in the past.

You’d expect the Knicks to go with more five-out lineups in Game 2.

This game stings. You can’t afford to give away opportunities like this against an opponent as good as the Knicks and get away with it. At least not if you do so repeatedly.

That said, Game 1 doesn’t decide a series. And if it does, it wasn’t one that you were going to win anyway. The sky isn’t falling, at least not yet.

The Cavs have experience in these situations due to blowing multiple games already this postseason. They’ve responded well in each of those situations. They’ll need to do so again if they’re going to come back from a hole they dug completely on their own.

“It’s one game,” Mitchell said. “We could’ve lost by 40. It still would’ve been 1-0.”

Troy Melton rehabs well in Lakeland walkoff win, Jhonan Coba dominates in FCL action

Toledo Mud Hens vs. Indianapolis Indians (postponed)

Rains washed out Tuesday’s start of this series in Toledo and sent Troy Melton back down to Lakeland to get a rehab start in. They’ll play two tomorrow starting at 11:05 a.m. ET.

Altoona Curve 4, Erie SeaWolves 2 (box)

Seth Stephenson returned from the injury list in this one, but it didn’t spark the offense as the SeaWolves dropped the first of six in Altoona on Tuesday.

Sean Hunley got the start and couldn’t find the strikezone, walking five and surrendering a four-run second inning that got him bounced. Wandisson Charles, Eric Silva, Tanner Kohlhepp, and Trevin Michael were great in relief, blanking the Curve the rest of the way.

The offense got Stephenson back, but lost John Peck in the first inning when he was hit in the helmet by a breaking ball. He appeared totally fine, but manager Tony Cappucilli lifted him for precautionary reasons.

In the top of the third, Peyton Graham was also hit by a pitch, and swiped second for his 23rd steal of the young sseason. Stephenson singled him to third with one out, and then stole his 22nd bag to put two in scoring position. Brett Callahan grounded out to score Graham, but that was all they’d get.

In the fifth, Izaac Pacheco smoked a triple to center field and scored on a Graham ground out, but that was all the SeaWolves could muster on the night.

In the eighth we got a look at Liranzo’s improved agility as he turned a double play by backpicking a runner at first after a strikeout to help Michael out of the inning.

Pacheco: 1-3, R, 3B

Graham: 0-2, R, RBI, 2 SB

Hunley (L, 0-4): 1.2 IP, 4 ER, 3 H, 5 BB, K

Coming Up Next: Game 2 in the series is set for 11:00 a.m. ET.

West Michigan Whitecaps 6, South Bend Cubs (box)

After three weeks of watching early leads slip away, Whitecaps’ manager Rene Rivera had to sweat this one through the late innings, but Donye Evans and Ryan Harvey were able to lock down the final two frames to end a 1-19 stretch over the last 20 games.

Hayden Minton gave the ‘Caps his best start of the year, firing five scoreless frames with eight strikeouts. He was rewarded with an early lead in the second when Cristian Santana doubled in Jackson Strong, though Samuel Gil was cut down trying to score, ultimately snuffing a rally. Gil bounced back by singling in Clayton Campbell in the third.

Thomas Bruss succeeded Minton and allowed a run in the top of the sixth, but the ‘Caps answered right back in the bottom half as Junior Tilien walked and was doubled to third by Andrew Sojka. Ricardo Hurtado singled in Tilien. Garrett Pennington then bashed a two-run shot to make it 6-1.

Unfortunately, Bruss allowed a pair of singles and a three-run shot in the top of the seventh. Fortunately, Evans and Harvey were able to lock it down from there.

Sojka: 2-4, R, BB, 2B, 2 K

Pennington: 1-4, R, 2 RBI, HR, BB

Rainer: 1-2, 2 BB, K, CS

Minton (W, 2-2): 5.0 IP, 0 R, 2 H, BB, 8 K

Coming Up Next: It’s an 11:00 a.m. ET start on Wednesday and it’s a peanut free game in Comstock Park.

Lakeland Flying Tigers 3, Bradenton Marauders 2 (box)

Troy Melton had his way with the Maruaders for the most part, and the Flying Tigers blew a one-run lead in the top of the ninth only for Jesus Pinto to walk them off.

Melton opened his outing allowing a single and a stolen base, and then balked the runner to third where he scored on a grounder. For the rest of his five innings it was lights out from Melton as he allowed one more hit, no walks, and struck out six. His fastball topped out at 98.1 mph and he averaged 96.5 mph with his fourseamer on the night. He threw 46 of 63 pitches for strikes, and looks good to go when eligible to return to the Tigers on Sunday.

Pirates prospect Jack Anker had the Flying Tigers in check for six strong innings, but they quickly jumped the Marauders bullpen. Anibal Salas started them off with a walk and Zach MacDonald reached on an error. Pinto struck out, but Jude Warwick doubled in Salas, and Beau Ankeney lifted a sacrifice fly that made it a 2-1 Flying Tigers lead.

Left-hander Grayson Grinsell took over from Melton on his usual start day. He was cruising until he allowed back-to-back walks trying to close the game out in the ninth. A sharp single loaded the bases, and Yendy Gomez took over, allowing one inherited runner to score.

So it was all tied up, but with one out, MacDonald was hit by a pitch and the power hitting outfielder stole second base. 19-year-old outfielder Jesus Pinto continues to have a hot hand, and he singled up the middle to walk this one off.

Trei Cruz, who the Tigers have missed, if only for his defensive abilities and base stealing ability, with all the injuries to the Opening Day roster, made his first rehab appearance going 1-for-3 with a pair of strikeouts.

Warwck: 1-3, RBI, 2B

Pinto: 1-4, RBI, K

Cruz: 1-3, 2B, 2 K

Melton: 5.0 IP, ER, 2 H, 0 BB, 6 K

Grinsell: 3.1 IP, ER, 2 H, 3 BB, 4 K

Coming Up Next: It’s a 6:30 p.m. ET start in Lakeland on Wednesday.

FCL Yankees 2, FCL Tigers 1 (box)

Jhonan Coba is another young pitcher you’re going to hear a lot about this season. The 19-year-old right-hander is a good bet to shoot up prospect lists this year, and should be in Lakeland, along with fellow Complex League Tigers Owen Hall, once Malachi Witherspoon and one of the other pitchers thriving with the Flying Tigers head up to West Michigan. Coba has a lively mid-90’s heater with advanced control but a bit inconsistent movement from a high three-quarters slot, a solid slider, and a very good changeup that sells well via Coba’s quick arm stroke. He struck out eight in this one, allowing a run on a hit and two walks in 3 1/3 innings of work on Tuesday.

Angel de los Santos: 2-5, 3 SB

Hadeen: 0-2, BB

Coba (L, 0-2): 3.1 IP, ER, H, 2 BB, 8 K

VOTE: Grade the Pirates through the first quarter of the 2026 MLB Season

PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA - MAY 15: Brandon Lowe #5 of the Pittsburgh Pirates rounds the bases after hitting a solo home run during the fifth inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at PNC Park on May 15, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the MLB. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Pirates fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

After last night’s loss to the St. Louis Cardinals, the Pittsburgh Pirates fell to 24-24 on the year and are in last place in the NL Central. With the 48 games played, that’s about 29 percent of the season in the books. We want you to give the Bucs a grade so far for the season.

The team has had some really good moments. Offensive production is up, the starters are for the most part pitching pretty well. The Bullpen has struggled as expected, and there’s been some bad moments as well. Many of us were calling for a roughly .500 Bucs squad this year, and that’s what we have right now. How does that weigh against your expectations?

Give the Bucs a grade, tell us in the comments, and we’ll be back soon with the results.