Giants' Matt Gage goes on injured list with right knee inflammation

MILWAUKEE — San Francisco Giants left-handed reliever Matt Gage has gone on the injured list with right knee inflammation.

The Giants recalled right-hander Dylan Smith from Triple-A Sacramento while placing Gage on the 15-day injured list.

Gage has made 29 appearances to lead all Giants pitchers. He owns a 4-1 record with one save and a 2.63 ERA.

“Little bit of knee tenderness, I think specifically kind of stemming between his quad and the knee,” San Francisco manager Tony Vitello said before the Giants’ 1-0 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers. “He’d been battling that for a while. If you know him, he’s kind of been through everything you can to get into the big leagues, and obviously doesn’t want any time down. He has fought through it, but good to come forward with that information because obviously when he’s at his best, he’s one of our best guys. But he’s got to get past that.”

Vitello didn’t have an estimate on how long it might take for Gage to return.

Smith made one appearance for San Francisco earlier this season and allowed no runs in two-thirds of an inning. He has gone 1-1 with a 3.98 ERA and one save in 15 games for Sacramento.

Last season, Smith went 1-0 with a 1.38 ERA in seven games with the Detroit Tigers.

NBA Finals fan who ran onto court for Wemby selfie arrested, banned

The fan who disrupted Game 1 of the 2026 NBA Finals by running onto the court to take a selfie with San Antonio Spurs star Victor Wembanyama has been arrested and banned for life from attending NBA games, the league announced.

The NBA also said a second individual involved in the incident had also been banned from attending NBA games moving forward.

"The individual who entered the court area during Game 1 of The Finals was arrested and will be banned for life from all NBA arenas," the league said in a statement released on June 4, according to the Associated Press. "A second individual will also receive a lifetime ban for his role in the incident."

The fan, a young male, ran onto the court in the middle of play during the fourth quarter of Game 1 between the New York Knicks and Spurs and pulled his phone out to take a selfie. Security in San Antonio quickly swooped in and escorted the fan from the floor at Frost Bank Center.

Wembanyama was standing next to Mitchell Robinson. The Spurs center laughed while the Knicks big man appeared confused. Officials stopped play momentarily and ultimately re-started the action with a jump ball at center court after being uncertain of possession at the time of the incident.

The Knicks were up 92-86 with 6:34 on the clock when it happened.

According to the NBA Code of Conduct, "guests who engage in fighting, throwing objects, or attempting to enter the court will be immediately ejected from the arena."

Possible sanctions for the fan and anyone who violates the Code of Conduct include "ejection without refund, revocation of their season tickets, and/or prevention from attending future games. They may also be in violation of local ordinances, resulting in possible arrest and prosecution."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Fan who ran onto court at NBA Finals Game 1 arrested, banned by league

The Golden Knights are rolling, eager to stretch streak to 8 straight in Game 2 of Stanley Cup Final

RALEIGH, N.C. — The Vegas Golden Knights were up one, down to a frantic 5.6 seconds left to secure Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final against the Carolina Hurricanes.

The Hurricanes won a faceoff in the Vegas zone, with Logan Stankoven passing to Alexander Nikishin up top for a one-timer from a young defenseman known for his hard shot. But Mitch Marner jumped in the path of the blast and blocked the puck with the inside of his left knee, a painful stop that ultimately closed the door on Carolina.

It epitomized the edge, precision and killer instinct that these Golden Knights are playing with as they try to win the Cup for a second time in four years. After winning twice on the road to start a shocking sweep of Colorado in the West final, they now have a chance to do the same against the team that finished second to the Avalanche in the regular season.

“To me that’s common sense,” coach John Tortorella said. “You win one, you want to win the next one. You don’t want to let any momentum slip away.”

When Vegas went into Colorado and won Game 1 last round, Tortorella and his players brushed off stealing home-ice advantage, making it clear they were there for more instead of being content with a split.

The same goes now after a 5-4 win at Carolina, with Tortorella noting afterward, “Momentum swings happen quickly.”

That particularly can be true when playing a team that went 12-1 through three rounds to secure its first shot at the Cup in two decades, coming after years of building in an eight-year playoff run before finally punching through its East final roadblock.

The Hurricanes’ only loss before Game 1 had come with a rusty start in Game 1 of the East final against Montreal after going 11 days between rounds, the longest playoff break in more than a century. And they pounced on Vegas with an opening-minute goal en route to a 2-0 first-period lead.

Yet the Golden Knights — who rallied from a three-goal deficit in Game 3 against the Avalanche — have an opportunity to hand the Hurricanes more losses in a week than they had the rest of the playoffs combined, largely by sticking together and sticking to their game.

“If you start to change and you start to chase the game, usually it doesn’t go so well for you,” captain Mark Stone said. “We have done a really good job of just sticking to the way we play and not taking too much unnecessary risks, and we were able to get ourselves back in the game.”

Game 1 offered another chapter in Vegas’ march that began with a late-season coaching change by firing Bruce Cassidy to hire Tortorella. The Golden Knights have won 20 of 25 games since, and seem to be getting better in every playoff round with a roster featuring tested talent from that 2023 title with players like Jack Eichel, Brett Howden, William Karlsson, Stone, Shea Theodore and Brayden McNabb.

They regrouped from a 2-1 deficit in Round 1 by winning a pair of overtime games before closing out Utah in six games. They beat Anaheim in six, winning the last two. Then came the sweep of Colorado, with the high-powered Avalanche managing seven goals in four games after leading the league in scoring (3.63).

Against Carolina, the Golden Knights gave up a goal to Nikolaj Ehlers on the rush just 25 seconds in, then another to Ehlers on a breakaway for the 2-0 lead.

But Vegas pushed back with three unanswered goals to silence a hostile crowd. They also twice responded when the Hurricanes tied the score, the last coming with Tomas Hertl taking a backhand pass from Colton Sissons and beating Frederik Andersen from the slot with 3:24 left.

Then came Marner’s final stop, when he jumped in front of Nikishin’s shot — it registered 89.6 miles per hour, according to NHL EDGE — to knock the puck off its laser-line trajectory toward Carter Hart in the crease.

“I don’t think it’s anything special,” Tortorella said of the block. “I think that’s part of playing defense, especially at this time of year.”

Regardless, the effort had multiple Vegas players going straight to Marner at the horn to hug him with a seventh straight playoff win secured — and the chance for more.

“I think the way they think the game, you can see it,” said Hurricanes coach Rod Brind’Amour, who captained Carolina to its lone Cup title in 2006. “They’re not making plays when they don’t have to, and they don’t turn pucks over. It’s out of their end, it’s through the neutral zone. if there’s no space, they’re putting it behind you, and they’re just staying above it, and they’re doing it right.”

Rod Brind’Amour defends Game 1 decision not to challenge for goalie interference

RALEIGH, N.C. — Carolina Hurricanes coach Rod Brind’Amour expressed no regret over his decision not to challenge the Vegas Golden Knights’ first goal in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final before his team lost 5-4.

Brind’Amour said he never really came close to challenging because he was not confident the on-ice officials and NHL’s situation room would see enough to wave it off for goaltender interference. Vegas forward Keegan Kolesar had a skate in the crease, but replays did not clearly show him impeding goalie Frederik Andersen’s ability to stop the shot by defenseman Shea Theodore, which banked in off the left shin pad of Hurricanes winger Eric Robinson.

“(Kolesar) was in the crease initially, and then he came out of it and then the shot goes off our guy,” Brind’Amour said. “It doesn’t really impact the goal. There’s too many variables there that are saying, ‘Nope, nope, nope.’”

Carolina led 2-0 on goals by Nikolaj Ehlers before Vegas got on the board to make it 2-1 with 6:32 left in the first period. The punishment for a failed challenge is a 2-minute penalty, so the Golden Knights would have gone on the power play after cutting their deficit in half.

Despite having a penalty kill that has allowed just four power play goals on 56 opportunities in the playoffs, a success rate of 92.9%, Brind’Amour and his staff did not want to take the risk.

“I think what I’ve seen — in the playoffs certainly — is if they’re more 50-50, they’re counting the goals now,” Brind’Amour said. “So, that was kind of our decision on that.”

Colton Sissons’ Game 1-winning pass

Tomas Hertl’s go-ahead goal with 3:24 left in regulation had the Golden Knights still talking the day after, largely because of how Colton Sissons assisted on it with a perfect backhander.

“Sick pass,” teammate Rasmus Andersson said. “It’s a nasty pass.”

It looked like a no-look feed, but Sissons insisted he saw Hertl and said confidently, “I knew where he was.” Fourth-liner Nic Dowd was in awe but not surprised.

“Yeah, that was nice: probably one of the nicer passes I’ve seen in a long time,” Dowd said. “It was a high-level play, and then he put it into a puck-sized hole. It was a perfect play.”

Late-bloomer Jalen Chatfield enjoys this chance

Jalen Chatfield went undrafted, spent years in the minors and was 26 by the time he became a full-time NHL player. Now 30, the unheralded Carolina defenseman is in the final for the first time in his career and not taking it for granted.

“It’s just life,” Chatfield said. “It’s been a journey. I just stuck with it. Had a lot of ups and downs in my career, but everything I’ve gone through, I’ve gone through for a reason and I’ve learned a lot. It’s helped me grow as a person and as a player and I wouldn’t have it any other way.”

Brind’Amour did not know him before they were in the same organization together but now appreciates Chatfield grinding it out to get to this point.

“We had a couple of years watching him in the minors and just kind of just gradually get better and better,” Brind’Amour said. “You root for guys like that. Really, everything they have now, they’ve worked for and I think he’s still getting better. It’s gratifying to watch a kid put in the work and then have it pay off.”

Golden Knights vs Hurricanes Anytime Goal Scorer Predictions & Parlay for Game 2

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Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Finals takes place tonight in Raleigh, and I've found tons of value in the goal-scorer market. 

My Golden Knights vs. Hurricanes goal scorer props will highlight Jack Eichel, Nikolaj Ehlers, and Brett Howden. 

Read more in my NHL picks for Thursday, June 4. 

Golden Knights vs Hurricanes goal scorer predictions for Game 2

Player to score a goalOdds
Golden Knights Jack Eichel+230
HurricanesNikolaj Ehlers+205
Golden Knights Brett Howden+310
💲Goal scorer parlay+2000

Goal scorer pick: Jack Eichel (+230)

On paper, Jack Eichel hasn't scored much in these playoffs, finding the back of the net just twice in 17 games. However, the underlying numbers suggest he's been far more dangerous than that production indicates.

Eichel owns 5.93 individual expected goals, one of the highest marks on the Vegas Golden Knights, and he's recorded eight shots on goal across his last three road games.

The veteran has also generated 67 individual Fenwick attempts during the postseason, trailing only Pavel Dorofeyev on Vegas. Eichel continues to create offense at a high level, and the Golden Knights are producing 15.15 high-danger chances per 60 minutes with him on the ice. If those opportunities continue, he's a strong candidate to break through in Game 2.

I'll play this pick up to +200. 

Goal scorer pick: Nikolaj Ehlers (+205)

Nikolaj Ehlers capitalized on his opportunities in Game 1, putting both of his shots on target in the back of the net. The winger now has six goals this postseason, but the underlying numbers suggest the production is no fluke. Ehlers owns 4.02 individual expected goals through 13 playoff appearances while generating 56 individual Fenwick attempts.

He's also consistently finding dangerous areas of the ice, posting 14.21 high-danger chances per 60 minutes during the postseason. Ehlers has been especially clinical at Lenovo Center, where five of his six playoff goals have come. If the Carolina Hurricanes continue generating quality scoring chances, Ehlers should remain a key offensive threat.

I'll play this pick up to +180. 

Goal scorer pick: Brett Howden (+310)

Brett Howden continued his strong postseason in Game 1, finding the back of the net for his 11th goal of the playoffs. While the Golden Knights forward has outperformed his 4.82 individual expected goals, the underlying chance generation remains solid.

Howden is second on Vegas with 21 individual high-danger scoring chances and owns a 10.59 HDCF/60 rate during the postseason.

The veteran has consistently found dangerous scoring areas throughout the playoffs, and his Game 1 goal suggests that trend isn't slowing down.

I'd play this pick up to +280. 

Golden Knights vs Hurricanes anytime goal parlay

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
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Yankees At-Bat of the Week: Paul Goldschmidt (5/29)

SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 29: Paul Goldschmidt #48 of the New York Yankees hits a three-run home run against the Athletics in the first inning at Sutter Health Park on May 29, 2026 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Yankees recently returned home from a successful roadtrip during which they swept the Royals and took two out of three from the A’s. The offense awoke from its mid-May slumber, putting up 51 runs across the six games. One of the unlikely contributors at the heart of that scoring outburst was Paul Goldschmidt. Initially re-signed over the winter as cover at first base but more importantly to retain his veteran leadership, the 38-year-old former MVP has been one of the Yankees’ most productive bats, bringing much needed stability to a DH role impacted by the injuries to Giancarlo Stanton and Jasson Domínguez.

We join Goldschmidt in the top of the first inning last Friday in West Sacramento. The Yankees are looking to make a first inning statement facing old friend Luis Severino, and have already opened the scoring after Ben Rice reached on a throwing error and scored on an Aaron Judge single. Cody Bellinger followed with a single of his own, he and Judge advancing into scoring position on a Jazz Chisholm Jr. soft grounder. Goldschmidt is a base knock away from making it 3-0, but Severino is also an out away from limiting the damage to one.

Severino starts Goldschmidt with a first pitch sinker at 97 mph, he and catcher Shea Langeliers looking to bust Goldschmidt inside.

Severino executes just the pitch he was intending, the sinker starting over the plate before riding in on Goldschmidt. It requires an impressive take from Goldschmidt given the pitch lands just a few inches from the zone — he starts his swing before recognizing that the movement of the pitch will run it off the plate inside for ball one and stops his swing in time.

Perhaps Severino spots Goldschmidt’s initial temptation to offer at that sinker, because he looks to throw a sweeper down a similar tunnel hoping he can get the batter to chase a pitch that breaks in the opposite direction.

Instead, Severino releases this pitch early, and it sweeps across the inside edge for called strike one. It is clear this is not the location that Severino intended to throw to when you see the target low and away that Langeliers flashes, but he gets the desired result all the same.

Severino next looks to leverage the result of the previous pitch — a sweeper that starts aimed inside and breaks glove-side back into the zone — to try to get Goldschmidt to chase a sinker in off the plate. To Goldschmidt, it should look like a hanging sweeper, and the increased velocity of the sinker means that by the time the hitter realizes what pitch is coming, it should be too late to halt his swing.

Once again, Severino rips of perfect execution of a sinker up and in. He buries this slider in on Goldschmidt’s hands, but Goldschmidt is forced to fight it off given that this one is in the zone. The location and movement of this pitch makes it impossible for Goldschmidt to do anything but fight it off foul.

Now that he has pushed the count to two strikes, Severino goes for the kill with the sweeper, Langeliers again setting a target low and away as the pair attempt to induce a chase and whiff from Goldschmidt over the breaker.

This is such a piece of professional hitting from Goldschmidt. He must have diagnosed the pitch early out of Severino’s hand, because at first glance this sweeper looks like it is aimed at his front hip. He also must have cued in on a subtle deficiency in Severino’s release point with all four pitches sailing up and in. To the eye, it certainly appears that Goldschmidt is hunting a breaking pitch in exactly this location based on what he has seen already from Severino in this encounter as well as the scouting report that reveals Severino’s tendency to throw the sweeper immediately upon reaching two strikes. Look at the way he stays in their despite the pitch exiting Severino’s hand aimed at him before unloading on this hanging sweeper for a three-run homer to give the Yankees a 4-0 lead.

Here’s the full AB:

Goldschmidt’s re-signing was initially derided as representative of the Yankees’ broader run it back approach to the offseason. However, his retention has proven an inspired decision in the wake of the injuries to Stanton and Domínguez. At the time of writing, Goldschmidt boasts seven home runs, 23 RBIs, and a 151 wRC+ in 35 games, which makes him the Yankees’ third-most productive hitter in a limited sample. The fact this home run came off a righty when Goldschmidt was expected to bat exclusively against lefties is also encouraging. Ben Rice has credited him as a mentor in learning the intricacies of playing first base, Goldschmidt giving them a capable defender as a late game substitution or when they want to give Rice half a day off at DH. The Yankees would not be within touching distance of the Rays for first in the division if not for Goldschmidt filling the void at DH, removing a ton of pressure off Stanton and Domínguez as they recover from their injuries.

St. Louis Blues Sign Zach Dean, Dylan Peterson To Two-Way Contracts

The St. Louis Blues have signed forwards Zach Dean and Dylan Peterson to one-year, two-way contracts. 

Both Dean and Peterson were pending RFAs, but the Blues made quick work of re-signing them before they had to give them qualifying offers.

Dean was acquired by St. Louis in the trade that sent Ivan Barbashev to the Vegas Golden Knights. Dean was originally a first-round pick (30th overall) by the Golden Knights in the 2021 NHL draft. 

Although Dean is a rapid skater with good hands and passing vision, he hasn’t been able to translate it to the professional level. In his final QMJHL season in 2022-23, Dean posted 33 goals and 70 points in 50 games, before adding 10 goals and 26 points in 13 playoff games. 

In his first season with the Blues, Dean featured in nine NHL games but failed to record a point. Since then, the 23-year-old hasn’t received a call-up. At the moment, Dean’s greatest flaw is availability. He played just 11 AHL games in 2024-25 and just 36 games this season. 

In those 36 games, Dean recorded four goals and 14 points. Dean missed a large chunk of the start of the season after being placed in the NHL/NHLPA player assistance program. His 2025-26 season did not begin until the start of 2026.

St. Louis Blues Have Seven RFAs This Off-SeasonSt. Louis Blues Have Seven RFAs This Off-SeasonThe St. Louis Blues will have seven restricted free agents this off-season, highlighted by Jonatan Berggren and Matthew Kessel.

The Blues are hoping for a healthy season from Dean next year, which will hopefully get his game back on track and allow him to begin working his way back to the NHL roster. 

Dean’s contract will carry an $850,000 AAV in the NHL, and he’ll be paid $95,000 in the minors. When his one-year contract concludes, Dean will remain a restricted free agent, according to Puckpedia.

As for Peterson, the 24-year-old completed his second season with the Springfield Thunderbirds in the AHL, scoring 12 goals and 24 points in 57 games. 

Standing 6-foot-4, the 2020 third-round pick (86th overall) of the Blues brings valuable size to the Thunderbirds’ lineup. While it hasn’t really translated to high-end production in the AHL, Peterson is still young, and they hope he continues to trend in the right direction.

With Dean and Peterson re-signed, the Thunderbirds should be a Calder Cup-contending threat once again next season.


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Braves acquire Austin Wynns from the Angels, designate Chadwick Tromp for assignment

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - MAY 5: Austin Wynns #29 of the Athletics looks on against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on May 5, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Phillies defeated the Athletics 9-1. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Due to injuries to both Drake Baldwin and Sean Murphy, the Atlanta Braves are currently having to dip into their reserve tank for help at the catcher spot. Part of that help had been provided by Chadwick Tromp, who did deliver a walk-off knock not too long ago. With that being said, Sandy León has been getting most of the reps behind the dish since the both of them became the top catchers’ duo in Atlanta and as a result, Tromp is now the latest Braves player to take the uncertain ride on the DFA cycle.

The Braves announced that they’ve acquired catcher Austin Wynns from the Los Angeles Angels in exchange for cash considerations. Wynns is clearly taking the place of Tromp on the roster because Tromp has now been designated for assignment.

To put this in the nicest terms possible, Wynns has been very underwhelming at the plate so far this season. He’s had 43 plate appearances with the SacramentoAthletics where he hit .077/.143/.077 with a .285 wOBA, a -40 wRC+ and three runs scored. Wynns had been released by the A’s in mid-May, picked up by the Angels a few days afterwards and stashed at their Triple-A affiliate from then until now, as he’s been acquired by the Braves and subsequently called up from Triple-A as well. With all of that being said, Wynns does play some solid defense and as evidenced by the fact that León is getting regularly playing time seemingly solely due to his defense, the Braves have made their decision as to what they value from the catcher’s spot while Baldwin and Murphy are gone.

There was also some shuffling going on elsewhere on the roster that corresponded with this move. Outfielder DaShawn Keirsey Jr. reportedly had an opt-out in his contract where if he wasn’t added to Atlanta’s major league roster by a certain date, he could elect free agency. Well, apparently the Braves didn’t want to lose Keirsey to an opt-out because they called him up to the bigs and then immediately sent him back down to Triple-A. Congratulations on your return to the big leagues, DaShawn Keirsey Jr., we hope you enjoyed your time while it lasted.

Anyways, in order to make roster space for all of this to happen, Sean Murphy has now been transferred to the 60-day IL. This was always going to happen once the Braves needed a roster spot since Murphy’s going to be out for a significant period of time with that fractured finger. This doesn’t change anything with his recovery timeline but it does mean that the Braves can now maneuver with him being on the long-term IL instead of taking up a roster spot on the short-term IL.

So there you have it! There’s some more roster shuffling for you. What do y’all make of all these moves?

Knicks vs Spurs Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight's NBA Finals Game 2

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The Spurs are caught in a major defensive dilemma regarding how to deploy Victor Wembanyama in Game 2.

Wemby was fantastic guarding the perimeter in Game 1, but it came at a price: removing him from the paint left the defensive glass wide open for the Knicks to feast on. 

Our Game 2 Knicks vs. Spurs predictions expect San Antonio to adjust by keeping their star big man near the rim tonight, betting they can live with New York’s outside shooting if it means shutting down those killer second-chance opportunities.

My NBA picks expect Wembanyama to ratchet up his rebounding on Friday, June 5.

  • UPDATE: Added prediction for who will win & +825 SGP!

Knicks vs Spurs Game 2 prediction

Who will win Knicks vs Spurs Game 2?

Spurs: The Knicks accomplished their mission and stole a win in San Antonio, flipping home-court on its ear. New York’s veterans never looked rattled in Game 1, even when falling behind big. And when the pressure built, the young Spurs crumbled late in the fourth quarter.

The Finals nerves are gone and I expect a tight San Antonio side to be much looser and shoot better than a dismal effort in the opener. I could see this being another close contest, but San Antonio is a great team off a loss (21-6 SU) and evens things up in Game 2.

Knicks vs Spurs best bet: Victor Wembanyama Over 11.5 rebounds (-120)

The San Antonio Spurs need Victor Wembanyama to stay at home and clean the defensive glass. 

Not only does his rebounding spark the Spurs’ transition (which was a no-show in 2H), but giving up a Costco-sized pack of offensive rebounds to the New York Knicks is crippling to the defense after forcing a miss.

Wembanyama still wrangled 12 boards on 22 rebounding chances but only nine on defense, as he was closing out on shooters. 

His Game 2 rebounding total stays lower at 11.5 O/U with projections ranging from 12.5 to 15+ boards. My number is around 14 rebounds, which should have the Over priced at -185.

Covers COVERS INTEL: Wembanyama spent most of Game 1 guarding Karl-Anthony Towns. Game 2 adjustments could see Wemby assigned more to Josh Hart, who shot just 1 for 5 for three points in Game 1. That allows him to play closer to the rim and stay in prime rebounding range.

Knicks vs Spurs Game 2 same-game parlay

I’m not running to lay the points with San Antonio, as New York doesn’t quit. However, I see the Spurs getting past the initial nerves and executing better offensively. Home teams coming off a loss in the NBA Finals aren’t great against the spread, but they are 24-16 SU since 2005-06.

With Wembanyama grabbing long boards and fueling the transition attack, San Antonio evens this series. He’ll stay closer to the rim and convert more of those rebounding chances, with models calling for as many as 15+ boards in Game 2.

Dylan Harper is a big part of that transition attack with his aggressive play getting to the rim for easy looks. With De’Aaron Fox struggling to score, there’s pressure on Mitch Johnson to give the rookie more run. Harper’s projected for as many as 13 points on Friday.

Knicks vs Spurs SGP

  • Spurs moneyline
  • Victor Wembanyama Over 11.5 rebounds
  • Dylan Harper Over 11.5 points

Our "from downtown" SGP: Out of this World

After the Game 1 loss, Mitch Johnson told reporters the team needs to get Wembanyama going earlier following a quiet opening frame. With a focused effort on feeding the “Alien”, Wemby tops his scoring prop, with some bullish models above 29 points. On defense, staying glued to the paint has him picking up rebounds and sending back a ton of shots.

Knicks vs Spurs SGP

  • Spurs -6.5
  • Victor Wembanyama Over 26.5 points
  • Victor Wembanyama Over 11.5 rebounds
  • Victor Wembanyama Over 3.5 blocks

Knicks vs Spurs odds for Game 2

  • Spread: Knicks +6.5 | Spurs -6.5
  • Moneyline: Knicks +190 | Spurs -230
  • Over/Under: Over 214.5 | Under 214.5

Knicks vs Spurs betting trend to know

NBA Finals games with totals of less than 220 points are 36-60 O/U (62.5% Unders) since the 2005-06 season. The Game 2 total is at 214.5 O/U. Find more NBA betting trends for Knicks vs. Spurs.

How to watch Knicks vs Spurs Game 2

LocationFrost Bank Center, San Antonio, TX
DateFriday, June 5, 2026
Tip-off8:30 p.m. ET
TVABC

Knicks vs Spurs latest injuries

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Orioles at Red Sox; Brayan Bello back as starter?

May 29, 2026; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Boston Red Sox pitcher Brayan Bello (66) throws a pitch during the sixth inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Progressive Field. Mandatory Credit: Ken Blaze-Imagn Images | Ken Blaze-Imagn Images

TV: NESN

First Pitch: 1:35 p.m. ET

The Red Sox and Orioles will compete in the rubber match of their three-game series on Thursday at Fenway Park.

Brayan Bello, who has been absolutely phenomenal as a bulk reliever, will return to the starting rotation with the hope that he can keep that form without the help (or lack thereof) of an opener. Jovani Morán and Tyler Samaniego, the two men who have opened for the veteran right-hander, have combined to allow nine runs in four innings across their four starts, while the should-be starter has a 0.71 ERA in 25.1 innings of relief in 2026.

It’s just a matter of bringing that same mentality and execution to his original role…

Jarren Duran, Ceddanne Rafaela, Wilyer Abreu, and Willson Contreras will remain as the first four in the order, with Andruw Monasterio, Carlos Narváez, and Connor Wong slotting back into the lineup after missing the 8-1 victory on Wednesday. Marcelo Mayer, Masataka Yoshida, and Mickey Gasper are out.

Yes, Wong is the DH…

The O’s will essentially run things back, with Leody Taveras and Colton Cowser replacing Tyler O’Neill and Blaze Alexander. Trevor Rogers will get the start.

Down 0-1 in Stanley Cup Final, Hurricanes coach on top line vs. Vegas: ‘We need them to get going’

RALEIGH, N.C. — After carrying the Carolina Hurricanes during the season as their top goal scorers, Seth Jarvis, Sebastian Aho and Andrei Svechnikov are ice cold in the playoffs.

That was easier to swallow during the first three rounds, when others down the lineup picked up the slack. Now, it is a problem that could cost them the Stanley Cup.

The Hurricanes have met their match in the final against the Vegas Golden Knights, a seasoned opponent with no glaring weaknesses who won the opener 5-4. In Game 2, the pressure squarely is on Carolina’s best players to get it together before it is too late.

“I know we have a better in us, and we’ve got to show it,” Aho said. “It’s on us to figure it out.”

Top-line scoring woes

Through 14 games this postseason, the trio of Jarvis, Aho and Svechnikov has scored just three times against a goaltender at even strength. The success of the second line of Taylor Hall, Logan Stankoven and Jackson Blake made getting past Ottawa, Philadelphia and Montreal a breeze with a single loss in the three series combiend.

Vegas is a different animal, and Game 1 showed the frustration seeping through for the first line.

“This league is weird: You grip your stick a little tight and you get into a weird matchup, and it can look worse than it is,” Hall said. “But things can change on a dime, especially this time of year.”

The Hurricanes have been waiting nearly two months for that change. Coach Rod Brind’Amour for several weeks has exhibited patience and praised Jarvis, Aho and Svechnikov for doing good things away from the puck that contribute to winning, even if they’re not showing up on the scoresheet.

His tone has changed facing a deficit in the final.

“They got to play in the other team’s end,” Brind’Amour said. “They’re too much one and done and not even one (scoring chance), and it’s not a lot of time. So, they got to get a little more offensive zone time. Kind of like that last shift they had. That was one of the shifts you could say: ‘OK, there you go. That’s how it needs to look.’ We need them to get going.”

Glimpse of what could be

That final shift came with the score tied late in the third period of Game 1, hemming the Golden Knights in their own end and generating quality opportunities. Jarvis had one shot blocked, then two more stopped by Carter Hart, including a flashy glove save that set the table for Tomas Hertl to score the winning goal 21 seconds later.

It was a marked improvement from earlier in the game, when Jarvis passed up an open shot looking for a pass and later missing a wide-open net.

“The chances are there,” Jarvis said. “We’ve had our looks. We just have to capitalize now more than ever. We can’t dwell on the past, can’t dwell on the stuff we missed. It’s about the next shift, the next shot.”

Easier said than done because Vegas is going to adjust, too. Coach John Tortorella has preached a consistent approach, and there is a reason the team has won 20 of 25 games since he took over in late March.

“We have thoughts on how to play this team,” Tortorella said. “We need to be patient. In a number of things, how we have to play, I think, requires patience — and when you get a little antsy against that team, they can capitalize. They’re that good. I think we have an understanding of how we have to go.”

What the Hurricanes need

While Jarvis, Aho and Svechnikov have looked off at times, there is little evidence it comes from a lack of caring. Maybe it’s trying too hard.

“It’s not about work ethic or trying harder, but it doesn’t matter at the same time,” Aho said. “There’s also a part that we almost sometimes try to do too much, instead of just letting the game happen and play the game, let the game come to you in a way.”

Teammates are trying to keep those guys’ heads up and focused as best as possible. Defenseman Jalen Chatfield is all about bringing the positivity.

“Everybody’s giving everything out there,” Chatfield said. “That’s not the question. Sometimes it’s bounces. Sometimes things happen in hockey, but I think as a group, (it is about) leaning on each other to help each other play our best.”

Hall, the No. 1 pick in 2010 and MVP in 2017-18 who has found a groove with his sixth NHL organization at age 34, doesn’t feel the need to coach up other players who are struggling. He maintains the belief that Jarvis, Aho and Svechnikov will turn things around.

“Those guys are great players,” Hall said. “They had their chances and their looks (in Game 1). Some of the looks didn’t turn into chances. But we know how good they are, and we know how good they can be and it’s only a matter of time.”

Canadiens’ St-Louis Far From Jack Adams Trophy

The NHL announced on Wednesday that Tampa Bay Lightning coach Jon Cooper had won the first Jack Adams Trophy of his career as the NHL’s top coach. In what was the closest race to the trophy ever, Cooper had 226 voting points, just three more than runner-up Buffalo Sabres bench boss Lindy Ruff, who finished with 223. Pittsburgh Penguins coach Dan Muse was third with 199.

Where does that leave Montreal Canadiens’ coach Martin St-Louis? In fifth place with 50 points, 16 behind Colorado Avalanche coach Jared Bednar, who had 66. The Habs’ coach had four first-place votes, seven second-place votes, and nine third-place votes. Comparatively, Cooper received 36 first-place votes, Ruff 26, and Muse 18.

Canadiens’ Slafkovsky Wasn’t Injured
Canadiens’ Gallagher Wasn’t Disrespected
Canadiens: The Curious Case Of Kirby Dach – Part 2

Given how much the Canadiens improved this season, it is surprising to see St-Louis finish fifth. Montreal went from a 16th-place finish and 91 points to a fifth-place finish with 106 points and being in the running for its division title. Of course, some would also argue that his team had quite a playoff run, but voting is held at the end of the regular season, before the playoffs begin. Still, St-Louis can at least say that he beat the league’s top two coaches on his way to the third round.

From all the stats about this young Canadiens’ team, the most impressive is probably the fact that it went from giving 3.18 goals per game in 2024-25 to just 3.06 in 2025-26. From a team that struggled to play the defensive style its coach was advocating, the Canadiens became a team that has understood the assignment. That wasn’t easy, but St-Louis managed to teach his players how they needed to play on the other side of the puck. Of course, it’s not perfect yet, but it has gotten better.

It wasn’t an easy year for the coach, who had to make some tough decisions as his team had progressed so much that a heart-and-soul veteran like Brendan Gallagher had to be a healthy scratch to make way for younger players better suited to St-Louis’ brand of hockey. As evidenced by the veteran media availability on Monday, he didn’t agree with the call, but given the speed at which the last two rounds were played, it’s hard to argue with the coach’s decision.

Even if the playoffs didn’t count for this year’s vote, the experience St-Louis picked up in those seven weeks of postseason action will be invaluable going forward. In the first round, against Cooper, he showed he was able to juggle his lines with the best of them to help Nick Suzuki evade the matchup with Brandon Hagel. If he didn’t make adjustments in that first round, the Canadiens wouldn’t have overcome the Lightning. Of course, his lack of adjustments against the Carolina Hurricanes was part of why the Habs were eliminated, but he picked up some valuable experience there, too.

When looking at St-Louis’ body of work, it’s hard not to mention just how much players like Suzuki, Cole Caufield and Juraj Slafkovsky have evolved under his tutelage. The coach has been in their shoes, and he’s seen it all. The way he can relate to every player and how well he communicates are big reasons he’s such a good pilot.

The 50-year-old might have finished fifth in voting this time around, but if the Canadiens carry on their upwards trajectory, he’ll soon be able to add a Jack Adams Trophy to his already crowded mantelpiece, which already features two Art Ross trophies, one Hart, one Lester B. Pearson, and three Lady Bing.


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Red Sox Minor Lines: Silent night (at the plate)

FORT MYERS, FLORIDA - MARCH 12, 2026: Kristian Campbell #28 of the Boston Red Sox bats during the second inning of a spring training game against the Minnesota Twins at Lee Health Sports Complex on March 12, 2026 in Fort Myers, Florida. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

Worcester: L, 0-12 (BOX SCORE)

Simply put: the WooSox got carved up by the Bison (Blue Jays AAA) pitching staff. Former Ray pitcher Josh Fleming pitched seven innings of two-hit ball and retired 16 consecutive batters en route to an easy win. To say Eduardo Rivera and Angel Bastardo out of relief couldn’t keep up with this lack of offensive firepower would be an understatement; the WooSox couldn’t find the strike zone all night, walking fourteen Bison throughout the day while allowing them seven hits with runners in scoring position. It got to the point where Nathan Hickey, a first baseman, pitched the ninth and gave up a tater.

Portland: W, 10-7 (BOX SCORE)

No, Franklin Arias, did not hit a home run, though he did get a knock against Hartford (Rockies AA). Johanfran Garcia hoisted a ball into the seats, making a 7-6 game a 9-6 game in a shot that’d make all the difference. While the Sea Dogs pitching allowed three homers, the offense answered with three of their own and got them where it matters. And it wasn’t just home runs that made a difference in this game: the Sea Dogs had just a 12% chance of winning the game entering the fifth, but Abhram Liendo’s home run followed by a Nelly Taylor bases-clearing pop up just outside the infield certainly shifted matters.

Greenville: W, 9-3 (BOX SCORE)

While Jack Winnay’s ninth home run in High-A put a pebble in Rome (Braves High-A) pitcher Cedric DeGrandpre’s armor, the Drive hitting him around to start the sixth to the tune of five runs and boosting a tie game into a 7-2 lead. Despite committing three defensive errors, all it took was that one rally in which they hit around the lineup, and it completely changed the complexion of an otherwise close game.

Salem: L, 1-2 (BOX SCORE)

Seen enough of the Red Sox’s offense wasting good pitching starts? Well, it happened in A-ball as the RidgeYaks hit 2-for-13 with runners in scoring position against the Warbirds (Brewers A). Jason Gilman, the 23-year-old from Staten Island and a former Division III player (certainly a rarity…) looked incredible, making it through six innings with 64 pitches, allowing just two hits and no walks, striking out ten, even retiring one runner who reached base via a double play. But Salem just couldn’t pull a winnable game in, stranding 11 and getting caught stealing three times, even one of which would have been crucial.

Have a thunderous Thursday.

Gamethread 6/4: Phillies vs Padres

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - JUNE 03: J.T. Realmuto #10 of the Philadelphia Phillies celebrates a solo home run with Adolis García #53 in the seventh inning during a game against the San Diego Padres at Citizens Bank Park on June 03, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Emilee Chinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Here are the lineups for the series (and season) finale against the Padres. Let’s discuss!

For the Phillies:

For the Padres:

Jeff Passan: Braves should “swing big” for Tarik Skubal at MLB Trade Deadline

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - APRIL 29: Tarik Skubal #29 of the Detroit Tigers on the field prior to a game against the Atlanta Braves at Truist Park on April 29, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/IOS/Getty Images) | Getty Images

With the calendar now having flipped to June, it’s only natural to start thinking about other events looming on the baseball horizon (well, outside of the potentially apocalyptic event that’s awaiting everybody once this offseason officially gets underway). One of those is the Trade Deadline, which is set for August 3 this season.

As such, Jeff Passan of ESPN has decided that since we’re just under two months away from that always-fateful day in the baseball season, now’s the time to start figuring out what each team is going to be up to at the deadline. Some teams have more modest goals than others and some teams should be attempting to swing for the fences. Jeff Passan has our Atlanta Braves as one of the teams that should absolutely be going for it at the deadline and honestly, I’d agree with that notion.

Assuming the ball club keeps this up this incredible form, this could shape up to be Atlanta’s best chance in years at making a legitimate World Series run and one of the best ways to make sure that this team is continuing to pull in the right direction for the long haul is to give the squad an adrenaline injection around late-July/early-August with an impact addition or two.

In fact, Passan is suggesting that the Braves should make what would likely be the biggest impact addition of the deadline by adding All-World starting pitcher Tarik Skubal into the fold. Here’s a snippet from Passan’s article where he’s talking about what the Tigers should do at the deadline:

2026 unquestionably will be The Skubal Deadline. Provided the two-time defending American League Cy Young Award winner returns from his elbow scope healthy and effective, he will be the focus for every contender. It doesn’t matter that he’s a free agent after the season. The deadline is largely about contenders shoring up pitching staffs, and there’s no better bulwark than the best pitcher in the world. And, no, the prorated amount — around $10 million of his $32 million salary — will not be an impediment. If you can get Tarik Skubal, you get Tarik Skubal.

Here’s where Passan brings the Braves into it:

Hurston Waldrep, is on a rehab assignment. Another, Spencer Schwellenbach, is throwing. And A.J. Smith-Shawver, who underwent Tommy John surgery last year, is ramping up bullpens. It’s not out of the question for all three to rejoin Atlanta by the end of the season.

So why Skubal? Because he’s Skubal. And because all those young arms — not to mention J.R. Ritchie and Cam Caminiti in the minor leagues, and Didier Fuentes at the big league level — give them the firepower to get him. To beat the Dodgers, teams need to assemble a wrecking crew that can go toe-to-toe with the first back-to-back World Series champions in a quarter-century. Starting a series with Skubal and Chris Sale — and having Spencer Strider and Bryce Elder to fill out the rotation — is quite a place to begin.

Now granted, it’s not like Passan is doing any type of actual reporting here — he’s just simply suggesting that the Braves should aim high when it comes to their Trade Deadline aspirations. He also has Skubal as the best fit for basically every team that’s currently flying high in the standings, so it’s also not like he’s exclusively linking Skubal to the Braves, either.

With that being said, I can see the vision. Sure, the Braves will have most of their planned rotation back in action by the time the second half of the season is in swing. They also have some encouraging pitching prospects on the farm that could potentially make some noise as well. Passan mentioned them in his clip and we’ve seen already with Didier Fuentes just how electric he can be when his stuff is really working.

Still, I like to relate this type of thing to that one episode of Family Guy where Peter Griffin and his wife Lois are talking with a sleazy salesman and deciding between receiving a gift of a boat or a mystery prize. While Lois is smartly suggesting that they should just take the boat, Peter is thinking “Yeah, it’s a boat but the mystery prize could be anything! It could even be a boat!” Then the mystery prize turns out to be tickets to a local comedy show while the couple returns home to watch all of their neighbors zooming around the neighborhood in their boats.

So while Ritchie, Caminiti and Fuentes and throw whoever else you want into this fold are all exciting prospects, they’re still mystery boxes at this point compared to the golden boat that is Tarik Skubal. If there’s any possibility of the Braves potentially getting Tarik Skubal and bringing him into the fold, no matter what the cost is, the Braves need to choose the boat in this scenario.

Even if the prospects turn out to become boats themselves, the Braves might be in need of a boat right now more than ever. If you look at the Braves and their “championship window,” you could say that they’re currently in Year 9 of that window after breaking through to win the NL East and return to the Postseason back in 2018. More-than-likely, the Braves are closer to potentially having to rebuild (or at least do a serious retool) than they are to having this window open much longer.

Chris Sale is still fantastic but he’s also 37. Matt Olson is still producing at the plate but he’s going to be 33. Ozzie Albies’ contract is going to be up soon. Sean Murphy may never be the same after his hip injury. Atlanta’s a year-or-two away from potentially having to answer a $500 million question about Ronald Acuña Jr. and his future. Left field is still a revolving door after Jurickson Profar made some pretty dumb decisions. Things are back on track right now but Alex Anthopoulos is going to have a tricky juggling session in the future when it comes to either extending this window or deciding to go in a different direction at some point in the relatively near future.

As such, this does seem like one of those years where if the Braves are in position to go for it, they should. If Tarik Skubal is available (which he likely will be) and Atlanta has any chance of swinging a deal with Detroit, they should be pursuing that with everything they’ve got. It’s one of those things that sounds like a wacky lil’ trade proposal that you’d see anybody cook up on social media because they’re bored and think that this is MLB: The Show but at the same time, when you have guys like Passan talking about it, the possibility of this happening is at least non-zero. That’s better than zero!

I’d like to once agin stress the fact that this isn’t reporting and this is just pure speculation from everybody involved. Alex Anthopoulos did indicate during a pregame interview on this past Sunday that the team would be active at the deadline in order to keep the foot on the pedal but there’s still nothing tangible linking the Braves to Tarik Skubal. With that being said, if there’s even the slightest possibility that Detroit is coveting what Atlanta has in terms of trade assets, there should be no hesitation from the Braves as to what they should do — at least in my opinion. We’ll see what happens.