But the Yankees are intrigued by Chivilli’s elite velocity, as well as his swing-and-miss stuff and ability to get ground balls, even though that hasn’t translated to success in the majors.
He’ll be in the mix for a bullpen spot after the Yankees lost Luke Weaver and Devin Williams to the Mets in free agency, with David Bednar expected to close in front of Fernando Cruz, Camilo Doval and lefty Tim Hill.
Paul Blackburn, Ryan Yarbrough and Yerry De los Santos also could be in the pen, as well as Jake Bird, who had a miserable stint in The Bronx after coming over from Colorado at the trade deadline last year.
General manager Brian Cashman called the bullpen a “work in progress, with a lot of quality choices,” with more potentially on the way — whether from the minors or outside the organization.
In exchange for Chivilli, who has remaining minor league options and can be sent to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, the Yankees gave up T.J. Rumfield, a 25-year-old first baseman who spent last year with SWB. He was acquired by the Yankees in a small trade with the Phillies in 2021.
Angel Chivilli pitching for the Rockies on Sept. 10, 2025. Getty Images
To make room on the 40-man roster for Chivilli, newly acquired outfielder Michael Siani was designated for assignment.
Right-hander Kaleb Ort, who the Yankees selected off waivers from the Astros earlier this month and later designated for assignment, was claimed by the Angels.
Cashman said Garza’s job is to “relaunch” and “reinvent” the international scouting department.
Garza, 44, has been in the organization since 2011, most recently as the director of baseball development.
Cashman said the Yankees “did an extensive interview process” before landing on a candidate they knew very well.
“He’s already well-versed in all our systems,’’ Cashman said. “That gives him a head start already as we try to relaunch that department and move forward.”
The Yankees haven’t gotten great returns on some of their big-ticket international signings, with Jasson Domínguez failing to win an everyday role in The Bronx and others, like Roderick Arias, stalling in the minors.
“We’re just looking for better outcomes,” Cashman said of Garza’s hiring. “So he’s gonna reinvent that department and we look forward to seeing where it takes us.”
With Cody Bellinger back in left field, Domínguez and prospect Spencer Jones may be on the outside looking in.
“The reality is, it does change,’’ Aaron Boone said of how Bellinger’s presence impacts the pair of prospects. “We’ve got Cody back in the mix and [Trent Grisham] back, that maybe complicates some things for them. But we also know what potentially outstanding players they’re gonna be in this league. We have a long time to go between now and… certainly Opening Day and you never know what’s gonna come down the pike.’’
The Colorado Rockies announced they have agreed to a deal with the New York Yankees, sending right-handed reliever Angel Chivilli to the Bronx in exchange for minor league first baseman T.J. RumField.
The Rockies announced today they have acquired Minor League 1B T.J. Rumfield from the New York Yankees in exchange for RHP Angel Chivilli. pic.twitter.com/0NfWWaJIk5
Chivilli, 23, looked like he could be a staple of a fresh Rockies bullpen when he debuted with the team in 2024. After posting a 4.55 ERA in 31 2/3 innings, the hard-throwing righty struggled mightily in 2025. In 58 2/3 innings over 43 games, he struggled to a 7.06 ERA and a 1.688 WHIP. Despite an incredible 14.4% swinging-strike rate in his career and an 32.3% chase rate, Chivilli proved a bit too inconsistent in the zone and was prone to giving up the long ball, averaging 1.99 per nine innings in each of the first two seasons. He didn’t walk many batters, but also didn’t strike out very many, leaving him on the bubble for the new front office.
Looking to add some more depth at first base, the Rockies acquire Rumfield, who was ranked as the No. 22 prospect for the Yankees per MLB Pipeline in 2025.
Drafted in the 12th round out of Virginia Tech in 2021 by the Philadelphia Phillies, he was traded to New York before the 2022 minor league season. He struggled to find his footing in the first couple of years but began top gain traction, winning the batting title (.400) in the Arizona Fall League in 2022. After struggling in some aspects in Double-A in 2023, despite finding his power, Rumfield made a slight adjustment to simplify his swing for more consistency. In 2024, Rumfield hit .292/.365/.461 with 15 homers in 114 Triple-A games.
He spent the entire 2025 season with the Yankees’ top affiliate in Scranton, slashing .285/.378/.447 with 16 home runs, 31 doubles, a triple, five stolen bases, a quality 11.9% walk rate, and an 18.4% strikeout rate that’s comfortably lower than average. Still, scouts indicate he chases a bit too much out of the zone.
Standing 6-foot-5 and 225 pounds, Rumfield has a modest power potential of 15 home runs a year, instead relying on hitting for contact. He won’t offer much on the base paths and is a decent enough defender at first base despite a lack of range and a questionable arm. Still, he gives the Rockies another left-handed option at first base, which would be their preference as a team.
Rumfield is not on the 40-man roster, leaving the Rockies with an open slot to work with as they still hope to add another free agent starter or the aforementioned first baseman.
With spring training about two weeks away, the Yankees are still assembling their roster for the 2026 season.
New York added to their bullpen on Wednesday, acquiring RHP Angel Chivilli from the Colorado Rockies in exchange for minor league 1B T.J. Rumfield, the team announced.
The Yanks also designated OF Michael Siani for assignment to make room for Chivilli on the 40-man roster. Siani was claimed off waivers from the Los Angeles Dodgers on Jan. 23.
Chivilli, 23, made his MLB debut with the Rockies in 2024 and has appeared in 73 games over the past two seasons, pitching to a 6.18 ERA with 71 strikeouts. He had a 7.06 ERA and 1.69 WHIP over 43 games (58.2 IP) in 2025, totaling 43 strikeouts.
Despite his record and ERA, Chivilli's fastball velocity averages at 97.1 mph, which is in the 88th percentile per Baseball Savant. He also owns a 29.7 percent whiff rate and a 49.8 percent ground ball rate, both well above the league average.
Rumfield, who'll turn 26 in May, hit .285 with 16 home runs, 31 doubles, and 87 RBI in 2025 for Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. He was originally selected by the Philadelphia Phillies in the 12th round of the 2021 MLB Draft out of Virginia Tech and later acquired by the Yanks in November 2021. Over five years in the minors, Rumfield owns a .271 batting average with 52 homers, 88 doubles, and 260 RBI.
The move comes one day after the NCAA filed a motion for Roberts, an Alabama donor, to recuse himself. Roberts is listed by the Crimson Tide Foundation as an active “circle” donor, meaning he gives anywhere between $100,000 to $249,999 to the university.
The NCAA said in court documents that it filed the motion pertaining to Roberts because of "external circumstances that could give the appearance of partiality."
Roberts had granted Bediako a temporary restraining order against the NCAA on Jan. 21 that made him immediately eligible for the Crimson Tide, who he played for from 2021-23 before declaring for the NBA Draft. Though he never suited up in the NBA, Bediako played 82 games in the G League over three seasons. He played for the Motor City Cruise, the Detroit Pistons’ G League affiliate, as recently as Jan. 17.
Bediako had an injunction hearing scheduled for Jan. 27, but it was pushed back after weather conditions in Tennessee prevented an NCAA lawyer from being able to make it to Alabama for the hearing. Because of that, Roberts extended Bediako’s restraining order another 10 days.
Following a three-year sabbatical from college basketball, Bediako has been immediately impactful for an Alabama team that’s No. 23 in the latest USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll. In two games — a loss to Tennessee and a win over Missouri — the 23-year-old Bediako is averaging 13.5 points, 4.5 rebounds, 1.5 steals and one block in 21.5 minutes per game while shooting 81.8% from the field.
The Crimson Tide have games against No. 21 Florida on Feb. 1 and Texas A&M on Feb. 4 that are scheduled before the 10-day extension on Bediako’s restraining order is set to lapse.
Are the Charlotte Hornets good? Someone needs to ask.
They have a worse winning percentage than the Memphis Grizzlies, but a better point differential, better postseason hopes, and also the best net rating in the NBA recently.
Charlotte might be good. My Hornets vs. Grizzlies predictions and NBA picks for Wednesday, January 28 certainly consider it.
Hornets vs Grizzlies prediction
Hornets vs Grizzlies best bet: Hornets -2 (-110)
As shocking as this is, the Charlotte Hornets may be playing better than anyone else in the NBA these days. The Hornets have the No. 1 net rating in the NBA over the last 10 games, +13.7 a full two points better per 100 possessions than No. 2.
Credit Charlotte’s offense, ranking No. 1 in rating at 122.9 in that stretch, and it should feast against the Memphis Grizzlies' struggling defense.
The Grizzlies’ defense falling off is an indictment on plenty of things there.
Losing Desmond Bane hurt. Overall locker room frustrations do not help. And thus, that defense has rated No. 19 in the last 10 games, giving up 114.6 points per 100 possessions.
Look at it this way; that is five points worse than Charlotte’s defense in the same stretch.
Hornets vs Grizzlies same-game parlay
Memphis’s defense has become a genuine liability, part of the Grizzlies cashing four Overs in their last five games. But doubt in LaMelo Ball still makes sense given his decreased workload in recent weeks.
He has fallen short of this modest prop in four of his last six games.
Hornets vs Grizzlies SGP
Hornets -2
Over 230.5
LaMelo Ball Under 21.5 points + rebounds
Our "from downtown" SGP: Bridges wastes no time
As much as Ball wants to be traded, Miles Bridges is that likely to be traded. He has thus been showcased a bit more lately.
Hornets vs Grizzlies SGP
Hornets -2
Over 230.5
LaMelo Ball Under 21.5 points + rebounds
Miles Bridges Over 3.5 points 1Q
Hornets vs Grizzlies odds
Spread: Hornets -2 | Grizzlies +2
Moneyline: Hornets -135 | Grizzlies +115
Over/Under: Over 230.5 | Under 230.5
Hornets vs Grizzlies betting trend to know
The Grizzlies are spiraling. They have lost three straight games outright, including two as favorites, and are just 2-6 outright in their last eight. Find more NBA betting trends for Hornets vs. Grizzlies.
How to watch Hornets vs Grizzlies
Location
FedExForum, Memphis, TN
Date
Wednesday, January 28, 2026
Tip-off
8:00 p.m. ET
TV
FDSN-Charlotte, FDSN-Memphis
Hornets vs Grizzlies latest injuries
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No doubt somewhere in the Bronx or Tampa, Matt Blake is quietly singing Shaggy’s popular refrain to himself while watching video. YES Network’s Jack Curry reported that the Yankees landed Angel Chivilli, a right-handed reliever, from the Colorado Rockies, sending Triple-A first baseman T.J. Rumfield in return to Denver. The Yankees have since confirmed the trade, with the team designating recent waiver claim outfielder Michael Siani for assignment as the corresponding 40-man roster move. Rumfield had been with the organization since being traded from the Phillies in December 2021 for Nick Nelson, but he had topped out at Scranton and Ben Rice firmly passed him on the first base depth chart.
Immediately looking at Chivilli, the 23-year-old has yet to post positive value in The Show since coming up in June 2024. He notched a 7.06 ERA and 6.03 FIP last year in 43 appearances, “good” for a -0.7 fWAR. That’s not MLB-caliber!
Still, you can kind of figure out the play here. Chivilli will sit 97 mph with his four-seam fastball, and that will play in any bullpen if you can command it. While he did manage a ground-ball rate over 50 percent last year, which is good, command of that fastball needs to be one of the first things for pitching coach Matt Blake to work on:
You can’t throw fastballs there no matter what ballpark you play in, but 97 on the black becomes quite nasty. Fixing that fastball location is job no. 1, and probably the overall key to making Chivilli a real weapon.
Job no. 2 though might actually be a little easier. One of the problems with pitching at Coors Field is the thin air reduces the amount that pitches break, and Chivilli throws a real hard slider at 90 mph and notched a 42-percent whiff rate on his changeup last year.
Simply moving closer to sea level should help those pitches break more, and all of a sudden the Yankees have a 24-year-old with multiple secondary offerings.
None of this is destiny, the work needs to get done, and even then young pitchers shatter all the time. Still, you can see why Angel Chivilli is a tempting project for a pitching lab that’s seen as much success as Blake’s has, and he immediately becomes one of the more intriguing players to watch in spring training with spots in the big-league bullpen seemingly available.
2018 Masters champion will be eligible for PGA Tour
Patrick Reed has delivered the latest high-profile blow to LIV Golf by announcing he will leave the circuit before the start of its 2026 season.
The 35-year-old American former Masters champion joins Brooks Koepka by instead focusing on the PGA Tour. Reed will spend his immediate time on the DP World Tour, where he won the Dubai Desert Classic on Sunday. Reed tees up in Bahrain from Thursday.
There are a few things, perhaps two things, so potent in their nostalgia that I feel discomforted by them. I can’t quite pin down the emotion. Or emotions. And I don’t know that I can explain it, either. Perhaps what is so uncomfortable to me about them is the contradictory nature of the sensation. Bittersweet, brimming with memories and emotions, but empty. So vivid in the mind, but not in the world. It’s one of the most unique feelings I’ve ever felt. I still don’t quite know if I like it or not.
One of these antecedents, if you will, is Pokémon. Particularly, the original anime. That was, perhaps, my very first hyperfixation, which in hindsight makes it unsurprising that I allegedly learned how to read by playing Pokémon Blue. Watching the original anime always makes me flashback to childhood, and gives me that ineffable feeling I’m struggling to describe. And that other thing, or antecedent? It’s, of course, the Mariners.
Yesterday, the Mariners announced that their longtime radio voice, Rick Rizzs, would be retiring following the 2026 season. It’ll mark his 41st year with the Mariners, and the 50th season for the franchise. That means that 82% of the Mariners’ existence has been commentated by Rizzs, and that he’s done the same for 100% of my life. The Mariners quoted Rizzs as saying, “Calling Mariners has been the highlight of my life.” Little does he know, it’s been the highlight of mine, too.
Given what I’m piecing together, I figure that the beginning of my sports consciousness was around 2000. As far as timing goes, it doesn’t hurt to spawn in for a playoff season, and one season before what is the first- or second-best single season of all-time. My first memory at then-Safeco Field is being up in the nosebleeds when Alex Rodriguez got a concussion and sprained his knee trying to break up a double play where, ironically enough, Joey Cora kneed him in the face jumping over him. I figure that Rizzs was somewhere right below me, calling the game from the booth.
Most of my early memories are sports-related – many of which occur in the context of my living room. And almost all of them include my dad. When I first started writing for Lookout Landing, Matthew Roberson had me on the podcast, and one of the things I told him was that my single-favorite memory (really, a collection of memories) from my childhood was a near-daily ritual with my dad. One in which he would get home from his job after making the long commute to and from work, where he would toil for 10 or 12 hours as a welder. He’d get home and plop onto the couch, and I’d wrench off his heavy work boots. We’d turn on the Mariners game, and he’d scratch my back until he’d inevitably fall asleep, which, unless John Halama was pitching, usually wasn’t before the exit of a Mariners starting pitcher. In the background would be the reliable cadence of Rizzs, or Dave Niehaus.
My dad and I would pile into his 1990-something gold Toyota 4Runner on brisk autumn mornings on my way to preschool. I remember the way that he would masterfully balance a full mug of piping hot coffee while managing to juggle between the steering wheel and shifter. As steam billowed from his mug, the smell of hazelnut Coffee mate creamer and the sound of Seattle talk radio would both permeate the cold air of the 4Runner. There would inevitably be a soundbite from one of Rizzs’ signature calls from the previous night, in which he was likely borrowing a Niehausism, or using one of his own catchphrases. At night, on the way home from family events or working at our family shop, I remember the slow crawls from Georgetown in my dad’s Toyota T100. There was always the red hue of brake lights filling up the car, and the crackle of Rizzs’ steady, familiar voice over the radio, hissing in tunnels and under bridges.
I suppose it wasn’t until writing this that I realized that my fondness for the Mariners is, of course, intertwined with Rick Rizzs, but also with my dad. Some of the fondest memories of my life have been spent at the ballpark, on my couch, and in the 4Runner or T100. All with my dad, and most, or all of them, with Rizzs. There’s a beginning and an end to everything. You only notice the best and worst of them, and Rizzs’ retirement represents the end of something really special. It makes me think about mortality, and the impermanence of everything. Therein lies the contradiction, and what this ineffable, nostalgic feeling derives from: cherishing all of the good moments and memories, while also mourning them, and also the ones that won’t come, after 2026.
During the pandemic, I wrote about Félix Hernández and grief. I reflected on how Félix and I had both changed quite a bit over the years. Things continue to change. After the biggest year-to-year jump on a Hall of Fame ballot of all time, now it seems like a matter of when, not if, he’ll be in the Hall.
For Rizzs, I figure we ought to have the same sort of conversation. There’s no Hall of Fame for announcers. The highest honor a baseball announcer can receive is the National Baseball Hall of Fame’s Ford C. Frick Award, given to broadcasters for their “major contributions to baseball.” The list of Ford C. Frick Award recipients could probably double as a list of the greatest MLB announcers of all time. Our beloved Dave Niehaus won it in 2008, and fellow GOATs Vin Scully and Bob Uecker are on the list too, though, if you ask me, its merits are certainly watered down by the likes of Hawk Harrelson – and, as of a month ago, literally Joe Buck – receiving the award. I digress.
In many ways, the Mariners are one of the most unfortunate sports franchises of all time. But with Rizzs and Niehaus, we were spoiled with two people who could make the most fucked up of rosters not only watchable, and not only enjoyable, but cherishable. And for the entirety of their careers, that they did. We never got to give a proper goodbye to Dave, because he passed away at the age of 75, in between seasons he was meant to commentate full-time. At the age of 72, after 51 years of calling professional baseball, and 40 years with the Mariners, we have the opportunity to do what I would say we never got to do with Dave. Rizzs can get his farewell tour, and we can give him his flowers. And though we’ll miss him, he can enjoy the rest of his storied life with his family, rather than prepping meticulously for games and spending two to three hours a day creating the most vivid imagery of a baseball game that even the dullest of minds can conjure.
If we’re to consider Rizzs’ major contributions to MLB, they are many. He, of course, can be considered on his own merits, but no one has continued the legacy of Dave Niehaus more than Rizzs. Every grand slam, and many home runs, have become an homage from Rizzs to Niehaus, but with his own flair and, of course, with his own catchphrases of his own.
There’s also that, as the longest-tenured broadcaster in franchise history, Rizzs has truly, genuinely become the voice of the Mariners. I suppose in some ways, what I’m writing now isn’t different from what I wrote about Félix. Félix had been part of my life since I was in fourth grade. But Rizzs has been part of my life before I even knew he was. Perhaps in part because of Niehaus’ greatness, and in part because of the Mariners’ badness, Rizzs has sparsely been able to shine under the bright lights that we know he’s capable of. Luckily, this recent crop of rosters has lent itself to more playoff-caliber baseball, and that’s meant more opportunities for Rizzs to shine, and an environment much more suitable for him to leave on: on top.
To Rick Rizzs: I know I speak for all of Seattle Mariners fans when I say that you, along with many others, have made our fandom. Know that you’ve made us, and your good friend Dave, very, very proud, and we’re excited for you to make the most of your final season, and to have more of your cherished time spent with your grandkids. Congratulations on retiring on such a high note, and thanks for everything. Thanks for being the sound of my childhood.
The Dodgers’ two biggest needs this offseason were bullpen help and outfield production, and they went and signed the two best free agents at those positions in Edwin Díazand Kyle Tucker, each contract setting records for average annual value.
With Tucker the lineup looks much deeper, and can be considered stacked even for a Dodgers team that has finished first or second in the National League in both runs scored and wRC+ in each of the last eight seasons.
“There’s some things, but I think in terms of more seismic changes, It feels pretty well set,” Dodgers president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman said at Tucker’s introductory press conference last week. “There are still a few things we’re kicking around, and conversations that have been going for a bit that we’re going to continue to look at, try to enhance and build up depth.”
Let’s take a look at the current roster to see where some of those depth needs might arise.
Position players
Lineup locks (9): Shohei Ohtani, Will Smith, Freddie Freeman, Tommy Edman, Mookie Betts, Max Muncy, Teoscar Hernández, Andy Pages, Kyle Tucker
Bench locks (3): Miguel Rojas, Andy Ibáñez, Dalton Rushing
Depth with options (4): LF/RF Alex Call, 2B/SS/CF Hyeseong Kim, SS/3B/2B Alex Freeland, LF/RF/1B Ryan Ward
Starting depth (5): Gavin Stone, River Ryan, Ben Casparius, Justin Wrobleski, Landon Knack
Right-handed reliever depth (5): Will Klein, Edgardo Henriquez, Kyle Hurt, Bobby Miller, Paul Gervase
Left-handed reliever depth (2): Jack Dreyer, Ronan Kopp
Graterol had shoulder surgery after the 2024 season and did not pitch in 2025, so his readiness for the start of 2026 is at least somewhat in question, though he’s expected to be ready to go at the start of spring training. The Dodgers will have at least two and maybe three active roster spots to fill on the pitching side.
Gavin Stone and River Ryan are intriguing rotation options after coming off major surgeries and not pitching at all last year.
Ben Casparius and Justin Wrobleski have gotten extended roster runs in hybrid roles. Jack Dreyer was active for all of last season. With Tanner Scott, Alex Vesia, and Anthony Banda, the Dodgers already have three left-handers in the bullpen. Do they add another for a half-southpaw pen?
The point here is, at the moment, the Dodgers have functional depth, with so many pitchers who could be optioned if needed, and two potential roster spots that can used for swapping as needed. Adding another reliever wouldn’t be much of a surprise, even if it limits that depth somewhat.
In somewhat the same mold as a Kiké Hernández return, it wouldn’t be all that surprising if the Dodgers find a way to bring back Evan Phillips, who will miss the first half or so of this season after Tommy John surgery last June. But that would be more for later in the season, and wouldn’t necessarily preclude adding another reliever as well.
A massive update related to Giannis Antetokounmpo’s future with the Milwaukee Bucks came across Wednesday, Jan. 28, and it’s one that will have ripple effects across the entire trading market.
Several teams with the assets necessary to make a bid for Antetokounmpo have been waiting for him to become officially available in a trade, which has caused the overall market to lag some.
That means stars such as Anthony Davis, Ja Morant might have to wait for resolution in the Antetokounmpo case to see if they’ll have new homes.
The trading deadline is Thursday, Feb. 5, at 3 p.m. ET.
Here are the latest trade rumors surrounding Giannis Antetokounmpo and his future with the Milwaukee Bucks:
Giannis Antetokounmpo trade rumors
According to an ESPN report that published Wednesday morning, Antetokounmpo has indicated he’s ready to move on from the Bucks, which is essentially a euphemism that he’s requesting a trade.
Antetokounmpo and the Bucks have been cautious about optics in this case, and neither side has wanted to appear – at least in the public eye – as the culprit for what is becoming an inevitability.
Per ESPN, the Bucks are now more open than ever to field offers for Antetokounmpo prior to the trading deadline, though Milwaukee is under no obligation to move the two-time MVP.
In fact, the Bucks are operating from a position of some leverage and can wait until the offseason to find resolution in this case. Teams are constrained by the salary cap and limited roster size during the season, and suitors will have far more draft capital available to ship to Milwaukee.
A trade like this also may require a third or fourth team, so the logistics of wrangling all moving parts together before next Thursday would be complicated.
ESPN also reported that potential suitors have gotten the sense that Milwaukee is willing to listen to offers. The question now becomes whether any team can present a deal enticing enough for the Bucks to maximize their return on Antetokounmpo, who has spent 12 ½ seasons in Milwaukee.
Antetokounmpo, 31, has averaged 28.0 points, 10.0 rebounds and 5.6 assists through 30 games this season, though he recently suffered a right calf strain that will sideline him for at least the next month.
Another reason why this has been a frustrating season for Antetokounmpo has been injuries.
Antetokounmpo reaggravated a right calf strain Friday, Jan. 23 in a 102-100 loss against the Nuggets, and indicated that he would miss between four-to-six weeks. That sidelines him well beyond the Feb. 5 trading deadline, and could complicate any potential trade that would come before the deadline; essentially, any team acquiring him would need to feel that Antetokounmpo would be available and fully healthy for the back half of the season, into a push for the playoffs.
It has been a turbulent season for Antetokounmpo in Milwaukee.
It all started before the season, during Bucks media day on Sept. 29, when team owner Wes Edens said he and Antetokounmpo met in June, and that Antetokounmpo reaffirmed his commitment to Milwaukee.
“I had a great conversation with Giannis back in June out here, where he was very committed to Milwaukee,” Edens told reporters in September. “He likes being here. He likes his family being here.”
But when it was his turn to speak, Antetokounmpo said he could not recall that conversation and did not give any assurances that he’s committed to the Bucks beyond the present.
“I want to be on a team that allows me and gives me a chance to win a championship,” Antetokounmpo said. “It is never going to change. I want to be among the best.”
Interestingly, prior to Milwaukee’s 139-122 loss Tuesday, Jan. 27 against the 76ers, Bucks coach Doc Rivers told reporters that Philadelphia center Joel Embiid, the 2022-23 NBA Most Valuable Player, was “the most talented player I ever coached.” It raised eyebrows considering Rivers has coached Antetokounmpo, a two-time MVP, for parts of three seasons.
Forward Jae Crowder, who played for the Bucks for two seasons, took to social media Wednesday after news of Antetokounmpo’s future in Milwaukee broke. Crowder was part of the 2023-24 team that eventually fired former coach Adrian Griffin and replaced him with Doc Rivers.
WE WERE 30-13 BTW. TO BRING IN DOC. THIS IS WHAT STARTED THE AVALANCHE https://t.co/BGh2ZaulRx
Giannis Antetokounmpo is ready for a new home ahead of the trade deadline as several teams have made aggressive offers to the Bucks, league sources told ESPN.
Jan 27, 2026; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; Montreal Canadiens goalie Jakub Dobes (75) makes a save against the Vegas Golden Knights during the first period at the Bell Centre. Mandatory Credit: Eric Bolte-Imagn Images
Eric Bolte/Eric Bolte-Imagn Images
MONTREAL — The Montreal Canadiens fired goaltending coach Eric Raymond.
They made the move 53 games into the NHL season despite sitting in a playoff spot in the Eastern Conference. Goalies Jakub Dobes, Samuel Montembeault and Jacob Fowler have combined for a save percentage of .884 that ranks 28th among the league’s 32 teams.
Marco Marciano was promoted from the same job with the American Hockey League’s Laval Rocket to fill the role on an interim basis for the remainder of the season. Raymond had served in the job since 2021.
Montreal is the second team to make a goalie coach change this season. The New York Islanders fired Pierre Greco six games in and gave the job to Sergei Naumovs, who has an extensive history coaching starter Ilya Sorokin.
Since making the move, Sorokin and backup David Rittich have combined for the fourth-best save percentage in the NHL at .907 over the past 46 games. They were 25th at .880 before that.
Jan 21, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Detroit Red Wings defenseman Ben Chiarot (8) warms up before playing the Toronto Maple Leafs at Scotiabank Arena. Mandatory Credit: Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images
Dan Hamilton/Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images
DETROIT — The Detroit Red Wings signed veteran defenseman Ben Chiarot to a three-year contract extension worth $11.55 million.
Chiarot will count $3.85 million against the salary cap from when his new deal kicks in next season through 2028-29.
Chiarot, who turns 35 in May, is past the midway point of his fourth season with the Red Wings after time with Winnipeg, Montreal and Florida. He has played in all 54 of their games, averaging 21 minutes of ice time, and ranks ninth in the NHL with 113 blocked shots.
Detroit is in second place in the Atlantic Division and on pace to make the playoffs for the first time since 2016.
The first-place Colorado Avalanche roll into the Canadian Tire Centre to face the Ottawa Senators tonight, and the Sens need to string wins together in a hurry to punch a postseason ticket.
As a result of Colorado's high-powered offense, my Avalanche vs. Senators predictions expect Ottawa netminder James Reimer to stay busy between the pipes.
Read more in my NHL picks for Wednesday, January 28.
Avalanche vs Senators prediction
Avalanche vs Senators best bet: James Reimer Over 25.5 saves (-105)
The Colorado Avalanche lead the league in shots per game (34.9) and rank second in Corsi For percentage at five-on-five, so I’m anticipating Reimer seeing plenty of action tonight.
Reimer posted a .895 save percentage across 92 games over the previous three years, and replicating that number tonight positions him to cash this Over.
After all, the Avs have recorded at least 30 shots in nine consecutive games.
Avalanche vs Senators same-game parlay
The Senators have allowed the fewest expected goals per 60 minutes at five-on-five on home ice, so they should hang around tonight. Colorado has also dropped four of its last six games and is dealing with multiple injuries, while the Sens are icing a healthy lineup.
In addition to the Avalanche allowing the fewest goals per game (2.34), Colorado has also hit the Under in 15 of its past 25 road games.
Colorado is 23-27 to the O/U this season. Find more NHL betting trends for Avalanche vs. Senators.
How to watch Avalanche vs Senators
Location
Canadian Tire Centre, Ottawa, ON
Date
Wednesday, January 27, 2026
Puck drop
7:30 p.m. ET
TV
ALT, SN, TVAS
Avalanche vs Senators latest injuries
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This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here
Giannis Antetokounmpo reportedly is "ready for a new home ahead of the Feb. 5 trade deadline" and the Milwaukee Bucks are now listening to offers, according to a report from Shams Charania of ESPN.
While there is clearly enough chatter that Charania reports the needle is starting to move, actually trading Antetokounmpo is much tougher to do on the ground in Milwaukee. The Bucks are asking for a massive haul in any trade — a high-level young player and a lot of draft picks to start — while, at the same time, Antetokounmpo has preferred destinations for his next team (most notably New York, which could not make that offer before next week's deadline).
The most likely outcome for any potential Antetokounmpo trade remains that it happens in the offseason if it's going to happen. Here is the key part of Charania’s report.
Multiple teams have received a sense that the Bucks are more open than ever on Antetokounmpo offers between now and the deadline, league sources said. However, Milwaukee has indicated to interested teams that the organization is not in a rush to complete a move and is willing to navigate Antetokounmpo's future in the offseason if its believed price point of a blue-chip young talent and/or a surplus of draft picks isn't met, sources said. By waiting until the summer, the Bucks could also see which teams are able to offer more appealing draft picks in June.
Sources said Antetokounmpo has informed the Bucks for months that he believes the moment has come to part ways after 12-plus years together, making a trade increasingly possible.
The expectation in league circles has been more that Antetokounmpo would tell the Bucks this summer he would not sign the four-year, $275 million supermax extension the team can offer (which he could not sign until Oct. 1), which would force the Bucks to trade him then or risk losing him for nothing in free agency in 2027.
Trading him at the deadline is difficult for a couple of key reasons. One is the tax aprons, which put hard caps and trade restrictions on potential trades. For example, the Knicks are hard-capped at the second apron and are currently less than $150,000 below that number, so they need to take back less money in a trade than they send out, and Antetokounmpo is making $54.1 million this season. That becomes a difficult math problem, and the Knicks don't have draft picks to send to Milwaukee in a deal anyway. Other teams known to be interested would face the same issues: The Warriors are hard-capped at the second apron (and the Bucks would not want just the injured Jimmy Butler in a deal), the Heat are hard-capped at the first apron, and the list goes on and on. Other teams linked in the past might rethink their interest: Do teams like the Spurs and Pistons want to blow things up to chase an aging star, or stick with their young cores that are winning big now?
The other factor is Antetokounmpo's injury — he is currently sidelined with a calf strain, and while the Bucks would not put a timeline on his return, Antetokounmpo himself said 4-6 weeks. Any team that trades for him is doing so in part to chase a ring this season, and Antetokounmpo has missed considerable time this season and in recent playoff runs because of similar leg injuries. Why would a team go all-in now if they can make a better offer this summer?
There are a lot of moving parts with an Antetokounmpo trade, and most likely it remains an offseason thing, but the Bucks are now listening to offers.
Organized professional baseball has been played in Kansas City since 1884, when the Kansas City Unions of the Union Association took the field. Despite this long history, the city has been light in witnessing baseball milestones.
Organized professional baseball has been played in Kansas City since 1884, when the Kansas City Unions of the Union Association took the field. Despite this long history, the city has been light on witnessing baseball milestones.
Not a single pitcher for the Kansas City Athletics threw a no-hitter at Municipal Stadium. The first two no-hitters in Royals history were thrown on the road. Neither franchise has had—or ever will have—a 300-game winner. The closest Kansas City came was Gaylord Perry, who pitched the final 14 games of his career here. George Brett remains the only Royal to eclipse 3,000 hits, and he recorded the milestone hit on the road—then promptly got picked off first base. The city has never had a 500-career home run hitter, save for Harmon Killebrew’s final 106 career games in 1975.
Of the notable milestones reached in Kansas City ballparks, one of the first occurred on June 26, 1947, when Carl DeRose—once the Yankees’ top pitching prospect—begged his manager for one more start. DeRose, a Milaca, Minnesota native, made his debut with the Amsterdam Rug Makers, the Yankees’ Class A affiliate, in 1942 and, at age 19, promptly went 19–6. Armed with what was described as a heavy fastball, DeRose was labeled the next Bob Feller.
World War II interrupted his ascension, costing him the next three years to military service. While pitching for a military team, DeRose threw a three-hit complete-game victory over Satchel Paige’s All-Star team. He appeared poised to make his Yankees debut, but a broken knuckle sent him to the Kansas City Blues for the 1946 season. DeRose went 12–6 and seemed ready for his breakthrough, but the baseball gods had other ideas.
He injured his shoulder on a cold, snowy day in Denver and was never the same. Experimental surgery loomed—the only chance to save his once-promising career. Thus, on that June evening in 1947 against the Minneapolis Millers, DeRose begged his manager for one last game. He gutted his way through nine innings, often with tears of pain streaming down his cheeks. Twenty-seven batters up, twenty-seven batters down. Carl DeRose, missing his once-prodigious fastball, threw the first nine-inning perfect game in American Association history at Municipal Stadium.
DeRose spent a couple more seasons bouncing around the Yankees’ minor league system before leaving the game after the 1950 season at age 27. He later played independent league ball in Iowa and Minnesota but never got the opportunity to toe a major league rubber.
On July 11, 1960, local fans—30,619 of them—got to see the game’s biggest stars when the Major League All-Star Game was played at Municipal Stadium. The contest featured 18 future Hall of Famers and was won by the National League, 5–3. The NL stars wasted no time. Willie Mays led off the game with a triple down the right-field line and scored on a Bob Skinner single. With two outs, Ernie Banks smashed a two-run home run. In the second inning, Del Crandall added another long ball to make it 4–0.
The Junior Circuit got on the board in the sixth inning and made it respectable in the eighth when Al Kaline cranked a two-run homer. Bud Daley was the only member of the Athletics selected and entered to a rousing ovation to pitch the ninth inning. He struck out Vada Pinson and Orlando Cepeda, and retired Roberto Clemente on a lineout. Daley later called the appearance the greatest thrill of his career. The game was also notable as the final All-Star Game for Ted Williams and the first for Clemente and Brooks Robinson.
On August 27, 1962, Municipal Stadium hosted the 36th—and final—Negro League East-West All-Star Game, a 5–2 victory for the West. It was the only Negro League All-Star Game hosted by Kansas City, which is notable given that the Negro Leagues were formed just a few blocks north of the stadium at the Paseo YMCA. Willie Hardwick of the Kansas City Monarchs homered in the second inning to spark the West. The East squad struggled defensively, committing five errors that led to four unearned runs. Another Monarch, pitcher Sherm Cottingham, earned the win. During the fifth inning, former Monarch Jackie Robinson was honored with a key to the city, and Satchel Paige and several other former Monarchs were also introduced.
On July 13, 1963, Early Wynn of the Cleveland Indians pitched five innings against the Kansas City Athletics to secure his 300th career victory in a 7–4 win. At 43, Wynn was the oldest player in the majors and became just the 14th pitcher to reach the milestone. He made his major league debut in 1939 as a 19-year-old with the Washington Senators and missed the entire 1945 season due to military service. His best years came with Cleveland, where he won at least 20 games in four different seasons. Wynn spent five seasons late in his career with the Chicago White Sox before returning to the Indians for the sole purpose of winning game No. 300. The victory against Kansas City proved to be the final win of his career, leaving him with a 300–244 record and a 3.54 ERA. That Athletics roster included an 18-year-old Tony La Russa, who appeared as a pinch runner. Future Royal Moe Drabowsky took the loss for Kansas City.
In a desperate attempt to boost attendance, Athletics owner Charlie O. Finley declared September 8, 1965, “Campy Campaneris Night.” The promotion centered on Campaneris playing all nine positions against the Los Angeles Angels. The stunt drew 21,576 fans to Municipal Stadium, and the 23-year-old Campaneris delivered a memorable performance. He started at shortstop before moving, in order, to second base, third base, left field, center field, right field, first base, pitcher, and finally catcher.
Things grew heated in the ninth inning when future Royal Ed Kirkpatrick led off with a single. Kirkpatrick promptly stole second, moved to third, and then attempted to steal home. Campaneris caught the pitch from another future Royal, Aurelio Monteagudo, and applied the tag as Kirkpatrick barreled into him in an effort to dislodge the ball. Campaneris held on for the final out and appeared ready to brawl before being restrained by José Cardenal, who also happened to be his cousin. Campaneris was removed from the game and taken to St. Luke’s Hospital with a shoulder injury. The Angels won, 5–3.
Next week, we’ll look at milestones achieved at Royals/Kauffman Stadium.