Dodgers vs Rockies Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight's MLB Game

Want to get more Covers content? Add us as a preferred source on your Google account here.

The Los Angeles Dodgers head to Coors Field for a four-game series with the Colorado Rockies beginning Friday night.

Tyler Glasnow gets the nod for the visitors in the series opener, while Tomoyuki Sugano toes the rubber for the home team.

My Dodgers vs. Rockies predictions and MLB picks for Friday, April 17 see a low-scoring game unfolding in frigid conditions.

Who will win Dodgers vs Rockies tonight: Dodgers (-291)

The Los Angeles Dodgers are a warranted heavy favorite given their advantages over the Colorado Rockies in starting pitching, relief pitching, and hitting. 

Tyler Glasnow has strong underlying metrics (2.60 xERA, 2.83 FIP) and a 107 Stuff+, whereas Tomoyuki Sugano has a worrisome 4.98 xERA and 5.39 FIP. Sugano’s 82 Stuff+ ranks 178th out of 184 pitchers who have started a game

L.A. has the more effective and better-rested bullpen after Thursday’s off day. Its lineup is tops in the league against right-handed pitching (135 wRC+), whereas Colorado lags well behind (80 wRC+). 

Covers COVERS INTEL: Glasnow has dominated the Rockies, holding their projected lineup to just three hits in 29 at-bats (.103) with 15 strikeouts.

Dodgers vs Rockies Over/Under pick: Under 9.5 (-107)

The Rockies have cashed the Under in 12 of their 19 games this season. With temperatures between 35 and 40 degrees at Coors Field, Friday could be another low-scoring contest. 

Glasnow, combined with a well-rested bullpen, should limit a punchless Rockies lineup.

Sugano managed to outperform his underlying metrics a year ago (4.64 ERA, 5.79 xERA), and that’s been the case again through three starts (2.16 ERA, 4.98 xERA). 

He’ll certainly experience regression given his .136 BABIP and 100% left-on-base rate, but his surface-level statistics (four earned runs in 16 2/3 innings) indicate that he’s at least in good form.

JD Yonke's 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets: 4-5, -0.62 units
  • Over/Under bets: 5-5, -0.26 units

Dodgers vs Rockies odds

  • Moneyline: Dodgers -291 | Rockies +240
  • Run line: Dodgers -1.5 | Rockies +1.5
  • Over/Under: Over 9.5 | Under 9.5

Dodgers vs Rockies trend

The Rockies have cashed the Under in four of their last five home games. Find more MLB betting trends for Dodgers vs. Rockies.

How to watch Dodgers vs Rockies and game info

LocationCoors Field, Denver, CO
DateFriday, April 17, 2026
First pitch8:40 p.m. ET
TVSportsNet LA, Rockies.TV
Dodgers starting pitcherTyler Glasnow
(1-0, 4.00 ERA)
Rockies starting pitcherTomoyuki Sugano
(1-0, 2.16 ERA)

Dodgers vs Rockies latest injuries

Dodgers vs Rockies weather

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

Is Steph Curry playing today vs. Suns? Latest update on Warriors' star

Golden State Warriors star Stephen Curry put on an all-time performance Wednesday against the Los Angeles Clippers, and proved anyone and everyone who ever doubted him, or the Warriors, wrong again.

Curry scored 35 points, including a go-ahead 3-pointer with under a minute left in the game, to lead Golden State to a 126-121 victory to eliminate the Clippers and set up a game against the Phoenix Suns for the No. 8 seed in the West.

He left it all on the floor, putting in 36 minutes of work. The Warriors and their fans are leaning on Curry to repeat that performance against Phoenix on Friday, April 17. It's not a matter of will he do it, but whether his body will allow him.

Will the Warriors have their best player available in the NBA Play-In game against the Suns? Here's what to know:

Will Steph Curry be available vs. Suns in NBA Play-In game?

Curry has battled a nagging knee injury throughout the season, but it seems that he's not feeling any pain, or significant enough pain to keep him from competing for a chance at the 2026 NBA Playoffs.

Curry was not on the injury list and appears to be healthy and available to play against the Suns on April 17, according to the NBA injury report, as of 8:30 p.m. ET on April 16.

Steph Curry injury history

Curry missed 27 regular-season games from Feb. 3 to April 2 with patella-femoral pain syndrome, a bone bruising in his right knee. The persistent pain sidelined Curry until late in the season as he geared up for a postseason run.

Curry returned on April 5 against the Houston Rockets, appearing in three of the Warriors' final five regular-season games. The rest prepared him for a battle with the Clippers in a do-or-die situation.

There was an early scare in the game after Curry went to the locker room in the first quarter. It was unclear as to what happened, but concern crept in as Curry missed time with Golden State during the regular season due to what the team previously told USA TODAY Sports was runners' knee.

Curry returned to the game at the 7:59 mark of the second quarter. It was like nothing happened. He showed up when his team needed him most, connecting on a 3-point shot with 50 seconds left to lead the way to victory.

Curry celebrated by passionately screaming and stomping his feet so hard, it appeared he nearly rolled his ankle, but the grip from his retro Nikes, a pair of Kobe IV Protros, held.

Elephant Rumblings: White Sox Coming To Sacramento

SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 16: Nick Kurtz #16 of the Athletics hits a double that scored three runs in the eighth inning at Sutter Health Park on April 16, 2026 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Morning everyone and welcome to another Friday!

Yesterday the A’s wrapped up their four-game series with the Texas Rangers, splitting the series and remaining in a tie atop the AL West. Not the best outcome but certainly not the worst. Now these two teams will split up and face a couple other teams before seeing each other again next weekend in Texas. Who will be in first place at that point?

Looking ahead to the next series, we welcome the Chicago White Sox to town for a weekend three-game set. Chicago has been one of the worst teams in baseball history over the past two seasons, and while they are back at the bottom of the AL Central with a 6-13 record they seem to have a bit more fight in them than the past couple of years. Can’t ever take a game for granted but the A’s should have the goal of taking at least two of three against the South Siders, with a sweep being the ultimate goal.

Tonight’s game will feature right-hander Aaron Civale on the bump for what will be his fourth start in an Athletics uniform. He’s gotten off to a terrific start with his new team as he’s gone at least five innings in each of his starts, which is exactly what the team was hoping for. They’re probably surprised at Civale’s ability so far this season to avoid giving up runs: he’s allowed just three baserunners to cross home plate in 15 2/3 innings of work. The team will be hoping he can keep that up against Chicago, who will be sending fellow righty Davis Martin to the mound to kick off the series for them. Martin has been arguably their best starter in the early going as he’ll bring a 2.50 ERA in three starts so far this year.

After that Friday night matchup it’ll be Luis Severino versus Erick Fedde on Saturday afternoon followed by a matchup between Jeffrey Springs against Noah Shultz on Sunday. That’ll be Schultz’s second career major league game so an excellent chance to jump on a fresh-faced rookie. The pitching matchups favor the Athletics all series but you still gotta go out there and play the games. Severino has had major home struggles so perhaps Saturday is the day he can begin turning that around.

On another note, two of the organization’s top pitching prospects got starts yesterday and did not disappoint. Left-handers Jamie Arnold and Gage Jump both had Thursday assignments and both posted quality outings. Jump, pitching at Triple-A Las Vegas and making his third start, collected eight strikeouts against just one walk in 4 1/3 innings of work. He allowed a pair of runs on four hits but he’s still sporting a pristine 2.61 ERA through three (short) starts. The team is clearly being cautious as they ramp up the young lefty but this was his longest outing of the year as he got up to 80 pitches. The current major league rotation is full and no one other than Severino is truly struggling so there’s no obvious opening but the team must be happy with how Jump is handling his first taste of Triple-A. Maybe if Jacob Lopez’s struggles get worse the team may elect to press fast forward towards the future a little earlier than expected.

As for Arnold, the 22-year-old southpaw had an even better performance a level lower in Double-A. In 3 1/3 innings of work (remember, slow ramp up for these two) Arnold punched out 7 of the 10 outs he collected, not allowing a run compared to just one walk. Many expected Arnold to be a fast riser through the system and so far in his first three starts as a professional, he hasn’t done anything to dispel that belief. It’s starting to feel like a foregone conclusion that we will see not only Jump at some point this season but Arnold as well. We’ll see if the A’s get aggressive with these two if they’re still in a playoff race but the smart money would be on seeing these guys in the Green & Gold sooner than later.

That’s all we have today everyone. Game tonight at 6:40. Until then, have a great day everyone!

A’s Coverage:

MLB News and Interest:

Best of X:

Lopez’s leash getting shorter?

Disappointing considering he needs every hit he can possibly get. He had time for jokes earlier this week about his lack of hitting skills, but this wasn’t funny to watch:

ICYMI:

Tough way to see your no-no end, even if you’re just a rookie:

Who else misses Stephen Vogt?

Mariners News: Colt Emerson, Ichiro, and Justin Turner

Aug 6, 2025; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Chicago Cubs first base Justin Turner (3) is safe at home plate as Cincinnati Reds catcher Tyler Stephenson (37) makes a late tag during the seventh inning at Wrigley Field. Mandatory Credit: David Banks-Imagn Images | David Banks-Imagn Images

Good morning everyone and happy Friday!

The Mariners dropped the series finale to the Padres last night, completing San Diego’s sweep in the first leg of the 2026 Vedder Cup. The team heads back home to open a new series tonight against the first-place Texas Rangers.

As we’re now 20 games into the season, which AL West team are you the most afraid of moving forward? The Rangers are in first place, though the Angels are seeing a rejuvenated Mike Trout, the A’s are an up-and-coming team that might be more competitive than expected, and the Astros are…also there.

In Mariners news…

Around the league…

Yankees Rivalry Roundup: Jays lose again, tough day in the West

MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - APRIL 16: Joey Ortiz #3 of the Milwaukee Brewers hits a RBI sacrifice bunt against the Toronto Blue Jays during the seventh inning at American Family Field on April 16, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by Patrick McDermott/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Yankees were Mike Trout-ed once again on Thursday. The future Hall-of-Famer walked twice and homered for the fifth (!!) time of the series. Against a not-great Angels team, the Bombers could only manage a split in the four-game series at home. But, life goes on, as does other action around the American League. Let’s take a look at what happened on Thursday.

Toronto Blue Jays (7-11) 1, Milwaukee Brewers (10-8) 2

For a second consecutive game, the Blue Jays lost to the Brewers by a score of 2-1. Toronto actually put a tally in the run column first in this one, when Taylor Heineman laid down a perfect safety squeeze to kick off scoring in the third inning. The Brewers manufactured a run of their own an inning later, thanks to a Luis Rengifo sacrifice fly, but outside of that, the bats were quiet on both sides.

That was thanks, in large part, to excellent starting efforts on the mound. Patrick Corbin tossed 5.2 innings of one-run ball, striking out six for the Blue Jays. Out of the other dugout, Milwaukee’s Darren Sproat produced a remarkably similar line over 6.2 frames. Both starters allowed one run on four hits while striking out six.

In the spirit of how this game shaped up, the decisive run came via some small ball once again. This time, a retaliatory squeeze bunt from Joey Ortiz scored the go-ahead run for the Brew Crew in the seventh inning. As things would have it, that would be the play that decided the game, as the Jays dropped another one, 2-1.

Houston Astros (8-12) 2, Colorado Rockies (6-12) 3

With the loss Thursday, the Astros officially lost the season series with the Rockies, a deal every other team in the Junior Circuit would happily sign up for. Houston jumped out to an early lead thanks to RBI hits from Yordan Alvarez and Joey Loperfido, but that would be all the noise the Houston bats would be able to make.

Following that, Colorado’s bulk guy Chase Dollander was terrific, allowing just one hit and striking out nine across 5.1 scoreless innings out of the ‘pen.

The Rockies made their charge in the middle innings, with runs in each of the third through fifth innings. An RBI knock and a run-scoring double play sandwiched Hunter Goodman’s fifth homer of the season, a solo shot in the fourth inning off of Houston’s Ryan Weiss.

By dropping another game, to the lowly Rockies no less, the Astros find themselves knotted up in last place in the AL West.

Seattle Mariners (8-12) 2, San Diego Padres (13-6) 5

Right down there with the Astros in the West basement is the Mariners, who took a lost to an NL West opponent on Thursday as well.

Luis Castillo struggled in his fourth outing on the season, as the Padres plated four runs in the first inning, and the right-hander eventually exited in the sixth inning having walked three and allowed seven hits. The damage San Diego did early came thanks to a couple of timely hits, punctuated by Fernando Tatis Jr.’s two-run single to make it 4-0.

On the mound for the Dads, Walker Buehler did a nice job across five innings of work, allowing just a pair of runs and striking out seven. The Mariner’s lone action on offense came in the sixth, when Cal Raleigh and Julio Rodríguez each managed RBI singles, but it wasn’t enough to match the early output of the Padres.

Like the Astros, the M’s drop to 8-12, and find themselves in a bit of a hole to kick off the 2026 season.

Other Games

Detroit Tigers (10-9) 10, Kansas City Royals (7-12) 9: The Tigers took home a slugfest to crawl above .500 on Thursday. Five different Detroit batters recorded multiple hits in this one, which included three from Riley Greene and a two-run blast from Dillon Dingler. The Royals staged a comeback in the seventh, scoring six runs led by a three-run dinger from Salvador Perez. Suddenly trailing 9-7 in the last of the ninth, a clutch double from Greene tied the game up, and he was later scored thanks to Colt Keith’s walk-off knock.

Cleveland Guardians (11-9) 4, St. Louis Cardinals (10-9) 2: Contrary to the other AL Central winner on Thursday, the Guardians took one home thanks largely to some terrific pitching. José Ramírez led the scoring charge with a two-run blast in the first, but the story of the night was Parker Messick. In his 11th career start, the lefty delivered his finest work, ultimately taking a no-hitter into the ninth inning against the Cardinals. He finished on the hook for two runs in the ninth, but he pitched a near-perfect eight innings, allowing just two hits and striking out nine in the win.

3-2-1 Pop Quiz: Giannis Antetokounmpo

MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - APRIL 05: Giannis Antetokounmpo #34 of the Milwaukee Bucks before the game against the Memphis Grizzlies at Fiserv Forum on April 05, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by John Fisher/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The season might be over (at last), but that doesn’t mean your interest wanes—or the coverage stops. With this in mind, we present to you our end-of-season player pop quizzes. Each quiz focuses on a single Buck, posing three “totals” based questions, two “advanced stats” based questions, and one “obscure” question about their 2025-26 campaign. Six questions, total. For the culture. So, are you truly the Bucks sicko you think you are? Dip your feet in the water with Milwaukee’s all-time best player, Giannis Antetokounmpo, and find out.

Season in a snippet

Giannis made noise this year, mostly for all the wrong reasons. On the court, he was his typical dominant self. But, for the first time in his career, he was off the court more often than he was on it thanks to a litany of lower limb injuries—groin strains, calf strains turning to soleus strains, ankle injuries, and hyperextensions. The result: a career-low 36 games after playing at least 61 games in each of his previous 12 seasons—and investigations into the Bucks’ decision to “tell [him] to not play.” Unlucky number 13, huh?

Of course, other noise started prior to the season—leading us to reflect on his Bucks legacy—and discussion about his future popped up like weeds throughout the season. Despite Giannis confirming his commitment to Milwaukee in January and again in August, the rumours persisted, leading to Bucks’ owners publicly declaring he will be extended or he’ll be traded this offseason. And now, here we are, with all of this taking its toll and a majority of Bucks fans ready to trade Giannis regardless of what he wants.

Tantalising totals

(1) “Point-Giannis” garnered much attention prior to the season. How many times did he have double-digit assists?

Click to reveal answer Twice, vs. Charlotte (18) and Denver (11).

(2) Giannis had 40+ points just twice this season, both in the first nine games. Which teams were these against?

Click to reveal answer Cleveland (40) and Chicago (41).

(3) True or false: Giannis had more games with zero blocks than he did games with one or more blocks?

Click to reveal answer True, 19 games of zero vs. 17 games with one or more.

Atypically advanced

(1) True or false: Giannis’ PER this year was a career high?

Click to reveal answer True, 32.6 this year vs. 32.1 in 2021–22.

(2) True or false: Giannis had a career-high usage percentage this year?

Click to reveal answer False, 37.0% this season vs 38.8% in 2022–23.

Obscure optics   

(1) Which other Buck did Giannis pair up with to form his best two-man lineup (with a +8.5 net rating)?

Click to reveal answer Cole Anthony.

How did you fare? Share your score in the comments and don’t forget to drop your thoughts along with it—which stat stands out?

Mats Sundin Linked To Possible Maple Leafs Return As Report Reveals Management Talks in Toronto

The search for a new head of hockey operations for the Toronto Maple Leafs continues, and word has surfaced that a franchise legend might be in the mix. TSN’s Chris Johnston reports that Mats Sundin is currently in Toronto to meet with the club regarding a potential role within the team’s new management structure.

This is not the first time Sundin has been linked to a possible increased role with the organization. The Hockey Hall of Famer attended the Leafs’ training camp in 2024, where he spent nearly a week engaging in activities that went far beyond typical alumni appearances. During that time, he traveled with the roster to an exhibition game against the Montreal Canadiens.

Following Brendan Shanahan’s departure in 2025, many believed his position might be replaced by a role that is not as involved in day-to-day roster decisions as a general manager would be. This shift comes after MLSE CEO Keith Pelley parted ways with GM Brad Treliving on March 30, 2025, following a disappointing season where the Leafs went 32-36-14 and missed the playoffs for the first time in a decade.

While Sundin typically prefers a quiet life in Sweden, he was asked about a potential return to the game when the club visited Stockholm for the 2023 Global Series. At that time, he notably did not dismiss the idea as he had in the past. Sundin’s return would bring significant goodwill to a franchise currently struggling to find its identity. Over his 18-season NHL career with the Leafs, Quebec Nordiques, and Vancouver Canucks, he amassed 564 goals and 785 assists across 1,346 games.

Knicks vs. Hawks: 3 keys for New York in Game 1 of first-round playoff series

The Knicks' playoff run begins on Saturday night when they open the first round against the hot Atlanta Hawks. 

Game 1 will be a feel-out process for both teams, but the Knicks will need to take care of the glass and defend the three-point line well to take early control of the series.

Here are three keys to the series opener...

Getting Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns going early

New York’s All-Star tandem of Brunson and Towns is a lethal one-two punch. Both are capable of carrying New York’s offense for long stretches on their own. But as we’ve learned, there is power in teamwork.

One of the largest criticisms at times is the lack of synergy they have in playing together. As this season wore on, we saw both players build chemistry and unite. Down the stretch of New York’s wins against the Hawks and the Boston Celtics last week, the Brunson and Towns two-man game hummed. 

Towns has a massive physical advantage in this series. The Hawks are guarding him with center Onyeka Okongwu and beyond the 6-10 starter, there’s not many other viable defenders for Atlanta to use. They could go to Jalen Johnson or one of their wings, but Towns and the Knicks should be able to handle any defensive strategy from the Hawks.

After establishing a pick-and-roll offense that works with Brunson and Towns, it would be less than ideal to go backwards now. New York should lean into their two stars more during this run.

Control the boards

The Knicks were seventh in offensive rebound rate this season. They owe that top-10 finish almost entirely to Mitchell Robinson.

In the seven-footer’s 1,175 minutes, the Knicks collected 39.5 percent of their misses, per NBA Stats, a figure that would lead the NBA. In 2,776 minutes with Robinson on the bench, that number dropped to 29.8 percent, a more pedestrian 17th in the league.

Against this smaller Hawks lineup, the Knicks should increase Robinson’s playing time after he averaged just 19.6 minutes in 60 games.

Dec 5, 2025; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks center Mitchell Robinson (23) grabs a rebound in the first quarter against the Utah Jazz at Madison Square Garden.
Dec 5, 2025; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks center Mitchell Robinson (23) grabs a rebound in the first quarter against the Utah Jazz at Madison Square Garden. / Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

Head coach Mike Brown might need Robinson to crack 25 minutes, a number he reached just seven times all season. That could mean more double big lineups with Robinson and Towns.

In New York’s win last week against Atlanta, the Hawks had 19 offensive caroms. So it’s not a guarantee that the Knicks will automatically outrebound the Hawks. Controlling the glass on both ends will be important to controlling the pace and slowing down Atlanta’s up-tempo offensive attack.

Contain Hawks' three-point shooters

The Knicks did not defend the three-pointer well this season, giving up the fifth-most three-point attempts to opponents per 100 possessions, and allowing teams to shoot 36.2 percent from three, 20th in the NBA.

The Hawks are dangerous on the perimeter, finishing fifth in three-point shooting percentage (37.1 percent) in the NBA this season. They have several players on the roster capable of going off.

Specifically, containing Nickeil Alexander-Walker should be a top priority for the Knicks. The Most Improved Player of the Year candidate erupted for 36 points in New York’s last game against Atlanta, knocking down seven trifectas.

Okongwu has evolved into a stretch-five. He made 37.6 percent of his threes this season. Veteran CJ McCollum is a career 37.5 percent shooter from deep, and Johnson shot a respectable 35.2 percent from behind the arc. 

Most of Atlanta’s core rotation can do damage from deep. And if they knock down shots from outside, they all are capable of putting the ball on the floor and driving to the rim. With the Hawks looking to run, they will be searching for transition three-point attempts.

New York’s wing trio of Mikal Bridges, OG Anunoby, and Josh Hart will be relied upon to defend the perimeter better and get out to shooters to secure the win.

Jaylen Brown and Jrue Holiday are teaming up one more time

Boston, MA - January 26: Portland Trail Blazers guard Jrue Holiday and Boston Celtics guard Jaylen Brown greet each other before the game. The Boston Celtics played the Portland Trail Blazers at TD Garden on January 26, 2026. (Photo by Matthew J. Lee/The Boston Globe via Getty Images) | Boston Globe via Getty Images

BOSTONJrue Holiday’s two-year tenure in Boston technically ended in May. After he was traded from the Celtics to the Trail Blazers, Jrue and his wife, Lauren, packed up their family and moved to Portland, where the two-time NBA champion would join a younger, up-and-coming squad hoping to punch their first ticket to the playoffs since 2021 (spoiler alert: on Tuesday, they did just that).

But, though they physically left the city last summer, the Holidays’ off-court impact in Boston hasn’t waned. In fact, their philanthropic collaboration with Jaylen Brown — which started a year and a half ago — is only growing.

How Jrue Holiday impacted Boston in two years

Holiday only spent two years in Boston, but it’s hard to describe his stint as anything other than a massive success. After earning All-Defensive honors and shooting a career-high 42.9% from three in the Celtics’ title year, he served as a pivotal part of the dominant 2024 championship run, responsible for key steals and defensive stops.

But off the court, his impact in the city extended even deeper than his on-court play, though much of his philanthropic involvement flew under the radar. Just a few months after the successful title run, Jaylen Brown, Jrue Holiday, and Lauren Holiday together launched the Boston Creator Accelerator, an incubator aimed at supporting underrepresented entrepreneurs in the Greater Boston Area.

The Accelerator provided 10 creators with monetary grants totaling $1 million — as well as mentorship, resources, and direct access to Brown and the Holidays.

Year 1 of the partnership was an undeniable success. The Boston Creator Accelerator invested in ten startups, including the: Future Master Chess Academy, a chess academy for underserved communities that focuses on lifelong skills; Little Cocoa Bean Company, a cafe that creates culturally diverse and nutritious food for toddlers and kids; PYNRS, a streetwear-inspired performance running apparel company, and Everybody Gotta Eat, a food culture and catering company, among others.

Brown, who launched Boston XChange last season in hopes of supporting entrepreneurs from underrepresented communities, was thrilled to collaborate with the Holidays.

“Sometimes, you’re asking other guys, they’ve been advised not to be involved because of whatever reason, I don’t know,” Brown said last season. “But Jrue and Lauren Holiday are great people. They’ve been doing this everywhere they go.”

It’s true: The Jrue and Lauren Holiday Foundation has operated in five cities since its launch in 2020: Los Angeles (Jrue’s hometown), Indianapolis (Lauren’s hometown), New Orleans (where Jrue played for seven years), Milwaukee (where Jrue won his first NBA title), and, now, in Boston.

In its first four years, the fund awarded grants of $25,000 to $50,000 to more than 150 Black-owned businesses and charities, while providing mentorship and resources that oftentimes far exceeded the financial support. Since launching, the monetary investment and hands-on support have continued to grow.

Though Jrue Holiday now lives in Portland, he’s investing in yet another Boston Accelerator Fund co-hort

For Lawyer Times, a lifelong chess player and instructor who had doubled as a post office worker for more than 40 years, the financial investment allowed him to retire from his day job and go all-in on the Future Masters Chess Academy. Lawyer’s wife, Angela, credits Brown and the Holidays for their unwavering belief in the vision.

“The Holidays have such a giving spirit,” Angela Times said. “They just want to create community and bring people together.”

Since joining the Boston Creator Accelerator, the Academy’s annual revenue increased from $50,000 to $300,000, said Renee King, who helps lead the Jrue and Lauren Holiday Fund.

“They all attribute it to the training the village that was wrapped around them, with the resources from all of the partners,” King said.

The initial cohort’s success has compelled Brown and the Holidays to bring in an additional cohort for Year 2. With the playoffs around the corner, they’re together investing another $1 million into ten businesses, with applications closing on April 21st.

Urina Harrell, the CEO of Vox Pop Branding, has long worked on the marketing side of the JLH Fund.  

“This is a true partnership between the JLH Fund and the Boston XChange,” she said.

King said that Jrue and Lauren never considered ending their investment in the Boston community just because he was traded.

“Their ethos has always been any city that we are, that we’ve inducted into the JLH, we’re still locked into those cities, regardless of if they’re there to play,” King said. “They’re just used to the fact of like, this is what they were put here for, right? They come in, they touch lives, and then they go; they get pulled to another place, to do the same. We were still going to be locked in on Boston.”

Jrue Holiday and Jaylen Brown have influenced lawmakers on Capitol Hill

The Boston Creator Accelerator could have ramifications that extend far beyond the city; the start-up has also helped inform a new piece of legislation that is pending in Congress, the SPARK Act to Supercharge Minority Entrepreneurship Nationwide. The bill, introduced in February, is meant to spur entrepreneurship and increase access to capital and resources for underserved entrepreneurs nationwide.

“Yes, this is a great pilot. But, the work that’s being done here is being used to shape policy, and we know once we shape policy, then that’s the bigger ripple effect, right?” King said. “Like, we can help more people, because that’s the goal. The goal is to have more people coming together to help more businesses that are creating solutions that all of our entire world needs.”

For now, Boston will continue to benefit from the athletes’ private investment. And, King said it’s been a wonderful city to work in, in large part because of how collaborative the partners that Brown and the Holidays have brought in have been. That list includes

“You have so many folks who are just willing to work together, from government, private institutions, the athletes — it was a very good ethos,” King said. “It was a great place for this pilot to launch, to grow it, because you had so many things within that space that you could pull together. And the energy from everyone, the community around pulling it together was really great.”

Applications close on April 21st, and interested entrepreneurs can apply here.

“We’re looking forward to adding more people to the family,” King said.

The Trail Blazers’ playoff run begins on Sunday against the San Antonio Spurs. As the team’s fourth-leading scorer, Holiday will be a crucial part of the team’s upset chances. Across the country, the Celtics begin their playoff run the very same day.

But Jrue Holiday and the city of Boston will forever be linked — even if the Hall of Fame guard never again dons Celtics green.

“Once you’re in the family, you’re always in the family,” King said. “That’s literally the ethos.”





Raptors vs Cavaliers Same-Game Parlay for Today's NBA Playoffs Game 1

Want to get more Covers content? Add us as a preferred source on your Google account here.

Opening round series can often be duds in the NBA Playoffs. This Round 1 pairing of the Toronto Raptors and Cleveland Cavaliers can be something better.

Game 1 of what should be a very tight series tips off in Cleveland on Saturday, and I’ve got a same-game parlay that draws options from interesting situations and circumstances for both teams.

Here are my best Raptors vs. Cavaliers predictions and NBA picks on April 18.

Our best Raptors vs Cavaliers SGP for Game 1

The Cleveland Cavaliers draw first blood at home against a Toronto Raptors team that has been cursed in the opening contest of the playoff series. The Raptors are 4-12 SU in Game 1 outings since 2014. Cleveland has the inside-out scoring and tightens the bolts on defense when it has to.
 
Not all fans may be familiar with the Cavaliers’ Dean Wade. However, the 6-foot-9 forward plays an important role in how Cleveland will defend Toronto. He’s expected to jump into the starting lineup and log more minutes than his standard 21 per game. 

When Wade gets 25+ minutes of floor time, his rebounding rate soars over five boards per game.

Scottie Barnes will draw plenty of touches for Toronto, especially if point guard Immanuel Quickley is limited (questionable). When he went down in March, Barnes became the Raptors’ primary ball handler, and his assist production spiked.

He’s dished out seven or more dimes in eight of his past dozen outings.

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

MLB Player Props & Best Bets for Today, April 17

Want to get more Covers content? Add us as a preferred source on your Google account here.

It’s a jam-packed 15-game slate across the majors today, and I’ve dug deep to find the top MLB player props. I’ll include CJ Abrams, Andy Pages, and Yordan Alvarez. 

Read more in my MLB picks for Friday, April 17. 

Best MLB player props today

Player PickOdds
Nats CJ Abrams1+ RBI+185
Dodgers Andy Pages1+ runs-110
Astros Yordan Alvarez1+ runs-150

CJ Abrams 1+ RBI (+185)

CJ Abrams is off to a red-hot start this season. He’s hitting .371 in 18 games with six home runs and 19 RBI, which ranks second in the big leagues.

The youngster has collected an RBI in three of his last five contests, and the Washington Nationals will face San Francisco Giants righty Logan Webb tonight. 

Webb has struggled out of the gates, posting a 5.25 ERA so far. While Abrams is just 2-for-14 lifetime against Webb, he’s driven in two runs.

Webb gave up four earned runs last time out, and Abrams is the engine of this Nats offense. Eight of his RBI have come at home as well. 

  • Time: 6:45 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: NBCSBA, Nationals.TV

Andy Pages 1+ runs (-110)

Andy Pages has been one of the biggest surprises of this young season so far. He leads the MLB in batting average, hits, and RBI.

The Cuban-born outfielder has been coming across the plate himself a lot more lately, however, recording a run in two of his last three games. Pages has five hits across his last five appearances as well.

He’s putting himself in a great position to let his teammates do their thing and drive him in. Pages and the Los Angeles Dodgers are at Coors Field tonight taking on the Colorado Rockies. L.A. is hitting .283 with RISP. 

  • Time: 8:40 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: SNLA, Rockies.TV

Yordan Alvarez 1+ runs (-150)

A healthy Yordan Alvarez is simply good for the game. The slugger is a force to be reckoned with offensively, and he’s doing it all right now. He’s hitting .328 with seven homers, 18 RBI, and 16 runs.

Alvarez has come across the plate four times over the last three games. The Cuban also has four hits during that span, and he’s up against Kyle Leahy of the St. Louis Cardinals tonight. Alvarez is 2-for-2 lifetime vs. Leahy with two hits.

The Astros are also batting .264 with RISP. 

  • Time: 8:10 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: Cardinals.TV, SCHN

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

5 Sixers thoughts after their Play-In win

PHILADELPHIA, PA - APRIL 15: Andre Drummond #1 of the Philadelphia 76ers grabs the rebound during the game against the Orlando Magic during the SoFi Play-In Tournament on April 15, 2026 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Sixers have advanced in the NBA’s Play-In Tournament following a home win over the Magic. I wrote about the scenes from the victory down in South Philadelphia already, so I’ll hit you all with a new column to keep that energy flowing…

It was ‘The Andre Drummond Game’

Before their matchup with Orlando, I had wondered who the unsung hero of the game would be for the Sixers if they pulled this one out. I would’ve not guessed Andre Drummond, who, to be frank, infuriated me throughout the season whenever he was on the court. That wasn’t the case at all on Wednesday.

Joel Embiid was sidelined and Adem Bona got the nod as starting center, but Drummond played 31 minutes, totaling 14 points, 10 rebounds, two assists, three blocks and three steals. He stuffed the box score! The 32-year-old Drummond brought a level of physicality that the Sixers desperately needed against an opponent like Orlando. The Sixers don’t win that game without him delivering that level of performance.

The two threes he made during the game that made the Sixers faithful erupt at the arena? Those were the highlights of the evening.

Tyrese Maxey debuted his new signature New Balance sneakers in the win

Maxey, donning the Sixers’ black throwback uniforms on Wednesday, had the perfect sneakers to match with his new New Balances:

My wife would kick me out of the house if I bought another pair of sneakers, but these look like perfect summer footwear for bopping around the city.

Per GQ, the sneakers will release later this year for $130.

Paul George needs to hit another gear, but I’m not sure he still has one

Paul George, who would turn 36 the day of a potential Sixers-Celtics Game 7, was 6-of-16 from the field and 1-of-6 from deep on Wednesday. The Play-In was his 11th game since returning from a 25-game anti-drug policy suspension. He needs to be better than that if the Sixers are to have even a puncher’s chance against Boston, particularly with Embiid’s timeline to getting back unknown as he recovers from surgery for appendicitis.

I always thought the “Playoff P” nickname was a bit of a misnomer for a guy, in the middle of his 16th pro season, who’s never reached the NBA Finals, but if he was ever going to live up that billing in its true form, it needs to be now.

‘We want Boston!’

As the Sixers inched closer to victory over Orlando, “We want Boston!” chants broke out at Xfinity Mobile Arena:

Famous last words? I respect the energy from our fan base even though I’m sure people online will clown us in the event that the Celtics make quick work of the Sixers over the next week-plus.

A Sixers-Celtics prediction…

Celtics in five, sadly. Am I a coward for not at least tricking myself into hoping and dreaming of an unprecedented upset given the talent disparity and the specific opponent? Maybe! I’ll still be rooting like hell either way.

2026 NBA Playoffs Preview: Contenders, pretenders, and a title pick

DENVER, CO - APRIL 4: Nikola Jokic #15 of the Denver Nuggets looks to drive against Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs during the first quarter at Ball Arena on April 4, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The NBA playoffs are finally upon us, and that means one thing: it’s time to place every team in arbitrary tiers made by yours truly. 

First, we need to reiterate one thing. In any given year, only a handful of teams have legitimate shots at the title, as history’s shown that teams need a player good enough to go down as a top-35(ish) all-time great, along with an All-NBA level sidekick. This year, only three squads meet those thresholds: the Thunder, Spurs, and Nuggets. 

However, since all of those juggernauts play in the West, we also need to factor in the path to the title for every team. That’s why the East’s best, Boston, are lumped in as a title contender, while the Wolves are in a tier with some lesser teams. 

As usual, let’s start at the top.

The favorite: Thunder

OKC was going to be the favorite no matter what, and the only question that remained was who they needed to beat to repeat as champs. Well, after the Spurs’ loss to Denver in the final regular season game, the Thunder officially have a Mickey Mouse path to the Conference Finals, as they’ll only need to go through a poor play-in team and either the Burnergate Rockets or a hobbled Luka-led Lakers. 

Given their bye to the semis, I think the title is essentially a coin toss between the Thunder and the entire field. OKC remains the deepest team in the league with arguably the best player too, and they went 64-18 while prioritizing health for 2/3 of the season. All the underlying metrics point to the Thunder being a historically great team, with a +11.9 net rating on the back of a ludicrous 107.3 DRTG, and they could’ve flirted with 70 wins if the regular season was a priority. OKC’s potential flaw is the lack of a second offensive option, as JDub has been injured all year and has not played at the level he did last postseason. I’d bet on the Thunder winning if JDub is at 90% of his usual level, but if that can’t happen, then the title race could be more open than expected. 

Legitimate title contenders: Spurs, Nuggets, Celtics 

The Spurs could’ve had the same Mickey Mouse path to the Conference Finals that the Thunder do had they taken care of business against Denver last week. Instead, they’re now facing a potential gauntlet with the Nuggets on their side of the bracket and OKC waiting in the third round, if they even make it that far. I was seriously contemplating picking San Antonio to win it all had they beaten Denver’s C-team, and they’re still talented enough to do it, but a more realistic scenario is a competitive loss to the Nuggets or Thunder before heading into next year as one of the favorites — similar to OKC in 2024. 

Denver, meanwhile, was my preseason title pick, and their ceiling remains high enough for that to happen. The Nuggets’ 122.5 ORTG is the best ever, and that number exceeds 130 when both Jokic and Murray play. However, their 117.5 DRTG is also 21st in the league, and Peyton Watson is still recovering from a calf strain. Denver’s recipe to the finals is rediscovering their early-season form, especially on defense. The Nuggets were a top 5 defensive team for roughly the first 20 games of the year, and while a lot of that was due to shooting luck, they passed the eye test with flying colors. If they can get back to that level and keep Aaron Gordon healthy, Denver is on par with OKC, but they’ll also need to beat the Spurs first to reach the defending champs.

Boston, meanwhile, isn’t in the same realm as the other teams, but they have a much easier path to the finals. Neither of the Jays are on the level of a Shai, Wemby, or Jokic, and yet, the Celtics’ championship DNA and coaching means that they’ve got a shot at beating any of those teams — especially if the West’s representative is beat up from the wars they’ll wage.

Finals contenders: Knicks, Pistons

Even though Boston is listed in a tier above, I wouldn’t pick them over the entire East field. Both the Knicks and Pistons have the talent to make it to the finals, with the only difference being that neither team seem capable of beating any of the West’s juggernauts. Still, New York and Detroit are two of just six teams with both a top-10 offense and defense, and credit should be given to their respective bigs.

KAT has improved his defense drastically in the last third of the season and shouldn’t be considered a liability if he keeps up his current play. On the other end, Jalen Duren averaged 23/10 when Cade was out with his collapsed lung, giving the Pistons a potential second scoring option good enough to get through the East. 

I still expect Boston to get to the finals, but both the Knicks and Pistons can make things very interesting. 

The fraud: Cavaliers

If you still believe in the Cavs, I really don’t know what to say. They’ve turned into Clippers East and will inevitably flame out as usual. 

Since the Harden trade, Cleveland has the fourth-best offense (121.4) but the 13th-ranked net rating (+4.5) and 18th-ranked defense (116.9). They went 21-9 with an extremely easy schedule and had trouble blowing out tankers due to their defense. If the Cavs don’t get upset by Toronto in the first round, then they’ll be out-toughed by the Pistons in the second. Just look at how their 2023 series against the Knicks went. 

I truly wish Cavs fans the best of luck, but don’t be surprised when Mitchell gets banged up, the team gets outrebounded by 100, and Harden goes 2/11 in another elimination game. 

Upset potential: Timberwolves, Hawks, Raptors, Hornets*

As back-to-back Western Finalists, the Wolves deserve a better fate than this. Unfortunately, their path to the finals includes facing the Nuggets in round 1, and potentially the Spurs and Thunder in rounds 2 and 3. Moreover, this is a team that has a negative net rating since February, and Ant and McDaniels are just returning from injury. I would be shocked if they took Denver to a game 7, let alone win. 

Atlanta has been one of the five best teams for almost two months now, and they will be a difficult test for the Knicks. Yes, they had a cupcake schedule during their winning streak, but the Hawks continued dominating until the end of the season, finishing the year 16-5 with a +12 net rating, good for third in the league during that span. 

The Hornets, meanwhile, still need to beat the “PB no J” Magic, and assuming they do, have a real shot at upsetting Detroit too. This Charlotte team is a 50-win team hiding in plain sight, as they have one of the five best records in the league since the new year (33-16) with the second-best net rating at +11.2 — three points better than Detroit.

Lastly, Toronto’s placement here says as much about the Cavs as it does the Raptors, but they also had a better net rating (+6.0) than Cleveland since the Harden trade, while placing top 10 in both offense and defense during that span. Even if they beat the Cavs, I expect a relatively uncompetitive series against Detroit/Charlotte in round 2. 

Thunder fodder: Lakers, Rockets

Do we even need to elaborate? The Lakers virtually have no shot against Houston with Luka still sidelined, and Houston was the team everyone wanted to play due to their anemic offense and shocking chemistry issues with getoffmy KD. Moreover, the winner will face a rested OKC team that’ll likely sweep their first-round matchup with Shai sitting every fourth quarter. 

There’s always next year, though! I heard a certain Kalshi ambassador might be available. 

Participation medal: Sixers, Blazers, Warriors/Suns*, Magic* 

Truly the circle of sadness, none of these teams have a shot at winning any first-round series. Still, many of them will be worth watching for the entertainment value. I’d love to see some Steph magic (sorry Phoenix) for perhaps the final time in the playoffs, and Portland could give the Spurs some trouble with their physicality and size against Wemby. 

In the East, Philly vs Boston is a classic rivalry, and Embiid hasn’t been ruled out of the series yet. As for Orlando, well, can their season just end already? The Hornets are a much more entertaining team, anyway. 

Finals prediction: Thunder over Celtics in 6

Interestingly, I chose this matchup last season too, and only half of that came true. I’m not as confident this year due to the wildcards in the East, and it hinges heavily on how large a load Tatum can handle. In 16 games, The Plagiarizer averaged 21.8/10/5.3 on 41/33/82 splits, looking like 85% of his usual self. More importantly, Tatum ramped his minutes up to 36.2 over five games in April, scoring over 20 points in every contest. It remains to be seen if he’s able to guard opposing bigs again, but regardless, the Celtics have the best combination of toughness, playoff pedigree, and matchup versatility in the East.

OKC’s path has already been laid out. It’ll be shocking if they dropped more than two games in the opening two rounds, and could meet an extremely banged-up Spurs/Nuggets team coming off a 7-game war. With that said, San Antonio has a unique matchup advantage over the Thunder, and if Denver gets past them, it could be a sign that they’ve regained their early-season form. OKC will be challenged and pushed to the brink, but I’m still confident in their ability to be the first back-to-back champs since the dynastic Warriors.

Raptors vs Cavaliers Prediction, Picks & Best Bets for Today's NBA Playoffs Game 1

Want to get more Covers content? Add us as a preferred source on your Google account here.

Players who may have served a minimal support role during the regular season can suddenly become pillars of NBA Playoffs strategy. It can take our Raptors vs. Cavaliers predictions to strange and unknown places, like Cleveland forward Dean Wade.

My NBA picks like Wade to get after it on the glass in Game 1 on Saturday, April 18. This one tips off at 1:00 p.m. ET on Prime Video.

Raptors vs Cavaliers Game 1 prediction

Who will win Raptors vs Cavaliers Game 1?

Cavaliers: The Cleveland Cavaliers are sizable home favorites for Game 1 on Saturday. Cleveland has great inside-out scoring and finished the season among the better offenses. Defense has been the biggest blemish for the Cavs. That said, the team seems to find another gear on that end of the floor against top-tier offenses and will be able to lock up a limited Toronto Raptors attack.

Raptors vs Cavaliers best bet: Dean Wade Over 3.5 rebounds (-125)

Heading into this Round 1 series, the big question for Cleveland Cavaliers head coach Kenny Atkinson was how he would counter Toronto Raptors small forward Brandon Ingram.

According to what team analysts believe, Atkinson will go with size as his best option, rolling out 6-foot-9 forward Dean Wade alongside Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen. This gives Cleveland a long and interchangeable defense-first lineup, with Wade able to counter Ingram’s perimeter play.

Not only is Wade a great defender, but he’s also counted on to clean the glass. He’s averaged 4.3 rebounds since the All-Star break with 8.6 rebounding chances per contest. He’s collected at least four boards in 15 of his last 24 outings.

Wade averaged around 21 minutes per game but was limited at the end of the year after injuring his ankle. With time to heal and an increased role, his rebound rate will soar on Saturday.

Wade has logged 25 or more minutes in just 24 of his 59 games. But when he draws that floor time, he averages more than five rebounds and has snatched up four or more boards in 18 of those 24 showings.

The rebounding chances will be there, considering the Cavaliers can put this Toronto transition attack in sand and force the Raptors to play a half-court game. Cleveland gives up the sixth-lowest points per play to transition offenses and doesn’t budge for easy looks inside, with the fifth-lowest points in the paint allowed.

Raptors vs Cavaliers Game 1 same-game parlay

The Cavaliers slow down the Raptors' attack and force them into a half-court contest, plugging up the interior with their defensive length. Toronto isn’t a great perimeter team and will struggle to counter the triples from James Harden and Donovan Mitchell.

Scottie Barnes carries the weight for this Toronto team, especially if point guard Immanuel Quickley is limited. He missed time with foot and hamstring ailments, leaving Barnes as the primary ball handler and sparking a surge in his assists. Quickley is questionable, and Barnes will have plenty of touches in Game 1.

Raptors vs Cavaliers SGP

  • Cleveland moneyline
  • Dean Wade Over 3.5 rebounds
  • Scottie Barnes Over 6.5 assists

Our "from downtown" SGP: Deep thoughts

With the Cavs defense pushing Toronto to the perimeter, Ingram is forced to take and make triples to keep pace with Cleveland’s combo of Harden and Mitchell. Both sharpshooters are projected for at least three triples in Game 1.

Raptors vs Cavaliers SGP

  • Cavaliers -8
  • Brandon Ingram Over 1.5 made threes
  • James Harden Over 2.5 made threes
  • Donovan Mitchell Over 2.5 made threes

Raptors vs Cavaliers odds for Game 1

  • Spread: Raptors +8 | Cavaliers -8
  • Moneyline: Raptors +290 | Cavaliers -370
  • Over/Under: Over 221 | Under 221

Raptors vs Cavaliers betting trend to know

The Raptors are 4-12 SU and ATS in Game 1 of a playoff series going back to the 2014 postseason. Find more NBA betting trends for Raptors vs. Cavaliers.

How to watch Raptors vs Cavaliers Game 1

LocationRocket Arena, Cleveland, OH
DateSaturday, April 18, 2026
Tip-off1:00 p.m. ET
TVPrime Video, TSN4

Raptors vs Cavaliers latest injuries

Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

Apex Predators: How the Wolves Defeat Denver and Make Another Post-Season Run

MINNEAPOLIS, MN - MAY 14: Jaden McDaniels #3, Anthony Edwards #5, and Rudy Gobert #27 of the Minnesota Timberwolves look on during the game against the Golden State Warriors during Round 2 Game 5 of the 2025 NBA Playoffs on May 14, 2025 at Target Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Noah Graham/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

After an 82-game grind that at various points felt like a thriller, a slog, a dark comedy, and a group therapy exercise for everyone invested in Minnesota basketball, the Timberwolves have arrived exactly where they finished a year ago: the Western Conference’s sixth seed. On paper, that sounds almost boring. Same slot, same franchise trying to push through the same door for a third straight spring. But anyone who has watched this team closely knows there is nothing copy-and-paste about the situation the Timberwolves are walking into now.

Last year, the sixth seed felt a little like a gift basket. The Wolves drew a Los Angeles Lakers team that was trying to figure itself out, wrestling with new pieces, lacking real depth, and most importantly, vulnerable to the exact kind of physical, frontcourt-heavy pressure Minnesota wanted to apply. This time around, there is no such soft landing. There is no confused opponent trying to assemble the plane while already in the air. Instead, waiting on the other side is Nikola Jokic, the best player on the planet, and a Denver Nuggets team that looks more stable, deeper, and frankly nastier than the version Minnesota regular-season swept a year ago.

This formidable first-round matchup is the fitting punishment for a team that failed to meet the lofty expectations thrust upon them this season. Minnesota flirted with being a top-tier Western Conference team. They briefly put a hand on the three seed. They spent stretches looking like they might finally seize control of their own destiny. And then, like they did far too many times this season, they let go of the rope.

Now, to be fair, the Wolves did not exactly limp into the postseason in disgrace. They had injuries. They had guys rotating in and out. They had Anthony Edwards and Jaden McDaniels miss time. They had all the usual wear and tear that comes when you’ve gone to the Western Conference Finals two years in a row and are trying to keep a veteran-heavy, expectation-heavy team alive through another 82-game marathon. But they also had too many nights where the problem wasn’t health or fatigue or roster construction. The problem was that they just didn’t show up with enough seriousness.

That is the tension hanging over this series.

Because if you are looking for reasons to believe in Minnesota, there are plenty. This team has been to back-to-back Western Conference Finals. It has playoff scar tissue. It has a real star in Edwards. It has size. It has defensive versatility. It has a deeper roster than this franchise has almost ever had. And perhaps most importantly, it has actual lived experience against Denver. They know what Jokić looks like over a seven-game series. They know what the Denver crowd feels like when things start rolling downhill. They know the physical toll, the emotional swings, and the pressure that comes with a series this massive.

They also know they can beat Denver.

That matters.

There are only a handful of teams in the league that can say that with a straight face. Minnesota is one of them. They went toe-to-toe with Denver before. They took them seven and lived to tell the tale. They’ve matched up well historically. Even in a season where the Wolves never quite found the same down-the-stretch cohesion they had a year ago, there remains a real belief that this is not some impossible draw. Difficult? Absolutely. Brutal? Without question. But impossible? No.

Still, belief and reality are not always on speaking terms in April.

The reality is that the Nuggets did not spend the past few months standing still. After taking a step back from their 2023 title peak and bowing out in the semifinal round in consecutive postseasons, Denver responded the way smart, motivated contenders usually do: they got sharper. The front office instability and the Mike Malone firing might have created a little drama, but it also pushed the organization to recalibrate. They brought in Cam Johnson and Jonas Valanciunas. They brought back Bruce Brown. This is not a team waiting to be exposed. This is a team that looks like it spent the year quietly taking notes.

That is why the Wolves cannot treat this like 2024’s sequel.

It is not enough to show up and expect that the old script will still work. This is not a series they can win by playing B-plus basketball and hoping Denver blinks first. Minnesota is going to have to be at or near its best. That phrase gets thrown around too loosely in sports writing, but here it actually applies. If the Wolves are going to move on past the first round for a third straight year, and only the fourth time in franchise history, they are going to need the best possible version of themselves. Not the version that sleepwalks through random regular-season Tuesdays. Not the version that gives away fourth quarters like unwanted coupons. Not the version that thinks it can flip the switch in the final five minutes and survive. The real version. The dangerous version. The one that has spent the last two postseasons convincing everyone this franchise is not just a cute story anymore.

And maybe, if you want to search for a silver lining, there is one.

For all the frustration of the final few weeks, for all the injuries and lineup juggling and weird late-season sputtering, the Wolves should be walking into this series relatively fresh. Edwards, Randle, McDaniels, and Gobert have all effectively been on reduced mileage programs over the past two weeks. They are not entering this series like a team that has been redlining into the finish line. Against Denver, where the series is likely to be a bar fight stretched across two weeks, freshness matters. They need their apex Timberwolves.

That is really what this series comes down to. This team has title aspirations, or at least it has been carrying itself like a team that wants to pretend it does. And title aspirations are not just about surviving the first round. They are about proving that beating Denver is not some one-off act of defiance from two years ago, not some piece of franchise folklore that gets dragged out every April like an old VHS tape. It is about showing that the Wolves can still play with championship pressure on their shoulders and not flinch. It is about getting back to the Western Conference Finals and, for the first time in franchise history, pushing beyond it.

That is the challenge. That is the opportunity. And that is why this series feels so massive.

Because if you strip away the standings drama, the regular-season wobbling, the what-if games they donated over the winter, and the endless debates over seeding, this is where the season was always headed. Toward a real opponent, a real test, and a real answer. Can the Wolves finally take all of that talent, all of that postseason experience, all of that maddeningly inconsistent regular-season potential, and turn it into four wins against the best player in basketball and a team built to maximize him?

And with that in mind, here is what has to happen for the Timberwolves’ core players if Minnesota is going to survive this first-round war and keep the bigger dream alive.


Anthony Edwards: The Series Has to Bend to Him

If the Timberwolves are going to beat Denver, it starts with Anthony Edwards playing like the best player in the series.

That is a huge ask when Nikola Jokic exists. It is also the reality.

Hopefully this week off has done for Ant what it looked like it desperately needed to do, which is get his body right, get his legs back under him, and get him back to looking like the version of himself that can tilt an entire playoff series with force, shot-making, and swagger. But, and this is the key part, it cannot be empty-calorie hero ball.

That is the trap with Ant sometimes, and it is a trap that feels especially tempting in a series like this, where the stakes are high, the opponent is elite, and your star naturally wants to grab the game by the throat. There will absolutely be moments where that is needed. Late clock. Final two minutes. Series swinging in the balance. Of course you want Anthony Edwards taking those shots. He has proven over and over again that he can hit the dagger, that he can rise into a jumper with two defenders draped all over him and somehow make it feel inevitable. Those moments are his. That is part of what makes him special.

But for the other 47 minutes and 30 seconds, this has to be a series where Ant operates within the flow of the offense and uses his gravity like the superpower that it is. Denver is going to load up on him. They are going to try to wall off driving lanes and force him into difficult, high-degree-of-difficulty jumpers. The counter to that is not just to take even harder shots and try to out-alpha the problem. The counter is to weaponize everything, the three ball, the mid-range, and the downhill attacks. But also the playmaking. He needs to be the guy who doesn’t just score 32, but who creates six or seven other baskets because Denver is so terrified of him getting to his spots.

It has been joked about for years now that Anthony Edwards is secretly Michael Jordan’s son. Cute joke. Fun meme. But if there is ever a time to lean fully into the MJ mythology, the killer instinct, the refusal to blink, the sense that the moment belongs to you because you said so, this is it.

The Wolves do not need Ant to impersonate Jordan stylistically. They need him to channel that mentality, that ruthless understanding that great teams do not advance because their best player had a nice statistical series. They advance because their best player imposed his will on everything around him.

That is the bar.


Julius Randle

There may not be a more polarizing player on this roster than Julius Randle, and honestly, that is pretty understandable. When you are the main incoming piece in the trade that shipped out Karl-Anthony Towns, a franchise pillar and beloved player, you are never walking into a neutral room.

The tricky part with Randle is that his game almost invites that emotional volatility. When he is bad, he is loudly bad. The ball sticks. The offense bogs down. He dribbles the air out of the possession, lowers his shoulder into traffic, and suddenly you are staring at a forced miss or a live-ball turnover while everyone else stands around watching. Defensively, he can drift. He can have possessions where he looks fully engaged followed by possessions where he appears to be operating under the assumption that someone else will handle it.

That is the frustrating version. The one that makes you yell at your television and start fantasizing about alternate trade constructions.

But when Julius is right, when he is locked in and forceful and fully engaged, he becomes one of the most valuable players on the team because he gives Minnesota something very few guys on the roster can: self-created offense with real force behind it.

Against Denver, there is real value in having a player who can bully his way into the paint, who can create a decent look out of a broken possession, and who can absorb contact and still finish. The Wolves are going to need that bruising version of Julius. Because this is not a finesse series. This is not a spread-you-out-and-jack-40-threes series. This is a weight-bearing series. A leverage series. A series where size and force have to matter.

Even that is not the full version of what Minnesota needs. Because the best playoff Julius is not just the bully-ball Julius. It is also the facilitator Julius.

It is the version who draws two defenders into the lane, keeps his head up, and sprays the ball out to open shooters instead of forcing some impossible interior contortion act. The Wolves need him reading the floor, finding cutters, kicking out to Ant, Dante, Jaden, and everybody else when the defense loads up. When Randle is doing that, both scoring and orchestrating, the offense takes on a completely different shape.

Minnesota also needs him to be credible from three. When he takes those shots, they need to matter. They need to go in often enough to punish Denver for cheating off him. They need to keep the spacing real. If Randle is bricking wide-open threes and drifting through defensive possessions, this gets ugly. If he is knocking them down efficiently and playing engaged basketball on both ends, this gets a whole lot more manageable.

We have already seen what playoff Julius can look like when everything is aligned. Last year against the Lakers and Warriors, he was a player who didn’t just support the stars but occasionally looked like one himself. That version changed the geometry of the floor.

The Wolves need that guy again.


Rudy Gobert

No player on the Wolves has drawn a more difficult, more essential, or more exhausting first-round assignment than Rudy Gobert.

Rudy is the center of gravity here because Jokic is the center of gravity over there. That is the matchup. That is the series. Everything else branches off from that central problem.

Gobert is the only player on Minnesota’s roster with the size, discipline, and defensive instincts to take the first punch from Jokic and keep getting back up. That does not mean he will stop him. Nobody stops him. Rudy’s purpose is to make every decision harder, every pass a beat slower, every look a little more annoying, every rebound a little more physical.

We saw these two go to war in the 2024 semifinals, and yes, Gobert did not do it alone. He had Karl-Anthony Towns. He had Naz Reid. He had wave after wave of bodies helping wear Jokic down. That will be true again here. This is going to take all three of Minnesota’s bigs, maybe even more if foul trouble becomes a thing. But Rudy is still the center of the strategy.

To do that, Gobert has to be both aggressive and smart. The Wolves cannot afford foul-trouble Rudy. They cannot afford the version that gets baited into cheap whistles or overcommits on a possession and suddenly finds himself on the bench while Jokic takes a breather from the hardest part of his night. Rudy has to pick his spots. He has to stay disciplined.

He also has to dominate the glass.

Denver cannot be allowed to feast on second chances. The Wolves cannot survive a series where they defend for 18 or 20 solid seconds and then let Jokic or Valanciunas or some cutting wing grab the rebound and restart the torture chamber. Gobert has to be there cleaning everything up, ending possessions, denying extra life, and making Minnesota’s defense feel finished rather than unfinished.

Then there is the offensive side, which matters more than people like to admit.

The Wolves need high-efficiency Rudy. They need the version who catches lobs cleanly, who has ready hands in traffic, who puts back misses, who punishes Denver when they rotate too aggressively toward Ant or Randle. Against a team as smart as Denver, wasted easy points become haunting points. Gobert has to make Denver pay when they concede space behind the play.

When Rudy is truly locked in, he is not just a rim deterrent. He is a possession finisher. He keeps the defense anchored and the offense moving. He makes the Wolves feel bigger, meaner, more stable. We saw it in Game 5 against the Lakers last year, when he more or less reached into that series and pulled the Lakers’ soul out through their rib cage. The Wolves need that version of him now more than ever.


Jaden McDaniels

Defensively, McDaniels’ assignment is about as serious as it gets. He’s going to spend long stretches chasing Jamal Murray and trying to disrupt the rhythm of one of the most dangerous playoff guards in basketball. He’ll also have his hands full at times with players like Cam Johnson and Bruce Brown.

But here’s the part that matters just as much: offense.

The Wolves don’t need Corner-Spectator McDaniels. They need the aggressive version, the one who attacks closeouts, gets downhill, and lives in that deadly mid-range/paint area where he’s quietly one of the most efficient players on the roster. When McDaniels is scoring 15–18 points on high-percentage looks, the offense unlocks.

This has to be a two-way series for Jaden. If he brings both ends, the defensive menace and the opportunistic scorer, he becomes the kind of player Denver has to account for on every possession. That’s when things start to tilt.


Donte DiVincenzo

You already know what you’re getting from Donte in terms of effort. That’s not the question. He’s going to dive on the floor, chase loose balls, and generally play like a guy who thinks every possession is a schoolyard brawl. That part is locked in.

What isn’t always locked in, and what will define his impact in this series, is the shooting.

This Wolves team, for better or worse, is still heavily tied to the three-point line. When the shots fall, they look borderline unstoppable. When they don’t, things fall apart…. quickly. Donte sits right in the middle of that equation. He’s one of the purest shooters on the roster, but he’s also prone to the kind of streakiness that can swing a game, or a series, in either direction.

Minnesota doesn’t need him to go nuclear every night, but they do need consistency. If Donte can hit at a high clip, punish rotations, and make Denver pay for helping off him, he becomes the kind of connective piece that keeps the offense humming. If he goes cold for long stretches, it puts even more pressure on Ant and Randle to manufacture everything.


Ayo Dosunmu

The Wolves spent most of the season trying to solve their point guard situation like it was a puzzle missing two or three pieces. Then Tim Connelly swooped in at the deadline and brought in Ayo Dosunmu, giving the team something it had been lacking: juice.

Ayo changes the tempo. He gets the Wolves out of half-court mud and into transition opportunities where things are simpler and cleaner. His ability to speed things up is incredibly valuable.

And then there’s the sneaky part: the shooting. He’s not a volume bomber, but he’s absurdly efficient when he does let it fly. If Ayo is knocking down open threes, he becomes a real problem because now you have to guard him honestly, and once that happens, his driving lanes open up, his playmaking improves, and suddenly he’s dictating possessions instead of just participating in them.

He doesn’t have to be the star of the series. But if he consistently tilts the pace and hits timely shots, he would instantly put his name in the running for the best trade deadline acquisition of the season.


Naz Reid

Naz Reid is the definition of a “what version are we getting tonight?” player, and in a series like this, that unpredictability can either be a problem or a weapon.

At his best, Naz is a nightmare matchup. He stretches the floor. He can score inside and out. He brings energy off the bench that changes the feel of the game. And most importantly, he gives the Wolves a third big body to throw at Jokic, which is absolutely essential over the course of a seven-game series.

At his worst, especially when the shoulder has been bothering him, he can look a step slow, a little out of rhythm, and not quite the same offensive spark.

Minnesota needs the good version. The one who is nailing threes, who’s finishing through contact, and who’s spacing the floor and forcing Denver’s bigs to make decisions.


Bones Hyland

Every playoff series has a moment, or two, or three, where things get weird. Shots aren’t falling. The offense stalls. Nobody can generate anything clean. And that’s when a guy like Bones Hyland becomes incredibly valuable.

He can come in, hit three shots in 90 seconds, and completely flip the energy of a game. He can attack the rim, pull up from deep, and play with the kind of fearless aggression that doesn’t always make sense but sometimes is exactly what you need. He’s not going to be consistent every night. That’s not his role. But if he gives you two or three explosive scoring bursts over the course of this series, that could absolutely swing a game.

In a matchup this tight, one stolen game can change everything.


Mike Conley

Two years ago, Mike Conley was the steady hand guiding this team through one of the most emotional series in franchise history. This time around, his role is going to be much smaller, maybe even sporadic.

That doesn’t mean it’s unimportant.

If Conley sees the floor, it’s because the Wolves need calm. They need organization. They need someone to slow things down and make sure the offense doesn’t spiral into chaos. Even if he doesn’t play much, his presence still matters. Leadership in the playoffs isn’t always about minutes. Sometimes it’s about making sure the guys who are playing don’t lose the plot.


Terrence Shannon Jr.

If there was one guy who used the final week of the regular season to bang on the door and demand attention, it was Terrence Shannon Jr.

Thirty-three against Orlando. Another 20+ against Houston. Suddenly, the flashes we’d been waiting for all season started to look a lot more real. Shannon brings something this team doesn’t have a ton of: straight-line speed, downhill pressure, and a willingness to attack the rim without overthinking it.

Will he have a big role in this series? Maybe not.

But if foul trouble hits, or if the Wolves need a jolt of energy, or if someone simply isn’t bringing it, Shannon has at least put himself in the conversation as a guy who can step in and give you real minutes.


Jaylen Clark

All season long, Jaylen’s role has fluctuated, but what Clark brings is something you can’t really manufacture: instinctive, disruptive, borderline annoying defense. He’s the kind of guy who can come in cold and immediately pick up full court, blow up a dribble handoff, or turn a routine possession into a fast-break in the other direction.

And in a series against a player like Jamal Murray, having a defensive wildcard matters.

Clark may not be part of the primary rotation, but don’t be surprised if there are moments where Murray strings together a few buckets, the Wolves need a different look, and Finch reaches down the bench and says, “Go bother him for a few minutes.” That’s Clark’s lane. He’s not there to score 15. He’s there to disrupt, to inject energy, and to give Minnesota a defensive gear they don’t otherwise have.


Joan Beringer

Every playoff series has that moment where your depth gets tested in a way you didn’t plan for. A couple quick fouls, someone tweaks something mid-game, and suddenly you’re looking down the bench…

That’s where Joan Beringer comes in.

He’s not expected to play meaningful minutes in a perfect-world scenario. But against a team like Denver, where Nikola Jokic has a habit of dragging bigs into foul trouble and physically wearing teams down, having another capable body matters more than you’d think.

Beringer gives you size. He can soak up a few minutes, contest a couple shots, grab a rebound or two, and just… survive a stretch. Think of him as the “break glass in case of emergency” option. You don’t plan around him, but if the moment calls for it, having that extra layer of depth could quietly save you in a game that hangs in the balance.


Chris Finch

Now it’s time for a little Chris Finch discourse.

On one hand, it’s fair to say this team underachieved relative to its talent. You don’t go to back-to-back Western Conference Finals and expect finishing sixth to feel like a clean success. There were too many nights where the effort wasn’t there. Too many games where they played with their food. Too many collapses that turned wins into head-scratching losses.

Some of that is on the players. Some of that is on the coach.

But zoom out for a second. Finch is still, by basically every meaningful measure, the best coach this franchise has ever had. He’s taken them further, more consistently, than anyone before him. That matters.

Now comes the part where he has to level up again.

Playoff coaching is different. It’s about adjustments. It’s about recognizing when things are slipping and calling that timeout before the avalanche hits. It’s about rotations, matchups, counters, and making sure your team doesn’t fall back into the bad habits that haunted them in January and February.

Finch has the pieces. Now he has to put them together in a way that gets the absolute best version of this team onto the floor for as many of these next seven games as possible.


That’s a long list of names. A long list of expectations. And honestly, when you step back and look at it, you can make a pretty strong case that this is the deepest, most versatile roster this franchise has ever rolled into a playoff series with. Top to bottom, in terms of guys who can swing a game on a given night? This might be the one.

And that’s what makes this whole thing so fascinating… and, if we’re being honest, so maddening.

Because we’ve seen it. Over 82 games, we’ve seen the version of this team that looks like a legitimate contender, the one that locks in defensively, moves the ball, hits threes at a respectable clip, and suddenly turns into a serious problem for the team in the opposing jerseys. We’ve also seen the other version. The one that sleepwalks through a Tuesday night, blows a fourth-quarter lead, or spends three possessions in a row dribbling into bad shots like they’re trying to speedrun a collapse.

That’s the push and pull of this entire season. The reason it’s felt like a roller coaster instead of a coronation.

But here’s the thing: none of that matters anymore.

This is the part of the season where reputations get made or rewritten. Where you either prove what you are… or you don’t.

There are no more dress rehearsals. No more “we’ll figure it out.” No more blaming the schedule, or injuries, or chemistry, or whatever excuse you want to reach for. This is it. This is the moment this team has been building toward since they walked off the floor in Oklahoma City last May.

The opponent isn’t exactly a soft landing.

Denver brings the best player on the planet, a team with championship pedigree, and a roster that’s been sharpened specifically for this kind of fight. There’s no easing into this postseason. It’s straight into the deep end.

But here’s the flip side, and it’s the part that should give Wolves fans just enough irrational confidence to talk themselves into this thing: Minnesota knows this team. They’ve been here before. They’ve stood toe-to-toe with this group and survived. They’ve proven that they can beat this opponent in a playoff setting.

So now it comes down to something simple, even if it’s not easy: Can they be the best version of themselves, four times in seven games? Can they string together the defensive intensity, the offensive flow, the composure, the shot-making, all the things we’ve seen in flashes, and actually sustain it when it matters most?

They have to lean into what they are at their peak. They have to become what they’ve teased all season long.

Apex predators.

Not the team that shows up for three quarters. Not the team that waits for someone else to close. Not the team that plays with its food.

The one that hunts. The one that finishes. The one that leaves no doubt.

Because the potential is there. We’ve all seen it.

Now it’s time to prove it.