Week in Review: Spurs find offensive stride in undefeated week

SAN ANTONIO, TX -FEBRUARY 7: Stephon Castle #5 of the San Antonio Spurs surrounded by teammates after he lead his team against the Dallas Mavericks at Frost Bank Center on February 7, 2026 in San Antonio, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Ronald Cortes/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Welcome to Week in Review: a Monday feature that looks back at the week that was for the San Antonio Spurs, takes a look at the week ahead, and more. Enjoy!


Week 15: The Spurs got revenge from the week prior by returning to Houston and beating the Rockets the exact way they had been beaten: by flipping the switch in the second half and turning a double-digit deficit into a blowout win. They then went to Charlotte, enduring a time change to a noon tipoff in an attempt to beat the winter storm out before falling in a close game to the rapidly rising Hornets. Finally, after getting stranded there overnight, they had perhaps their most admirable victory of the season, overcoming two more tipoff time changes after having to change planes in Atlanta to beat the Orlando Magic at home.

Week 16: 3-0 (36-16, 2nd in West)

116-106 win vs. Oklahoma City Thunder

With Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams out with injury, the Thunder chose to also sit their next top four rotation players on the second night of a back-to-back, resulting in the ultimate trap game for the Spurs (just ask the 2012-13 Miami Heat). While the Spurs were guilty of being a bit complacent and never truly putting a depleted Thunder team away, they kept them at arm’s length most of the time before making a timely run to close the game and leave no doubt. With the season series already secured for the Spurs and the Thunder struggling of late, there could now be a legitimate race for the top seed in the West. Stay tuned…

135-123 win at Dallas Mavericks

Facing another shorthanded team (in this case, the Mavs were waiting for newly acquired trade pieces to become available), it was a tight game thanks to a sensational showing from top overall pick Cooper Flagg and plenty of help from players like Naji Marshall and Max Christie. Similar to the Thunder game, the Spurs failed to ever truly put them away but kept them at arm’s length most of the time, riding a big first half from Victor Wembanyama and full team effort in the fourth quarter for their third straight win.

138-125 win vs. Dallas Mavericks

With the Mavs’ main rotation now available, the second game of the miniseries again started tight, but the Spurs went on a game-changing run to close the first half before turning the game into a blowout by the fourth quarter, and it wasn’t nearly as close as the final score indicated. This time, Flagg was held in check, and the Spurs rode a historical 40-point, 12-rebound, 12-assist triple-double from Stephon Castle to victory. (It’s amazing how two consecutive games against the same team with only a one-point difference in the outcome can feel so different.)


Power Rankings

John Schuhmann, NBA.com — 2 (last week: 3)

OffRtg: 116.5 (10) DefRtg: 111.1 (3) NetRtg: +5.4 (5) Pace: 100.8 (14)

The Spurs matched their win total from last season with a wire-to-wire victory over the shorthanded Thunder on Wednesday, finishing 4-1 against the champs. Then they swept a home-and-home set with the Mavs to climb within three games in the loss column of Oklahoma City.

Three takeaways

1. The Spurs have outscored their opponents by 16.8 points per 100 possessions with Champagnie and Victor Wembanyama on the floor together, the third-best non-Thunder two-man mark among combinations that have played at least 500 total minutes. So, even with Devin Vassell back in the starting lineup for the last five games, Champagnie has remained there. Harrison Barnes has come off the bench in three of the last five, and Stephon Castle was a reserve for the first time this season in Dallas on Thursday.
2. Castle was back in the starting lineup and had the best game of his career two nights later, recording a 40-point triple-double as the Spurs blew out the Mavs. Castle is still shooting 28.9% from 3-point range, but he’s seen jumps from his rookie season in field goal percentage in the paint, the percentage of his shots that have come in the paint and free throw rate. He’s also seen the fifth biggest jump in assists per 36 minutes (from 5.5 to 8.2) among 310 players who’ve played at least 300 minutes in each of the last two seasons.
3. The Spurs have outscored their opponents by 76 points in the restricted area over their four-game winning streak, and now rank fourth in restricted-area differential (plus-6.0 per game) for the season.

Coming up: The Spurs are 0-2 against the Warriors, having lost the two games (both at home) by a total of six points. They’ll be at a rest disadvantage when they close out their pre-break schedule at Golden State on Wednesday.

Law Murray, The Athletic — 3 (last week: 3)

Roster reset: PF Harrison Barnes

The Spurs are trying to be like the New England Patriots. That is, a team that dominated most of the 21st century and hit a rough patch in the 2020s but is back right before our eyes. The Spurs did absolutely nothing to their 15-man standard contract roster, and that’s been the case since the regular season began. San Antonio has started bringing Barnes off the bench, his first games as a reserve since leaving Golden State a decade ago. The Spurs didn’t need a move, though. Stephon Castle just had a 40-point triple-double, and the Spurs have beaten the Thunder four times this season. They even avoided a post-Thunder letdown this time.

Brett Siegel, Clutch Points — 1 (last week: 3)

With the Thunder struggling and losing for the fourth time this season to them, the San Antonio Spurs have jumped back into the pole position in the NBA power rankings. Between their physicality on defense and steady play on offense, the Spurs have cemented themselves as true title contenders in the Western Conference.

As good as Victor Wembanyama is, especially when he steals the show with his dazzling dunks or monstrous blocks, Stephon Castle has been the biggest difference for the Spurs this season. Recently, the second-year guard recorded a 40-12-12 game, becoming the youngest player to produce such a game in NBA history.*

(* Note: To be clear, Castle was the youngest player to record specifically a 40-12-12 triple-double, but not the youngest to record a 40-point triple-double. Both LeBron James and Luka Doncic had 40-10-10 games at younger ages. Just throwing that at there since there has been a lot of confusion when this is not specified. Castle is also only the second Spur to have a 40-point triple-double along with David Robinson, and he’s only the second player to have one while shooting over 75% from the field. The other was Wilt Chamberlain. Insane company regardless of any semantics.)


Coming up: Tues. 2/10 at Los Angeles Lakers (32-19); Wed. 2/11 at Golden State Warriors; All-Star Weekend

Prediction: 2-0 — The Spurs have me believing again. They kick off their annual Rodeo Road Trip against a Lakers team whom they’ve owned in their last two matchups. (Side note: this is a scheduling fluke game, with the Cup Quarterfinals making this their third game in LA this season.) Then, even though they’ll be at a rest disadvantage the next night, the Warriors are depleted with no Jimmy Butler, and Steph Curry has missed their last four games. (Also, the Spurs two losses to them early in the season feel more and more like a fluke. Curry went vintage and combined for 95 points in those two games, and both teams have gone in drastically different directions since then.)

Cavs Roundtable: First impressions of the James Harden Era

Feb 7, 2026; Sacramento, California, USA; Cleveland Cavaliers guard James Harden (1) walks onto the court before the game against the Sacramento Kings at Golden 1 Center. Mandatory Credit: Dennis Lee-Imagn Images | Dennis Lee-Imagn Images

The Fear the Sword staff has had some time to digest the James Harden for Darius Garland trade, as well as see what Harden looks like in wine and gold. That makes it a perfect time to answer five questions about the trade and what it means for the Cleveland Cavaliers this season.

What are your first impressions of Harden as a Cavalier?

Mike Anguilano: Adding one of the best pick-and-roll passers ever will immediately make Jarrett Allen and Evan Mobley (less so, but still) even more valuable on offense. Harden’s clutch shot-making was on full display against the Sacramento Kings, but the fact that he was so open because defenses had to scramble after Donovan Mitchell is even more encouraging. That is a true pick-your-poison backcourt pairing in a way that Darius Garland was not quite at the level of.

Corey Walsh: Harden on the Cavaliers is something I do not think I will ever be able to comprehend. Against the Kings, it felt like one could see Harden’s mindset and comfort level increase as the game went along. In the first quarter, he avoided stepping on toes, opting to facilitate. By the end of the game, he was comfortable shooting from his spots. It’ll be fascinating to see the role evolve in the final games of the regular season.

Jackson Flickinger: The gravity that Harden has as an offensive player is more than I anticipated. It’s incredible to see someone command so much attention from a defense while also sharing the floor with Mitchell. This is the most offensively skilled backcourt in franchise history.

What are you most excited about with the Harden addition?

MA: It was a shock to see the Cavs have to throw in a pick for the Clippers to take Garland, but that is how it sometimes goes with injured, expensive players. The addition of Harden immediately puts the Cavs into even more of a win-now territory, but this doesn’t feel as much of a risk compared to some other “all-in” type moves. Harden and Mitchell is a lethal backcourt pairing in a way that Garland was not able to fully level up to. Or at least not consistently enough.

CW: His ability to get the bigs, specifically Jarrett Allen, involved after what has been a disappointing campaign, is intriguing. It was apparent from the get-go that Harden’s passing was going to add another layer to the Cavaliers’ offensive play, something that Mitchell at the point guard was never going to bring.

JF: I’m interested to see how the chemistry grows between Mitchell and Harden. It’s clear after one game that they can be the most dynamic backcourt in the league. How does that develop? Can they become better than the sum of their parts?

This offense will still be good if they just reverted to playing, your turn, my turn basketball. If they truly bought into playing off each other, this could be really special.

What will you miss most about Darius Garland?

MA: Garland was the first player I truly got to interview and ask questions to. During All-Star Weekend in Cleveland, back in 2022, he was donating band uniforms to a local high school with a high percentage of disadvantaged students. I asked Darius about being named an All-Star for the first time, what it means to him, and his growth as a player, and what his favorite local restaurants are that he would be recommending to the other All-Stars. He was great to talk to, very genuine, and had some great answers. In addition to his status as a young, All-Star caliber player, I’ll miss the Cavs losing an all-around good person.

CW: Truthfully, Garland was the emotional core of the Cavaliers since roughly 2021. To lose Darius removes a lot of the culture the Cavaliers have cultivated over the years. While that hasn’t translated into playoff success, this team oozed vibes. I feel like they are shifting from one that seemed like a family to a team that feels more corporate.

JF: Just watching the infectious joy Garland plays with. There was something so satisfying about watching the way he would pick apart a defense, and then skip down the court like he was playing pick up with his friends.

On top of that, his style of play was incredibly entertaining. The way Garland would probe the defense, keep his dribble alive, and find passing angles that you didn’t even know were there was so much fun to watch.

What is your biggest concern about the trade?

MA: Another fade out in the playoffs is the biggest fear, and it’s not close. The narrative around Harden and his inability to perform consistently in the playoffs aligns eerily close to the Cavs’ story. The fit on the court between him and Mitchell is not nearly as concerning as I think there is enough time to figure it out. Harden has played with other high-usage players and things have worked out fine…in the regular season.

CW: Outside of postseason success, which I believe is the most obvious and discussed flaw. I think about how this team handles the on and off-floor chemistry between Harden and Mitchell.

Harden’s currently expressed willingness to be the second banana in Cleveland and seems willing to go with the flow. What happens when the Cavaliers begin to flounder, or if they exit in the second round again? How will Harden’s stance about the team warp? He has a track record of not handling middling results well.

JF: The perimeter defense is a problem. While Garland wasn’t a defensive specialist, he could stay in front of his man better than Harden. That has me worried in a playoff series against a team like the Boston Celtics that can space the floor and attack you off-the-dribble with playmakers at every position.

Which Eastern Conference team is the biggest threat to the Cavs?

MA: The New York Knicks, but it is close. Boston is not fully healthy, which limits their offense. The Detroit Pistons make a very strong case, but they have some holes that could become chasms in the playoffs if exposed properly. But the Knicks are a more cohesive unit, boast one of the league’s best offenses behind Jalen Brunson, and have enough on the defensive side to string stops together.

CW: Barring a Tatum return for Boston, it has to be the Knicks, right? The Knicks have the same makeup of a team that can turn on the physical dial, and adding Harden doesn’t change the calculus. As long as players like Mitchell Robinson, Josh Hart, and Brunson are on this roster, they will have the Cavaliers’ number until something changes.

JF: The Celtics, even without Tatum, are a problem. They have the talent and versatile playmakers to hurt the Cavs in a lot of the ways the Indiana Pacers did last season. Even though this is a very different Cavs team, this group still has a lot of the same strengths and weaknesses.

40 in 40: Let Eduard Bazardo rest

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - JULY 18: Eduard Bazardo #83 of the Seattle Mariners looks to catch a ball on his way to tag first base for the final out of the game against the Houston Astros at T-Mobile Park on July 18, 2025 in Seattle, Washington. The Seattle Mariners won 6-1. (Photo by Alika Jenner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

There’s one pitch that sums up Eduard Bazardo’s 2025 season. I don’t need to beat around the bush, we all know it. Let’s just roll the clip and get it over with:

Bleh. Thank goodness that’s over with, no more MLB Network re-runs needed.

On July 12th, in the bottom of the 8th inning, against the then-AL-best Detroit Tigers, the Mariners felt antsy, even with their 11-5 lead. They’d won the night before in a 12-3 romp, sending reigning and future Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal running with four earned runs in five frames, albeit just a 4-3 lead headed into the sixth inning. In that July 11th game, Seattle turned to Bazardo, who deftly glided through two shutout, hitless frames, watching the M’s swell their lead by a trickle, then later a flood after he’d retired to the dugout for good.

Not expected to be a mainstay, active injuries to Gregory Santos, Collin Snider, and Bryce Miller, as well as the early absences of other rotation and bullpen options had forced Bazardo to the fore. There he’d shone, and would continue to all season long, running a 2.52 ERA somewhat belied by his 3.64/4.12 FIP/DRA, but hey, that’s a strong 4th reliever or a dynamite 5th one. But for Bazardo to get that opportunity, he had to pitch a lot. Unheralded as a trade acquisition from the Baltimore Orioles back in 2023, and originally signed for just $8,000 out of Venezuela by the Red Sox in 2021, his ascension from mop-up to to leverage arm was well-chronicled by Kate just before this pre-All-Star break series in Detroit.

But Bazardo never fully was solidified in any one particular role, even as necessity and his performance merited heightening responsibility. While Santos, Snider, Troy Taylor, Jackson Kowar, Casey Legumina, Trent Thornton, Carlos Vargas, and others struggled, Bazardo maintained his composure. In so doing, he was used heavily. Bazardo had the 8th-highest innings total on zero days rest in MLB, with 18.1 frames in 18 games of back-to-backs. All but two of the names ahead of him were their club’s closer, and Bazardo is the only one in the top-16 to have thrown more innings than games he appeared in on no rest. Those two were RHP Tony Santillan of the Reds, who is 6’3, 285, and more easily fits the “workhorse” archetype, and RHP Tyler Rogers of the Giants and Mets, who is a submariner which typically requires less strain on the body for those who can master it.

Bazardo is sturdy for his size, but is more Fjord than Percheron (thank you LL equine consultant Isabelle Minasian), and his 78.2 innings in 73 regular season frames were the sixth-most of any reliever in 2025. Tack on the 11.2 innings in nine playoff games and Bazardo was the most used reliever in baseball in 2025, with 90.1 innings on the hill. He was able to find so much success and merit his usage thanks to a series of tweaks highlighted by Mikey Ajeto early in October, but Seattle simply needed innings all the time. It led to an interesting cadence from Bazardo, exemplified from July 3rd thru August 7th, wherein he pitched 14 times and, aided by the All-Star Break, received three or more consecutive days off four different times, but pitched back-to-back seven times in that stretch.

Let’s come back to the pitch at this piece’s outset. It’s likely the worst offering Bazardo throws all year, a heart-shot four-seamer in a 1-2 count, pitching on the heels of a two-inning appearance the night before, with a six-run lead against Detroit. The situation is not dissimilar from the at-bat highlighted by Mikey in his piece, but Bazardo is not yet fully actualized. It’s not too different from a few situations of memorable note, in fact, where Bazardo was called upon following a heavy workload the night before, and left a fastball over the plate’s heart.

A different bullpen has two different men for its bridge inning mop-up and high leverage, but Bazardo wore both hats, particularly as Carlos Vargas floundered beyond trustworthiness. The Venezuelan outperformed expectations right until the last, aided by a .228 BABIP against, but earning a certain role moving ahead. There is standing on your head, and then there is coming in for a shutdown in extra innings with two on and no out, escaping, and working ANOTHER inning and a half scoreless.

Just… let this man get a little more rest this year.

OF Rayner Arias voted the No. 38 prospect in the system

Willie McCovey stretching to make a catch at first base.
September 10, 1972 San Francisco, CA - Willie McCovey takes Cesar Geronimo of the Cincinnati Reds at first base. Second baseman Tito Fuentes at right. (Kenneth Green / Oakland Tribune Staff Archives) (Photo by MediaNews Group/Oakland Tribune via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images

It’s the eve of Spring Training for the San Francisco Giants! If you’re sad that this is the first day without football, you can rejoice that it’s the last day without baseball!

There will be a little overlap between Spring Training and our Community Prospect List, which will see us rank the top 44 prospects in the organization. But there won’t be much overlap, because we’re somehow already almost done!

The next name on the list is someone who is facing a critical season ahead of him: it’s outfielder Rayner Arias, who has been voted as the No. 38 prospect in the system. It’s a drop of a whopping 34 spots for the right-handed hitting and fielding Arias, who was voted the No. 4 prospect in last year’s CPL.

Arias still has a few more months of teenage life, yet it’s already been quite a roller-coaster of a career for him. He was signed in 2023 out of the Dominican Republic, and immediately made an impression as one of the most dynamic players in the system. He played 16 games in the Dominican Summer League after signing, and the numbers are almost comical: he hit 24-58 with 12 extra-base hits, 15 walks, and just 11 strikeouts. It made for a not-a-typo slashline of .414/.539/.793, with a 1.333 OPS and a 233 wRC+. And it’s not like he was old for the level, or a slugging pillar of salt first baseman: he had just turned 17, was playing a delightful center field, and added four stolen bases.

The only downside with his magical debut was that it was cut short, when he injured his wrist diving for a fly ball.

That injury seemed to prove costly. He showed up at Papago for his stateside debut in 2024, and it went quite poorly. He hit just .250/.371/.364 for a .735 OPS and a 98 wRC+ for the organization’s Arizona Complex League. The bat speed and power thump had almost entirely evaporated, as his average was modest despite a high BABIP, and his isolated slugging plummeted from .379 to .114, without a single home run. His strikeout rate rose from 14.5% to 25.7%, he stole just three bases (while being caught three times), and his defense looked considerably worse. And just to really make matters worse, he was limited to just 25 games, after re-injuring his wrist, again while diving for a fly ball.

While it was a bad 2024, the glass half full view was that he wasn’t fully healthy, and his results would flourish when he could get on a field with good health. Unfortunately, that half-full glass was spilled in 2025, when Arias remained healthy all year. He returned to the Arizona Complex League, and in 47 games hit just .242/.333/.366 with three home runs, resulting in just a .699 OPS and an 87 wRC+, while virtually repeating his strikeout rate (25.8%). He did make his Low-A San Jose debut, but not on merit — it was more to get reps while he was suspended from the ACL for a scuffle, and to help with roster logistics as the Baby Giants dealt with a string of outfield injuries. In seven games with San Jose, Arias did nothing to prove that his struggles in the ACL were an aberration: he hit just 1-for-25 with nine strikeouts.

And so Arias enters a highly critical 2026. It’s hard to believe the player who was not just putting up absurd numbers, but wowing scouts with his athleticism, power, contact ability, and feel for the game just up and vanished overnight. But after looking like a five-tool star, we’re now two years into Arias looking like a zero-tool player whose opportunities are on the verge of running dry. The optimistic view is that, while Arias was healthy in 2025, his injured wrist was still impacting his game, either through lingering pain, a lack of confidence, or some compensations that his body had made.

To my eye, Arias feels like one of the most must-watch prospects in the system this year, because it feels like his potential outcomes are so extreme. Could I see him struggling once again, and no longer being a prospect of note at all in a year? Yes. Could I see him recovering, putting all those tools on display, and jumping back into the top-10 next year? Also yes. Can I see something in the middle? Not really, though that’s usually the most likely outcome. In a way, he’s the (much younger) Reggie Crawford of the position players: you can’t trust him to be healthy and good, but if he is, then he’s probably going to be really good.

Now let’s add to the list, and we’ve got some new names to vote on today! As a reminder, voting takes place in the comment section using the “rec” feature.

The list so far

  1. Bryce Eldridge — 1B
  2. Josuar González — SS
  3. Jhonny Level — SS
  4. Bo Davidson — CF
  5. Dakota Jordan — CF
  6. Luis Hernández — SS
  7. Gavin Kilen — SS
  8. Carson Whisenhunt — LHP
  9. Blade Tidwell — RHP
  10. Keyner Martinez — RHP
  11. Jacob Bresnahan — LHP
  12. Trevor McDonald — RHP
  13. Argenis Cayama — RHP
  14. Luis De La Torre — LHP
  15. Trevor Cohen — OF
  16. Jesús Rodríguez — C
  17. Parks Harber — OF/3B
  18. Carlos Gutierrez — OF
  19. Drew Cavanaugh — C
  20. Daniel Susac — C
  21. Gerelmi Maldonado — RHP
  22. Josh Bostick — RHP
  23. Lorenzo Meola — SS/2B
  24. Will Bednar — RHP
  25. Yunior Marte — RHP
  26. Joe Whitman — LHP
  27. Joel Peguero — RHP
  28. Alberto Laroche — RHP
  29. Trent Harris — RHP
  30. Carlos De La Rosa — LHP
  31. Diego Velasquez — 2B
  32. Lisbel Diaz — OF
  33. Maui Ahuna — SS
  34. Cam Maldonado — OF
  35. Victor Bericoto — OF/1B
  36. Reid Worley — RHP
  37. Jack Choate — LHP
  38. Rayner Arias — OF

Note: Clicking on the above names will link to the CPL where they were voted onto the list.

No. 39 prospect nominees

Sabin Ceballos — 23.5-year old 3B — .670 OPS/102 wRC+ in AA (420 PA)

Jakob Christian — 23.4-year old OF/1B — .950 OPS/155 wRC+ in High-A (92 PA); .815 OPS/119 wRC+ in Low-A (318 PA)

Reggie Crawford — 25.2-year old LHP — did not pitch in 2025; 1.04 ERA/4.07 FIP in AAA in 2024 (8.2 IP); 4.66 ERA/4.93 FIP in AA in 2024 (9.2 IP)

NateFurman — 24.6-year old 2B — .970 OPS/188 wRC+ in AA (39 PA); 1.139 OPS/211 wRC+ in High-A (96 PA); 1.283 OPS/237 wRC+ in Low-A (15 PA)

JuanSánchez — 25.2-year old LHP — did not pitch in 2025; 3.93 ERA/5.17 FIP in AAA in 2024 (34.1 IP)

CharlieSzykowny — 25.7-year old 3B/1B — .816 OPS/122 wRC+ in High-A (549 PA)

JancelVillarroel — 21.0-year old C — .699 OPS/91 wRC+ in High-A (61 PA); .746 OPS/123 wRC+ in Low-A (372 PA)

Note: Each player’s first name links to their Baseball-Reference page, and their last name links to their Fangraphs page. All stats are from the 2025 season.

On This Day in Flyers History: Philly Gets a Hockey Team

On February 9, 1966, the NHL did something it had resisted for a generation: it admitted the world was changing, and that hockey needed to change with it.

After 24 seasons as a closed, six-team club, the league announced it would double in size for the 1967–68 season. Six new franchises were coming to a more expanded geographical audience. The playing field (or, rather, rink) would have a little more competition. And, most importantly, of course, Philadelphia would have a hockey team again.


A City That Never Quite Let Hockey Go

Philadelphia hadn’t had an NHL team since the Depression-era Quakers folded after one miserable season in 1931. But hockey never fully left the city’s bloodstream. Minor-league teams survived and rinks stayed busy. Fans kept watching, even if the highest level of the sport felt like something happening elsewhere.

By the mid-1960s, though, Philadelphia was different. Bigger. Louder. Growing into a full-fledged major-league sports city. The Spectrum was rising in South Philadelphia—a bold, modern arena designed not just for hockey, but for spectacle.

To the NHL, all of that mattered. Television, geography, and markets that could sell tickets and draw viewers mattered most of all.

The league was also looking over its shoulder. The Western Hockey League was making noise about becoming a major league. American TV networks wanted more teams, more cities, more games. The NHL had two choices: expand or risk being boxed in by its own conservatism.

So on this February day all those decades ago, the league named its six new homes: Los Angeles, Minneapolis–St. Paul, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, San Francisco, and St. Louis.

And thus, the “Second Six” were born.


Why Philadelphia Was a Lock

Philadelphia was a bet the NHL felt comfortable making. This was a city that lived and breathed sports, one that had already embraced the Eagles, Phillies and most recently the 76ers. Add a state-of-the-art arena and a population hungry for relevance, and the Flyers made sense before they even had a name.

Ownership mattered, too. Ed Snider, the driving force behind the franchise, wasn’t interested in polite hockey or slow burns. He wanted a team that would matter immediately, and that mindset would define the Flyers long before they played their first game.

When the name “Flyers” was chosen, courtesy of Snider's sister Phyllis, it was modern, fast, and unapologetically forward-looking. Even the color choice—orange and black—was a departure from the league’s muted traditions. This wasn’t an Old World franchise. It was something unabashedly and unapologetically new. In every sense, the league was put on notice.


The Bullies Are Born

When the Flyers entered the league in 1967–68, there were no illusions about how difficult it would be. Expansion drafts were thin by design. The Original Six teams certainly weren’t giving away stars. The early Flyers were pieced together from overlooked players, role guys, and hopeful bets.

But that was the point. The Flyers established their "Broad Street Bullies" reputation from the jump, leaving no room for questions about who they intended to be. From the get go—to put it kindly—no one liked them, and they did not care.

Within a decade, the Flyers would become one of the league’s defining franchises—polarizing, feared, impossible to ignore. (e.g., becoming the first expansion team to win a Stanley Cup in the 1973-74 season, winning it again in 1974-1975, temporarily running the Soviet Red Army team off the ice in 1976 before beating them 4-1 during the height of Soviet hockey dominance, etc.) 

But on February 9, 1966, none of that was guaranteed. All that existed was a league trying to stay relevant, a city ready for a team, and the belief that hockey could belong in places it hadn’t before.

Underdog role nearly suited Clayton Kershaw & Dodgers in 2016

Oct 16, 2016; Chicago, IL, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Clayton Kershaw (22) reacts after Los Angeles Dodgers catcher Yasmani Grandal (not pictured) committed an error during the seventh inning against the Chicago Cubs in game two of the 2016 NLCS playoff baseball series at Wrigley Field. Mandatory Credit: Jon Durr-Imagn Images

The Dodgers have grown in strength gradually since the early days of Dave Roberts in charge — before becoming this current powerhouse, essentially the favorite against whichever National League opponent came their way in the postseason — the Dodgers played the role of spoilers against the team of destiny, and for a little bit, in great part due to Clayton Kershaw’s magnificent work, they looked set to fulfill that task.

Back in 2016, the Chicago Cubs were a moderate version of what the Dodgers should be: this absolute juggernaut filled with talent and a well-oiled machine ready to compete not only in that but across multiple seasons. This in itself created quite the challenge, but further increasing scrutiny and public interest in this team, the Cubs carried the best odds this organization had to break a curse that dated back to 1908, a type of storyline that transcended baseball itself.

After a heroic effort against the Washington Nationals, one that saw Kershaw pitch in three of the five games of the series, including earning a save on one day of rest to close out Game 5, finally getting his revenge on Daniel Murphy, the Dodgers found themselves as the only things standing in the way of a World Series ticket to the Cubs.

Because of his NLDS efforts, Kershaw wasn’t available to go in Game 1 of the NLCS, and unlike in previous campaigns, that 2016 team didn’t have a 1B in Zack Greinke to take the hill. A valiant effort by Kenta Maeda and the bullpen was for naught as Joe Blanton allowed a tie-breaking grand slam to Miguel Montero, and with their backs against the wall, the Dodgers relied on their ace in Game 2 at Wrigley Field.

Facing a lineup that had led baseball with a team 115 wRC+ against southpaws, a mark even more impressive accounting for the fact it came before pitchers stopped hitting, Kershaw had his work cut out for him, facing the likes of Kris Bryant, Anthony Rizzo, Ben Zobrist, and company. Further increasing the need for a strong outing from Kershaw, the Dodgers had just overworked two of their more trusted relievers in Pedro Báez and Blanton.

Pitching his first NLCS matchup since that forgetful evening in St. Louis back in 2013, Kershaw looked every bit his most dominant self. Commonly, we hear about the freedom of pitching with a lead, particularly a large one, as it allows a pitcher to more freely attack the zone and take the game to the opposing hitters. This was anything but that.

While Kershaw did pitch the majority of the game with the advantage, he did so in the most stressful of circumstances, as an Adrian González solo shot in the second was the only scoring this game saw. Facing the best team in the big leagues, on the road, Kershaw shut it all down in an incredibly efficient manner, needing just 84 pitches to complete seven scoreless frames before turning it over to Kenley Jansen for a two-inning save.

One of the purposes of this series is to highlight how things could’ve easily been different for Kershaw with a few breaks here and there; on the flip side, even in the most dominant of performances, one can point to a couple of potential turning point moments. After not allowing a baserunner through the first four innings, Kershaw ran into some problems in the fifth, but the right man at the right time helped him get out of it.

With two on and two out after back-to-back singles from Javier Báez and Willson Contreras, manager Joe Maddon had the wrong man up to do the damage against Kershaw. The Cubs’ biggest offseason signing ahead of that season, Jason Heyward, had been absolutely atrocious with the bat in 2016, and even worse against the lefties—although he tried his best to make up for it with elite defensive work. Thanks to his outstanding defensive talents, the fifth inning was early enough even in a one-run game for Maddon not to pinch-hit a Jorge Soler or some other right-handed batter for Heyward, and Kershaw retired him without any problem, dropping his arm angle on a fastball, something the left-hander really got into doing once in a while during that period.

A couple of innings later, the big threat came around as the first two reached, and a run of three right-handed hitters was due up, following an error that gave Chicago first and second. Kershaw struck out Ben Zobrist and retired Addison Russell. The only thing standing in the way of six scoreless innings was Javier Báez.

With a 1-0 count, Kershaw threw Báez a fastball up in the zone, one that he was ready for, connecting pretty well straight to center, but it had just enough air on it for it to be caught by Joc Pederson in center.

That was the last pitch Kershaw threw, one that, in different circumstances completely beyond the control of the pitcher or batter, might’ve had another outcome.

This series, ultimately, isn’t one looked back on fondly by Dodger fans, as the team collapsed after taking a 2-1 lead, including a completely different Kershaw outing in Wrigley in Game 6. Still, that one particular game is one of my favorites for all that it represented: a time the Dodgers succeeded, even if briefly, without the weight of expectations currently associated with this team.

You did not see this every day.

Are the Royals actually trying to contend or are they just pretending?

KANSAS CITY - MARCH 26: An empty Kauffman Stadium, home of the Kansas City Royals, is shown on what would have been Major League Baseball's Opening Day on March 26, 2020 in Kansas City, Missouri. The start of the season has been postponed due to the COVID-19 outbreak. League Commissioner Rob Manfred recently said the league is "probably not gonna be able to" play a full 162 game regular season. (Photo by Jamie Squire/2020 Getty Images) | 2020 Getty Images

We’re trying a new series at Royals Review, a daily mid-day question of the day to hear about your opinions on a fun or pressing question affecting the Royals or baseball in general. Chime in and drop your answers below!

The Royals made a surprise postseason appearance in 2024, a 30-win improvement. But last year they regressed and it was easy to find a culprit – an outfield that couldn’t hit. So far this offseason, the only upgrades the team has made have been trading for Isaac Collins from the Brewers and signing free agent Lane Thomas. The club is certainly banking on Jac Caglianone to bust out, but is it enough?

With the Tigers signing Framber Valdez, the standard in the division has been raised. The Royals are projected by Cot’s Contracts to have a $142 million payroll, 18th-largest in baseball. That number is up from the $126 million payroll last year and would mark the largest team payroll since 2017. They have one of the best players in the game in Bobby Witt Jr., and two 100-RBI men in Salvador Perez and Vinnie Pasquantino. Caglianone and Carter Jensen are two of the most promising young hitters in baseball. They have some of the best starting pitching in the league, and two terrific relievers in Lucas Erceg and Carlos Estévez.

But is it enough to truly contend, or is the team doing just enough to make it seem like they are trying to win? What do you think?

Pakistan agree to play India at T20 Cricket World Cup after scrapping boycott

  • Match to go ahead in Sri Lanka on Sunday

  • Government made decision after negotiations

Pakistan are poised to fulfil their T20 World Cup fixture against India on Sunday, having pre­viously been instructed by their government to boycott the game in a move that could have cost the sport millions.

The crisis was triggered by ­Bangladesh withdrawing from the tournament last month – their place handed to Scotland – when a request to play their matches outside India on security grounds was rejected by the International Cricket Council.

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The Rockets need to live up to their Space City moniker

OKLAHOMA CITY, OK - FEBRUARY 7: Kevin Durant #7 and Jabari Smith Jr. #10 of the Houston Rockets high five during the game against the Oklahoma City Thunder on February 7, 2026 at Paycom Center in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Logan Riely/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Spacing.

So much discussion around spacing. It’s rudimentary. It’s intuitively easy to understand. More shooters = more shots. More shots = more points. Three is, by now, infamously more than two.

The Houston Rockets have bad spacing by modern NBA standards. It’s undeniably true. Alperen Sengun and Amen Thompson are both poor shooters. They’re also the two best non-Kevin Durant players on the Rockets’ roster. It’s a conundrum.

I’m veering dangerously close to the “Can Sengun and Thompson co-exist?” piece I recently did. That’s fine. Think of me as Virginia Woolf writing another stream-of-consciousness novel, only a man in 2026 writing about the Houston Rockets with about one millionth the talent.

That piece was making the case that Sengun is close enough to being a shooter that he’s likely to reach the level he’d need to reach for the duo to co-exist. This one is more about what happens if he doesn’t reach that level.

Do the Rockets need four-out spacing?

The Rockets will need four-out spacing

Yes. Case closed.

Although the statistical analysis is somewhat complicated here. The Rockets hung 112 points on the Thunder with Amen Thompson on the sidelines. That’s the impetus for this article. It’s a huge number – in 1999. In 2026, it’s fine.

Factoring in that the Thunder are the best defensive team in the NBA, it looks pretty impressive. Factoring in that they were missing Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams (two positive defenders), it gets downright aggravating. Was this game evidence of a revamped Rockets offense or not?

I say yes. The Rockets attempted 43 threes in this contest. The Warriors lead the league in attempts per game at 45.1, and the Celtics are second at 42.4. The Rockets?

Well, they’re not dead last – but they’re just 0.1 away. Houston’s 30.2 threes per game rank 29th in the NBA. That puts them in company with the Kings, Pistons, Mavericks, and Pelicans.

It seems that there’s room for one homecourt advantage seed that doesn’t shoot enough threes in each conference. Yet, three-point volume alone does not spacing make. Some Rockets fans will cringe reading this, but Jalen Duren is a – wait for it – vertical spacer. His pick-and-rollability (new word) with Cade Cunningham mitigates the non-shooting of the other Thompson. Not for nothing, Ausar also plays largely off-ball, similarly to how his brother played last season.

The Rockets’ spacing is worse. Sengun is best optimized when he’s camped in the paint. Thompson, if he has the ball, needs to get there. So, we’re back where we started:

Can they co-exist?

Rockets may face tough decisions

Not if neither of them can reliably shoot!

It’s a bitter pill – oh wait, we already did the pill metaphor. Am I, as the kids say, washed?

As constructed, the Rockets are too easy to plan for. Put the opposing center on Thompson. Have him sag off and pack the paint. Now, he can effectively guard Sengun and Thompson at the same time. The paint is closed off, so unless Durant can make lemonade, the offense looks like a firm, yellow, bitter fruit that nobody eats without sugar unless they’ve just done a tequila shot.

Yes, some actions can mitigate the problem. Put Sengun in the high post, have Thompson cut. That’s a good action. You can’t run it for every play. This is a fundamental problem that can’t be fundamentally solved unless one of these guys is a shooter.

What’s the solution?

There’s no reason to rush. There’s still enough reason to hope that one or the other can get their shooting up to snuff. If Rafael Stone wants to see how it looks with VanVleet and Adams back, that’s justifiable, even if it won’t appease the dopamine-chasing masses in need of instant results.

If the need to choose arises, it won’t be easy. Some will disagree. Sengun is the better player, so you choose him. Right?

Arguably. Sengun’s abilities were on full display against the Thunder. He finished with 17 points, 12 rebounds, and 10 assists. Surrounded by four shooters, Sengun reminded the world why he’s evoked Jokic comparisons. He’s a dynamic passer when it isn’t far too easy for rival defenses to crowd him.

Yet, from the point of view of market scarcity, there’s a case for Thompson. As talented as Sengun is, Thompson is arguably the best wing defender in the NBA. Simply put, it would be easier to trade Sengun and picks for a better Sengun than it would be to trade Thompson and picks for a better Thompson. There is no better Thompson (besides, possibly, Thompson).

Ultimately, it may depend on who’s available. If the Rockets want to go the Antetokounmpo route, I think Thompson is the better fit. Antetokounmpo approximates Sengun’s offensive role more closely. Thompson can move off the ball full-time, feast on cuts, and the Rockets can overwhelm opponents with dunk and layup efficiency to offset the low three-point volume. The 81.1% Antetokounmpo is shooting between 0-3 feet would revolutionize this offense if it replaced the 69.1% Sengun is shooting from the same range.

Alternatively, suppose Ant Edwards requested a trade (I loathe the homophobia, but let’s otherwise talk basketball). You keep Sengun. The inside/outside combination would stretch the floor as far as it can be stretched. The Rockets would put opponents in an impossible bind. Edwards (again, minus personal foibles) is the dream target, but this applies to any potential star acquisition who’s an elite three-point shooter.

By now, some readers are sick. Listen – preferably, you can keep both. Ideally, one or the other (again, likely Sengun) develops a reliable enough three to make this viable. If, in a couple of years or so, that hasn’t happened, this could get messy. The Rockets may need to move one or the other.

In this NBA, they’ll need the spacing.

The 2026 Cubs by the numbers

As I do here every spring, today I present to you a full numerical roster of all the players and coaches in Cubs spring camp. Also included are the Cubs’ retired numbers, so you can see the full numerical progression. There are 58 players in camp, the 40-man roster plus 18 non-roster invitees.

A few notes:

  • The Cubs have still not re-issued No. 44, worn by Anthony Rizzo during the World Series run, since he was traded away in 2021. I’m guessing that will remain un-issued for quite some time. Jon Lester’s (and Kerry Wood’s) No. 34 has also not been re-issued since Lester left after 2020. Lastly, the team hasn’t re-issued Kyle Hendricks’ No. 28 since he departed after 2024. None of these numbers is likely to be retired by the team. Other numbers not in use this spring: 19, 21, 51, 54, 56, 57, 58, 59, 61, 62, 64, 66, 67, 69, 73, 82, 87, 96 and 99.
  • Of interest are some of the numbers issued to non-roster guys. Dylan Carlson gets 5, while Chas McCormick, his presumed competition for a backup outfield spot, gets 55. Neither of those players has previously worn the numbers indicated. Does the lower number issued to Carlson indicate the team thinks he has a better chance of sticking?
  • Speaking of No. 55, Hoby Milner wore that for several years in Milwaukee (and also for the Phillies in 2017 and 2018), but instead chose 41, the number he wore last year for the Rangers.
  • There is one number duplicated. Jefferson Rojas, a non-roster invitee, and bullpen catcher Erick Castillo will both wear No. 93.
  • Of the 58 players listed here, 18 were not in the Cubs organization a year ago.

Lastly, I’d like to take a moment for a bit of self-promotion, if you’ll indulge me. If you still don’t have the latest edition of “Cubs By The Numbers” (complete through 2015 but still full of fun stories!), here’s your link to buy one!

Here’s the entire list of players and coaches in camp (along with retired numbers). Non-roster players in italics.

0 Quintin Berry (third base coach)
1 Justin Dean
2 Nico Hoerner
3 Alex Bregman
4 Pete Crow-Armstrong
5 Dylan Carlson
6 Matt Shaw
7 Dansby Swanson
8 Ian Happ
9 Miguel Amaya
10 Ron Santo (retired)
11 Craig Counsell (manager)
12 Scott Kingery
13 Kevin Alcántara
14 Ernie Banks (retired)
15 Carson Kelly
16 Matthew Boyd
17 Tyler Austin
18 Shōta Imanaga
20 Ben Cowles
22 Cade Horton
23 Ryne Sandberg (retired)
24 Caleb Thielbar
25 Moises Ballesteros
26 Billy Williams (retired)
27 Seiya Suzuki
29 Michael Busch
30 Edward Cabrera
31 Fergie Jenkins/Greg Maddux (retired)
32 Ben Brown
33 Ryan Rolison
35 Justin Steele
36 Jordan Wicks
37 Porter Hodge
38 Corbin Martin
39 Ethan Roberts
40 Jeff Brigham
41 Hoby Milner
42 Jackie Robinson (retired by MLB)
43 Luke Little
45 Hunter Harvey
46 Gavin Hollowell
47 Jack Neely
48 Daniel Palencia
49 Trent Thornton
50 Jameson Taillon
52 Collin Snider
53 Colin Rea
55 Chas McCormick
60 Christian Bethancourt
63 Juan Cabreja (assistant hitting coach)
65 Jose Javier (first base coach)
68 Tommy Hottovy (pitching coach)
70 Jaxon Wiggins
71 Jacob Webb
72 Javier Assad
74 A.J. Lewis (staff assistant)
75 Pedro Ramirez
76 Dustin Kelly (hitting coach)
78 Casey Opitz
79 Connor Schultz
80 John Mallee (assistant hitting coach)
81 Mark Strittmatter (bullpen coach)
83 B.J. Murray
84 Ryan Flaherty (bench coach)
85 Garrett Lloyd (bullpen catcher)
86 Casey Jacobson (assistant pitching coach)
88 Phil Maton
89 Ariel Armas
90 Jonathan Mota (major league coach)
91 Jonathon Long
92 Brett Bateman
93 Jefferson Rojas
93 Erick Castillo (bullpen catcher)
94 Riley Martin
95 James Triantos
97 Connor Noland
98 Grant Kipp

The Rockies at the 2026 World Baseball Classic

SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA - MARCH 09: Jarren Duran #2 of Team Mexico runs to third base during the third inning of a spring training exhibition game against the Colorado Rockies at Salt River Fields at Talking Stick on March 09, 2023 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images

As we sit mere days away from pitchers and catchers reporting for duty at their respective complexes in Arizona and Florida, much of the world is focused on international competition.

The Winter Olympics in Milan Cortina are in full swing, with fans across the world rooting for athletes representing their home towns, their countries, or even their favorite professional sports teams. The Colorado Avalanche have eight Olympians for the 2026 games, including captain Gabriel Landeskog wearing the “C” for his Team Sweden.

However, in the shadow of the Winter Games lies another rapidly approaching international competition: the World Baseball Classic.

The competition—which takes place every three years—grants an uncommon opportunity for professional baseball players worldwide to represent their home country or country of heritage on the world stage. Many of the teams from dominant baseball countries like the United States, the Dominican Republic, and Venezuela are packed with a veritable who’s who of Major League Baseball stardom and familiar faces from both the regular season and the playoffs.

For fans of the Colorado Rockies—who have not been to the post-season since 2018 and are beginning a crucial rebuild—the opportunity to see players from their team on a big stage are often few and far between. Even in the 2023 World Baseball Classic, the Rockies had just five players in the tournament and only one of them—left-handed pitcher Kyle Freeland—remains with the team.

This year the Rockies are fairly well represented in the World Baseball Classic. While they have no players on Team USA, the Rockies are sending ten players and one coach to represent six different nations in the upcoming tournament.

Let’s begin the Parade of Nations!

Team Canada

Recent arrival and infielder Edouard Julien will be representing Team Canada in the World Baseball Classic for the second time in his career. Although Canada was eliminated in pool play during the 2023 tournament, the Quebec City native still ended up leading the World Baseball Classic in slugging percentage and OPS. He then turned that excellent performance into a strong rookie season in which he hit .263/.381/.459 with 16 home runs and was worth 2.6 wins above replacement.

Julien suffered down seasons in 2024 and 2025 and enters the season looking to recapture the magic of his rookie campaign. Hopefully former Rockies All-Star and Team Canada hitting coach Justin Morneau can help Julien start the season strong.

Joining Julien on the Canadian roster is left-handed Québécois pitcher Antoine Jean, in what will technically be the first professional games of his career. The Rockies selected Jean in the seventh round of last year’s draft from the University of Houston, where he was the 2025 Big 12 Pitcher of the Year and led all NCAA Division I pitchers in batting average against (.168) and had the second-best K/9 (14.8).

Team Israel

The player to watch for Rockies fans when it comes to Team Israel is without a doubt prospect outfielder Cole Carrigg (no. 6 mid-season PuRP).

Carrigg—also a non-roster invite to spring training this year—spent the entire 2025 season with the Double-A Hartford Yard Goats, where he hit .237/.316/.394 with 18 doubles, six triples, 15 home runs, and 46 stolen bases as the team’s starting center fielder. Although he won’t be big league ready to start the season, a strong tournament could do a lot to lift his stock as a prospect.

Joining Carrigg is first baseman and outfielder Troy Johnston, whom the Rockies claimed via waivers from the Miami Marlins during the off-season. The 28-year-old made his Major League debut in 2025 with a strong .277/.331/.420 line and four home runs over 44 games with the Marlins.

Team Italy

The Rockies’ most important off-season free agent acquisition is also their lone representative for the Italian national team. Right-handed pitcher Michael Lorenzen was brought in to help the Rockies finally figure out pitching at Coors Field, a challenge he was eager to accept.

The 34-year-old’s aggressive approach and extensive arsenal of pitches will be a key asset to the Rockies’ rotation in 2025 as the team begins to work on their new pitching philosophy. One of his teammates for Italy will be former Rockies closer Adam Ottavino, who had previously performed well at Coors Field and was rumored to be in contention for a front office job over the off-season.

Team Mexico

Mexico was one of the breakout stories in the 2023 tournament, placing third overall after losing an incredible game against Japan in the semifinals. Returning manager Benji Gil is currently riding high after his México Rojo (Charros de Jalisco) emerged as the victor of the Serie Del Caribe and is no doubt ready to take another crack at the World Baseball Classic.

Gil’s bench coach will once again be Rockies special assistant and legendary third baseman Vinny Castilla. The Blake Street Bomber has extensive experience playing and coaching for various Mexican teams, including acting as the manager for Team Mexico in the 2009 World Baseball Classic.

Pitching for Mexico by way of California will be right-handed reliever Victor Vodnik and left-handed reliever Brennan Bernardino.

Vodnik, a bullpen staple, is entering his fourth big league season after an excellent 2025 campaign during which he posted a 3.02 ERA over 52 appearances. He notched ten saves and tallied 49 strikeouts over 50 2/3 innings of work.

Bernardino, meanwhile, is another new arrival to the Rockies. Obtained from the Boston Red Sox in exchange for minor league outfielder Braiden Ward, the 34-year-old middle reliever has a career 3.47 ERA over parts of four big league seasons.

Team Puerto Rico

The delegation from Puerto Rico had some difficulties putting their roster together, often due to insurance issues with their star players. As such, Carlos Correa of the Houston Astros and Francisco Lindor of the New York Mets are both sitting out, much to their consternation.

For off-season free agent acquisition and utility player Willi Castro, however, it represents an opportunity. The 28-year-old from Río Piedras will represent Puerto Rico for the first time in his career. The Rockies brought in Castro on a two-year, $12.8 million contract. The 2024 All-Star had a down year in 2025—especially after he was traded from the Minnesota Twins to the Chicago Cubs—but a strong performance in the World Baseball Classic could help him start a rebound campaign on the right foot.

Team Venezuela

A healthy and productive tournament would likely mean a lot to young Rockies star shortstop Ezequiel Tovar. The 24-year-old performed well enough during the 2025 season, hitting .253/.294/.400 with 18 doubles, four triples, and nine home runs, but he missed significant time due to injury and appeared in just 95 games.

Tovar is a key building block for the Rockies’ future, and entering the 2026 season strong with some much-needed momentum could help propel him to new heights after he won a Gold Glove Award and even had an MVP vote in 2024. Hopefully that comes with cutting down on strikeouts and not chasing so many pitches down and away.

Joining Tovar on Team Venezuela is right-handed pitcher Antonio Senzatela, who I’m sure is banking on the World Baseball Classic to kick off a much-needed bounceback campaign as he enters the final guaranteed year of his current contract.

Senzatela struggled immensely in 2025, posting a 7.42 ERA from the rotation in 23 starts before he was relegated to the bullpen. He fared especially poorly in the first inning, where he held a staggering 11.03 ERA. He performed better in limited bullpen appearances with a 2.86 ERA over 22 innings and is likely to remain in the bullpen for the upcoming season.

It is also worth noting that former Rockies starting pitcher Germán Márquez will also be on Venezuela’s roster. Márquez is currently still a free agent and could look to leverage his tournament performance into a contract.


The pool play portion of the World Baseball Classic kicks off on March 4th and the tournament itself runs through March 17th. There will also be multiple exhibition matches in which MLB spring training squads will face off against national teams. The Rockies are scheduled to play Team USA on March 4th at Salt River Fields at Talking Stick with a first pitch time of 1:10 PM MT.


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50 Most Notable Yankees Free Agent Signings in 50 Years: Masahiro Tanaka

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - OCTOBER 07: Masahiro Tanaka #19 of the New York Yankees pitches against the Tampa Bay Rays during the fourth inning in Game Three of the American League Division Series at PETCO Park on October 07, 2020 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Yankees’ forays into the Japanese market have produced some mixed results. The signing of Hideki Matsui was an absolute success, as he was a very good player for the Yankees for many years, and capped it off by winning World Series MVP in 2009. On the other hand, the acquisitions of pitchers Hideki Irabu and Kei Igawa were, uh, less great.

In the 2013-14 offseason, one of the hottest names on the market was another Japanese pitcher. Having just led the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles to a Japan Series title, Masahiro Tanaka was sought after around MLB. The Yankees were among that chasing pack, and they ended up winning the fight. In the end, his highs were not quite as the ones experienced by Matsui, but it’s hard to argue that Tanaka wasn’t a success, and he came up with some big playoff moments of his own.

Masahiro Tanaka
Signing Date: January 22, 2014
Contract: Seven years, $155 million

Thanks to a dominant career in Japanese high school baseball, Tanaka was long on the radar of NPB teams. When he was finally eligible to be selected in the NPB Draft, the Golden Eagles did so in 2006. He debuted as an 18-year old the following season and quickly cemented his place as a star for the team, winning the league’s Rookie of the Year Award.

Having only been founded ahead of the 2005 season, the Golden Eagles hadn’t done much of anything before Tanaka’s arrival, but he helped them to their first ever playoff berth in 2009. Over the next couple years, Tanaka continued improving and began to dominate. His most impressive season came in 2013, as he posted a crazy 24-0 record with a 1.27 ERA with 183 strikeouts in 212 innings. The Golden Eagles went on to win their first — and so far only — Japan Series title that year. In the series, Tanaka allowed just one run in a Game 2 win, threw 160 pitches in Game 6, and then came back the very next day and recorded the save in the Game 7 win. It was a truly remarkable effort.

Not that he wasn’t already on MLB team’s radars, but the remarkable season turned Tanaka into probably the top pitching name on that year’s free agent market. The Yankees always seemed to be one of, if not the top, favorites to land Tanaka, and they eventually did so in January 2014, inking him to a seven-year deal worth $155 million.

When big-name Japanese imports come to MLB, there’s always a big spotlight on them, and it was no different for Tanaka, especially considering that he was playing in New York. He made his MLB debut on April 4th in Toronto, going seven innings, allowing two earned runs on eight hits, with eight strikeouts as the Yankees beat the Blue Jays, 7-3.

His first truly astounding MLB start came in his third game, when he threw eight shutout innings and struck out 10 against the Cubs. Tanaka mostly kept cruising through his debut season, putting up a 2.27 ERA through July 3rd, making the All-Star team and getting himself in award contention. However, he struggled in his next start, and hit the IL after that with what turned out to be a partially torn UCL. Despite some saying that he and the Yankees should just bite the bullet with Tommy John surgery, they opted to rehab the injury. As it turned out, he would never need to go under the knife over the entirety of his Yankees career.

Tanaka’s rookie campaign saw him finish fifth in Rookie of the Year. In 2015, he made his first ever MLB Opening Day start, and was given the ball in the Yankees’ Wild Card Game loss, which was due more to the nonexistent offense than his two runs in five innings. In 2016, he had probably his best MLB season, finishing seventh in Cy Young voting after a 4.7 fWAR year.

The 2017 regular season was a bit of a down one compared to his previous years, but once the postseason came around, he began to establish his reputation as a big game pitcher.

With the Yankees’ backs against the wall in Game 3 of the ALDS against Cleveland, Tanaka threw seven shutout innings as the Yankees won the game and rallied to win the series. In the next round, he repeated that effort in Game 5, giving the Yankees a 3-2 edge in the ALCS against the Astros. While the Yankees never ended up winning a ring during Tanaka’s tenure, he stepped up in the playoffs in most of the games he was called on. While there were some blips in his final season with the team, over his seven-year deal, he had a 3.33 ERA and 0.981 WHIP in 10 postseason starts, with the Yankees going 6-4. Only one of those four losses can be fully put on him too. In the other three, he allowed just seven total runs, getting just four runs of support combined.

Tanaka had an opt-out after the 2017 campaign, but he decided to stick around on his initial contract. Across those final three years, he dropped off a bit as he aged, but still made his second All-Star team in 2019 while posting a 107 ERA+ and 6.4 fWAR across a steady 368 innings of work from 2018-20. The Yankees opted to let him walk in free agency after the COVID-shortened 2020 season. As it turned out, Tanaka would walk away from MLB entirely and opted to return to Japan and rejoin his old Golden Eagles team. Playing in NPB allowed him be part of the Japan national team when they won gold at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021.

After a couple seasons with the Golden Eagles, Tanaka signed with the Yomiuri Giants — often called the Yankees of NPB — where he’s preparing to play the 2026 campaign. This past year, he became the fourth pitcher to accumulate 200 wins between MLB and NPB play, joining Hideo Nomo, Yu Darvish, and former Yankees teammate Hiroki Kuroda.

On the field, Tanaka was a competitor who was never satisfied, no matter how good his last start was. Off the field, he always seemed like a genuine and nice guy, who’s missed on the Yankees’ roster in that aspect. He was a lot of fun to root for across his seven years in pinstripes.


See more of the “50 Most Notable Yankees Free Agent Signings in 50 Years” series here.

Guerschon Yabusele on amending Knicks contract to facilitate Bulls trade: 'The passion is more than just the money'

The texts from NBA agents came in almost immediately.

“Did he really do that?”

“ What??!?”

“Wooow”

They were reacting to the news that ex-Knicks forward Guerschon Yabusele removed the 2026-27 player option from his contract. Yabusele was slated to earn $5.8 million in guaranteed money next season. He essentially removed that money from his deal to facilitate last week’s trade to Chicago.

It’s rare for a player in Yabusele’s situation to forgo guaranteed money. But if you ask Yabusele about it, he’ll tell you it was an easy decision.

“We can always see the side of the money and talk about it, but at the end of the day the passion is more than just the money. It’s being out there, missing the feeling of being out there, offense, defense. Just competing at a high level because I’m a competitor first,” Yabusele said in an interview with SNY. “… The situation with New York was a little bit different for me because I wasn’t really playing, so being able to be on another team and try to bring value on the court was really important. I was just missing being out there on the court, making mistakes, learning from it and trying to get better.”

Yabusele signed a two-year, $12 million deal with the Knicks in the offseason – New York’s biggest signing of the summer. Once the season started, Yabusele was rarely on the floor. His strengths as a player did not seem to fit under new head coach Mike Brown (who was hired after Yabusele signed).

As the trade deadline approached, the Knicks were trying to find a new home for Yabusele. But it became clear that no team wanted to take on his $5.8 million player option for next season. The lack of interest was not a reflection of Yabusele’s ability; it’s mostly due to the ‘second apron’ era of the collective bargaining agreement, where every dollar in player salary is crucial for contending teams.

As such, the Knicks would have had to send draft capital to the team that traded for Yabusele.

But that all changed when Yabusele decided to change his contract. He and his agent, Richie Felder of CAA, worked with the Knicks to amend the deal and remove the player option.

Soon after, Chicago pounced and sent Dalen Terry to New York in a trade for Yabusele.

Sure, the amended contract was part of Chicago’s attraction to The Dancing Bear. But the Bulls also know Yabusele can help them on the court, something he wasn’t able to do in New York.

Yabusele so far has proven the Bulls right, averaging 12.5 points in 30 minutes over his first two games.

“I love it out there with the team, the guys. The coaches, they did a great job of welcoming me the best way they can,” Yabusele said. “Everybody’s telling me how happy they are for me to be out there on the team with them. It just makes it easy for me to have confidence and just feel good on the court.”

The trade also made it easy for New York to obtain Pelicans guard Jose Alvarado.

The Knicks didn’t have to use any of their *seven second-round picks in the Yabusele trade. In Terry, they acquired a player with no guaranteed money in 2026-27 (Terry is a restricted free agent this offseason).

New York flipped Terry and two second-round picks to New Orleans for Alvarado. The former Christ The King star made an immediate impact in his Knick debut, scoring 12 points while adding two steals on Sunday against Boston.

He will be greeted with a hero’s welcome at the Garden on Tuesday, his first home game as a Knick.

But he doesn’t make it to the Garden without Yabusele’s contract amendment.

“I mean the decision was, I wanna say pretty quick and easy,” Yabusele, a former first round pick of the Celtics who spent a few seasons overseas before returning to the NBA, said. “For me to be able to have that second chance at the NBA and come back here, I had to take [a] risk. So I would say it was nothing new to me… I was thinking about [amending my contract] and I thought that this was the best thing to do.”

With no player option for 2026-27, Yabusele will now be an unrestricted free agent this summer. He received interest from some overseas teams ahead of the trade deadline. He will probably get plenty of overseas interest this summer. A cynic would wonder if Yabusele already has a deal in place for next season.

Yabusele’s agent, Felder of CAA, declined comment when asked about an overseas deal for 2026-27.

Regardless of how things play out for Yabusele, his decision earlier this month opened the door for the Knicks to get Alvarado.

At some point on Tuesday night, Alvarado will stand up and walk to the scorer’s table. The Garden crowd will erupt. Alvarado, raised in Brooklyn, should get a long, loud ovation when he steps on the floor.

If you are one of the people screaming for Alvarado on Tuesday, don’t forget to thank Yabusele.

*The Knicks have two additional second-round picks if you include the 2026 first-round pick from Washington. That pick is top-8 protected and will almost surely turn into two second-round picks (2026, 2027). If you count the Washington picks, they have seven second-round picks left after the Alvarado trade.

Pakistan ends boycott and will face India at T20 World Cup

ISLAMABAD (AP) — Pakistan reversed its decision to boycott the T20 World Cup game against India and was directed to “take the field” in Colombo next Sunday.

A weeklong impasse ended on Monday, a day after International Cricket Council director Imran Khawaja and Bangladesh Cricket Board president Aminul Islam arrived in Lahore to talk with the Pakistan Cricket Board about reinstating the biggest and richest game in cricket.

Back-channel talks reached the highest level, and the Pakistan government announced on X, “In view of the outcomes achieved in multilateral discussions, as well as the request of friendly countries, the Government of Pakistan hereby directs the Pakistan National Cricket Team to take the field on February 15, 2026, for its scheduled fixture in the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup.

“Moreover, this decision has been taken with the aim of protecting the spirit of cricket, and to support the continuity of this global sport in all participating nations.”

The ICC said: “It was agreed that all members will respect their commitments as per the terms of participation for ICC events and do all that is necessary to ensure that the ongoing edition of the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup is a success.”

After Bangladesh was booted from the World Cup two weeks ago when the ICC dismissed its security concerns about playing in India, PCB chairman Mohsin Naqvi decried the ICC's “double standards” and “injustice.” The Pakistan government told its cricket board to boycott the India group game in solidarity with Bangladesh.

But the consequences of no Pakistan-India game threatened current and future TV rights deals and ICC funding of the global game.

The Pakistan government noted in its statement that the PCB was formally asked by ICC members including Sri Lanka and the United Arab Emirates to end the boycott. On Monday, Bangladesh's Islam requested the match go ahead “for the benefit of the entire cricket ecosystem."

“We are deeply moved by Pakistan's efforts to go above and beyond in supporting Bangladesh during this period,” Islam said. “Long may our brotherhood flourish.”

The ICC eased its stance on Monday when it said it would not penalize Bangladesh for missing the T20 World Cup for the first time. The ICC added Bangladesh had the right to approach the dispute resolution committee “should it choose to do so.”

Naqvi then announced a decision by Pakistan within 48 hours, but the final clincher appeared to come from a phone call on Monday evening between Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Sri Lanka President Anura Kumara Dissanayake.

World Cup co-host Sri Lanka is hosting Pakistan for all of its matches.

The Pakistan government said Dissanayake asked Sharif “to accord serious consideration to amicably resolve the current impasse.”

Sharif green-lit the India matchup again and gave his best wishes to the “Men in Green,” who have already started the World Cup with a win over the Netherlands.

Bangladesh will be awarded a global tournament before the men's World Cup in 2031, the ICC said.

ICC chief executive Sanjog Gupta said in a statement that Bangladesh's absence from the T20 World Cup “is regrettable but it does not alter the ICC’s enduring commitment to Bangladesh as a core cricketing nation.”

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AP cricket: https://apnews.com/hub/cricket

Julia Taubitz is 1st and Merle Fraebel is 2nd at midway point of Olympic women's luge race

CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy (AP) — German teammates Julia Taubitz and Merle Fraebel have pulled away after the first two runs of the women’s singles luge event at the Milan Cortina Olympics, opening up a sizable lead over the rest of the field going into Tuesday’s medal-deciding heats.

Taubitz is the leader, finishing her two runs Monday in 1 minute, 45.188 seconds. Fraebel is in second with a time of 1:45.249, and it’s a sizable gap from there to Latvia’s Elina Bota — third in 1:45.683.

There are five sliders within two-tenths of a second of Bota’s time, meaning the race for the bronze medal could get wild on Tuesday. Verena Hofer of Italy is fourth in 1:45.743, followed by Ashley Farquharson of the U.S. (1:45.796), Sandra Robatscher of Italy (1:45.801), Lisa Schulte of Austria (1:45.866) and Emily Fischnaller of the U.S. (1.45.872).

Anna Berreiter of Germany, the lone Olympic medalist in this field — she won silver at the 2022 Beijing Games — is ninth going into Tuesday. And Summer Britcher of the U.S., a two-time World Cup winner this season, is 12th after the opening two runs.

Taubitz is the reigning world champion. She's a six-time medalist in women's singles at the worlds — twice a winner, four times the runner-up.

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AP Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/milan-cortina-2026-winter-olympics