Devin Fitz-Gerald went on an insane run for the Wilmington Blue Rocks last week

JUPITER, FL - MARCH 19: Devin Fitz-Gerald #3 of the Washington Nationals bats during the game between the Washington Nationals and the St. Louis Cardinals at Roger Dean Chevrolet Stadium on Thursday, March 19, 2026 in Jupiter, Florida. (Photo by Jared Blais/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

A few days ago, MLB Pipeline updated their top 100 list, and for some reason, Devin Fitz-Gerald did not feature. They must regret that decision right now because the 20 year old Fitz-Gerald has been playing like a no doubt top 100 prospect. In his last 10 games, Fitz-Gerald has 7 home runs for the Wilmington Blue Rocks.

The craziest part is that Fitz-Gerald is not a prospect who is known as a slugger. Fitz-Gerald is known for having a highly polished hit tool as a switch hitting infielder. At 5’10 185 pounds, he does not look like a slugger, but is hitting like one. His strikeout rate is hovering around 15% and he rarely misses in the zone. Fitz-Gerald combines these skills with above average power as well.

Fitz-Gerald’s home run power does not come from crazy strength or elite exit velocities. He is not like his Wilmington teammate Ethan Petry, who looks like your typical power hitter. Instead, Fitz-Gerald specializes at hitting the ball at good angles. He has mastered the art of pulling the ball in the air, which allows him to hit homers with the least amount of resistance.

His elite hit tool and ability to tap into every ounce of his raw power is why Fitz-Gerald is getting comparisons to Kevin McGonigle. That is very lofty praise, but it is something he deserves. McGonigle was one of the best pure hitters the minor leagues has seen in the last decade. We still need to see a bit more from Fitz-Gerald to throw that tag on him, but he is trending in that direction.

The numbers are absolutely insane for him. He is hitting .307 with a 1.073 OPS with 11 homers and 11 stolen bases as a 20 year old in High-A. Just as a reminder, Fitz-Gerald had only played in 10 games above rookie ball before this season. He is one of just four hitters with 10 homers and 10 steals in the minors, and the only one with a strikeout rate under 20%.

I am not sure those stolen base numbers will translate to the big leagues, but that is not the end of the world. The one knock on Fitz-Gerald is that he is not an elite athlete with flashy physical tools. However, he makes up for that with elite baseball instincts that he learned from his father, who is the coach at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, one of the best high school baseball programs in the country.

Those instincts make me believe that Fitz-Gerald could steal 12-15 bases in the big leagues despite only having average speed. Fitz-Gerald’s polished skills are his defining trait as a player. It is why he has a chance to hit 20-25 home runs in the big leagues despite only having average raw power. While Fitz-Gerald does not have the physical tools of a Ronny Cruz, at the end of the day, the numbers do not lie. 

Wilmington is usually a very difficult place for batters to hit, but not for Fitz-Gerald. He is making it look easy. Power usually suffers for hitters at Wilmington, but Fitz-Gerald hits the ball at such good angles that he can find the shorter parts of the park. He also has the ability to make a ton of contact.

Another neat thing about Fitz-Gerald is that he is a switch hitter. It seems like players who grow up with fathers that are around the game are inclined to switch hit. Both Fitz-Gerald and Eli Willits grew up around the game and are switch hitters. Fitz-Gerald has been much better from the left side of the plate this season, but he did hit a grand slam as a righty last week.

He is just hitting .188 from the right side, but his OPS is still a solid .722 from that side of the plate. His numbers from the left side are totally absurd. He is hitting .343 with a 1.176 OPS as a lefty. For now, I am not too concerned with his relative struggles from the right side. He does not get as many reps as a righty, and he is still just 20 years old.

While Fitz-Gerald is a bat first prospect, he is not a bad defender either. His lack of elite athleticism or arm strength limits him, but his baseball instincts translate well to the field. He has played 15 games at second base, 9 games at shortstop and 8 games at third base. I think second base is the best fit for him, but Fitz-Gerald has the ability to play all over the infield. That versatility only adds to the Kevin McGonigle comparison.

If you do not have Devin Fitz-Gerald on your top 100 prospect list, you are just wrong. This kind of bat does not come around that often. He has a rare blend of hitting ability, power and patience. His swing is picture perfect and he is crushing baseballs in a pitcher friendly environment. For goodness sakes, he has 8 home runs since May 5th and had a run where he hit 7 in 8 games. 

With the way he is playing, Devin Fitz-Gerald is making the MacKenzie Gore trade a win just on his own. However, Fitz-Gerald was not the only exciting piece the Nats got in that deal. Gavin Fien, who was supposed to be the headlining piece, has been out for most of the season, but just returned to the lineup. He also has very exciting traits as a hitter. Fien hit his first home run as a pro the other day.

Yeremy Cabrera has also had a great start to the season. He tore up Low-A before getting promoted to Wilmington, where he is teammates with Fitz-Gerald. Abimelec Ortiz has not put up massive numbers, but his under the hood data has been quite good. Lastly, Alejandro Rosario will not pitch this season, but he did finally get his Tommy John Surgery. The last time we saw Rosario, he looked like an elite pitching prospect in 2024.

Paul Toboni has knocked that trade out of the park, and Devin Fitz-Gerald is the biggest reason why. He looks like one of the best pure hitters in the minor leagues, and was a great scouting job by the new regime. Fitz-Gerald had buzz last year, but got hurt, and only played 10 games above rookie ball. Evaluating him as a piece they needed to have was a great job. We are seeing why Paul Toboni was so high on Devin Fitz-Gerald. The sky is the limit for this kid and a promotion to Double-A feels like it is on the horizon.

Dodgers Week 8: Shohei Ohtani rests, then shines in winning streak

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - MAY 12: Shohei Ohtani #17 of the Los Angeles Dodgers reacts after hitting a solo homerun during the third inning of a game against the San Francisco Giants at Dodger Stadium on May 12, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Dodgers last week lost Blake Snell to the injured list, with the left-hander set for surgery this Tuesday to remove loose bodies in his left elbow. This came after Tyler Glasnow was sidelined the week before with back spasms.

Losses on the field mounted too, including Monday and Tuesday to the San Francisco Giants, giving the Dodgers four straight losses by at least four runs, something they hadn’t done since 90 years ago. Shohei Ohtani’s hitting slump continued, such that he was given a two-day respite at the plate. His gem on the mound started a winning streak, then his hitting helped continue it through the weekend when the Dodgers swept the Angels in Anaheim.

After getting outscored by 20 runs in their four-game skid, the Dodgers walloped the Giants and Angels 40-5 in a five-game win streak to end the week on a high note.

Batter of the week

Managing Shohei Ohtani’s workload will be a challenge this season, and this week saw him get his first actual rest day of the year. Ohtani didn’t hit when he pitched on Wednesday and didn’t hit on Thursday either. Despite being limited to five of the seven games offensively, Ohtani made his mark anyway with two doubles, a triple, and a home run, the latter snapping a string of 52 plate appearances without a long ball (directly after a 59-PA homerless skid). Ohtani this week hit .364/.462/.682 with a team-leading eight RBI.

Honorable mention goes to Teoscar Hernández, who ended a three-week drought of no extra-base hits with three doubles and a home run in his six games this week, and led the team with 11 hits.

Pitcher of the week

After a year and a half of rehab from his second Tommy John surgery followed by gradually building back up over the last few months of 2025, Shohei Ohtani has been fully unleashed on the mound from the get-go this year, with spectacular results. His latest gem was seven scoreless innings on Wednesday to beat the Giants, allowing only four singles and two walks with his eight strikeouts. That lowered Ohtani’s ERA to a major-league-best 0.82.

“He wants to be the best pitcher in baseball,” manager Dave Roberts said. “Right now, he’s doing it.”

This is the second time Ohtani has won the batter of the week and pitcher of the week here in the same week. He also did so last year for the week of July 7-13.

Honorable mention goes to Roki Sasaki, who had by far his best MLB outing to date with seven strong innings to beat the Angels on Sunday. It’s the first time with the Dodgers a start lasted past six innings for Sasaki, who struck out eight and, for the first time in the majors, walked zero.

Week 8 results

5-2 record
45 runs scored (6.43 per game)
20 runs allowed (2.86 per game)
.815 pythagorean win percentage

Year to date

29-18 record
248 runs scored (5.28 per game)
154 runs allowed (3.28 per game)
.705 pythagorean win percentage (33-14)

Miscellany

It takes a village: It was scramble mode for the Dodgers on Friday with one of their eggs cracked as Blake Snell was placed on the injured list. They used a bullpen game for the first time this season, to great success. Will Klein pitched the first two innings, followed by six reliever friends at one inning apiece to blank the Angels. Eight pitchers tied the most pitchers ever used in a shutout in Dodgers franchise history, along with May 3, 2015 in a 13-inning game against the Arizona Diamondbacks and September 29, 2019 at San Francisco, the last day of the regular season. In MLB history dating back to at least 1898, there are only 10 shutouts in which a team used at least eight pitchers. The two times nine pitchers were used in a shutout were extra-inning affairs. The Dodgers’ win on Friday was just the sixth nine-inning shutout with eight pitchers used.

More than hits: Saturday in Anaheim was the second Dodgers game this season with more runs scored than hits, along with March 27 against the Arizona Diamondbacks with five runs on four hits. Saturday was much more extreme, with 15 runs on 10 hits, thanks in large part to 10 walks and two times hit by a pitch. The win over the Angels was just the 15th major league game dating back to at least 1898 in which a team scored at least 15 runs on no more than 10 hits. The previous such game was August 10, 1993 by the Detroit Tigers against the Baltimore Orioles. The Dodgers did so one previous time, on July 13, 1929 in Brooklyn, collecting nine hits in a 15-8 win over the St. Louis Cardinals.

Lopsided sweep: The Dodgers scored 31 runs in their weekend sweep of the Angels, while allowing just three, outscoring the Halos by 28 runs. Since moving to Los Angeles, that was their second-most lopsided run differential in a three-game sweep, behind only April 21-23 against the Reds in Cincinnati, in which the Dodgers scored 36 runs and gave up seven. Since 1958, the Dodgers have only two other three-game stretches in which they outscored an opponent by 28 runs, but they were not in the same series — July 10-16, 2021 (+30) and August 11-14, 2019 (+28).

Transactions

Monday: After missing 32 games with a strained oblique, Mookie Betts was activated off the injured list. Alex Freeland was the odd man out in the infield, sent down to Oklahoma City.

Tuesday: The Dodgers acquired recently-DFA’d outfielder Alek Thomas from the D-backs for minor league outfielder Jose Requena, and designated outfielder Michael Siani for assignment. Thomas was optioned and sent to Cameback Ranch in Arizona for now.

“We have him in the organization, we’ll kind of do a deep dive on his swing to figure out of there’s some things we can unlock,” Roberts said Tuesday. “Then, if the opportunity presents itself, to get him up here.”

Friday: Blake Snell was placed on the injured list with loose bodies in his elbow, and will be out a while. Charlie Barnes got the call from Oklahoma City.

Sunday: For the first time as a pro Jack Dreyer is on the injured list, with left shoulder discomfort. Paul Gervase and Chayce McDermott were called up from Triple-A, and Barnes was optioned.

Sunday: With Snell and Tyler Glansnow sidelined, the Dodgers added starting depth by trading for Eric Lauer, and Brusdar Graterol was moved to the 60-day injured list after a setback in his rehab assignment.

Game results

PlayerPARH2BHRRBIBBBA/OBP/SLG
Espinal5120110.400/.400/1.000
Ohtani26582184.364/.462/.682
Hernández305113162.407/.467/.630
Tucker25574033.333/.440/.524
Muncy26950244.227/.346/.500
Rojas13150020.417/.385/.417
Smith25450143.263/.360/.421
Call10220052.286/.400/.286
Betts23340221.182/.217/.455
Freeman26341005.190/.346/.238
Kim21340022.211/.286/.211
Pages30430153.115/.233/.231
Rushing13000003.000/.231/.000
Offense27345601094232.258/.352/.425
Ohtani also tripled; Ohtani & Freeman each stole a base
PitcherRecordIPHRBBSOERAWHIP
Ohtani1-07.040280.000.857
Sasaki1-012.01041133.000.917
Wrobleski1-06.072153.001.333
Sheehan1-06.022263.000.667
Yamamoto0-16.365087.110.947
Starters4-137.329136403.130.938
Henriquez1-03.010040.000.333
Dreyer0-03.020140.001.000
Klein0-02.720030.000.750
Scott0-0, Sv2.010020.000.500
Hurt0-02.010120.001.000
Barnes0-02.010110.001.000
McDermott0-01.010010.001.000
Treinen0-03.721222.451.091
Vesia0-13.343278.101.800
Mills0-03.013719.002.667
Bullpen1-1, Sv25.716714272.451.169
Totals5-263.0452020672.861.032

Previous reviews: Week 1 | Week 2 | Week 3 | Week 4 | Week 5 | Week 6 | Week 7

Up next

After a pseudo-away series near enough to home over the weekend in Anaheim, the Dodgers hit the road for real this week while running the Kurt Bevacqua gauntlet, playing three games each in San Diego and Milwaukee against teams they’ve faced in the postseason once each over the last two years.

The Dodgers flipped the rotation a bit, with Shohei Ohtani bumped to Wednesday’s series finale at Petco Park, which lines him up to pitch directly before an off day (and likely two such weeks in a row). That means Emmet Sheehan on Tuesday, which will be the first start by a Dodgers pitcher on four days rest this season. The weekend rotation in Milwaukee is a guess, depending on how and when they decide to use newcomer Eric Lauer into the mix.

Mon, 5/18Tue, 5/19Wed, 5/20Thu, 5/21Fri, 5/22Sat, 5/23Sun, 5/24
at Padresat Padresat PadresOFFat Brewersat Brewersat Brewers
6:406:405:404:404:1511:10
YamamotoSheehanOhtaniWrobleskiSasakiYamamoto
KingCanningVásquezHendersonGasser*Sproat
SNLA/MLBSNLA/MLBSNLASNLAFoxSNLA
*left-handed pitcher

Looking at the History of the 26th Pick in the Modern MLB Draft

May 6, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; Baltimore Orioles left fielder Taylor Ward (3) celebrates scoring a run in the seventh inning against the Miami Marlins at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Jim Rassol-Imagn Images | Jim Rassol-Imagn Images

With the MLB Draft only about two months away I thought it would be good to examine the history of the players selected with the picks the Atlanta Braves have in the 2026 MLB Draft. With the Braves picking 26th overall for their second first round selection, I decided to start by looking at the history of the 26th pick in the draft in the modern era – or since 1987.

Every player and the team selecting them are being listed, as well as their bWAR. At the end I will run down the hit to bust rate, and what the median WAR produced is – excluding players drafted after 2020.

Note that with the WAR, a N/A indicates that the player never made it to the big leagues, while a player listed at 0.0 is for players that did appear in a big league game and just had a neutral WAR.

Picks

1987.Red Sox-Reggie Harris, RHP, -0.1 WAR

1988.Tigers-Rico Brogna, 1B, -1.1

1989.Mariners-Scott Burrell, RHP, Did Not Sign (NBA)

1990.A’s-Don Peters, RHP, N/A

1991.A’s-Brent Gates, SS, 5.5

1992.Twins-Dan Serafini, LHP, -0.8

1993.Brewers-Kelly Wunsch, LHP, 3.1

1994.White Sox-Mark Johnson, C, 1.9

1995.Braves-Chad Hutchinson, RHP, Did Not Sign (Football)

1996.Red Sox-Josh Garrett, RHP, N/A

1997.Orioles-Darnell McDonald, OF, 0.9

1998.Orioles-Rick Elder, OF, N/A

1999.Cubs-Ben Christensen, RHP, N/A

2000.Indians-Corey Smith, SS, N/A

2001.A’s-Jeremy Bonderman, RHP, 4.9

2002.A’s-John McCurdy, SS, N/A

2003.A’s-Brian Snyder, 3B, N/A

2004.A’s-Richie Robnett, OF, N/A

2005.Red Sox-Craig Hansen, RHP, -1.9

2006.Dodgers-Bryan Morris, RHP, 2.7

2007.A’s-James Simmons, RHP, N/A

2008.Diamondbacks-Daniel Schlereth, LHP, 0.0

2009.Brewers-Eric Arnett, RHP, N/A

2010.Rockies-Kyle Parker, OF, -1.7

2011.Red Sox-Blake Swihart, C, -0.6

2012.Diamondbacks-Stryker Trahan, C, N/A

2013.Yankees-Eric Jagielo, 3B, N/A

2014.Red Sox-Michael Chavis, SS, 0.1

2015.Angels-Taylor Ward, C, 10.9

2016.White Sox-Zack Burdi, RHP, -0.8

2017.Rangers-Bubba Thompson, OF, -0.6

2018.Red Sox-Triston Casas, 3B, 2.2

2019.Diamondbacks-Blake Walston, LHP, -0.1

2020.A’s-Tyler Soderstrom, C, 3.7

2021.Twins-Chase Petty, RHP, -0.7

2022.White Sox-Noah Schultz, LHP, 0.2

2023.Yankees-George Lombard Jr., SS, N/A

2024.Yankees-Ben Hess, RHP, N/A

2025.Phillies-Gage Wood, RHP, N/A

Breakdown

Total Players Drafted and Signed 1987-2019: 31

Total WAR: 24.4

Average WAR: 0.8

Five Best Players: Taylor Ward (114 career HR), Brent Gates (.685 OPS), Jeremy Bonderman (200 starts), Tyler Soderstrom, Triston Casas

Total 20+ WAR: 0

Total 10+ WAR: 1

Total Who Failed to Reach MLB: 12 (Excluding Burrell, who didn’t sign due to the NBA)

Thoughts

The 26th pick has been pretty awful over the last nearly 40 years. The fact that Taylor Ward is by far the best player to come out of that pick, says everything. It’s also telling that the rest of the Top 5 players to be drafted with this pick include a guy with a sub-.700 OPS, a pitcher who was more about volume (200 starts) than production (89 ERA+), a 24-year-old, and a player who despite only being 26 hasn’t done anything for the past two years due to injury.

Things could really change in the next few years though. Tyler Soderstrom is a talented young slugger, Noah Schultz and George Lombard Jr. are among the top prospects in the game, and Chase Petty, Ben Hess, and Gage Wood are all prospects with potential. You could also add that Triston Casas and Blake Walston are still young, and if they are able to return to health, could still make an impact.

The odds aren’t in the Braves favor, with nearly 40% of the guys picked 26th failing to reach the big leagues, and there really only being one player in almost 40 years who became even a solid starter.

Royals Break the Streak but Questions Remain: Lineups, Mechanics, and Mojo

The Kansas City Royals snapped a losing streak with a win against the Cardinals, but one win does not erase the questions that have been building, and Jacob Milham and Jeremy Greco are not shying away from any of them.

The episode opens with an honest assessment of where this team stands relative to expectations, with patience for certain management decisions wearing noticeably thin. The most pointed conversation centers on Jac Caglianone’s benching, which the hosts argue is being driven by questionable split-based reasoning. It is a lineup decision that invites a broader discussion about how the front office and coaching staff are evaluating talent and making in-game strategic calls.

The player analysis segment covers significant ground. Salvador Perez’s declining offensive numbers remain a concern, while Bobby Witt Jr.’s MVP-level resurgence offers one of the brightest storylines on the roster right now. The pitching staff also gets attention, with updates on Kolek, Lynch, and Falter rounding out a thorough look at where the staff stands heading into the next stretch of games.

One of the episode’s most technically rich segments is a deep dive into Caglianone’s swing mechanics, specifically his attack angle and swing path. Drawing on data from Baseball Savant and principles from Driveline Baseball, Jacob and Jeremy work through what adjustments could unlock his considerable potential and why getting his mechanics right matters for the long-term outlook of this lineup.

And yes, there is also a mystical mojo segment. The guys attempt to metaphysically uncurse the Royals, and it is exactly as entertaining as it sounds.

Need your Royals fix? Head to royalsreview.com for news, analysis, and to engage with Royals fans around the world! Follow us online:

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What’s wrong with Bo Bichette?

Bo Bichette prepares to swing in a home white Mets uniform

Just about anyone rooting for the New York Mets this season has been watching, waiting, and hoping that former All-Star Bo Bichette will break out at the plate and be himself. His first 46 games of 2026 are in the books, and the wait continues.

Bichette is coming off a brutal Subway Series, during which he went 1-for-12 and had an embarrassing error that helped the Yankees score a run. Bichette’s lone hit came in the ninth inning of a 7-6 comeback win Sunday. When he got to first base, he couldn’t help but crack a smile after finally breaking through with a knock.

A key part of the Mets’ offseason overhaul, Bichette’s signing helped ease the loss of several homegrown players. Landing him was seen as a consolation after missing out on Kyle Tucker. The Mets even secured Bichette at the last moment before the Phillies could. It seemed like signing a 28-year-old free agent out from under a division rival was a win for the front office.

Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns was quick to talk up his splashy free-agent signing.

“This is someone who has been one of the better and complete right-handed hitters in all of baseball, really since he entered the league,” Stearns said at Bichette’s introductory press conference. “Beyond that, it brings an intense competitor. Someone who never takes a play off, who never takes an at-bat off, and that can only help the group as a whole.”

But so far, the results have been near the worst-case scenario for a player who had an epic performance for the Toronto Blue Jays in the World Series just seven months ago. Bichette is hitting .210/.262/.269 with a 54 wRC+. His calling card is producing with RISP (.330 for his career), but he’s hitting an abysmal 8-for-42 (.190) in those situations this year and has just four RBIs in his last 15 games. His .518 OPS against fastballs is the third lowest of any qualified hitter in MLB, significantly lower than his career number of .813. His line drive percentage (18.8%) is at a career low, while his ground ball rate (53%) is at a career high.

“The difference this year is that his bat angle is under 45 degrees and he has been under everything,” Keith Hernandez said on SNY. “Pitches that he should hit, he’s fouling back or swinging under and missing. I would get him in (batting practice) and tell him to focus on the top half of the ball.”

One of several frustrating aspects of the situation is that Bichette has been relatively healthy since joining the team and has yet to miss a game. He has dealt with lower-body injuries at various points in his career, including during the 2024 season, when he played 81 games. Unfortunately for the team, Bichette’s stats so far this season have resembled his injury-plagued ‘24 season rather than his best years that saw him be one of the most exciting hitters in baseball.

Bichette isn’t the first big-name player to come to Queens and struggle. Juan Soto had an .822 OPS (.946 career) and 20 RBIs in his first 46 games with the Mets. Francisco Lindor was even worse with a .589 OPS (.815 career) and 11 RBIs. Both Soto and Lindor settled in to be above-average hitters in those seasons despite their slow starts.

When Soto was struggling last year, Hall of Famer and former Met Pedro Martinez was quick to defend him, reminding people that there’s a person in the uniform and that there would always be an adjustment period after switching teams on a massive contract.

Perhaps Bichette is in a similar situation, where the mental side of his game still has to catch up with the physical side. His $42 million salary this season is quite a raise from the $17.5 million he made in his final year with Toronto. Bichette himself admitted to pressing in the season’s opening series against the Pittsburgh Pirates.

“I didn’t anticipate it, but I definitely felt that wanting to have a moment not only for my teammates, but for the fans,” Bichette said. “That’s just something I have to manage. I guess I didn’t anticipate it affecting the way I play.”

Crushing injuries and poor offensive play across the lineup have only put more of a spotlight on Bichette’s cold start, as he and Soto are expected to carry the lineup daily. Despite setbacks, the Mets have momentum in May, notching a 10-5 record and winning four of their last five series.

Maybe his base hit late against the Yankees could be the start of a breakout. In the meantime, the Mets and their faithful will just have to wait for Bichette to find consistent success in New York.

Three up, three down: week of May 11-17

May 17, 2026; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies third baseman Alec Bohm (28) and first baseman Bryce Harper (right) celebrate after defeating the Pittsburgh Pirates at PNC Park. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images | Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

A 3-3 road trip to Boston and Pittsburgh was, for me at least, the bare minimum the Phillies had to do. Gaining some steam at home was great, but going to those two cities and laying some eggs would have left a sour taste. They had to at least go .500 to maintain that steam moving forward, but instead won five of six and again look like one of the better teams in baseball.

Deep down, we all knew this was going to be how it was with them. There’s simply too much talent to not be this good. It just looked like they all were struggling together, now they’re all on the upswing. Now they just need to maintain the momentum and take care of business at home this week.

Three up

Cristopher Sanchez – A lot of people don’t subscribe to The Athletic and I get it. However, I am one of those people that does, which means I can read this article each year, where it talks to different people around the game to try and determine who the actual Aces of the game are. Sanchez came in fifth, behind the names you’d suspect in Skenes, Skubal, Crochet and Yamamoto. However, Skenes and Skubal were placed in their own tier called “The Inner Circle”. I think it’s time to start putting Sanchez into that same conversation with those two, calling for his own placement in that “Inner Circle” of starters.

Kyle Schwarber – What more is there to say? Schwarber’s week was an incredible one and has arguably been the reason this team has moved back over .500. The starting pitching getting their act together is probably the biggest reason, but the offense was doing absolutely nothing during that 10 game rough patch. Seeing Schwarber get hot and vault himself to the top of the home run leaderboard has been a pleasure to watch.

Alec Bohm – Sometimes, a guy just needs a few days off to get his game going again. Rob Thomson had a lot of strong points to his game, but one of his weaker ones was sticking with players in the lineup when they clearly needed to come out of it. He believed that a player slumping needed to keep swinging his way out of the slump and a lot of times, that’s true. It was so blatantly obvious that Bohm needed a break, even for a day, and yet Thomson continued to put him in the lineup. Don Mattingly saw right away that Bohm’s poor production was hurting the team as well, so he sat him down to let him clear his head and he has a week where he collects nine hits in 25 plate appearances. Sometimes, it’s that easy.

Three down

Edmundo Sosa – Remember each time that we say, me included, how Sosa needs to play more and Bohm needs to play less? At the time, it wasn’t wrong. Bohm was horrid and Don Mattingly acted accordingly, sitting him down two games to get his head on straight. The only problem is – Sosa is in one of his own slumps right now and probably shouldn’t be playing much either. I think I know what the team should be looking for at the trade deadline.

J.T. Realmuto – It really does look like age has caught up to Realmuto offensively. As Matt Gelb pointed out, he’s missing fastballs in the zone badly this year. Even though his bat speed is fine, he’s just getting blown away right now. Will it change? Maybe. It had better.

Aaron Nola – There is only so much a person can defend a guy. I’ve been pro-Nola during these struggles last year and this, but even I can’t defend some of his recent performances. Even with the usual caveats of “lower your expectations!”, there is only so low one can go with him.

Why do the Cavaliers forget about Jarrett Allen and Evan Mobley?

CLEVELAND, OHIO - MAY 11: Evan Mobley #4 of the Cleveland Cavaliers celebrates with Jarrett Allen #31 against the Detroit Pistons during the third quarter in Game Four of the Second Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs at Rocket Arena on May 11, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. 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 Jason Miller/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Dinners should not be where revelations take place.

After a Saturday night meal, Cleveland Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert told head coach Kenny Atkinson that Jarrett Allen was the team’s spark. Atkinson has since credited that conversation as a turning point. And while Gilbert was right, it’s a “no s***” observation. Frankly, the fact that it took a dinner with the owner to shift Atkinson’s worldview is the most concerning detail of Cleveland’s postseason run so far.

Because the evidence was already there. Repeatedly. In plain sight.

Game 7 against the Toronto Raptors was a blueprint. Allen’s presence was stamped all over the 114-102 win. Allen was physical, assertive, and finished at the rim. Donovan Mitchell, who was nowhere near his best that night, operated as a facilitator rather than a hero. The offense flowed. Cleveland advanced.

Then the series shifted to Detroit, and almost like the coaching staff hadn’t been in the building for Game 7, the focus reverted back to the star backcourt. Allen played just 18 minutes in Game 1, which is unacceptable even though he was dealing with foul trouble. He and Evan Mobley combined for only 11 points. Cleveland lost 101-111. The team spent the next several games trying to find Mitchell’s groove rather than building on what had just worked.

Games 2 through 6 against Detroit told the same story in rotating chapters. When Allen and Mobley were connected and involved, the offense had a logic to it. When Cleveland fell back into “let’s see if Mitchell has it” mode, and more often than not in this postseason, he didn’t, the offense siloed. James Harden became the primary facilitator by default. Mitchell forced. The life drained out of the building, and it seemed like the Cavaliers blew their chance at the Eastern Conference Finals.

The pattern was never subtle. Mitchell playing hero-ball, chucking up contested looks, is electric when they’re falling. When they don’t, it is the most aggravating form of basketball to watch, and it visibly drags him and everyone around him down with it.

Game 7 against Detroit confirmed what Game 7 against Toronto had already shown. From the opening possession, the bigs were going to be involved. Allen was set up immediately and converted. Mitchell ran the offense as a distributor, getting Mobley and Allen engaged early and keeping them there. The result was an offense that played with a coherence Cleveland rarely sustained for more than a few minutes at a stretch across either series; it produced a 125-94 blowout on the road.

When Mitchell drives and draws defensive bodies, it opens a dump-off lane for Allen or Mobley. Either they finish inside, or they kick out to Sam Merrill, Max Strus, or Harden for open looks. Allen and Mobley are too gifted offensively to exist solely as pick-and-roll partners. The offense becomes genuinely difficult to guard when they’re true options, not afterthoughts.

The Cavaliers have now won two Game 7s this postseason running this offense. They’ve also dropped winnable games in both series when they abandoned it.

Cleveland opens against the New York Knicks on Tuesday as significant underdogs, and they are heading into a road series against a deeper, well-coached team. The margin for error is thin. Reverting to Mitchell-first basketball when it isn’t working; burning possessions, flattening the offense, waiting for a hot streak that may not come, is a luxury they cannot afford.

The blueprint has been written twice now. Allen and Mobley at the forefront. Mitchell as the engine who makes everyone better, not the lottery ticket the team cashes in and hopes for the best. When this Cavaliers offense is a collective effort rather than an individual one, it is as good as anything left in these playoffs.

Atkinson shouldn’t need another dinner to figure that out.

Thunder vs. Spurs – Game 1 WCFW – predictions: Odds, recent stats, trends and best bets for May 18

The Oklahoma City Thunder and San Antonio Spurs open their Western Conference Finals showdown tonight in what on paper looks to be one of the most compelling Finals matchups in recent memory. The Thunder enter undefeated in the postseason, having swept both Phoenix and the Lakers, while the Spurs arrive with a little more wear and tear on the tires having lost a game in the opening round to the Trail Blazers and two games in Round 2 to the Timberwolves. Despite those three losses, this is the series NBA fans were hoping to get because despite Oklahoma City’s postseason perfection, San Antonio holds a clear edge from the regular season, winning four of the five meetings and doing so by an average margin of 11.75 points. Are the Spurs the Thunder’s kryptonite?

A major storyline centers on the star power on both sides. Oklahoma City is led by Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the two-time reigning MVP who averaged 31.1 points during the regular season and continues to control games with better than elite efficiency. The Spurs counter with Victor Wembanyama, the 2026 Defensive Player of the Year and one of the league’s most dominant two-way forces. Wembanyama has been central to San Antonio’s surge, with the team going 37–3 in his last 40 games with at least 15 minutes played. Their matchup—Wembanyama vs. Chet Holmgren—anchors the chess match of the series.

Health will also play a key role in Game 1. The Thunder expect Jalen Williams back after a hamstring injury that has kept the All-Star out of the lineup for the better part of the season. Williams offers a crucial scoring and playmaking option to their lineup. Meanwhile, the Spurs list De’Aaron Fox as questionable with an ankle issue, though he is expected to play; his effectiveness could swing the early momentum of the series although Dylan Harper has gotten better each game of the postseason. Both teams rely heavily on their perimeter creators, making these injury updates especially significant.

As mentioned, the regular-season series tilted heavily toward San Antonio:
December 13 (111–109) – San Antonio win
December 23 (130–110) – San Antonio win
December 25 (117–102) – San Antonio win
January 13 (119-98) – Oklahoma City win

No question the Spurs draw confidence from those regular season results, but a healthy and postseason-tested Thunder are decent favorites to advance to the NBA Finals against the winner of the Cavs/Knicks series.

Lets take a closer look at tonight’s matchup and take into consideration lineups, injuries, and other factors affecting the line and total.

We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on how to catch tipoff, odds courtesy of DraftKings recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.

After 24 years, the NBA is back on NBC and Peacock, combining the nostalgia of an iconic era with the innovative future of basketball coverage. The NBA on NBC YouTube channel delivers fans must-see highlights, analysis, and exclusive and unique content. 

Game Details and How to Watch Live: Thunder vs. Spurs

  • Date: Monday, May 18, 2026
  • Time: 8:30PM EST
  • Site: Paycom Center
  • City: Oklahoma City, OK
  • Network/Streaming: NBC/Peacock

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Game Odds: Thunder vs. Spurs

The latest odds as of Monday courtesy of DraftKings:

  • Moneyline: Oklahoma City Thunder (-245), San Antonio Spurs (+200)
  • Spread: Thunder -6.5
  • Total: 220.5 points

This game opened Thunder -6.5 with the Game Total set at 217.5.

Be sure to check out DraftKings for all the latest game odds & player props for every matchup this week on the NBA schedule! 

Expected Starting Lineups: Thunder vs. Spurs

Oklahoma City Thunder

  • PG Shai Gilgeous-Alexander
  • SG Luguentz Dort
  • C Isaiah Hartenstein
  • SF Jalen Williams
  • PF Chet Holmgren

San Antonio Spurs

  • PG De’Aaron Fox
  • SG Stephon Castle
  • SG Devin Vassell
  • PF Julian Champagnie
  • C Victor Wembanyama

Injury Report: Thunder vs. Spurs

Oklahoma City Thunder

  • Jalen Williams (hamstring) is listed as probable for tonight’s game
  • Thomas Sorber (knee) has been declared OUT of tonight’s game

San Antonio Spurs

  • De’Aaron Fox (ankle) is listed as questionable for tonight’s game
  • Luke Kornet (foot) is listed as questionable for tonight’s game
  • David Jones Garcia (ankle) has been declared OUT for tonight’s game

Important stats, trends and insights: Thunder vs. Spurs

  • The Thunder are 38-7 at home this season
  • The Spurs are 33-13 on the road this season
  • The Spurs are 53-39-2 ATS this season
  • OKC is 44-45-1 ATS this season
  • The OVER has cashed in 50 of the Thunder’s 90 games this season (50-40)
  • The OVER has cashed in 42 of the Spurs’ 94 games this season (42-52)
  • Devin Vassell scored 10 or more points in each game of the Spurs series against the Timberwolves
  • Vassell pulled down 5 or more rebounds in 4 of the 6 games against Minnesota
  • Dylan Harper averaged 14.7 points, 6.2 boards, and 2.5 assists against Minnesota
  • Shai Gilgeous-Alexander shot 47.1% from the field against the Lakers
  • This is the first month this year SGA is shooting under 50% from the field
  • Chet Holmgren averaged 20 points and 8.5 rebounds last round

Rotoworld Best Bet

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Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the NBA calendar based on data points like recent performance, head-to-head player matchups, trends information and projected game totals.
 
Once the model is finished running, we put its projections next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for tonight’s Thunder and Spurs’ game:

  • Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is staying away from a play on the Moneyline
  • Spread: Rotoworld Bet is recommending a play on the Thunder -6.5 ATS
  • Total: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Game Total UNDER 220.5

NBC Sports’ Lead Betting Analyst Jay Croucher’s (@croucherJD) Series Prediction: Thunder in 7

"The Thunder will likely struggle to score in the halfcourt against Victor Wembanyama, who has found an extra gear in the playoffs, but expect the tipping point of the series to be 1) OKC having home court advantage, and 2) OKC generating just enough San Antonio turnovers to juice their own offense."

Want even more NBA best bets and predictions from our expert staff & tools? Check out the Expert NBA Predictions page from NBC Sports for money line, spread and over/under picks for every game on today’s calendar! 

If you’re looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our NBA Top Trends tool on NBC Sports!

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  • Jay Croucher (@croucherJD)
  • Drew Dinsick (@whale_capper) 
  • Vaughn Dalzell (@VmoneySports) 
  • Trysta Krick (@Trysta_Krick) 

Which young Penguins players could break out in 2026-27?

PITTSBURGH, PA - OCTOBER 27: Harrison Brunicke #45 of the Pittsburgh Penguins skates during the game against the St. Louis Blues at PPG PAINTS Arena on October 27, 2025 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

We have looked at bounce back candidates.

We have looked at potential regression candidates.

Now it is time to look at some of the Pittsburgh Penguins young players that could break out in a big way for the 2026-27 season.

The candidates are mostly obvious, but how high should we be setting the ceiling?

Let’s dig into it a little bit,

Ben Kindel

The most encouraging development for the Penguins during the 2025-26 season was the emergence and rapid development of center Ben Kindel. From the moment he arrived in training camp and started to play in the preseason there was obvious reason for excitement and optimism. And then he delivered on that far sooner than anticipated by not only making the team as an 18-year-old in his draft year, and not only sticking around for the entire season and playoffs, but also making a sizable impact.

He was not a passenger.

He was one of the drivers of the team’s success for a good chunk of the season.

He did have some moments where he ran into a rookie wall, especially later on, but that is to be expected for a player that age going through that sort of grind for the first time.

At the very least, he looks like an NHL player. The question is what his long-term upside is, including in his second season.

To try and get an idea I pulled up comparable rookie seasons over the past 20 years. The criteria: 18-year-old forwards in their rookie season, scoring between 12 and 25 goals, and finishing with between 25 and 40 points. It eliminates the 18-year-olds like Sidney Crosby and Macklin Celebrini that were clearly on a different level, as well as the players that did not stick around long enough to contribute or simply did not contribute as much as Kindel did.

The comparable results were: Andrei Svechnikov, Cole Sillinger, Valeri Nichushkin and Evander Kane.

Kindel, Svechnikov and Nichushkin were the only ones that also exceeded a better than 50 percent shot attempt share in their rookie seasons, indicating an ability to drive possession.

It’s not exactly a big group of players to draw many conclusions or comparables from, which also kind of highlights how rare of a season it was for Kindel.

Svechnikov took a huge step forward in year two. Kane took a small step forward offensively. Nchushkin was limited to just eight games in his second season and took a few years to become an outstanding second-line winger. Sillinger took a massive step backwards and has not really taken a major step forward ever since.

It’s also not really an apples-to-apples comparison across the board because Svechnikov, Nichushkin and Kane are all wingers, while Kindel and Sillinger are the only centers on the list.

The ideal scenario here would be a Svechnikov-like jump offensively. But I am not sure he has Svechnikov’s shot, even if he might have the two-way game.

Sillinger is the example you do not want him to follow, but I also think his rookie year was significantly better and more well-rounded than Sillinger’s. Sillinger didn’t push play to the same degree that Kindel did and received slightly more favorable situations and matchups.

Kindel’s not likely to be a franchise-level player or star-level player. But that doesn’t mean he won’t be a really good, really important long-term piece. The sort of jump he takes next season will give us more insight into what that upside can be.

Harrison Brunicke

Brunicke’s 2025-26 season did not follow the path many people expected, getting playing time in the NHL, WHL and AHL. There’s been some concern that the Penguins didn’t really help his development this season by jumping him all around to three different levels, and having him sit for most of the first half of the season while they made a decision on him, but I’m not sure I agree with that take.

At the end of the day he is going to play more hockey games this season than he did in each of the previous two seasons.

He has also received a significant taste of pro hockey, including at the NHL level, and held his own as a 19-year-old.

He just wasn’t ready for full-time NHL action at that point. It’s okay. It happens.

He has been especially strong since getting an opportunity to play at Wilkes-Barre, including in the playoffs.

President of Hockey Operations/general manager Kyle Dubas has already made it clear that improving the team’s defensive play is going to be a huge priority this offseason, and I can’t think of a better place to start looking for that than internally with a player like Brunicke, even if it does not happen from the very start of the season.

Honestly, he checks every box for what the Penguins should be looking for on next year’s roster and would add youth, skating and a potential long-term defensive solution. He’s been a highly touted prospect from the moment he was drafted and has impressed at every step in the process.

They need somebody to emerge as a long-term piece on defense. Next year could be the start for him.

Sergei Murashov

There is not a young player in the organization that can change the Penguins’ timeline for contention more than Murashov.

I do not say that to put more pressure on the kid or raise expectations around him, but just to point out the reality of the situation and his position.

The Penguins farm system has improved significantly over the past few years in terms of depth and potential NHL players. But it is still lacking that one dude that can be a top-tier player. If Murashov reaches his ceiling, he could be that top-tier player. And given that he plays the most impactful position on the ice, and the one that can change an entire season for a team, he could be the most significant player they have.

That is what goalies do.

But goalies are also maddening, volatile beasts that can surprise in the best and worst ways. There are maybe five established goalies in the NHL that you should feel confident in from one year to the next. Or even within the same season.

Young goalies with no NHL track record are even more volatile and unpredictable.

The good news: Murashov looks NHL ready, at least in the sense that he has nothing left to prove in the AHL. He has dominated for two years down there, and entering play on Monday has a .938 save percentage this postseason in his first six games. He is almost certainly going to be in the goalie rotation next season with a chance to make a difference. I imagine there will be some rocky moments at times, but there is also the potential for a major contribution.

If they get back to the playoffs next season, my guess is he would be a big reason why.

Bill Zonnon

If you go back to the 2025 NHL Draft, the one Penguins player taken in the first round that seemed to get the most consistent praise for his game, and for being NHL-ready, wasn’t actually Ben Kindel, but instead Bill Zonnon. He’s been a favorite of prospect watchers all year and has received high-praise for his work ethic, two-way play and hockey IQ. He has done nothing but back all of that up on the ice in both the QMJHL and AHL. When it comes to the latter, he showed up having already learned the system on his own and was ready to be plopped into the lineup.

He then scored two goals in his first two games.

I don’t know if he will make the roster next season right out of training camp, but I could see a scenario in the middle of the season where he gets an opportunity and never returns to Wilkes-Barre.

Canadiens Must Put The Pedal To The Metal

After a complete collapse on home ice on Saturday night, the Montreal Canadiens find themselves on the brink of elimination for the second time in these playoffs as they face a do-or-die Game 7 with the Buffalo Sabres at KeyBank Centre on Monday night. The last time the Canadiens had to play a Game 7, they came out on top, but they needed a little help from the Forum ghosts, who had apparently made the trip to Florida for their game against the Tampa Bay Lightning. They won, but they didn’t deserve to with just nine shots on net. They’ll need to be better than that tonight.

Tonight’s tilt will be the 203rd Game 7 in league history and only the second in these playoffs, with the Canadiens starring in both. The Sabres will be playing only their eighth Game 7 in franchise history, and so far they have a 1-6 record, but are 1-1 when the game is played at home. Both home games required overtime. Meanwhile, this will be the 26th Game 7 in Canadiens history and the 15th on the road. The franchise has a 16-9 record and is 8-6 on the road.

Canadiens: A Fairytale Worthy Experience Despite The Nightmarish Ending
Hutson Playing Huge Role For Canadiens
Canadiens Excited To Play Another Game 7

The Habs will not be holding a morning skate today, but we may get some lineup hints if the healthy scratches take to the ice. Joe Veleno took an elbow to the head in the last game, and one can wonder if he’ll be dressed tonight or if Martin St-Louis will decide to make some changes after the disastrous Game 6.

That’s not a decision to take lightly, especially after using the same lineup for the last six games. Anyone you decide to bring in will be somewhat rusty. Brendan Gallagher has not played since Game 7 against the Lightning, while Oliver Kapanen’s last game was on April 26. When Gallagher entered the first round in Game five, he provided a much-needed spark and scored the first goal of the game. Can the veteran do the same against a much faster and younger Buffalo team? As for Kapanen, he has two goals against the Sabres in four games this season, but that was in the regular season.

St-Louis could also elect to mix his lines a little bit. The top line had an awful game in Game 6, and that was in large part because Juraj Slafkovsky was ineffective. On the other end, Ivan Demidov looks like he has finally found his rhythm in this series; perhaps he could cause some damage alongside Nick Suzuki and Cole Caufield. There’s also the possibility of reuniting Alexandre Texier, Kirby Dach and Zach Bolduc, who worked well as a unit against Tampa.

Whichever combinations St-Louis decides to put on the ice, though, the Canadiens’ top players will have to be better. Montreal also can’t afford to miss golden opportunities. Game 6 might have been vastly different if Texier hadn’t missed the pass that would have sent him on the breakaway on the first shift of the second period.

In the last two games, St-Louis started with Slafkovsky, Suzuki, and Caufield, and they were scored on following defensive-zone turnovers by Caufield on Thursday and Slafkovsky on Saturday. It might be an idea not to lead with that line, but with an energy line that can set the tone in this pivotal game.

While Saturday’s defeat wasn’t Jakub Dobes’ fault, the Czech netminder can play a much better game than he did, and on Monday night, he’ll need to have his A-game. So far in these playoffs, the 24-year-old netminder has always bounced back (or, as St-Louis would say, "forward") after a loss; he is 5-0 with a .911 save percentage. In those five games, the Canadiens have scored 19 goals and only allowed nine for a 1.80 GAA. That’s the kind of performance Montreal needs. With a win, Dobes would become only the fifth goaltender in franchise history with multiple Game 7 wins; he would join Ken Dryden, Patrick Roy, Jaroslav Halak, and Carey Price in the very select club.

In Game 7 against Tampa, Dobes allowed just one goal on 29 shots, while Suzuki scored the team’s first goal, and Alex Newhook scored the unorthodox game-winner. Kaiden Guhle assisted on both goals, while Lane Hutson, who leads the team in scoring, had an assist. The team that scores first in a Game 7 has won the game 75% of the time (152-50), which is what Montreal did against the Bolts, but in six games against the Sabres, they’ve only scored the first goal once. So far in this series, the home team has only won two of the six games.

Puck drop is set for 7:30 PM, and you can catch the game on ESPN, SN, TVAS, and CBC. Jean Hebert and Wes McCauley are set to officiate, while Scott Cherrey and Devin Berg will be the linemen. Whoever wins the game will head to Raleigh to face the Carolina Hurricanes in Game 1 of the Conference Final on Thursday. It will be the Canes’ first game since May 9, when they completed the sweep against the Philadelphia Flyers.


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Knicks Bulletin: ‘They have a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity’

NEW YORK, NY - MARCH 23: Spike Lee and Patrick Ewing embrace during the game between the Brooklyn Nets and the New York Knicks on March 23, 2024 at Madison Square Garden in New York City, New York. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2024 NBAE (Photo by Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

After what felt like a month, the Knicks finally learned the next team they’ll put to the sword.

It’s the Cleveland Knights, no puns intended.

Here’s the latest in what will likely be the softest and most casual Bulletin in the next two weeks.

Mike Brown

On sticking with Mikal Bridges despite outside questions:

“I don’t know if I was publicly backing him. I was just telling the truth. He can play, he’s been in this situation before, we’ve had success with him. So I was just basically answering the questions regarding him. He’s earned the right to be there. He’s earned the right to do a lot of different things. And I was just reiterating it.”

On Bridges’ importance within the team structure:

“He’s definitely an important piece of what we’re trying to do, as well as everybody else. He’s gotta do his job on both ends, and when he does, we’re pretty good. Not just him; when anybody else does, we’re pretty good. So he’s no different than anybody else.”

Mikal Bridges

On the need for steady improvement throughout the playoffs:

“You can’t look at the past. You learn from it, but just be present and do what you gotta do to get better. I think that’s really it. Just learn from each game and try to get better every single game. And that’s really it. Like I said, I always try to play to help win and just keep trying to get better. That’s been the outcome.”

Miles McBride

On the benefit of extra rest before the Eastern Conference finals:

“It’s good to give your body some rest. Be able to sit back and watch your opponents beat each other up in a sense.”

Patrick Ewing

On the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity in front of the Knicks:

“What I would tell them is they have a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. No one knows if it’s going to come back around. When we got there in ’94, I definitely thought that we were going to have another opportunity in ’95 — take advantage of this opportunity. Continue to do the things that they’ve been doing. Continue to play as a team. The five guys on the floor got to do their part, the bench has to do their part. So remember that it’s about team, this is not tennis with one person against another person, all five have to be locked in, be unselfish, be selfish when you need to be selfish, and just play a team game.”

On why these Knicks can win a championship:

“Anything is possible. These guys have been putting in the work, the coaches have been putting them in great positions to accomplish that. That’s everybody’s goal at the beginning of the year to win a championship, and we’re all hoping that happens.”

On how the Knicks finish the job:

“They have to continue to do what they’ve been doing. We’ve been definitely hot in these last two rounds. We have to continue to do the same thing that we’ve been doing — playing as a team, both offensively and defensively taking care of business, no turnovers, just all the things that they’ve been doing.”

John Calipari

On how playing through Karl-Anthony Towns elevates the Knicks:

“What everybody is seeing is that playing through him the way they are doesn’t take away from anybody else’s game. On the contrary, it adds to everybody else’s game. And is exactly right for this team. The style of game he’s been playing, especially since they got behind the Hawks, I call that Jokic style, and that’s without him getting a ton of shots. Good for Mike and good for Karl.”

On Towns handling regular-season criticism:

“You know why I’m happy for him? He never said a word when he was taking all the grief he took during the regular season. He just kept walking. There’s a word for that, by the way: Professional.”

“Hey, I know it’s hard to listen to me when I’m talking about him. I admit I’m biased. But I stand up for my guys and this time it was easy, even when it looked as if he was scuffling. Now he’s started making things easier for everybody else. I told Spike the other day: If they keep playing through Karl this way, they can win the whole thing.”

On Towns’ versatility and unselfishness:

“You can’t foul him because he shoots free throws like a guard. He can absolutely make the right pass if you make a hard cut. And because of his size, he can pass the ball over the defense if he has to. As good a scorer as he’s been, guy’s not thinking shoot first. It just speaks to how unselfish he is. Hey, back when we were both at Kentucky and I needed him to play 21 minutes a game so Dakari Johnson could get 19, you know what he did? He went and sat down and didn’t say a word then, either.”

On first recognizing Jalen Brunson’s talent:

“I remember seeing [Brunson] when he was on his way to Villanova. And even though I knew Jay Wright had him locked up, I called up Jay and said, ‘I need to recruit the hell out of this Brunson kid.’ Because it was clear how good he was.”

Naz Reid

On supporting Karl-Anthony Towns during the Knicks’ playoff run:

“I’m trying to get out there back home for sure, trying to see him play in person, you know, from a spectator aspect, that’s a brother for sure, I’ve been years in with him as well. So, and him also being from Jersey, I’ve known him long before NBA. So I mean, just trying to make sure I give the same love to him that he’s reciprocated to us and so forth and so on. I obviously want to be there for him as much as I can. I mean, he’s been there for me more than you guys know. So I mean, just showing that love is the least I can do.”

Baron Davis

On comparing Jalen Brunson to Allen Iverson:

“Jalen Brunson to me is like Allen Iverson in this era. Like nobody can guard him. No matter what you do, he going to get his shot off. He gets hot. You know, it’s on fuego and he can play to the moment.”

Jamal Crawford

On the similarities between Jalen Brunson and Allen Iverson’s usage:

“I think they are a little more diverse in using Brunson. To me, they’re using Brunson, as AI was used in Philly. And they got him off the ball some. They moved him around. Then they got him in pick-and-roll situations. Obviously, we know the playoffs slow down, and you want the ball in your best player’s hands, but they’re a little less predictable.”

Stephen A. Smith

On why the New York Knicks are LeBron James’ best option:

“Now, I understand that it’s emotional. I know that. But what I’m thinking about when it comes to the New York Knicks is two things. If you don’t win the title this year, again, you don’t … He gonna be with the Knicks. That’s the brand that will easily enable LeBron to pocket an additional half a billion dollars. And then you got LeBron with Brunson, with OG, with Karl-Anthony Towns.”

Paul Pierce

On why LeBron James should retire:

“Yeah, I think he should, man. Just like for the simple fact that at the age that he still receives the criticism that he still does. The greats wasn’t getting this criticism late. Nobody was criticizing Kobe when he wasn’t going to the playoffs in his last year. They was just enjoying his moments. Like, the same with Jordan in Washington.

“For the simple fact that the man is 41, and we still critiquing him like he 25 and should be winning championships still. Just the criticism he gets still. He still gets criticism.”

Arizona Diamondbacks News, 5/18: Rocky Mountain Aye

May 17, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; The infield is covered during a weather delay before the start of the game between the Colorado Rockies and the Arizona Diamondbacks at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images | Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images

Recaps

[AZ Central] Diamondbacks build big lead, hold off Rockies in road trip finale – A weather delay was announced five minutes before the scheduled first pitch, and a few minutes later, groundskeepers rolled out the field tarp. Light rain then began to fall. At 1:31 p.m., in Denver, fans were told to seek shelter with lightning in the area. But the sky eventually cleared up, the tarp was off the field by 2:35 p.m. and the game got under way. Fans in the stands sang along and danced to music, including Neil Diamond’s classic “Sweet Caroline. Most appeared to have waited out the delay.

[dbacks.com] Carroll homers twice as D-backs erupt, then hold off Rox late rally – After being held homerless for the first two games of the series, the D-backs unloaded on the Coors Field bleachers Sunday, with Corbin Carroll knocking a pair to pace Arizona’s 8-6 win over the Rockies and secure the series win and a .500 road trip. Gurriel knocked his first homer of the season in the two-run fifth and Carroll’s second homer of the game, a 448-foot blast to right-center, accounted for a sixth-inning insurance run to make it an 8-2 lead. Michael Soroka pitched 5 2/3 innings for Arizona, allowing two runs (both earned) on six hits and two walks while striking out eight.

[Arizona Sports] Corbin Carroll knocks 2 home runs in Diamondbacks’ win over Rockies – With the D-backs up 3-0 in the fourth inning, Carroll hit a 94-mph fastball off Rockies righty Michael Lorenzen into the Colorado bullpen for his sixth homer of the season to make it 5-0. His second homer of the day marked the ninth-career multi-home run game of Carroll’s career. His last multi-homer game came on June 3 last season against the Atlanta Braves. Carroll’s offensive outburst was a welcome sight for the Diamondbacks, as Arizona left 10 runners on base and went 2-for-11 with runners in scoring position in a 4-2 loss to the Rockies on Saturday.

Team news

[AZ Big Media] Paul Sewald of the Diamondbacks has, literally, returned home – Last spring, Sewald and his wife, Molly, purchased a home in the Valley with a plan: six months at home, six months on the road, and stability for their two young daughters. The cycle of packing, unpacking and re-establishing routines was getting tiring. Then the phone rang. “The Diamondbacks called, and we thought, ‘That’s amazing,’” Sewald said, sitting in the dugout during batting practice. “Pretty cool to stay at home.” For Sewald, the move wasn’t just convenient — it was personal. Sewald and Molly met while she was an ASU student. His brother, Johnny, is also a former Sun Devil. The couple considered settling in the Valley during Sewald’s first stint with the D-backs, from 2023-2024.

[SI] Diamondbacks Prospect Manuel Pena Simply Can’t Be Ignored Any Longer – To say infield prospect Manuel Pena has been swinging a hot bat for the Double-A Amarillo Sod Poodles would be a vast undersell. The 22-year-old is simply posting a .963 OPS, with a .634 slugging percentage through the first 36 games of the Texas League season. The reason that slug is so high? Pena has 15 home runs already. That is on pace for just over 57 long balls in the 138-game Texas League season. Six of his home runs have come in the month of May, including a two-homer game back on May 7.

And, elsewhere…

[ESPN] Mariners call up top prospect Colt Emerson for MLB debut – [Emerson] will be the youngest Mariners player to make his major league debut since Félix Hernández did so at 19 on Aug. 4, 2005. Emerson signed an eight-year, $95 million contract April 1 — the biggest commitment at the time for a minor leaguer yet to make his major league debut. The Mariners selected Emerson with the 22nd pick in the 2023 draft, and his stock only rose from there. General manager Justin Hollander said, “This is not a 15 at-bat or 20 at-bat tryout to see if he’s capable of taking the job and running with it for the rest of the year.”

[Awful Announcing] Joe Davis, John Smoltz discuss whether MLB should change ABS strike zone – As Davis explained, walk rates (specifically, unintentional walk rates) are at an all-time high because the ABS has shrunk the strike zone. Davis then asked Smoltz, “Would you tweak the ABS zone, make it bigger in certain areas?” “No,” Smoltz, who was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2015, responded. “I think lowering it gives hitters a chance with velocity down vs. velocity up. If that strike zone was higher, no chance.” “That’s a spot where the zone has shrunk the most,” Davis said. “The top of the zone is three inches shorter than what umpires were calling last year.”

MLB.com: Top 10 Plays of the Week

Astros Prospect Report: May 17th

WEST PALM BEACH, FL - MARCH 09: Kevin Alvarez (11) of the Houston Astros throws from the outfield during a spring training practice game on March 09, 2026 at CACTI Park of the Palm Beaches in West Palm Beach, Florida. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Another day of minor league baseball is in the books. See the results below. Check out the previous days recap here.

AAA: Sugar Land Space Cowboys (20-25) lost 7-6 (BOX SCORE)

Sugar Land got on the board in the 3rd inning scoring 4 runs on a Strahm sac fly and Nelson 3 run home run. McPherson got the start making his Triple-A debut but struggled allowing 5 runs over 2.2 innings. After falling behind 6-4, the offense tied things up in the 7th on a Strahm 2 run single. The game went to the 9th and in the bottom of the 9th, Tacoma walked it off as Sugar Land fell 7-6.

Note: Nelson is hitting .305 in Triple-A.


AA: Corpus Christi Hooks (17-22) lost 5-3 (BOX SCORE)

Dombroski started for the Hooks and went 4 innings allowing 1 run. The offense tied it up in the 3rd on a Whitaker sac fly. In the 8th, the Hooks rallied for 2 runs on RBI doubles from Encarnacion and Meyers. The bullpen was solid until the 9th where Ramsey allowed 4 runs, though all were unearned. The offense was unable to counter in the bottom of the inning as the Hooks fell 5-3.

Note: Austin has a .834 OPS this season.


A+: Asheville Tourists (9-30) lost 19-12 (BOX SCORE)

DeVos started for Asheville and went 4 innings allowing 6 runs, 4 earned. The offense got on the board in the 2nd inning on a Call RBI double. They picked up 3 more runs in the 4th on a Call 2 run home run and Thomas sac fly. Steinbaugh relieved DeVos but struggled allowing 6 runs over 1.2 innings. In the 5th, Daudet connected on a 3 run home run. Asheville rallied for 5 runs in the 6th inning to tie it on a fielder’s choice, Call 2 run double, and two runs scoring on wild pitches. The bullpen continued to struggled as the Spartanburgers added 7 more runs between the 8th and 9th inning. The offense loaded the bases in the bottom of the 9th but was unable to score as Asheville fell 19-12.

Note: Walker is hitting .294 this season.


A: Fayetteville Woodpeckers (18-21) won 8-7 (BOX SCORE

The Woodpeckers got on the board in the first inning on an Alvarez solo home run, his 5th of the season. Carrera got the start and went 5 innings allowing 7 runs. The offense battled back in the 5th scoring 2 runs on a Sierra RBI double and Alvarez RBI single. The offense got another run in the 6th on a Ramirez sac fly and one in the 7th inning on a wild pitch. The Woodpeckers tied things up in the 8th inning scoring 2 runs on a Wakefield groundout and Sierra sac fly. The offense took the lead in the 9th inning on a Salas RBI double. Smith went the final 4 innings allowing zero runs as he closed out the 8-7 win.

Note: Sierra has a .892 OPS this season.


Today’s minor league starters:

SL: OFF

CC: OFF

AV: OFF

FV: OFF

Canadiens vs Sabres Props & NHL Playoffs Game 7 Best Bets

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The Montreal Canadiens and Buffalo Sabres will close out a thrilling, high-scoring series tonight at KeyBank Center.

I'm eying both captains – and top line winger Juraj Slafkovsky – to make an impact with my Canadiens vs. Sabres props and NHL picks.

Be sure to read our full Canadiens vs. Sabres predictions on Monday, May 18.

Best Canadiens vs Sabres props for Game 7

PlayerPickBET99
Canadiens Juraj SlafkovskyOver 0.5 points-150
Sabres Rasmus Dahlin Over 2.5 shots-170
Canadiens Nick Suzuki Over 0.5 assists-135

Game 7 Prop #1: Juraj Slafkovsky Over 0.5 points

-150 at BET99

Juraj Slafkovsky is having a productive series, with six points through six games. What’s impressive is that he has managed strong outputs while scoring only once on 3.13 expected goals and 21 chances. He’s deserving of better. 

Open ice will be hard to come by in a Game 7, with every puck hotly contested in a meat-and-potatoes style of game. Slafkovsky’s ability to get to the net and operate in tight spaces will serve him well.

Game 7 Prop #2: Rasmus Dahlin Over 2.5 shots

-170 at BET99

Rasmus Dahlin is a one-man shooting gallery for the Buffalo Sabres. He has generated 3+ shots in eight of the last nine games and five straight in Buffalo. 

He’s been more productive at home, especially in this series. Dahlin combined for 12 shots on 21 attempts through three home dates, a stark contrast to the eight on 11 he mustered up over three games in Montreal.

Nobody on the Sabres has generated more attempts or shots than Dahlin at home. Likely to play 25+ minutes in Game 7, the volume should remain quite strong.

Game 7 Prop #3: Nick Suzuki Over 0.5 assists

-135 at BET99

Cole Caufield leads the Montreal Canadiens with 22 scoring chances against Buffalo, and right behind him is Slafkovsky at 21.

What do those two have in common? They're centered by Nick Suzuki at 5-on-5 as well as on the power play.

Suzuki is the best facilitator the Canadiens have up front and, clearly, he's helping create plenty of looks for his linemates. Given how much of the offense runs through Suzuki and the talented finishers on his wing, he's as likely as anybody to pick up a helper.

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Guardians News and Notes: Guardians’ Turn in Detroit

CLEVELAND, OHIO - JANUARY 27: Manager Stephen Vogt of the Cleveland Guardians greets Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers after the game against the Detroit Pistons at Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse on January 27, 2025 in Cleveland, Ohio. The Cavaliers defeated the Pistons 110-91. 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 Jason Miller/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After a great night for Cleveland in Detroit, the Guardians head to the Motor City to play the Tigers for four days beginning tonight. Let’s hope it goes as well for the Cleveland baseball team as it did for the Cavaliers.

Yesterday was a tremendous day for the Guardians. Nicole/Deborah covered it quite well here as always.

If you haven’t been keeping up with Zack Meisel’s amazing work at the Athletic, now’s the time to catch up. He covered remembering Bob Tayek, Guardians’ stadium PA here. He covered Parker Messick’s historic start here. And it’s a good idea to go back to take a look at Angel Martinez’s hot start as covered by Zack here. I have to note that the Athletic tried to get their Twins’ writer to go national and he refused and started his own website, so I’d continue to subscribe to the Athletic and support Zack were I a Guardians’ fan who loves his content.

FanGraphs’ Michael Baumann had a nice article about Erik Sabrowski that I missed earlier.

AROUND MLB:

The Tigers lost, but the Royals, White Sox and Twins all won yesterday.