How collective bargaining uncertainty factors into Phillies extending Luzardo

How collective bargaining uncertainty factors into Phillies extending Luzardo originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

CLEARWATER, Fla. — There is a possibility, while unlikely, that there won’t be baseball in 2027.

Will there be a salary cap?

A salary floor?

Both?

Right now, there is not a clear picture of what’s coming in Major League Baseball — or when. The disagreement surrounds payrolls across the game.

The Phillies carry the fourth-highest luxury tax payroll in the league at just under $312 million, and it’s unclear how grandfathered money might factor into a potential salary cap structure.

So they got ahead of the chaos.

On Sunday, the Phillies and Jesús Luzardo agreed to a five-year, $135 million extension covering the 2027 through 2031 seasons. He will make $11 million this season in his third and final arbitration year.

Luzardo is just 28 and won’t turn 29 until September. Age is a central reason the Phillies felt urgency. If he goes out and posts another 32-start campaign with a sub-3.50 ERA, he could have commanded north of $30 million annually on the open market.

The collective bargaining agreement is the backdrop to everything here. The current agreement expires after 2026, and a work stoppage — lockout, strike, or otherwise — would push the next season to 2028. If that happens, Luzardo would be knocking on 30 when the next season began.

That’s exactly the age most free-agent starting pitchers, especially left-handers, hit the open market. The window to sign him at a relative discount was now, not next winter.

If a salary cap is implemented and the Phillies are up against it, they would not have been as strong a suitor. Locking him up now eliminated that risk.

There would have been significant competition for Luzardo regardless. A cap-and-floor system — the structure most likely to bridge the gap between players and owners — would have forced smaller-market teams to spend up, making him an even hotter commodity.

The foundation for this deal was laid long before Monday. When Dave Dombrowski acquired Luzardo from Miami in December 2024, trading top-five infield prospect Starlyn Caba and outfielder Emaarion Boyd, the southpaw was coming off a season-ending back injury with an ERA north of six. It was a calculated bet on talent and upside.

A healthy 2025 validated it. Luzardo made a team-leading 32 starts for the second time in his career, went 15-7 with a 3.92 ERA, threw a career-high 183 2/3 innings and struck out 216. He finished seventh in NL Cy Young voting.

His season wasn’t without turbulence. A stretch of pitch-tipping produced back-to-back disastrous starts — 20 earned runs in 5 2/3 innings. Remove those outings and he pitched to a 3.03 ERA in 30 starts.

Once the issue was identified and corrected, Luzardo closed the year with a 2.84 ERA over his final 11 starts. That version of the pitcher is what the Phillies are buying.

The Luzardo deal also further validates the decision to pass on Ranger Suárez in free agency this past winter. Suárez landed five years and $130 million with Boston, yet has never made 30 starts in a season or eclipsed 160 innings. Luzardo has cleared 175 innings twice and made 32 starts in each of those campaigns.

The Phillies chose the more durable pitcher at $5 million more total. That’s a reasonable trade-off.

The financial picture works, too. Nick Castellanos ($19.2 million) and Taijuan Walker ($18 million) come off the books after this season, freeing up roughly $37 million. The $16 million annual increase in Luzardo’s value will be easier to absorb in that context.

What has allowed the Phillies to keep investing in starting pitching year after year?

In part, one of the sharper trades and extensions in recent memory. Cristopher Sánchez was acquired from Tampa Bay in 2019 for prospect Curtis Mead, who has appeared in just 152 big-league games and hit .238.

Sánchez’s hot start to 2024 earned him a four-year, $22.5 million extension buying out his final pre-arbitration year and three arbitration seasons at just over $5 million annually, with club options for 2029 ($14 million) and 2030 ($15 million). A bargain for a Cy Young-caliber pitcher that created the room to keep spending.

Looking ahead, Wheeler’s deal expires after the 2027 season, the end of his three-year, $120 million. With Luzardo now signed through 2031, he joins Trea Turner and Bryce Harper as the three players under contract that far out.

The roster construction beyond Wheeler’s departure will look very different, and the next CBA — which will likely span longer than the 2021 agreement — will shape how that money is distributed.

The next domino worth watching is closer Jhoan Duran, one year away from his own contract year. A work stoppage could delay those conversations or accelerate them. The Phillies may choose to act sooner rather than later.

For now, the Luzardo extension is the statement. If he continues to take the ball every five days and pitches to his ceiling, this deal could age as one of the more cost-efficient contracts on the books for a club that has never shied away from spending.

There’s a great unknown hanging over the sport heading into 2027. One thing is certain, though. Jesús Luzardo will be in red pinstripes.

Knicks’ Mohamed Diawara posterizes Nic Batum — who he grew up watching — with vicious dunk

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Mohamed Diawara dunks on Nic Batum during the Knicks-Clippers game on March 9, 2026, Image 2 shows Mohamed Diawara dunks on Nic Batum during the Knicks-Clippers game on March 9, 2026

LOS ANGELES — Mohamed Diawara’s first NBA dunk was a poster. 

The Knicks rookie highlighted an otherwise dreary Knicks loss Monday with a dribble through the Clippers defense before a one-handed jam over fellow Frenchman Nic Batum. 

It occurred late in the third quarter and ignited a pro-Knicks crowd at the Intuit Dome, but the visitors couldn’t complete a comeback and fell amid a rash of turnovers, 126-118.

“I was just driving and dunked the ball and fortunately (Batum) was there,” Diawara, who grew up in France hearing much about Batum, told The Post. “But that was a good play. Funny to see that. My first dunk – my first poster – was against him.”

Diawara’s jam was part of an 11-3 run to end the third quarter. He finished with five points in 18 minutes with four rebounds and two assists. 

“(The dunk) felt good,” Diawara said. “It was about time. I was looking forward to doing it.”

Mohamed Diawara dunks on Nic Batum during the Knicks-Clippers game on March 9, 2026. X /@nyknicks
Mohamed Diawara dunks on Nic Batum during the Knicks-Clippers game on March 9, 2026. X /@nyknicks

With Jose Alvarado struggling, coach Mike Brown briefly gave Tyler Kolek a meaningful cameo in the fourth quarter. 

Kolek has been basically out of the rotation since Alvarado was acquired in a trade. On Monday, Kolek went scoreless in just two minutes.

“I thought Jose was struggling a little bit. So I threw Tyler out there to see if we could get something from him, similar to me throwing Jordan Clarkson out there (in the previous game against the Lakers),” Brown said. “Tyler didn’t get a long time to play because we put Jalen out there to see if we could make a run. But I said this before, those guys have to keep themselves ready just in case their number is called. Because it can be called at any time.” 


Brown knocked on wood while crediting the performance staff, including owner James Dolan’s son, Quentin, for keeping Mitchell Robinson healthy throughout this season. 

“Casey (Smith, the VP of Sports Medicine), Chico (Goenega, the head athletic trainer), those guys, and Quentin Dolan, those guys have done a nice job of coming up with a plan,” Brown said. “And the biggest thing is to get him in games this year and making sure he stays healthy. And so our whole medical staff, starting with those three guys down to everybody that’s in our medical department. They’ve done a great job of keeping him healthy and keeping him in the game and practicing and stuff like that. So I applaud them more than anybody else for what they put together and how they’re executing it.”

Quentin Dolan holds the title of Senior VP, Player Performance and Science Leader.

Robinson, who has been injury prone throughout his career and underwent multiple surgeries on his ankle, again sat Monday versus the Clippers in the second game of a back-to-back. Robinson hasn’t played both games of a back-to-back all season. 

No. 12 Gonzaga beats Oregon State, advances to 29th straight WCC final

LAS VEGAS (AP) — Graham Ike had 24 points and 11 rebounds to lead No. 12 Gonzaga to a 65-56 victory over Oregon State on Monday night and put the Bulldogs in the West Coast Conference Tournament championship game for the 29th straight time.

Gonzaga (29-3) will play No. 21 Saint Mary’s or Santa Clara in the title game. Those teams met later Monday night. It will be the Zags’ last WCC championship before heading to the Pac-12 Conference next season.

Oregon State’s seasons ends at 17-16.

Ike, the WCC player of the year, made 10 of 17 shots for his 14th double-double this season and 45th of his career. He was the only Gonzaga player to score in double figures.

Jorge Diaz Graham led the Beavers with 15 points and Noah Amenhauser scored 11.

SANTA CLARA 76, NO. 21 SAINT MARY'S 71

LAS VEGAS (AP) — Sash Gavalyugov scored 23 points including a back-breaking 3-pointer to lead Santa Clara to a victory over Saint Mary’s in the semifinals of the West Coast Conference Tournament to take a big step toward making the Big Dance.

The Broncos (26-7) will play No. 12 Gonzaga (29-3) in the championship game on Tuesday night. The winner receives the conference’s automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.

While the Bulldogs are safely in the tournament, Santa Clara was considered on the bubble. The Broncos entered this game No. 42 in the NCAA’s NET rankings and No. 37 in Kenpom.

Saint Mary’s (27-5) could take a hit in the tournament seeding, but the Gaels figure to get into the field of 68. They were No. 20 in the NET and No. 22 in KenPom.

This is the first time since 2021 that the WCC final hasn’t been between Gonzaga and Saint Mary’s.

Santa Clara coach Herb Sendek claimed his 600th career victory, a somewhat mild upset over the Gaels, who were favored by 5 1/2 points at BetMGM Sportsbook.

Elijah Mahi added 19 points for the Broncos and Allen Graves finished with 10.

Paulius Murauskas scored 26 points to lead Saint Mary’s, Mikey Lewis had 23 and Andrew McKeever totaled 11 points and 11 rebounds.

Utah Jazz vs Golden State Warriors: recap and final score

SALT LAKE CITY, UT - MARCH 9: Blake Hinson #2 of the Utah Jazz reacts after sinking the game winning basket in front of Head Coach Steve Kerr of Golden State Warriors during the second half of their game at the Delta Center on March 9, 2026 in Salt Lake City, Utah. 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 Chris Gardner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Utah Jazz beat the Golden State Warriors in a game they really needed to lose 119-116. The first thing that needs to be said here is that the Golden State Warriors are pathetic from top to bottom. It starts with Steve Kerr, who decided to whine after the game was over about the number of games played.

Does the league need to lower the number of games? Yeah, probably. Would that change Steve Kerr from being one of the most overrated coaches of all time? No.

The Jazz, who are giving half effort to try to lose these games, rested Keyonte George in the fourth quarter, and the Warriors couldn’t figure out how to pull off a win. They weren’t helped by the highly overrated guard, Brandin Podziemski, who went 0/4 from the free-throw line in the fourth quarter and cost his team the game.

Draymond Green, guided by Steve Kerr, was also horrendous tonight, going 2/7 from the field and 1/5 from three. Green had 11 assists because he’s terrified of shooting the ball and played hot potato all night. It’s a reminder that Kerr and Draymond have led the Warriors to multiple top lottery picks whenever they’re without Steph Curry.

For Utah, it’s a win that might help team morale, but it now puts their pick in real danger. Utah is playing Sacramento and Washington soon and if they don’t lock into this tank 100% they’re in real danger of losing their pick. Right now, they’re just one game up on Dallas, who have lost seven games in a row. Utah should “take note” of the effort and commitment other teams are putting into these losses. Doing this halfway against bad teams (like the Warriors) and bad coaches (like Steve Kerr) is playing with fire, and the Jazz got burned again this season. It’s not a catastrophic loss, but Utah has now forced its own hand in future games to rest all its high-level players.

Sloppy Knicks plagued by turnovers for second straight game in loss to Clippers

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows Karl-Anthony Towns drives during the Knicks-Clippers game on March 9, 2026, Image 2 shows Jalen Brunson reacts during the Knicks-Clippers game on March 9, 2026, Image 3 shows Kawhi Leonard dunks the ball during the Clippers-Knicks game

LOS ANGELES — A day earlier, coach Mike Brown made an impassioned plea to his players to take care of the ball.

As he put it, control the controllables. 

They didn’t listen. 

Jalen Brunson reacts during the Knicks-Clippers game on March 9, 2026. NBAE via Getty Images

The Knicks committed 20 turnovers in a second straight slopfest in L.A., this time falling to the Clippers on Monday night, 126-118, at the Intuit Dome. The defeat felt sealed, appropriately, with consecutive Knicks turnovers in the final 3:05 – one by Jalen Brunson, the other by Landry Shamet. 

But New York still held hope until Shamet and OG Anunoby missed contested 3-pointers in the final 25 seconds. Then it left Southern California with back-to-back clunkers. 

“Biggest difference in the basketball game,” Brown said, “was our turnovers. …I liked our fight. I liked the way we played in the second half for the most part. We’ve just got to find a way to take care of the basketball.” 

The Knicks (41-25), who allowed 24 points off those turnovers, wasted a rare high-scoring performance from Karl-Anthony Towns, who dropped 33 points on 12-for-16 shooting. It was the first time he scored 30-plus points since, amazingly, December. 

But the Knicks couldn’t overcome those turnovers. Anunoby was the sloppiest with four of them. Brunson, Towns and Josh Hart all had three. 

On Sunday in an ugly loss to the Lakers, the Knicks committed 18 turnovers, which prompted Brown to list that as a main issue alongside fouling too much and rebounding. 

Karl-Anthony Towns drives during the Knicks-Clippers game on March 9, 2026. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

His team was certainly better at rebounding on Monday. They were slightly better at avoiding stupid fouls. They were worse at turnovers. 

“I think a lot of them, we were getting downhill and trying to make plays. But we got to be better playing off two feet obviously, playing more controlled,” Brunson said. “But (the Clippers) got a lot of guys on their team who are steal guys, who are long wingspans, play passing lanes. That’s what they do. We played to their strengths.

Mikal Bridges, who went scoreless in Sunday’s loss to the Lakers, didn’t hit a shot until midway through the second quarter against the Clippers. He finished with seven points in 26 minutes and was benched for crunch time. His backup at the two-guard, Landry Shamet, endured a brickfest while missing his first eight 3-pointers. Still, Shamet closed over Bridges and finished with nine points on 3 of 12 shooting, with all his attempts from beyond the arc. 

Brunson, meanwhile, arrived in a deep shooting slump and quickly righted the ship Monday. He then scored 13 in the first quarter with three assists and two rebounds.

“He’s human and he’s going to have some nights (when he struggles to shoot),” Brown said. “His track record shows that he can go get it done. It’s not anything I’m concerned about or I’m looking at. And like I said, when he does have nights like that, how else can you impact the game, and he’s shown that he can do that.”

Brunson was cooking in the first quarter. Then Towns took over the offense.

Kawhi Leonard dunks during the Clippers-Knicks game on March 9, 2026. NBAE via Getty Images

The center feasted on the slower Brook Lopez, who had difficulty defending Towns last season with the Bucks, as well. 

Towns finished the first half with 21 points – including 17 in the second quarter – but New York’s 3-point defense underwhelmed, its turnovers were abundant, and the Knicks went into the break with a nine-point deficit.

The good news for Knicks fans is the schedule eases up considerably. They next face terrible teams in six of the next seven games, including Wednesday at Utah and Friday at Indiana. 

It’s a chance to regroup after turnover-fests in La La land.

“Treat the ball better,” Towns said. “The turnovers obviously put us in a bad spot. We didn’t stop the bleeding in the second and fourth quarters. And even though we made three more shots than them, they made four more 3s. That’s a recipe right there for disaster.”

Utah Jazz vs Golden State Warriors Player Grades

SALT LAKE CITY, UT - MARCH 9: Kyle Filipowski #22 of the Utah Jazz drives to the basket during the game against the Golden State Warriors on March 9, 2026 at Delta Center in Salt Lake City, Utah. Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Melissa Majchrzak/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Auditions for next year’s roster continued in earnest Monday night when the shorthanded Utah Jazz took on the equally decimated Golden State Warriors at the Delta Center. News surfaced earlier that day that the Jazz released guard Vince Williams Jr, adding more incentive for players like Elijah Harkless, Blake Hinson, Oscar Tshiebwe and Cody Williams to make a statement that they belong on the team. Who stepped up and made the most of their minutes in a nail biting 119-116 victory over the Warriors? Let’s take a look.

Keyonte George – B

Keyonte was aggressive early, especially from the mid-range, scoring eight points in the first quarter. His three- pointer was off tonight, only managing 1-5, and there were a couple of instances in the second half when he drove to the basket only to be stifled by the defense. He didn’t really get into a rhythm, his minutes restricted as he shared point guard duties with Elijah Harkless.

Cody Williams – B+

Cody matched his career high 7 assists and was decisive in moving to the basket. He uncorked his patented hammer dunk in the 4th quarter after a delicious feed from John Konchar. His three-point accuracy continues to be problematic, going 0-4 tonight.

John Konchar – B

John does a lot of the dirty work that isn’t always reflected on the stat sheet, such as contesting the three-point attempt that would have tied the score at the end of the game. His three-pointer is still hit and miss (mostly miss), but he made up for his lack of scoring with 10 rebounds, 3 assists and 3 steals.

Kyle Filipowski – A

Kyle was terrific tonight, recording a double-double with 19 points and 15 rebounds. He was perfect from the free throw line and also had 5 assists and 2 steals. His impact on the game goes beyond the numbers. He seemed to be in the right spot at the right time, competed fiercely and showed a range of shot making ability.

Brice Sensabaugh – A

Brice showed himself to be more than just a sharpshooter, finding ways to contribute even when his shot wasn’t falling early in the game. He delivered a beautiful bullet pass to Cody Williams in the first quarter and ended up with three assists. He also added 2 blocks. He helped fuel a Jazz run in the 3rd quarter by twice using his physicality to create a three point opportunity the hard way. Brice earned every one of his team high twenty-one points.

Elijah Harkless – A-

Elijah showed off his speed and tenacity, especially in the first half. He went on a run where he either scored or assisted on 21 of 24 points, helping the Jazz take a lead into half-time. I think his ability to drive to the basket in traffic caught the Warriors’ defense off guard. He ended up with a career high in points for the Jazz (16). The defense adjusted in the second half, which made it more difficult for him to have the same impact.

Kevin Love – A

In limited minutes, the old man of the team gave a valuable boost to the Jazz, making all 3 of his three pointers, including an amazing four point play in the 3rd Quarter. Add 8 rebounds, an assist and a block and you have another example of Kevin’s great contribution to the team this season.

Oscar Tshiebwe – B

Oscar showed some of his scoring ability tonight, especially in the 4th Quarter when he had a quick 6 points. He was active around the basket, grabbing 8 rebounds and a steal. As an undersized big, his challenge is protecting the rim and affecting shots on the defensive end.

Blake Hinson – C+

Blake is continuing to find his way in the NBA and was at times a little over aggressive on defense, leading to foul trouble. His three-point shot was off early in the game, but he did make two threes late in the 4th Quarter to help the Jazz maintain their lead.

Warriors drop to ninth seed after loss to Jazz and Clippers’ win over Knicks

SALT LAKE CITY, UT - MARCH 9: Draymond Green #23 of the Golden State Warriors handles the ball during the game against the Utah Jazz on March 9, 2026 at Delta Center in Salt Lake City, Utah. 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 Melissa Majchrzak/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

A loss to the actively tanking Utah Jazz is bad news for the Golden State Warriors for several reasons.

The first reason is obvious: the Jazz have been intentionally trying to lose in an effort to land a high lottery pick, in an upcoming draft class that stands to be packed with blue-chip prospects. The Warriors, however, did a better job of playing losing basketball themselves, in a game that saw them attempt an astounding 52 threes while making only 16 of them (30.8 percent).

The second reason: the Los Angeles Clippers’ win over the New York Knicks tonight has resulted in a 32-32 deadlock in the Western Conference standings with the Warriors. However, by virtue of having the tiebreaker, the Clippers have climbed up to the eighth in the standings while the Warriors drop to ninth and into the lower bracket of the play-in tournament.

There’s no question that the Warriors are locked into the play-in tournament no matter how well they perform the rest of the regular season; it simply becomes a matter of whether they’ll be in the upper bracket, where one win gets them an outright playoff berth while giving them two chances to do so; or if they fall to the lower bracket and will have to win two-straight games in order to make it to the playoffs.

Without the services of Steph Curry and Jimmy Butler III, the Warriors’ margin for error is significantly slim. In a winnable game against a bottom-dwelling team looking to obtain a high draft pick, losing will come back to bite them.

Then again, perhaps the season was already virtually lost when Butler went down with and ACL injury and Curry’s prolonged absence due to runner’s knee.

Clippers 126, Knicks 118: “Effort was good all game, execution was not.”

INGLEWOOD, CA - MARCH 9: Karl-Anthony Towns #32 of the New York Knicks drives to the basket during the game against the LA Clippers on March 9, 2026 at Intuit Dome in Los Angeles, California. 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 Juan Ocampo/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Still smarting from the previous day’s drubbing by the Lakers, the Knicks (41*-25) bounced over to the Intuit Dome to challenge the LA Clippers (32-32). Redemption was not in the cards, however. The visitors spent most of the night digging out of holes they had dug themselves. 20 turnovers, cold shooting, and long Clippers runs kept New York chasing almost all night. With another All-Star performance by Kawhi Leonard (29 PTS, 8 AST, 7 RBS, 2 STL) and strong support from Darius Garland (23 PTS, 7 AST, 2 STL), the Clips had little trouble securing their 126-118 victory.

Quoth Allzingers, “Effort was good all game, execution was not.” They sure seemed to be trying out there, but bad pass after bad pass killed them. And it didn’t help to get only four first-half points from everyone not named Towns, Brunson, or Anunoby.

The Knicks opened the game with more turnovers than your neighborhood bakery. The Clippers drilled three straight triples for a 9–0 lead, while missed shots and three giveaways in three minutes only deepened New York’s hole. Leonard was a menace on both ends of the floor through the period, logging seven points and a steal.

Jalen Brunson (28 PTS, 8 ASTS) took charge, scoring most of the points on a 10-3 run. For a while, he and Karl-Anthony Towns (35 PTS, 12 RBS, 7 AST) provided almost all of New York’s offense, with the wings bricking their first five attempts. When OG Anunoby (22 PTS, 2 STL) finally hit from deep, midway through the frame, Ty Lue needed a timeout. Whatever he said seemed to work, because after OG added a game-tying free throw, the Clippers rattled off seven unanswered points.

A neck sprain made Landry Shamet (9 PTS, 3-12 3PT) questionable for yesterday’s game, and he missed all three of his field goal attempts in tonight’s first quarter. We assume that neck pain can throw a shooter off. Meanwhile, after scoring as many points as you did against the Lakers, Mikal Bridges’ slump carried on as he misfired on two more shots. He’d finish with seven points, seven boards, and two steals on 3-of-8 shooting in 26 minutes.

New York’s seven first-quarter turnovers tied a season high and directly led to 11 Clippers points. By the end of the period, the Knicks trailed 28–24, with Brunson pouring in 13 of their points.

Early in the second quarter, Anunoby scored back-to-back at the rim and gave his team their first lead. It wouldn’t last. The home team went on a 10-1 run that featured scores by Bennedict Mathurin (28 PTS, 7 RBS), Brook Lopez (16 PTS), and Garland. Then, on a missed driving layup, Towns jammed his knee and favored it through the rest of the quarter. Given that KAT was one of only three Knicks producing anything on offense, this was an especially worrisome development.

After missing nine shots over five and a half quarters, Bridges finally canned a nine-foot jumper. Every time the Knicks put together a few points, L.A. swatted them back. Leonard steadily poured in the points. With a minute and a half left, The Claw scored eight points to give his team an 11-point lead. By intermission, his club was up 64-55.

Through the half, Los Angeles shot 53% overall and 45% from three (9-for-20), while New York went 46% and 29%. The Knicks dominated the boards (25-16), but their 10 turnovers turned into 18 Clippers points. Towns had 21 points, Brunson had 19, and Anunoby had 11. The other seven Knicks combined for four points. For the home team, Leonard had 21 points.

Third quarter: more turnovers, more misses. The visitors continued to spin their wheels in the mud while the Clippers steadily stretched their lead. Mathurin turned up the heat, scoring 12 points in the quarter, with cuts, transition finishes, and second-chance points.

Down by 15 midway through the frame, the Knicks tried to punch back. Josh Hart buried a three from the wing, and Landry Shamet later added another—his first after eight tries. Off the bench, rookie Mohamed Diawara provided a short jolt of energy with a driving dunk and a late three, and Jalen Brunson found his rhythm in the final minutes with a string of floaters and pull-ups. Still, the Clippers never lost control and took an 88-81 lead into the final frame.

In the fourth, New York managed to cut the deficit to six, thanks to a three-pointer from Bridges and more free throws by Towns. Their inability to get stops offset any hint of momentum, though, with Garland, Mathurin, and Leonard continuing to score. Coach Mike Brown subbed in Tyler Kolek to rest Brunson, perhaps looking for more offense than the zero that Jose Alvarado had given in his eight minutes. Kolek survived for two minutes before getting the hook.

Midway through the frame, KAT scored on a layup and then blocked Mathurin, which led to a Shamet trey that cut the differential to seven. Of note: Bridges was subbed out at 6:51 and did not return in the game.

On an 11-3 run, capped by an Anunoby longball, the score was 109-104 with just under four minutes remaining. But Brook Lopez swished from 26 feet at the other end. Following that were turnovers by Brunson and Shamet, and it seemed like the Knicks were deadset on gifting this one to the Angelenos. Josh Hart cut the deficit to six with a layup at the two-minute mark, but Derrick Jones, Jr., responded with an effortless triple, then Leonard made some free throws to restore an 11-point lead.

In the last minute, OG dunked, Shamet swished, and Garland missed a free throw. The glimmer of hope was faint, but detectable. After Brunson hit a jumper with 37 seconds left, and the score was 121-116, New York fouled Garland, who made 1-of-2. Out of a timeout, our heroes missed three tries at the rim before fouling Mathurin with 20 seconds left. The glimmer was gone. The game was over.

Up Next

In the fourth game of the five-game road trip, New York travels to Utah to play the Jazz on Wednesday. Safe travels, Knickerbockers.

Box Score

* Should be one more, shouldn’t it?

Penguins' Defenseman Loaned To AHL On Conditioning

After a few weeks of bad injury news, the Pittsburgh Penguins were due for something positive in that department. 

And they finally got some good news on Monday.

The Penguins announced that defenseman Jack St. Ivany was loaned on conditioning to the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (WBS) Penguins of the AHL. The 26-year-old right-side blueliner was injured in Pittsburgh's Jan. 25 matchup against the Vancouver Canucks when he broke his hand blocking a shot, which required surgery. 

St. Ivany's initial timetable was supposed to be eight weeks, and according to the NHL's media site, he is no longer listed on injured reserve for the Penguins. 

St. Ivany, 26, has played in only 17 NHL games this season due to injury. He missed the first few months of the season with a lower-body injury after getting going down during training camp in addition to the broken hand sustained in January. 

He has seven assists in 17 games with Pittsburgh this season as well as a goal and five points in five games with WBS. He has nine total points in his 50-game NHL career and has yet to score a goal at the highest level. 

It's unclear at this point where St. Ivany will report after his conditioning stint, as the Penguins already have eight defensemen on their NHL roster. Since he is technically on the NHL roster, he would have to pass through waivers in order to be re-assigned to WBS after his conditioning stint. 

Brazeau Ruled Out V. Boston, Newly Acquired Forward To Make Penguins' DebutBrazeau Ruled Out V. Boston, Newly Acquired Forward To Make Penguins' DebutForward Justin Brazeau is the latest Pittsburgh Penguin to fall victim to injury, but it opens up space for their newly acquired forward to make his team debut Sunday against the Boston Bruins

Bookmark THN - Pittsburgh Penguins on your Google News tab to follow the latest Penguins news, roster moves, player features, and more!    

Detroit Mercy tops Robert Morris 70-64 in Horizon League semifinal, will play Wright State for title

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Orlando Lovejoy had 21 points and Lance Stone came off the bench to score 16, leading Detroit Mercy to a 70-64 victory over Robert Morris on Monday night in a Horizon League Tournament semifinal.

No. 3 seed Detroit Mercy (17-14) will play top-seeded Wright State in the championship game on Tuesday with an automatic berth in the NCAA Tournament on the line.

Lovejoy made 5 of 14 shots and 11 of 12 free throws for the Titans, adding six assists. Stone sank 6 of 12 shots with two 3-pointers. Tyler Spratt had 10 points and Legend Geeter contributed nine points and 10 rebounds.

DeSean Goode finished with 14 points and 10 rebounds to pace the second-seeded Colonials (22-11). Nikolaos Chitikoudis had 13 points and seven assists. Ryan Prather Jr. and reserve Ta'Zir Smith both scored 11.

The Titans outscored Robert Morris 37-28 in the second half.

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Knicks' offense wakes up too late, fall to Clippers on second night of back-to-back

The Knicks were defeated by the Los Angeles Clippers 126-118 as they continued their road trip on Monday night. 

Here are some takeaways...

- The Knicks' three-point defense struggled in the early-going, as the Clippers knocked down six of their first 12 attempts from behind the arc. New York also carried over their sloppiness from Sunday, turning the ball over seven times in the opening quarter, but hot starts from Jalen Brunson and OG Anunoby helped keep things close (28-24). 

Brunson (13) and Anunoby (seven) combined to score 20 of the Knicks' 24 points in the quarter. 

- With Brunson resting, Karl-Anthony Towns was finally able to get himself going early in the second. The All-Star big man scored 17 of his 21 points during the middle frame, but he was forced to the bench after grabbing at his right knee on two different dunk attempts.

Towns did return and drilled four straight buckets, but he limped to the locker room heading into the break. 

- New York had just five players in the scoring department at halftime, and Mikal Bridges and Josh Hart had just two points apiece. They also shot just 29 percent from three, Landry Shamet missed all six of his attempts, and they committed 10 turnovers as a team to put them down nine (64-55). 

The Knicks also had no answer for Kawhi Leonard, who tied Towns for the game-high with 21 points.  

- It was much of the same coming out of the break, as New York simply could not get anything to fall from downtown, and Los Angeles quickly opened their largest advantage of the night at the time (15). Four different Clippers joined Leonard in double-digits, led by Brook Lopez (13) and Bennedict Mathurin (12).  

Shamet got a three to fall with three minutes left in the third, accounting for the Knicks' first bench points of the night. The energy level picked up from there, as New York finally strung together some stops, and they were able to cut the deficit back down to seven heading into the fourth (88-81). 

- Tyler Kolek saw time off the bench early in the fourth with Jose Alvarado missing all four of his shot attempts. 

- New York continued to show a ton of fight and cut the deficit all the way down to five at numerous points, but each time they put together a mini-run the Clippers counterpunched with a big bucket on the other end. LA never looked back as they handed the Knicks their second loss in as many games. 

- Towns led all scorers with 35 points, Brunson had 28, Anunoby 22, and Hart finished with 12. Bridges chipped in just seven on three-of-eight from the field, and he was benched down the stretch in a close game. Shamet and Mohamed Diawara accounted for all 14 of the bench points. 

- Leonard led Los Angeles with 29 points, seven boards, and eight assists. Mathurin chipped in 28 off the bench, Lopez had 16, Derrick Jones Jr. 16, and Garland drilled five threes as part of his 23 points as the Clippers climbed back to the .500 mark for the first time on the season. 

- The Knicks turned the ball over 20 times and shot just 35 percent from three-point land. 

Game MVP: Kawhi Leonard

Leonard led the way for LA's offense, knocking down 10-of-19 shots from the field. 

Highlights

What's next

The Knicks continue the road trip on Wednesday night against the Jazz. 

Tip is scheduled for 9:00 p.m. at the Delta Center. 

Eastern Washington holds off Weber State 84-79 in Big Sky Conference Tournament quarterfinal

BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Alton Hamilton IV scored a career-high 25 points, Isaiah Moses added 22 and Eastern Washington held off Weber State 84-79 on Monday night in a Big Sky Conference Tournament quarterfinal.

No. 3 seed Eastern Washington (14-18) will play seventh-seeded Idaho in a Tuesday semifinal. The Vandals beat the Eagles twice, including in the regular-season finale to end EWU's eight-game winning streak. Top seed Portland State plays fourth-seeded Montana in the other semifinal.

Hamilton made 8 of 10 shots with two 3-pointers and both of his free throws for Eastern Washington. He added five rebounds. Moses had eight assists and his three-point play with 37 seconds left gave the Eagles an 82-76 lead. Johnny Radford totaled 12 points and four rebounds off the bench.

Tijan Saine Jr. led the sixth-seeded Wildcats (16-16) with 27 points. Nigel Burris added 14 points and Viljami Vartiainen scored 13.

Hamilton made all six of his first-half shots and scored 18 to guide Eastern Washington to a 46-32 lead at the break. Hamilton had the first four points in a 16-0 first-half run for the Eagles.

___

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Canucks Adam Foote Provides Injury Update On Evander Kane

After their 2-0 loss on Monday night, Vancouver Canucks Head Coach provided an injury update on Evander Kane. The 34-year-old did not play after being listed as a game-time decision after morning skate. Kane was not on the ice at either morning skate or during pre-game warmups. 

"He's been fighting through an injury," said Foote. "A discomfort, upper-body. Just see if we can settle it down."

Kane has played 61 of Vancouver's 64 games this season. He has 11 goals and 27 points along with 78 penalty minutes. Kane is in the final year of his contract and is schedule to become a free agent on July 1. 

Jan 25, 2026; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks forward Evander Kane (91) during a stop in play against the Pittsburgh Penguins in the second period at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images
Jan 25, 2026; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks forward Evander Kane (91) during a stop in play against the Pittsburgh Penguins in the second period at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images

Make sure you bookmark THN's Vancouver Canucks site and add us to your favourites on Google News for the latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more. Also, don't forget to leave a comment at the bottom of the page and engage with other passionate fans through our forum. This article originally appeared on The Hockey News.

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Canucks Can't Beat Reimer, Fall 2-0 To The Senators

The Vancouver Canucks kicked off their eight-game home stand with a 2-0 loss to the Ottawa Senators. Kevin Lankinen was solid on Monday night, as he allowed just one goal 23 shots. As for Ottawa goaltender James Reimer, he stopped all 16 shots for his first shutout of the season. 

Overall, the Canucks put forth a strong effort on Monday. They arguably should have left the ice with at least one goal as they were unlucky at times in the game. While the game was not the most entertaining, it was a step in the right direction from a process perspective as Vancouver fought until the final whistle. 

All the focus from this game will be on the Senators first goal. The Canucks felt the play should have been blown dead as the puck hit Shane Pinto's glove before Ridly Greig scored. Vancouver did challenge the play, but it was unsuccesful as " The Situation Room supported the Referee’s on-ice decision that the puck deflected off Shane Pinto’s glove, and was therefore not deemed a hand pass prior to Ridly Greig’s goal."

As for the Canucks best player in this game, that was Lankinen. He made some big saves down the stretch, which included stopping all six shots he faced in the third period. Ultimately, Lankinen did his job and was a big reason why Vancouver had a chance to push for the tying goal late.

Zeev Buium was also a standout from Monday night. He logged over 20 minutes and finished with two shots on goal. Buium was also able to showcase his speed and skating ability throughout the night as he helped the Canucks with controlled entries into the offensive zone. 

"I think we competed really hard," said Buium post-game. "I think we fought till the end, which is good to see. I don't think we gave them much either. Kinda had a weird goal obviously there but I thought we played really hard."

Mar 9, 2026; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks defenseman Filip Hronek (17) watches as goalie Kevin Lankinen (32) makes a save on Ottawa Senators forward Brady Tkachuk (7) in the first period at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images
Mar 9, 2026; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks defenseman Filip Hronek (17) watches as goalie Kevin Lankinen (32) makes a save on Ottawa Senators forward Brady Tkachuk (7) in the first period at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images

While the result did not go Vancouver's way, fans should at least be happy with Monday's effort. Yes, there were mistakes, but more importantly, the Canucks fought until the end and showed grit throughout the night. In the end, Monday was another successful tank game as Vancouver put forth a strong effort while still falling in regulation. 

Stats and Facts:

- Canucks are shutout for the fifth time this season

- Curtis Douglas threw four hits in 6:52 of ice time during his Vancouver debut

- Aatu Räty's 67% in the faceoff dot led the team

- Filip Hronek led all players in ice time at 26:01

Scoring Summary: 

1st Period:

No Scoring

2nd Period:

10:11- OTT: Ridly Greig (10) from Shane Pinto and Artem Zub

3rd Period:

18:40- OTT: Brady Tkachuk (17) from Tim Stützle and Artem Zub (ENG)

Up Next:

The Canucks continue their home stand on Thursday against the Nashville Predators. This will be the third meeting between Vancouver and Nashville, with each team having picked up a win so far. Game time is scheduled for 7:00 pm PT. 

Make sure you bookmark THN's Vancouver Canucks site and add us to your favourites on Google News for the latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more. Also, don't forget to leave a comment at the bottom of the page and engage with other passionate fans through our forum. This article originally appeared on The Hockey News.

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