The Philadelphia 76ers are set to host the New York Knicks as the two teams meet for the fourth time this season.
Re-invigorated at home and playing with a rest advantage, my Knicks vs. 76ers predictions call for Tyrese Maxey to get teammates involved as the home team covers a small spread.
Here are my best free NBA picks for this Eastern Conference tilt on Wednesday, February 11.
Knicks vs 76ers prediction
Knicks vs 76ers best bet: Tyrese Maxey Over 6.5 assists (-115)
Tyrese Maxey’s playmaking will be on full display against the New York Knicks, who are playing the second leg of a back-to-back. The Knicks have surrendered 115 points per game without rest, giving up at least 124 points on four occasions.
With OG Anunoby out and four of five starters logging at least 38 minutes last night, the Knicks' defense is extremely vulnerable. Maxey has recorded 7+ assists in seven of his last eight home games, with the Philadelphia 76ers' point guard averaging 8.0 assists in those contests.
Knicks vs 76ers same-game parlay
New York fell to the Indiana Pacers in overtime last night as 11.5-point home favorites, giving the Sixers a rest advantage after returning home from a five-game road trip.
Joel Embiid has averaged 33.1 points over his last 10 games, reaching 30+ points in eight of them. He’s poised for a big night against a fatigued Knicks defense.
Knicks vs 76ers SGP
Tyrese Maxey Over 7.5 assists
76ers -2.5
Joel Embiid Over 29.5 points
Our "from downtown" SGP: Next Man Up
Considering Anunoby and Miles McBride are sidelined for New York, forward Mohamed Diawara is set for increased playing time.
In seven games where he’s logged 15+ minutes, Diawara has averaged 7.9 points, reaching at least five points in five of those contests.
Knicks vs 76ers SGP
Tyrese Maxey Over 7.5 assists
76ers -2.5
Joel Embiid Over 29.5 points
Mohamed Diawara Over 4.5 points
Knicks vs 76ers odds
Spread: Knicks +2.5 (-115) | 76ers -2.5 (-115)
Moneyline: Knicks +115 | 76ers -135
Over/Under: Over 224.5 (-110) | Under 224.5 (-110)
Knicks vs 76ers betting trend to know
Philadelphia has covered the 2Q spread in 33 of its last 50 games (+15.35 Units / 26% ROI). Find more NBA betting trends for Knicks vs. 76ers.
How to watch Knicks vs 76ers
Location
Xfinity Mobile Arena, Philadelphia, PA
Date
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
Tip-off
7:30 p.m. ET
TV
ESPN
Knicks vs 76ers latest injuries
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PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. — New York Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said he’s optimistic shortstop Francisco Lindor will recover for opening day after having surgery on Wednesday to repair a broken hamate bone in his left hand.
Lindor was evaluated by a hand specialist after experiencing soreness in the area around his hand and wrist this week.
“People are saying six weeks for return of play,” Mendoza said, referencing a timeline that could threaten Lindor’s status for the start of the season.
“Knowing Lindor, I’m not gonna bet against him. This is a guy that’s played through broken toes and the low back (injury) two years ago when he barely walked and he continued to play through it. So we’re still optimistic that he’s going to be available for us on opening day, but we’ve just got to wait and see.”
Lindor is the third prominent player to suffer hamate bone injuries in the opening week of spring training, following Arizona outfielder Corbin Carroll and Baltimore second baseman Jackson Holliday.
When asked about the sudden rash of hamate injuries, Mendoza said: “It’s baseball, you know. I guess it’s back to baseball season. ... This is a pretty common one. It’s just rare that, you know, in the span of, what 24 hours, we got three really good players going down with the same injury. But I don’t make too much out of it.”
Lindor, 32, hit .267 with 31 homers, 86 RBIs and 31 steals in 160 games with New York last year. The five-time All-Star was left off Puerto Rico’s roster for the upcoming World Baseball Classic over insurance coverage.
SARASOTA, Fla. — Baltimore Orioles second baseman Jackson Holliday will have surgery on Thursday to repair a broken hamate bone in his right hand and will miss opening day.
Orioles president of baseball operations Mike Elias announced Wednesday that Holliday sustained the injury while taking batting practice last week.
Holliday, 22, hit .242 with 17 home runs, 55 RBIs and 17 stolen bases in 2025. He was the No. 1 overall draft pick in 2022.
Elias also said Wednesday that third baseman Jordan Westburg is recovering from a right oblique injury that could delay his participation in spring training games.
Arizona Diamondbacks outfielder Corbin Carroll will miss the World Baseball Classic after breaking the hamate bone in his right hand during batting practice, according to a person with knowledge of the injury.
Carroll will have surgery Wednesday and miss significant time during spring training, according to the person who spoke on condition of anonymity Wednesday because the injury has not been announced by the team.
It is not known if Carroll, 25, will return in time for opening day. He had been expected to play for Team USA in the WBC.
Carroll was the National League Rookie of the Year in 2023. He hit .259 with 31 home runs and stole 32 bases last season. He led the majors with 17 triples.
ORLANDO, FL - FEBRUARY 9: Ousmane Dieng #21 of the Milwaukee Bucks handles the ball during the game against the Orlando Magic on February 9, 2026 at Kia Center in Orlando, Florida. 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 Fernando Medina/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
Six days ago, as anxiety was about as high among the fanbase as I can remember, it became clear the Bucks were not going to trade Giannis Antetokounmpo. This didn’t come as a surprise. It also didn’t come as a surprise that Milwaukee made a move, shipping out unproductive vets Cole Anthony and Amir Coffey, both on expiring contracts, for Ousmane Dieng, a lottery ticket. Even though Milwaukee’s interest in him was long reported, what did come as more of a surprise was signing Cam Thomas to the resulting roster opening.
It seems more likely we’ll see more of Thomas than former 11th overall pick Dieng, but will we know enough to decide whether they’re part of the Bucks’ future? Thomas is indeed on a minimum contract, and they’ll only have Non-Bird rights on him this summer when he hits unrestricted free agency. That limits Milwaukee to a new contract with a starting salary of up to $3.4m. Otherwise, they’d have to dip into their mid-level or bi-annual exception to keep him. Dieng will be a restricted free agent if the Bucks extend an $8.7m qualifying offer, and can thus match any offer to re-sign him. If they don’t, he’s unrestricted, but either way, they will have Bird rights on him, and their offer can be anything up to the max.
In this week’s Tuesday-Wednesday Tracker, we want to know how you think the Bucks did at the deadline and what it means for Giannis’ future. We also have a bonus question about a controversial partnership Giannis entered into with a sports betting site. This week is a two-parter, and if you missed it, we asked another question about Giannis and took your opinions on the Thomas signing yesterday. We’ll have the results for you this weekend.
As always, this poll will be open until midnight Central on Friday, and we’ll post the results later that day. Thanks for voting!
MIAMI, FLORIDA - SEPTEMBER 26: Francisco Lindor #12 of the New York Mets rounds the bases after hitting a home run against the Miami Marlins during the first inning of the game at loanDepot park on September 26, 2025 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Megan Briggs/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Mets announced that Francisco Lindor is undergoing surgery on his hand today to address the hamate issue that became public knowledge yesterday. As David Stearns had said in giving that update, the expected recovery timeline for Lindor is six weeks. The Mets’ 2026 season begins six weeks from tomorrow.
It goes without saying that Lindor is crucial to the Mets’ success, as he’s been the team’s best player over the past several years. And even with the addition of Juan Soto last year, Lindor was the team’s best player by fWAR, albeit by a relatively small margin, while he slightly trailed Soto in bWAR.
If Lindor’s recovery goes smoothly and he is ready to play on Opening Day, the time he misses in spring training shouldn’t be a major problem. If there are delays, though, it’ll be interesting to see what the Mets do at shortstop in the early part of the season. The team has several players who have played short in the past, but whether or not any of them are ideal substitutes for Lindor is another matter.
Lakers star Luka Doncic is part of former Dallas general manager Donnie Nelson's investor group looking to buy a basketball team in Italy, with an eye toward moving it to Rome and joining NBA Europe, which Adam Silver has pushed for and appears on track to open in 2027.
This group, with some clearly deep-pocketed investors partnering with them, is looking to buy Vanoli Basket, from Cremona in northern Italy (closer to Milan). Italian news outlet La Gazzetta Dello Sport, reported former Mavericks star Dirk Nowitzki was also part of Nelson's group alongside Doncic, but a spokesperson for Nowitzki denied that to NBA insider Marc Stein.
The group is buying Vanoli Basket to gain access to the club's La Liga license, setting up a much larger play to be one of the 12 licensed franchises in the NBA's proposed new European league, reports Joe Vardon, Sam Amick and Mike Vorkunov at The Athletic.
Vanoli Basket is a license holder in Liga Basket Seria A, the top Italian pro league, and any team competing in NBA Europe must also play in a domestic league. Multiple sources said Vanoli Basket was being purchased for its Liga license. With that in hand, those sources said, Nelson, Dončić, Nowitzki and their partners would then establish an essentially new franchise about 330 miles away in Rome.
Pushed for by NBA Commissioner Adam Silver, the new NBA Europe league will feature 12 stakeholder teams competing in it every year. A few of that dozen are likely existing powerhouse European clubs — Real Madrid and Barcelona are two that have been linked to the NBA — as well as new, or dramatically upgraded teams in other markets, such as soccer powerhouse Paris Saint-Germain fielding a squad in that city. The buy-in for these teams, or new teams, to join NBA Europe could reach as high as $1 billion in some cases.
The other four spots in the league would need to be earned annually through performance in the domestic leagues.
Rome is one of the cities mentioned as a target by NBA Europe, and it does not currently have a high-level team there.
Doncic is one of the greatest European players ever in the NBA. There is no ban on NBA players owning a stake in these European teams (Kevin Durant is an investor in Paris Saint-Germain), and it's not clear how much of the team they may own, but there is no cap on their ownership levels (as there are with players owning part of a WNBA team, for example). Having big NBA names can help establish a team and sell it in a market where NBA Europe will compete with the existing domestic basketball leagues (the NBA Europe teams would have to compete in domestic leagues), the existing basketball EuroLeague, and the popularity of other sports on the continent, such as soccer and cricket.
The NBA is targeting a fall 2027 launch of NBA Europe. The NBA sees a European basketball market that is not marketed or maximized as a business — leaving money on the table — which is something the NBA specializes in. How fans will receive the new league is something we will find out in a couple of years, but the NBA is bringing big names and big money to the table.
Feb 11, 2026; Dunedin, FL, USA; Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Jorge Alcala (65) throws a bullpen session for spring training practice at Blue Jays Player Development Complex. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images | Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images
On Monday, Tom and I asked your thoughts about the Jays’ most exciting and most concerning moves (or non-moves) of the winter. Now, how do you think they did overall? I’m sure the vibes would have been better on this question 48 hours ago, before we knew that Anthony Santander was out for most of the season and that Shane Bieber had the dreaded forearm tightness. But then it makes the Cody Ponce signing and the decision not to try to trade Nathan Lukes both look pretty wise. I’m happy overall. The pitching is better and deeper, and while they didn’t get a big bat, Kazuma Okamoto has interesting upside and fits into the roster. On paper they’re better than the team that came within a run of winning the World Series in November. Of course, a lot had to break right for them to get that far, and would have to do so again. That’s kind of always the case. But I don’t see a roster in the American League that’s better than theirs. What do you think? Did they do enough? Or are there holes that they’ll regret not addressing?
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - OCTOBER 05: Jaxson Hayes #11 of the Los Angeles Lakers slam dunks over Trayce Jackson-Davis #32 of the Golden State Warriors in the second half of a preseason NBA game at Chase Center on October 05, 2025 in San Francisco, 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. (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The NBA’s All-Star weekend is an opportunity for the league to showcase its talent. The main event is the All-Star Game, but the 3-point Contest, Rising Stars Game, and the Slam Dunk Contest are also important fixtures of the festivities.
For any NBA player, being involved in the weekend is an honor, but for Jaxson Hayes, it means a bit more. He was asked to participate in the Slam Dunk Contest and accepted.
With the All-Star Game happening in LA, Hayes will represent the Lakers in his home market. Sure, the game is at the Intuit Dome in Inglewood, where the Clippers play, but he’ll certainly be a fan favorite.
This will be Hayes’ first time participating in the Slam Dunk Contest, but it’s something he’s wanted to do his entire career.
After the Lakers beat the Warriors, he spoke to the media about participating in the competition.
“I’ve always dreamed of being in the dunk contest,” Hayes said. “That’s something you do as a kid. I mean, obviously like making it to the NBA, being an All-Star and stuff like that, but like for me, I was always big into the dunk contest, if you guys can’t tell by the way I play, I was just excited, so when I got that call, I was definitely down.”
Hayes is certainly elite at dunking the ball. He has 75 dunks on the season, which is the 19th most in the NBA. He has only 46 made field goals that are not dunks.
Coming off the bench for the Lakers, Hayes electrifies by attacking the rim and elevating the energy of the arena when he slams one down. A prime example occurred when the Lakers faced the Bulls earlier this year. Hayes went coast-to-coast and executed a fantastic East Bay Funk Dunk.
The hope is that he can bring some of that action to the All-Star stage.
Hayes also has some experience winning these kinds of competitions. He won the Ohio-Kentucky All-Star Game Dunk Contest as a senior in high school and executed an impressive windmill from the free throw line.
It’s great that the NBA selected a player who wants to be in the dunk contest and will put his best effort forward, representing the Lakers on this stage.
Kobe Bryant is the only Laker ever to win the Slam Dunk Contest, so if he could pull off a victory, it’d be a historic moment in LA and a great reward for Hayes, who has been a star in his role for the purple and gold all season long.
Olympics men's hockey is back to a best-on-best tournament with the return of NHL players.
The league sent its players from 1998 to 2014, but didn't in 2018 (lack of an agreement) and 2022 (need to make up games postponed by COVID). International tournaments are included in the latest collective bargaining agreement, so the league has shut down for several weeks to let players suit up for their national teams.
As a result, NHL players will be plentiful on the rosters of most of the 12 countries participating in Milan. Nineteen of the league's top 25 scorers are at the tournament.
Here are some top NHL players to watch at the 2026 Winter Olympics:
Canada's Connor McDavid (Edmonton Oilers): The three-time Hart Trophy winner has gone to the Stanley Cup Final the last two seasons and was playoff MVP in 2024 in a losing effort. He scored the overtime winner at the 4 Nations Face-Off and is the NHL's top scorer.
Canada's Nathan MacKinnon (Colorado Avalanche): He won a Stanley Cup in 2022 and was league MVP in 2024. He won MVP of the 4 Nations. He was the leading scorer for much of this season before McDavid passed him.
Canada's Sidney Crosby (Pittsburgh Penguins): The Canadian captain is the NHL's most recognizable name. He won three Stanley Cup titles and two Olympic gold medals, scoring the overtime winner in 2010. He ranks eighth in all-time NHL scoring, recently passing Penguins legend Mario Lemieux.
Germany's Leon Draisaitl (Oilers): He's considered the NHL's second-best player behind McDavid and won the Hart Trophy in 2020.
USA's Connor Hellebuyck (Winnipeg Jets): The goaltender won the Vezina Trophy the past two seasons and three times overall. He was voted league MVP last season.
USA's Quinn Hughes (Minnesota Wild): The defenseman missed the 4 Nations with an injury and the USA missed his puck-moving ability. Hughes won the Norris Trophy in 2023-24 and has 34 points in 26 games since his trade to Minnesota. His brother, Jack, also plays for the USA.
Finland's Mikko Rantanen (Dallas Stars): He's a clutch scorer with 123 points in 99 NHL playoff game. He'll be looking for a better performance after getting only one point at the 4 Nations.
Czechia's David Pastrnak (Boston Bruins): He ranks sixth in NHL scoring this season and had a 61-goal season in 2022-23 and a league-best 48 in the COVID-shortened 2019-20 season. He has has three 100-point seasons.
Slovakia's Juraj Slafkovsky (Montreal Canadiens): He was MVP of the 2022 Olympics, scoring seven goals as Slovakia won bronze. He then was taken No. 1 overall in the 2022 NHL Draft. He scored the opening goal of this year's tournament and finished with two goals and an assist in a win against Finland.
Sweden's Lucas Raymond (Detroit Red Wings): He's the top NHL scorer among Swedish Olympics and with 60 points this season, he is on pace for a career high.
No sweat for Dalibor Dvorsky in his Olympic debut.
The 20-year-old St. Louis Blues center, a first-round pick in the 2023 NHL Draft, made his first appearance for Slovakia a memorable one with the game-winning goal and an assist to help the Slovaks upset Finland, 4-1, at Santagiulia IHO Arena in Milan, Italyon Wednesday.
Dvorsky scored on a net front loose puck rebound, beating Juuse Saros (Nashville Predators) at 7:20 of the third period to break a 1-1 deadlock:
Dvorsky would add an assist on Juraj Slafkovsky's (Montreal Canadiens) second goal of the game, a power-play goal at 10:30 to add insurance to Slovakia's upset win and stir the pot to open the men's portion of Group B preliminary round play.
Dvorsky had two shots on goal and was a plus-1 in 11:14 of ice time as the third-line center in the game and was the game's third star; he became the youngest Slovakian player to score a goal in the Olympics (20 years, 241 days) with NHL players, according to NHL public relations:
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Australia will be hunting revenge during the upcoming multi-format series against World Cup champions India, which doubles as a farewell tour to captain Alyssa Healy.
MINNEAPOLIS, MN - SEPTEMBER 20: Bailey Ober #17 of the Minnesota Twins pitches against the Cleveland Guardians on September 20, 2025 at Target Field in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Photo by Brace Hemmelgarn/Minnesota Twins/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Atlanta Braves got some more bad news when it was discovered that Spencer Schwellenbach will need arthroscopic surgery on his right elbow. This leads to wondering what the way forward.
It was widely expected that the Braves would try to land a playoff caliber starting pitcher this off-season, which obviously has not happened yet. This is not to say that the front office has not tried. It is not like walking into a grocery store and you pick what you want. It takes two parties and a lot of moving parts to get a deal done. This goes with both free agents and trades.
As it stands now, the five-man rotation looks to likely be Chris Sale, Spencer Strider, Reynaldo Lopez, Grant Holmes, and Hurston Waldrep to start the season. AJ Smith-Shawver is likely out for the entire year, Strider has yet to be his former self, and we don’t know for certain how Reynaldo López will be post injury. Add the fact that the Braves usually opt to give Sale extra rest and that means they will need either a sixth man or run a bullpen game. The depth has been worn thin yet again this season.
It makes sense that the Braves should at the very least entertain bringing someone else in. There are a few free agents available still, but there these names have been floated around social media like crazy. There have been some trade targets that have been talked about a lot like Sandy Alcántara. There is also a possibility that a farm arm steps into a rotation spot. However, let’s have some fun and look at some lesser mentioned names, or out of the box ideas.
First, we need to point out a few things. If you are looking at trades, then you must be realistic. Teams that are looking to make a playoff push rarely move starters. We have also seen teams that likely won’t win their division add players. For example, the Pirates and Angels have added a decent number of players for teams in their position that typically would not, which leads to thinking they are planning on keeping their starters for now. It should also be noted that we are not looking at players to replace Schwellenbach’s level of play, but rather serviceable arms to fill out the rotational depth that is sorely needed.
Let’s start with a team that may think they can compete but may be willing to move certain starters if the trade makes sense for them.
López is coming off a season in which he only pitched 75.2 innings, but he looked like his former self in terms of ERA with a 2.74. He had a much higher expected ERA (xERA) of 3.96, but that is still in the upper half of pitchers in MLB. Fangraphs has him projected at 3.75 ERA, 3.60 FIP, 3.2 fWAR, 9.0 K/9, and 2.3 BB/9. The reason this may work is he still has two years left on his contract with an AAV of $18.375MM. The Twins may be willing to move him to clear up some money while also bringing in prospects.
It may seem weird to be considering a pitcher that had a 5.11 ERA last season, but don’t quit reading just yet. His xERA of 4.36 shows he was unlucky, not to mention he was dealing with a hip issue. Braves fans know that hip injuries can have a lingering effect after watching Marcell Ozuna last year. He was a hitter, but still. Ober is supposedly good to go this season.
Four out of the last five seasons he has been in the top ten percent or better in walk rate, and from 2023-2024 he was arguably an all-star level talent with an xERA of 3.61 and 3.25 respectively. Fangraphs does not have much faith in him projecting a 4.28 ERA, 4.25 FIP, 1.8 fWAR, 8.2 K/9, and 2.1 BB/9. If the Twins are willing to sell low on him, he may be worth the gamble. The Braves would have team control through 2027.
Staying in the division, let’s look at the Guardians.
If the Guardians are willing to move Bibee, he is an excellent bounce back candidate that could be under team control through 2030. He has four years left on his $48MM contract with a team option for 2030. It is clear the Guardians plan on him being part of their core, so it depends on if they think they can be competitive within his contract window.
A 4.25 ERA is nothing to be excited about, but his xERA was much lower at 3.64 and was actually the lowest of his three-year career. He also is extremely durable. He had two complete games and pitched 182.1 innings last season. His lowest number of innings in a season was 142.0, and that was his rookie season.
Fangraphs projects that he will have a 3.90 ERA, 4.04 FIP, 2.5 fWAR, 8.4 K/9, and 2.7 BB/9. These are numbers that pretty much any rotation would be happy to have, especially when you consider the inning count. The real question is if the Guardians can be persuaded to move him. The odds are low.
Moving on to an outside of the box idea. The Cardinals are clearly sellers, but how much do they want to sell? They have two arms that are under their control for a while.
The odds of the Cardinals trading McGreevy are slim to none, but why not consider it if it is a non-zero chance? McGreevy is under team control through 2031and has only pitched 118.2 innings at the MLB level with a 3.94 ERA. Fangraphs likes what they have seen enough to project him having a 3.98 ERA, 4.02 FIP, 1.6 fWAR, 6.3 K/9, 2.2 BB/9. It should be noted that Statcast does not like his stuff as much as Fangraphs.
In the same line of thinking we can look at Liberatore. He is under control through 2029. To say his career started off poorly would be an understatement, but he has shown improvements to be at least a cheap depth arm that is good enough for the back of a rotation. Back in 2023 he had a horrendous xERA of 6.04. It was in the bottom 5.0 percent of all MLB pitchers, but he improved to a much more palatable xERA of 4.19 in 2024. Both of those seasons he bounced between being an SP and RP. In 2025 he settled in as a full-time starter and gave the Cardinals 151.2 innings of 4.21 ERA and 4.03 FIP ball. This included his best strikeout to walk ratio of his career with a 3.05.
Fangraphs projects him to have a 4.22 ERA, 4.19 FIP, 1.5 fWAR, 7.5 K/9, and 2.9 BB/9. These are not numbers that jump off the page, but they are much better than what we would likely see from Bryce Elder, who is out of options anyway. It would be a gamble by both the Cardinals that he would not progress and the Braves that he would progress if this hypothetical trade were to take place.
One can only guess what route the Braves will take in terms of reacting to Spencer Schwellenbach’s injury, but one thing is for sure. The Braves will most certainly need depth after what we saw last season.
Kansas City Royals' starting pitcher Jimmy Gobble (41) hands off the ball to manager Buddy Bell as catcher John Buck (14) looks on in the fifth inning during their game against the Los Angeles Angels on Thursday, July 20, 2006, at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by John Sleezer/Kansas City Star/Tribune News Service via Getty Images) | We’ve had some lean times
Most readers here love the game of baseball and love our Royals, but there are some seasons that truly test us. The hitters can’t hit, the pitchers can’t throw strikes, the ball gets kicked around the field, and the losses pile up. By June, you already have an eye towards Chiefs training camp. You’re a real sicko if you’re watching a 106-loss Royals team get beat down by the Twins in front of a few hundred fans in September.
By pure losses, here are the worst seasons in Royals history:
2023 (106 losses) – A bad season after a long rebuild, but there seemed to be hope about the future
2005 (106 losses) – Tony Peña quits in the middle of the season, and the Buddy Bell era isn’t any better
2018 (104 losses) – The entire championship team departs, leaving a lot of “who is this guy?”
2004 (104 losses) – Fresh off a surprise run in 2003, this team fell flat on their face
2019 (103 losses) – Allowed 219 home runs, second-most in club history.
2006 (100 losses) – Gave up a club record 971 runs, getting Allard Baird fired
But maybe it was a season that was miserable for other reasons – Dick Howser’s death in 1986? The strike-shortened almost-contention of 1994? Maybe it was miserable for reasons in your personal life?
Royals fans have lived through rebuilds, retools, collapses, and the long, quiet stretches in between contention windows. So let’s ask the uncomfortable question: what was the most miserable Royals season you ever endured as a fan?
NEW YORK, NY - SEPTEMBER 26: Gerrit Cole #45 of the New York Yankees poses for a picture before the game against the Baltimore Orioles at Yankee Stadium on September 26, 2025 in New York, New York. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images
It has been 469 days since we last saw Gerrit Cole on an MLB mound, and it won’t be that much longer before the Yankees’ ace makes his triumphant return. After missing an entire season to Tommy John surgery, it is uncertain whether we can still consider him to be the Yankees’ ace, but there is no doubting that he remains the leader of the staff and one of the top voices in the clubhouse. Knowing his competitive spirit and the resulting desire to erase the mistakes made in Game 5 of the 2024 World Series, I am choosing to remain bullish on Cole’s projections for 2026.
2025 Stats: Missed season due to Tommy John surgery
Cole injured his elbow in spring training last year — the same elbow that suffered nerve inflammation in 2024, costing him the first half of the season but determined to not require surgical intervention at that point — and underwent complete UCL reconstruction including an internal brace procedure on March 11, 2025. He was provided a 14-month recovery timetable at that point and the most recent reports confirm that he is right on schedule. He began his throwing program last August and threw his first bullpen at the start of November, with he and the team continuing to target an early-June return, though late-May is not out of the question.
Cole’s projections reflect that initial two-month absence as well as the expected rust for a pitcher coming off his first major surgery. ZiPS expects his ERA and FIP to hover just below four, which would be his worst marks as a Yankee, accompanied by the worst strikeout-minus-walk ratio (16.5-percent) since his final season with the Pirates.
It’s not just the return from injury that underlies this diminished performance. We had already begun to see a transformation in Cole’s pitcher profile prior to his injury. He lost about a mile per hour off his average fastball velocity in each of his last two seasons, though we can’t say whether this is age-related loss of stuff or an intentional effort on Cole’s part to save bullets for the grind of a long season with a further eye toward preserving longevity into his late-30s.
His first few seasons in pinstripes, Cole still pitched like the bulldog that was unleashed in Houston, looking to bully every hitter he faced into submission. The strikeouts flowed in bunches from this approach, but he was also prone to the long ball when he would stubbornly try to throw the ball by the hitter rather than pitch to a spot. However, in 2023 and 2024, he shifted his focus from hunting strikeouts to hunting early outs on harmless contact. Indeed, the strikeouts began to dry up, but so did the home runs as Cole improved his barrel and hard-hit rates, culminating in his best season with the Yankees from a run prevention standpoint and his long-elusive Cy Young award in 2023. All this being said, all these data points are at least two years old, and we simply will not know what Cole is capable of until he starts throwing in live game situations.
That’s the leading problem when it comes to Cole: uncertainty. We just don’t have enough data points to project with any clarity what his 2026 will look like. How do you project a starter who hasn’t thrown a pitch in MLB since Game 5 of the 2024 World Series? How do you project someone with just a 95-inning sample size over the last two seasons, when most recent performance is the best predictor of future outcomes? How do you project how his body will respond now at the age of 35 coming off the first Tommy John surgery — and first arm surgery of any kind — of his career?
The error bars are so wide that it really feels like anything is possible. His pedigree as the former best pitcher in all of baseball might lull you into a false sense of security when it comes to his floor and allows you to dream of a ceiling as a Cy Young candidate. On the other hand, there is a legitimate chance he pitches less than half the season should he encounter a delay at any stage of his rehab.
If the Yankees are searching for a kernel of hope, they might look to Justin Verlander as the ideal outcome for Cole. Verlander underwent Tommy John surgery on September 30, 2020, and missed the entirety of the 2021 campaign. He made his return to an MLB mound on April 9, 2022, having thrown just six big league innings since the end of the 2019 season. He blew every expectation out of the water, making 28 starts with a 1.75 ERA, 2.49 FIP, 185 strikeouts, and 6.1 fWAR to secure the third AL Cy Young Award of his career at the age of 39.
I don’t need to tell you that it is unreasonable to expect Cole to come back and win the Cy Young, if for no other reason than the existence of a certain pitcher named Tarik Skubal. And of course, far more pitchers who undergo Tommy John surgery struggle in their first season back, many of them younger than Cole.
Instead, the focus for Cole is and should remain getting fully healthy and properly built up without putting unnecessary stress on himself to return by some predetermined date. If there is any pitcher on the Yankees’ staff who I would trust to complete his rehab properly, it’s Cole. He’s one of the true pitching professors in the game, and he knows better than anyone else what his body needs to eventually take the ball every fifth day.