Phillies still bullish on the ‘pen but hoping for a better ending

Phillies still bullish on the ‘pen but hoping for a better ending originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

CLEARWATER, Fla. — The Phillies had home-field going into the National League Division Series last October despite muddling through the second half of the regular season. The Mets were on a tear, scratching and clawing the final month just to claim the final wild-card berth.

Catcher J.T. Realmuto summed up what that meant the day before the festivities began. “I think it’s important for us to be able to come out and start well in this series and try to put an end to the momentum they’ve clearly gained,” he said. “They’re a really hot team.”

Zack Wheeler executed the plan to near-perfection in Game 1 the following afternoon before a frenzied sellout at Citizens Bank Park. He pitched seven shutout innings, allowing one hit and striking out nine. After throwing 111 pitches, He turned a 1-0 lead over to the bullpen that had been so dependable for so much of the season.

Oops.

Jeff Hoffman, Matt Strahm and Orion Kerkering combined to give up five runs on five hits and a walk. The Mets won and went on to easily dismiss the Phillies in four games.

Would it have altered the outcome of the series if the Phillies had held on to win Game 1? Maybe, maybe not. The lineup went AWOL as well. What can be said with certainty is that the bullpen saved its worst for last and the ghastly 11.37 ERA the relievers pitched to will live in the record books forever.

It also illustrates the importance of top-to-bottom relief depth in an era when starters prioritize max effort on every pitch and, as a result, rarely finish what they started.

Hoffman and Carlos Estevez have since departed as free agents. Jordan Romano and Joe Ross have been added. Strahm, Kerkering, Jose Alvarado, Tanner Banks and Jose Ruiz were penciled in before camp opened, leaving just one vacancy to be filled. It would be two if Strahm’s left shoulder impingement delays his start to the season.

While relievers are notoriously up and down from one season to the next, the Phillies like the group they’ve assembled going into the season opener at Washington on March 27. Given the inherent inconsistency of the role, though, like any team, they are counting on one or two from the group to take a step forward.

Dave Dombrowski nominated Kerkering.

“Even though he’s done well, I don’t think people realize how good a pitcher (2.29 ERA in 67 games last season) he’s been,” the president of baseball operations said while sitting in his BayCare Ballpark office this spring. “So I think he can definitely jump up and pitch late innings. He’s pitched more like the seventh inning, but he’s definitely a late-inning type of guy.”

Realmuto is impressed with the soon-to-turn-24 right-hander who has yet to earn his first big-league save.

“There’s no doubt in my mind that he’ll be a closer in this game for sure,” the All-Star catcher told The Phillies Show podcast. “He has that ‘it’ factor where when he steps on the mound. … He’s trying to execute and no moment really seems too big for him, so I definitely think he has that mentality.”

Said manager Rob Thomson: “There’s really two guys for me: Kerkering and Alvarado. One from the left and one from the right. They both have great stuff. And they have the capacity to throw strikes and command the baseball. If they do their thing, we’ve got a really, really good bullpen.”

Alvarado has been dominant at times but has also struggled with command. And that makes all the difference. Consider:

In 31 games from April 13 through July 3 last season, he had six walks in 29.1 innings while throwing 65 percent of his pitches for strikes. In those games, his ERA was 2.15 and he held batters to a .198 average.

In his next 18 games, he had more than twice as many walks (13) in about half the innings (16.1) and threw strikes 56 percent of the time. In those outings, his ERA was 7.16 and opposing batters hit .288.

The Phillies are also counting on Romano, who had a total of 72 saves for the Blue Jays in 2022-23 but is coming off elbow surgery that ended his season last May.

For most of the time Thomson has been the manager, he’s declined to designate a closer. This follows the sabermetric imperative that the ninth inning isn’t always the most critical late inning of a game. And that will be the case again this season, at least at the outset.

(He deviated last season after Estevez was acquired from Angels at the deadline, cognizant that the veteran was accustomed to being used in the ninth and closers frequently struggle when a save isn’t on the line. Similarly, when Craig Kimbrel was pitching well in 2022, he was largely confined to game-on-the-line situations.)

“We do not have a closer,” Thomson said. “Romano’s been a closer, but he was hurt last year. He could develop into the guy, but we’ve really got four or five guys where you could say, ‘Okay, you’ve got the ninth inning every night.’ And then you piece the other innings together according to what you’ve got and what you’re up against.

“But as of right now, I say we go by committee and do it by the pockets and by the innings.”

For the most part, that’s been a successful formula for the Phillies. And when it’s not, there isn’t much that can be done about it.

Said Dombrowski: “I don’t ever like to use the phrase, ‘That’s baseball.’ Things happen and I think ‘That’s baseball’ is a broken-bat blooper over your head. They just didn’t pitch well (in the NLDS). That was just really the way it was, for whatever reason. I was as surprised as anybody.”

Warriors' Butler shrugs off Heat return as just ‘another game'

Warriors' Butler shrugs off Heat return as just ‘another game' originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

For Jimmy Butler, the Warriors’ upcoming matchup with the Miami Heat on Tuesday is just another game. On just another day that ends in -y.

And while that might be the sentiment that Golden State’s veteran forward coveys publicly, the first game against his former team since the blockbuster Feb. 5 trade is one Butler likely has had circled for quite some time.

However, you wouldn’t know that based on his comments about the upcoming matchup after the Warriors’ 124-115 loss to the Atlanta Hawks on Saturday.

“Yeah, I was traded from there, yada, yada, yada,” Butler said after Saturday’s loss about his return to Miami. “Yeah, it didn’t end the way that people wanted to, yada yada yada.

“But that’s so far behind me now. I don’t even think about it. I don’t pay attention to nothing except for the trajectory of this squad.”

Butler led the Heat on two NBA Finals runs in four years, and as he prepares to return to the arena where he played five-plus seasons and created countless memories, he is not worried about the reception he will receive from Heat fans on Tuesday night.

“Not really, don’t make no difference,” Butler said. “I’m a member of the Golden State Warriors. I love that fan base. They showed me a lot of love while I was there. But I’m there to win now. I’m on the opposing team.”

While Butler had plenty of success during his time in Miami, he and the Heat ultimately fell short of their ultimate goal.

“We were alright,” Butler shared. “We didn’t win nothing like we were supposed to. So I don’t know. We made some cool runs. We had some fun. I think that’s all we did.”

Despite Butler’s subdued reaction to the Warriors’ upcoming game, the weight of the reunion is not lost on his new teammates.

“We got Jimmy over here, I know this is a big game for him,” Warriors forward Draymond Green said. “They got [Andrew Wiggins] over there. I know it’s a huge game for him. We want to win for Jimmy, they’re going to want to win for Wiggs. We got to come out ready to play.”

After a frustrating loss to the Hawks without injured superstar Steph Curry, the Warriors (41-30) will look to bounce back against the Heat (29-41) on Tuesday in a game that probably means more to Butler than he is willing to admit.

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Young Sharks defenseman finally putting together impressive NHL tape

Young Sharks defenseman finally putting together impressive NHL tape originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

It’s hard to learn how to play defense in the NHL.

Shakir Mukhamadullin, who played a career-high 24:15 in the Sharks’ 3-1 victory over the Boston Bruins on Saturday at SAP Center, is a prime example of that.

The 23-year-old, the 2020 New Jersey Devils’ first-round pick, finally is putting together consistently strong NHL tape after a long and non-linear development in the KHL and AHL.

Notably, he’s killing or influencing plays defensively on a fairly regular basis in the best league in the world.

But he still is going to have his rough patches … and that’s okay.

Read the full article at San Jose Hockey Now

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Lakers well beaten by Bulls on James return

Los Angeles Lakers players Jarred Vanderbilt and LeBron James look dismayed as they speak to a referee during their loss to the Chicago Bulls on 22 March 2025
LeBron James (right) became the first NBA player to surpass 50,000 combined points earlier this month [Reuters]

The returns of LeBron James and Rui Hachimura could not save the Los Angeles Lakers from a sixth defeat in nine NBA games as they were well beaten by the Chicago Bulls on Saturday.

James made his Lakers comeback after seven games out with a groin injury while Hachimura had missed 12 matches with a knee problem.

But they could not prevent the Lakers losing 146-115 - with Chicago running up their highest score of the season to improve their record to 31-40.

Coby White had 36 points for the Bulls and rookie Matas Buzelis added 31, while 22-year-old Australian Josh Giddey claimed his 15th triple-double - 15 points, 17 assists and 10 rebounds.

Luka Doncic led Los Angeles (43-27) with 34 points - 29 in the first half - while James scored 17, and they cut the score to 65-64 at the start of the third quarter, but the Bulls had racked up a 104-89 lead going into the fourth.

Antetokounmpo inspires Bucks fightback

Elsewhere in Saturday's match-ups, Giannis Antetokounmpo notched 32 points and 17 rebounds as the Milwaukee Bucks rallied from a 14-point deficit to win 114-108 at the Sacramento Kings.

The Golden State Warriors remained without leading scorer Stephen Curry, because of a pelvis injury, as they lost 124-115 at the Atlanta Hawks, with Trae Young scoring 25 points in his his 41st double-double of the season.

Tyrese Haliburton returned from a three-game absence to help the Indiana Pacers beat the Brooklyn Nets 108-103, with team-mate Pascal Siakam scoring a game-high 26 points.

Karl-Anthony Towns claimed 31 points and 11 rebounds to help the New York Knicks win 122-103 at home to the Washington Wizards.

George Foreman showed every gesture is political – especially for Black athletes | Bryan Armen Graham

At the 1968 Olympics, Foreman’s flag-waving was seen as deference if not betrayal. But the reaction to it reveals the limited ways we allow Black athletes to express themselves

When a teenager from Texas named George Foreman waved a tiny American flag in the boxing ring after winning Olympic gold in 1968, he had little awareness of the political minefield beneath his size 15 feet. The moment, captured by television cameras for an audience of millions during one of the most volatile periods in American history, was instantly contrasted with another image from two days earlier at the same Mexico City Games: Tommie Smith and John Carlos, heads bowed and black-gloved fists raised in salute during the US national anthem, a silent act of protest that would become one of the defining visuals of the 20th century. Their message was unmistakable: a rebuke of the country that had sent them to compete while continuing to deny civil rights to people who looked like them. Their action was seen as defiant resistance, Foreman’s as deference to the very systems of oppression they were protesting.

Foreman’s flag-waving, unremarkable in almost any other context, became a lightning rod. For many, especially those aligned with the rising tide of Black Power, the gesture felt tone-deaf at best, an outright betrayal at worst. How could a young Black man, representing a country still brutalizing his own people, celebrate it so enthusiastically? But that reading, while emotionally understandable amid the fevered upheaval of 1968, misses something deeper – about Foreman, about patriotism, and about the burden of symbolic politics laid on the shoulders of Black athletes.

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‘It’s a privilege’: Boris van der Vorst, the man who saved Olympic boxing

By forming a new governing body, World Boxing, the Dutchman prevented the sport being banished by the IOC

“It feels like such a sweet week and of course I’m very happy and proud,” Boris van der Vorst says as, in his role as the president and one of the founders of World Boxing, he takes a rare break to reflect on a mighty achievement. Just over two years ago, boxing had been struck off the initial programme for the Los Angeles Games in 2028 and it was about to be banished entirely from the Olympic movement. It was then that Van der Vorst set about establishing a new regulatory body to replace the discredited International Boxing Association.

His work, despite intense pressure, was vindicated when Thomas Bach, the outgoing International Olympic Committee president, announced on Monday that his executive board had recommended boxing’s inclusion in the LA Olympics. The key stipulation was in place, because the IOC recognised World Boxing as the sport’s new regulatory body, and on Thursday Bach’s recommendation was accepted. Boxing was welcomed back into the Olympic fold.

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SMU squares off against Oklahoma State in NIT

Oklahoma State Cowboys (16-17, 7-14 Big 12) at SMU Mustangs (24-10, 14-8 ACC) Dallas; Sunday, 3 p.m. EDT BOTTOM LINE: SMU and Oklahoma State play in the National Invitation Tournament. The Mustangs are 14-8 against ACC opponents and 10-2 in non-conference play.

Illinois State squares off against Presbyterian in CBI Tournament

Presbyterian Blue Hose (14-18, 7-10 Big South) vs. Illinois State Redbirds (19-14, 11-11 MVC) Daytona Beach, Florida; Sunday, 7:30 p.m. EDT BOTTOM LINE: Illinois State and Presbyterian square off in the College Basketball Invitational. The Redbirds are 11-11 against MVC opponents and 8-3 in non-conference play.