Kings Blow Out Sharks in 8-1 victory

© Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

Los Angeles, CA — The Los Angeles Kings (41-23-9) defeated the San Jose Sharks (20-44-9) in an 8-1 victory at Crypto.com Arena on Sunday, March 30. 

This victory was a bounce-back from the previous two losses against some of the tougher competition in the Stanley Cup playoffs—the Toronto Maple Leafs and the Colorado Avalanche. It also helped the Kings regain their top home-ice record.

Among the standout players during this match were LA Kings right wing Adrian Kempe and left wing Warren Foegele, who scored goals during a power play and again in the Kings' offensive onslaught in the second period. 

In the first period, Los Angeles drew first blood when center Phillip Danault hit a slap shot from the left side of the San Jose net to score the first goal, 1-0. The Sharks' offense was later given two power plays off of penalties by the Kings — slashing and sticking —but could not utilize their advantages. 
Meanwhile, the Sharks also gave up penalties. During the second power play, which the Kings received after a hooking penalty, Kempe hit a snapshot to the hockey net to score another goal for the Kings, 2-0. 

As the second period skated by, San Jose scored their only goal of the night by center Cam Lund, 2-1. They could not hold back the offensive prowess of Los Angeles. 

Kings left wing Trevor Moore took advantage of a defensive miscalculation by the Sharks—too many players on one person—and hit a wrist shot to the net, scoring for Los Angeles, 3-1. The Sharks gave up three penalties to the Kings, and on the second power play of the period, Foegele was able to muscle the puck into the San Jose net with a deflected shot from their goaltender, making it 4-1.

Towards the end of the second period, Foegele scored again for the LA Kings, only this time he tipped in a shot from defenseman Mikey Anderson to blow up the lead, 5-1. Even as the period was coming to a close, as the puck was being passed along nicely by Los Angeles, Kempe struck again with a slap shot from the left side of the Sharks net for a goal, 6-1.

The third period came around for the LA Kings, but San Jose's offense skipped town despite the penalties the Kings took—roughing and cross-checking by Mikey Anderson, both in the same play. 

As the latter half of the third period came, as did left-wing Andrei Kuzmenko when he shot the puck right by the neutral zone with an impressive wrister, ballooning the lead to 7-1. Los Angeles center Trevor Lewis chimed in with insurance goals near the end, nailing a wrist shot to the Sharks net, making it 8-1 and marking the end of the offensive rampage by the LA Kings with a win.

Despite the offensive magic, the Kings will face perhaps one of the biggest challenges yet in the Winnipeg Jets, considered one of the favorites to make a deep run in the Stanley Cup playoffs.

Garrett Crochet, Red Sox agree to massive contract extension: Report

Garrett Crochet, Red Sox agree to massive contract extension: Report originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Red Sox landed their ace this offseason, and they intend to keep him for a long time.

The Red Sox and left-hander Garrett Crochet have agreed to a six-year, $170 million contract extension, ESPN’s Jeff Passan reported Monday night. Crochet’s new deal begins in 2026 and includes an opt-out in 2030, per Passan.

Boston acquired Crochet from the White Sox this offseason in a blockbuster trade that sent the Red Sox’ No. 4 prospect, catcher Kyle Teel, to Chicago along with prospects Braden Montgomery, Chase Meidroth and Wikelman Gonzalez.

Crochet, who’s in his fifth MLB season, signed a one-year, $3.8 million deal with Boston earlier this offseason to avoid arbitration but would have entered his final year of arbitration next season.

Considering what the Red Sox gave up to acquire the 25-year-old left-hander, keeping him around long-term was a priority, and it appears they’ve accomplished that goal with a deal that will pay him an average of $28.3 million per year.

Crochet is fresh off the best season of his career, posting a 3.58 ERA in 2024 with a 1.068 WHIP and 209 strikeouts in 146 innings in 2024. He started Boston’s 2025 season opener on Thursday, allowing two runs on five hits over five innings with four strikeouts in a 5-2 win.

Flyers win 3rd straight as Michkov, Konecny put up multi-point games

Flyers win 3rd straight as Michkov, Konecny put up multi-point games originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Flyers matched their season-best winning streak of three games with a 2-1 decision Monday night over the Predators at the Wells Fargo Center.

Ryan Poehling and Jamie Drysdale provided the Flyers’ markers. Poehling has seven goals in the last 10 games.

Matvei Michkov and Travis Konecny had two assists apiece. Konecny is one helper away from 50.

Ivan Fedotov did the job in net.

The Flyers (31-36-9) are 3-0-0 under Brad Shaw. They’ve scored 15 goals over his three games as interim head coach.

It’s the fifth time the Flyers have won three straight this season. They haven’t won more than three straight since Feb. 6-12 of last season, when they won four in a row.

The Flyers swept the two-game regular-season series from the Predators (27-39-8). They picked up a 3-2 overtime win in Nashville, Tennessee on the eve of Thanksgiving. Two of the Flyers’ three goal scorers that night were not in the lineup for the rematch because of trades.

• Michkov’s surge continued.

The 20-year-old rookie played an excellent two-man game with Konecny to set up Poehling’s game-opening goal in the second period. Thirty-four seconds after the Predators tied it up, Michkov and Konecny assisted Drysdale’s go-ahead goal.

Over the last 21 games, Michkov has put up 24 points (10 goals, 14 assists). He’s on a six-game point streak in which he has recorded 11 points (four goals, seven assists). He’s two points away from 60 on the season and leads all NHL rookies with 24 goals.

• Fedotov converted 28 saves on 29 shots to pick up his first win since March 1.

The 28-year-old made some big stops in the third period.

“I thought he battled,” Shaw said. “Coming off a couple of tough ones for him, I thought he worked to see the puck.”

Poehling had a big blocked shot with 21 seconds left in the game as the Flyers had a gritty finish to nail down the one-goal lead.

“I think that just shows the group we have here,” Konecny said. “No matter what we’re facing as far as the standings and where we’re at, guys just can’t help themselves. They want to win games and that’s why we love this group.”

Nashville backup Justus Annunen stopped 16 of the Flyers’ 18 shots.

• The Flyers’ top defensive pair of Travis Sanheim and Nick Seeler was real solid for a second straight game.

Seeler was great defensively in the final minutes.

“I think there’s a chemistry that has to be built with a pair,” Shaw said. “I like how hard they compete. Seels, there’s never a question on how hard he works. Sanny, I thought for a guy who has played a ton of minutes the last month, I thought he was fantastic tonight. I thought it was one of the better games I’ve seen him play in the month of March and that’s not an easy thing to do with what we’ve asked from him and everything’s done this year already.”

• Garnet Hathaway returned from an upper-body injury to notch his 600th career NHL game.

The 33-year-old winger had missed almost all of March after taking a blindsided hit at the end of February. More on Hathaway and Rasmus Ristolainen’s status here.

• Karsen Dorwart, who the Flyers signed out of Michigan State, is expected to join the team for practice Wednesday. Shaw said the 22-year-old center will probably be in the lineup for the Flyers’ next game Saturday.

The 6-foot-1, 195-pounder will wear No. 23 when he makes his NHL debut.

“We need depth at center,” Shaw said, “and hopefully he can be one of those solutions for us.”

The club has six games left.

“Hopefully he can get in the majority of them and get his feet wet,” Shaw said. “Then when training camp comes around, he has got a way better idea of what this league is all about.”

• The Flyers now have four days before their next game Saturday when they visit the Canadiens (7 p.m. ET/NBCSP).

They’re scheduled to practice Wednesday and Friday at 11 a.m. ET in Voorhees, New Jersey.

Flyers win 3rd straight as Michkov, Konecny put up multi-point games

Flyers win 3rd straight as Michkov, Konecny put up multi-point games originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Flyers matched their season-best winning streak of three games with a 2-1 decision Monday night over the Predators at the Wells Fargo Center.

Ryan Poehling and Jamie Drysdale provided the Flyers’ markers. Poehling has seven goals in the last 10 games.

Matvei Michkov and Travis Konecny had two assists apiece. Konecny is one helper away from 50.

“They’re certainly looking for one another,” Brad Shaw said. “I think they are feeding off one another’s success.”

Ivan Fedotov did the job in net.

“Great win for us,” Fedotov said. “Everybody played well, stayed with the structure.”

The Flyers (31-36-9) are 3-0-0 under Shaw. They’ve scored 15 goals over his three games as interim head coach.

It’s the fifth time the Flyers have won three straight this season. They haven’t won more than three straight since Feb. 6-12 of last season, when they won four in a row.

The Flyers swept the two-game regular-season series from the Predators (27-39-8). They picked up a 3-2 overtime win in Nashville, Tennessee on the eve of Thanksgiving. Two of the Flyers’ three goal scorers that night were not in the lineup for the rematch because of trades.

• Michkov’s surge continued.

The 20-year-old rookie played an excellent two-man game with Konecny to set up Poehling’s game-opening goal in the second period.

“Those are two guys that have so much offensive skill and you saw them showcase it there,” Poehling said. “For me, it was weird, it came off a backcheck, I was just trying to get in an open spot and T.K. made a great play.”

Thirty-four seconds after the Predators tied it up, Michkov and Konecny assisted Drysdale’s go-ahead goal.

Over the last 21 games, Michkov has put up 24 points (10 goals, 14 assists). He’s on a six-game point streak in which he has recorded 11 points (four goals, seven assists). He’s two points away from 60 on the season and leads all NHL rookies with 24 goals.

“It’s the end of a season and there’s a long, long break,” Michkov said through translator Slava Kuznetsov, a Flyers consultant. “I’m trying to get every single moment, seize every single moment on the ice.”

• Fedotov converted 28 saves on 29 shots to pick up his first win since March 1.

The 28-year-old made some big stops in the third period.

“I thought he battled,” Shaw said. “Coming off a couple of tough ones for him, I thought he worked to see the puck.”

Poehling had a big blocked shot with 21 seconds left in the game as the Flyers had a gritty finish to nail down the one-goal lead.

“I think that just shows the group we have here,” Konecny said. “No matter what we’re facing as far as the standings and where we’re at, guys just can’t help themselves. They want to win games and that’s why we love this group.”

Nashville backup Justus Annunen stopped 16 of the Flyers’ 18 shots.

• The Flyers’ top defensive pair of Travis Sanheim and Nick Seeler was real solid for a second straight game.

Seeler was great defensively in the final minutes.

“I think there’s a chemistry that has to be built with a pair,” Shaw said. “I like how hard they compete. Seels, there’s never a question on how hard he works. Sanny, I thought for a guy who has played a ton of minutes the last month, I thought he was fantastic tonight. I thought it was one of the better games I’ve seen him play in the month of March and that’s not an easy thing to do with what we’ve asked from him and everything he has done this year already.”

• Garnet Hathaway returned from an upper-body injury to notch his 600th career NHL game.

The 33-year-old winger had missed almost all of March after taking a blindsided hit at the end of February. More on Hathaway and Rasmus Ristolainen’s status here.

• Karsen Dorwart, who the Flyers signed out of Michigan State, is expected to join the team for practice Wednesday. Shaw said the 22-year-old center will probably be in the lineup for the Flyers’ next game Saturday.

The 6-foot-1, 195-pounder will wear No. 23 when he makes his NHL debut.

“We need depth at center,” Shaw said after morning skate, “and hopefully he can be one of those solutions for us.”

The club has six games left.

“Hopefully he can get in the majority of them and get his feet wet,” Shaw said. “Then when training camp comes around, he has got a way better idea of what this league is all about.”

• The Flyers now have four days before their next game Saturday when they visit the Canadiens (7 p.m. ET/NBCSP).

They’re scheduled to practice Wednesday and Friday at 11 a.m. ET in Voorhees, New Jersey.

Ex-Sabres Defender Expected To Be Done For The Season

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While speaking to reporters, including NBC Sports Philadelphia's Jordan Hall, Philadelphia Flyers interim head coach Brad Shaw shared that former Buffalo Sabres defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen is unlikely to play again this season. 

Ristolainen, 30, has not played for the Flyers since their March 11 matchup against the Ottawa Senators. In 63 games this season, the 6-foot-4 defenseman has recorded four goals, 19 points, 94 blocks, 97 hits, and a plus-3 rating. This is after he had one goal, three assists, and a minus-6 rating in 31 games last season for Philadelphia. 

Ristolainen was selected by the Sabres with the eighth-overall pick of the 2013 NHL Entry Draft. In eight seasons with Buffalo, he had 46 goals, 199 assists, 245 points, 848 blocks, 1,355 hits, and a minus-179 rating. The right-shot blueliner also had four seasons with at least 32 assists and 41 points during his time with the Sabres. 

Ristolainen's time with the Sabres ended when he was traded to the Flyers during the 2021 NHL off-season. 

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White breaks Celtics record for most 3-point shots made in a season

White breaks Celtics record for most 3-point shots made in a season originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Derrick White has set a new Boston Celtics team record.

The veteran point guard made his 246th 3-point shot of the season in Monday night’s road game against the Memphis Grizzlies. He has surpassed Isaiah Thomas, who set the C’s single-season record for 3-pointers with 245 during the 2016-17 campaign.

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It’s not surprising that this record has fallen. The Celtics are on pace to break NBA records for the most 3-pointers made and attempted by a team in one season.

The fact that White has broken the record is a little surprising. White came to the Celtics in a pre-trade deadline deal with the San Antonio Spurs in 2022. He was not known as an excellent outside shooter, but to his credit, he has improved quite a bit in this aspect of his game.

White never shot better than 36.6 percent from 3-point range in a full season with the Spurs. He has never shot below 38.1 percent in his three full seasons with the Celtics (including this year). White entered Monday with a 38.3 3-point percentage this season.

White broke the record, but he probably won’t be the only Celtics player to pass Thomas this season. Jayson Tatum came into Monday needing eight 3-pointers and Payton Pritchard needed nine 3-pointers to pass Thomas’ previous record of 245 3-pointers.

Based on his season averages, White could end the season with 270 3-pointers made.

The league record belongs to Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry, who made 402 3-point shots in the 2015-16 campaign.

Blues Top Prospect Expected To Make NHL Debut Tuesday

Jimmy Snuggerud (left) is expected to make his NHL debut with the St. Louis Blues on Tuesday against the Detroit Red Wings. (Nick King/Lansing State Journal / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)

MARYLAND HEIGHTS, Mo. -- Like any nervous kid looking to do something for the first time Jimmy Snuggerud was like a sponge on Monday.

The 2022 first-round pick (No. 23) by the St. Louis Blues was on the practice ice on Monday for the first time after signing his three-year, entry-level contract on Friday, just one day after a premature ending to his collegiate season – and career – when the Minnesota Golden Gophers fell to Massachusetts 5-4 in overtime on Thursday at the Fargo Regional semifinals.

And judging by practice line combinations and power play drills, the 20-year-old is expected to make his NHL debut when the Blues (40-28-7) put their nine-game winning streak on the line to begin a three-game homestand on Tuesday against the Detroit Red Wings (34-33-6).

“Potentially,” Blues coach Jim Montgomery said. “He had a good practice, will talk it over with the staff, but there’s some quality talent that we’ve acquired and is going to make us deeper, better.”

Snuggerud, who had 51 points (24 goals, 27 assists) in 40 games for the Golden Gophers this season, was on a line with Oskar Sundqvist and Zack Bolduc on Monday and played the bumper with one of the Blues’ power-play units.

“It was good. It was a fast-paced practice,” Snuggerud said. “A lot of movement, a lot of speed. It was fun. It was just great to be on the ice with the guys.

“It’s kind of just learning from other guys and watching. The speed, it showed quick. The first drill, you kind of have to be ready from the start and there’s so many good players on the ice, so just watch them and what they’re doing and kind of learn from them.”

It’s been a whirlwind of emotions for the 20-year-old, who went back to school on his own accord, to not only better himself in certain areas he felt he wasn’t ready for to compete at this level yet but also to try and win a national championship, which he unfortunately was unable to do.

“It’s kind of hard to turn the page quick, but you kind of have to honestly,” Snuggerud said. “You jump from one team to another team who is the hottest team in the National Hockey League. You’ve got to switch your mindset quick. I think I’ve learned from a lot of people in my life that have taught me to do that. It’s been an easy adjustment.

“It was a really quick turnaround honestly. From zero to 100. A lot of emotions honestly. You lose your season and I’m really excited to be here now and meet this group of guys.”

Should Snuggerud jump into the lineup, he will go in for Mathieu Joseph, who was an extra along with 2023 first-round pick (No. 10 overall) Dalibor Dvorsky and Alexandre Texier.

“You come in and let him play, let him feel comfortable and go from there,” Blues captain Brayden Schenn said. “He’s going to be nervous, he was nervous today. He flat-out said it, right. He’s never been in an NHL training camp, right, so it’s our job to make him feel as comfortable as possible as quick as possible. Obviously he has elite talent and at the same time, you don’t expect him to come in here and be this guy that’s going to save your season or whatever. He’s just got to be a piece for us and that’s all we need from him and just play his game.”

Montgomery admitted prior to Monday not knowing anything about Snuggerud other than what he’s maybe seen on television or read about him. And after a practice session, he’s learned, “His hockey sense, his game management, his puck play was really good. His hands are exceptional, his skating is NHL speed. Those are things you’re looking to see, but the biggest thing is the brain, that he thinks it so well.”

With the Blues, who hold the second wild card from the Western Conference, on an absolute tear, does it disrupt the room implementing someone new into the lineup?

“We’re not going to worry about Jimmy being a disruption in our locker room,” said Schenn, who drove Snuggerud to the rink on Monday. “I think our locker room’s good enough where he can come in and just be a piece for us and a guy that has a lot of skill and a lot of talent that can fit in well for us. Even in the run, Matt Kessel stepped in for a game, Dvorsky stepped in for a game. It’s one of those things where you don’t have to worry about him coming in and disrupting or any of that stuff. That’s not what we’re worried about. You let him come in, find his game, but at the same time, don’t put pressure on him. Just let him play and let him get better game by game.”

Montgomery said, though, it was something that needed to be addressed with the leaders.

“As a coach, you never stop worrying about all those possibilities, but in the end, I think if you communicate to everybody that’s involved, especially your leaders, and they understand that when we bring in a new player, it’s an opportunity for us to get better, and that’s why we’re doing it, and in the end, we all want to put the best players on the ice and the best team possible,” Montgomery said. “I’ll sit with the staff and we’ll see if we make a change in the lineup or not.”

The points of emphasis Snuggerud feels he’s equipped to handle now include, “Speed, puck possession, poise, leadership things. Those things are kind of why I decided to come back and that’s what I wanted to work on. I feel like I worked on those things well enough to a point where I could jump on this team. But like I said before, it’s a fast-paced game and I’m really lucky and fortunate to be here and I feel like I’ve improved myself to be here, but there’s still a long ways to go.

“I feel like my game has evolved over the past year. Obviously the speed is different. Guys in here want to win and I think I have that winning mentality. I just want to win games and I want to be here for them, be by their side when they win hockey games. That was kind of the most important thing for me is making that jump knowing the mentality is hockey, hockey, hockey. There’s no school anymore. It’s just hockey and you’re here to win hockey games and that’s it.”

“Everyone in here is so nice. Just meeting the guys already, it’s such a tight-knit group of guys. It’s cool to meet them and talk to guys on the ice. There’s some Minnesota guys in here too so it’s cool to connect with them. There’s some college players too. It’s just cool the connections you can start and create with guys in this locker room.”

Snuggerud, who chose No. 21; not out of a connection, but because, “I just happened to look at the list and happened to choose 21. I’m kind of playing for what’s on the front,” goes from playing for one title and jumping into a playoff race probably eases somewhat the sting of not accomplishing what he wanted when he went back to college.

“It’s cool. You dream of it as a kid,” he said. “You obviously still don’t know yet. But I’m playing for everyone else in here. I’m here to win hockey games. Hopefully that’s what I kind of entail on other guys. They’re the hottest team in the NHL and I’m so lucky and grateful to be a part of it.”

Shohei Ohtani 50-50 card sells for $1.07 million. It includes piece of pants Dodger wore reaching milestone

A baseball card autographed by Shohei Ohtani and featuring a piece of the pants the Dodgers superstar wore while becoming the first MLB player to hit 50 home runs and steal 50 bases in a season has sold for more than $1 million.

The one-of-a-kind Topps Dynasty Black card that features an on-card signature in gold ink by Ohtani and the MLB logo patch from the pants he wore during his record-setting game against the Miami Marlins was sold by Heritage Auctions on Saturday night for $1,067,500. The name of the buyer has not been revealed.

That is by far the most money paid in a public auction for an Ohtani card. The previous record was the $533,140 paid last year for a card from the 2018 Bowman Chrome Rookie Autographs Orange Refractor set. While 25 of those cards exist, that one received a 10 from the Beckett Grading Service.

The record-setting card is one of three different cards from the 50-50 game that Topps used to launch its Dynasty Black series, which features one-of-one autographed cards with pieces of game-used memorabilia from specific, historic moments. One of those Ohtani 50-50 cards — which includes a tag from the batting gloves Ohtani wore while hitting his 50th home run and a laundry tag from the pants he wore during that game — received $173,240 at auction in February.

Read more:Champagne, hugs and T-shirts: Inside the unforgettable night Shohei Ohtani reached 50-50

"Shohei Ohtani is currently the best player in the game, and this 1-of-1 card is tied to a significant historical moment as the first MLB player to join the 50/50 club in 2024," Chris Ivy, director of sports auctions at Heritage, told The Times in an email. "It is also the most desirable of the three 1-of-1 Dynasty black cards because of the logo patch."

Ivy added: "Part of what makes this result remarkable is the fact that it was not a rookie card — they usually are among the most popular in the collecting community — and still set the world record."

Earlier this month, the one-of-one major league rookie debut patch autograph card for Pirates pitcher Paul Skenes sold at auction for $1.11 million.

Read more:Shohei Ohtani's 50th home run ball sells for record $4.4 million. Who gets the money?

Ohtani entered the Sept. 19 game at loanDepot Park with 48 home runs and 49 steals. He wasted no time reaching 50 stolen bases, swiping third base in the first inning, then added No. 51 in the second inning. Then came home run No. 49 in the sixth inning, setting the stage for history to be made in the seventh.

After fouling off the first two pitches and laying off one in the dirt, Ohtani sent a hanging curveball by Marlins reliever Mike Baumann 391 feet and over the left-field wall. That ball was auctioned for $4.392 million, an amount that surpassed any sum paid for a baseball, in October.

Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Hicks lives out childhood dream, dominates in hometown for Giants

Hicks lives out childhood dream, dominates in hometown for Giants originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

HOUSTON — Jordan Hicks stepped out of the dugout at 6:30 p.m. on Monday and looked around. He had a glove in one hand, a bag of equipment in the other, and a lifetime of memories flooding back into his head. 

Hicks is a Houston native and grew up rooting for Lance Berkman, Craig Biggio and others. He came to about 20 Astros games as a child and has fond memories of experiencing Major League Baseball for the first time at a ballpark that he still refers to by its previous name. As Hicks looked around what is now Daikin Park, he thought back to where he used to sit. 

For the rest of the night, it was his childhood team that was caught looking. 

Hicks struck out six across six one-hit innings in his first big league appearance in Houston, including three straight strikeouts looking in a dominant second inning that signaled his second year in orange and black might take on a much different tone.

Jeremy Pena, Cam Smith and Mauricio Dubón went down looking in succession, all watching 98 or 99 mph sinkers clip the edge of the zone. Patrick Bailey’s golden framing helped a bit, but for the most part this night was about Hicks, who had his best start as a big leaguer as the Giants beat the Astros 7-2.

“That’s a good one to build off in 2025,” Hicks said. “I’ll just stay right there.”

Hicks got off to a strong start in 2024, too, but this was something different. His fastball averaged 98 mph, nearly a full tick higher than his best average in any single game last season, his first as a starter. He hit 100 mph for the first time as a Giant and threw 13 pitches at 99 mph or above, three more than he had all of last season.

Hicks had more than 80 family members and friends in the seats, and that extra adrenaline certainly helped. But this is the Hicks the Giants have expected for months. President of baseball operations Buster Posey made it clear in the offseason and again at the start of camp that he viewed Hicks as a starter. Posey inherited the right-hander’s four-year contract and could have moved him back to the bullpen, especially with the depth the Giants have, but he felt good about Hicks’ offseason. General manager Zack Minasian and manager Bob Melvin did, too.

The second inning alone validated all those offseason hopes, but Hicks kept it going. He repeatedly hit 99 mph in the sixth as he reached his predetermined pitch count. 

“It’s what he did when he was closing, he’s just doing it for a longer period of time now,” Melvin said. “I think that’s one of the things he’s kind of figuring out now. It’s, go as hard as he can for as long as he can. That’s what he’s been successful doing in the past and it’s just [about making] sure you’re conditioned to pitch deeper into games.”

Hicks spent the offseason working out in San Francisco and packed on 15 pounds from the end of last season. The Giants won’t know for several months if that offseason work truly leads to more longevity for a pitcher who slammed into a wall last summer, but they’re confident that Hicks can give the rotation 150 or so innings this time around.

Hicks started with six that were spectacular, leading the Giants to a third win in four games on this trip. He said he’s right where he hoped to be at the start of the season, and he’s eager to build off Monday’s performance. 

It was a perfect return to his hometown. Well, almost perfect. 

Hicks always imagined himself pitching on this mound, he just thought it would have a different name. For more than two decades, it did. 

“I’ve never even thrown out of the bullpen here, so it was really nice to have all of the family come out and for them to experience it,” he said. “I was more excited when it was still Minute Maid Park, but now they changed to Daikin, so I guess we’ve just got to live with it. But I grew up coming here and it was special to be on the field where I used to watch all the old ball games. It was a pretty special moment.”

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The Wraparound: Has Oilers' Leon Draisaitl Ended The Hart Trophy Race?

Leon Draisaitl (Perry Nelson-Imagn Images)

There are lots of rapid-fire NHL and hockey topics to discuss on The Hockey News Wraparound Show.

Has Oilers' Leon Draisaitl Ended The NHL's Hart Trophy Race? by The WraparoundHas Oilers' Leon Draisaitl Ended The NHL's Hart Trophy Race? by The Wraparoundundefined

Here's what Emma Lingan and Michael Augello discussed in this episode:

0:00: Has Leon Draisaitl ended the Hart Trophy race?

4:04: Which of the Chicago Blackhawks’ latest signings has a better chance of staying with the team next season?

7:21: Can Jimmy Snuggerud be an impactful player for the St. Louis Blues this season and potentially in the playoffs?

10:09: Should Jack Eichel be getting more consideration for NHL awards?

12:38: Could Nikita Kucherov go down as the best Russian-born player of all-time?

15:14: Breaking down the players and teams to look out for during the CHL playoffs

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After 'awful' start, what should the Dodgers do about Roki Sasaki?

(This article was written with the assistance of Castmagic, an AI tool, and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy. Please reach out to us if you notice any mistakes.)

On the latest episode of "Baseball Bar-B-Cast," hosts Jordan Shusterman and Jake Mintz delved into the recent struggles of Roki Sasaki, the talented pitcher for the Los Angeles Dodgers. 

On Saturday against the Detroit Tigers, Sasaki had a tough outing in which he managed to secure only five outs before he was pulled from the game. The hosts noted his visible frustration and possible tears in the dugout.

"[Sasaki] was awful. Worse than he looked in Japan," Mintz said. "The fastball command was abysmal. He was missing arm-side with the heater, particularly to lefties. Just couldn't figure it out. And he was clearly frazzled throughout the entire outing."

For Mintz, it boils down to one thing: "He's not ready for this right now."

The podcast discussion revolved around the Dodgers' strategy in developing Sasaki, given the high expectations for him after his move from Japan. Mintz and Shusterman debated the pros and cons of keeping him in the major leagues versus sending him to Triple-A to work on his command in a less pressurized environment. 

As Mintz put it, "The Dodgers can afford for Roki to figure this out at the big-league level. That is part of what they pitched to him. They're so talented, so deep that he can go out there and throw up stinkers and work on stuff and effectively use a big-league game as a minor-league development experience. And they can still win.

"But is that what's best for his development right now? I'm not sure."

While the Dodgers' deep and talented roster affords them the flexibility to let Sasaki to develop at the highest level, there's a valid argument to give him an opportunity to refine his skills and build confidence in Oklahoma City, away from the bright lights of L.A., which could, in turn, be more beneficial for his long-term development.

What's more, as Shusterman pointed out, the Dodgers have so many other options that their rotation is not reliant on Sasaki at this point in time.

"They did not need to fast-track Roki in this way," he said. "They didn't. Not only because they can obviously win without him, but literally they have so many other pitchers that are more than good enough to fill in his spot."

While Mintz made the argument that the only way Sasaki is going to learn to pitch in the big leagues is to continue pitching in the big leagues, Shusterman disagreed. 

"I don't know if just continuing to roll that out in the big leagues is actively helping," he said. "And I think that there is a version where five starts in Oklahoma City, in front of fewer people, against worse hitters, where he can actually work on things, will put him in a position to come back and be more prepared to succeed. But either way, he does not look like a pitcher that is being put in a position to succeed. That is the simplest way to put it."

After pitching first in the Tokyo Series and then on opening weekend at home, Sasaki could certainly use an easy outing, but his next scheduled start is against the Phillies. Pitching in a notoriously tough environment such as Philly will no doubt add an additional challenge that will further test Sasaki's resilience and adaptability.

"You could say, 'Why are you babying this guy?'" Shusterman pondered. "But he's a baby! He's not making $300 million. He's making the minimum, and he's 23. ... And yes, he is one of the most talented players to ever come from Japan, but if you don't think he's a finished product, if you clearly know that he has stuff to work on, why are we pretending like he's already your No. 2 starter? That's what I don't get that."

Keep an eye on Sasaki, as his journey will continue to be one to watch — not only because of his immense talent but also to see how the Dodgers manage his development moving forward.

To listen to the full episode and more, tune in to "Baseball-Bar-B-Cast" on Apple, Spotify or YouTube.