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.
Cubs President of Baseball Operations Jed Hoyer and General Manager Carter Hawkins met with media in Mesa, Arizona Wednesday, which was also the day that Cubs pitchers and catchers officially reported for Spring Training at the Sloan Park complex, though many players have been in camp already for a couple of weeks.
There wasn’t any real news made at this presser. Most of it was just reiterating things that were said at the Cubs Convention, or over the winter in general.
Many Cubs fans, myself included, felt that the 2025 season was sort of like where the Cubs were after 2015, a team that went pretty far but had “unfinished business.” That was exactly the term Hoyer used in describing the atmosphere in Mesa. He said, “Expectations are high, which is great. The excitement in camp is palpable, players and coaches are excited about our group.”
Clearly, it’s not an exact comparison. The 2016 team was widely considered to be a World Series favorite and came through. The 2026 Cubs, while a serious contender, aren’t quite perceived in that way. Nevertheless, I personally think the Cubs have as good a chance as any to win it all this year.
Hoyer was asked whether the team was still looking at signing players, and he said that he is still on the phone with agents about guys who have yet to sign. But when Bruce Levine asked a question that appeared to specifically be about Zac Gallen (and you might have seen some recent Gallen-to-the-Cubs rumors), he said, “I’m not going to address specific free agents.”
You can read that however you want, but I’m pretty sure the Cubs aren’t signing Gallen to an eight-year deal (which is one rumor that spread on social media recently). Hoyer did add that they feel the team is in a good place to add at the deadline, if needed.
Hoyer and Hawkins talked about the way the Cubs Pitch Lab has worked well to make pitchers “the best version of themselves,” as Hawkins put it. He specifically referenced Matthew Boyd and the improvements Boyd made last year, and feels the same thing could be done with Hunter Harvey, who has had recent seasons ruined by injuries.
It was noted that Justin Steele, who is throwing bullpen sessions, won’t be ready for Opening Day. That’s something I think all of us pretty much knew already. I would expect Steele to be placed on the 60-day injured list today, which is the first day he’s eligible for that placement (it’s the day for each team when pitchers and catchers report). This would make Steele eligible to return in mid-April, but I don’t think he’ll be ready by then and I believe the Cubs will not rush him back.
Further to that, Hoyer noted the additional starting pitching acquisitions made this offseason as a way to address the way the rotation got “thin” at the end of the season and in the postseason. In addition to Boyd, Cade Horton, Jameson Taillon, Edward Cabrera and Shōta Imanaga, who will be the five rotation starters on Opening Day, the Cubs have Colin Rea in the pen as a potential swingman, and Javier Assad and Steele as guys who could join the rotation later on, as well as a potential Horton-like promotion of Jaxon Wiggins sometime during the season.
So that would make the Cubs at least nine deep for rotation options, not even counting a potential mid-season acquisition.
There were a few comments made about Matt Shaw and his playing some outfield, with Hawkins saying, “He will put in the work needed,” and about Pete Crow-Armstrong and Michael Busch taking steps forward and that those two also know what they need to do in order to continue the progress they made last year.
Lastly, Hoyer was asked about the World Baseball Classic and whether the 12 Cubs who are going to play in the tournament would be a “disadvantage” to the team. He said it was anything but that, it was “fun” to watch the WBC and it gives an opportunity for minor league free agents to play. He was especially excited for Seiya Suzuki to go and play for Samurai Japan, because Suzuki suffered an injury just before the last WBC in 2023. You might recall that Samurai Japan dedicated their win to Suzuki and held up his jersey during their title celebration.
The first Cubs full-squad workout will come on Monday, when team Chairman Tom Ricketts usually addresses the team, and the first game is a week from Friday.
It’s not there at the time of this post but the entire Hoyer/Hawkins presser should be available on the Marquee YouTube channel sometime later today.
There is, I suspect, very little doubt about the top and bottom of the division. The Dodgers are prohibitive favorites – around 7-1 on at the sports books – to win the NL West for the thirteenth time in the past fourteen years, as well as the fifth season in a row. At the other end, the Rockies finished 2025 a whopping thirty-seven games behind the fourth-place D-backs. They will probably be better this year – if only because it’d be very difficult for them to be worse – but they ain’t making up that deficit. In the middle, though? Things get a lot more murky. What do you think?
Rank the division, honestly. Who’s real, who’s fake, and who’s lying to themselves?
It’s between the D-backs, Giants and Padres for second, third and fourth, and I don’t feel like any order of those three teams for those three spots would particularly surprise me. If you want some objective measures, FanDuel has the projected win totals as Padres 84½, Giants 81½ and Diamondbacks 79½. Fangraphs has them at Giants 82.3, Diamondbacks 80.9 and Padres 79.9. Baseball Prospectus? Giants 82.3, Padres 81.3 and Diamondbacks all the way down at 77.1. But not particularly consistent there either. So how are you feeling, as we stand at the very start of spring training.
How would you rank the three teams, between the juggernaut-like Dodgers and paper airplane Rockies? Bonus points for explaining your working…
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 11: Chase Dollander #78 of the Colorado Rockies looks on while warming up before a bullpen at Salt River Fields at Talking Stick on February 11, 2025 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by Kyle Cooper/Colorado Rockies/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Spring training is finally upon us as pitchers and catchers began reporting this week with the Colorado Rockies joining the party on Thursday. This means we’ll be getting our first look at the new-look Rockies after a busy offseason that saw them remake their entire front office and coaching staff. The next step is figuring out their roster for both 2026 and beyond, and that step starts tomorrow.
So, with action getting underway, let’s explore some storylines to follow for pitchers and catchers in Rockies camp.
New faces, new philosophies
Pitching has always been both an emphasis of the Rockies and the bane of their existence. They’ve tried to mitigate the issue as much as possible, including opening a dedicated pitching lab at their spring training complex in early 2024.
After a disastrous 2025 that featured one of the worst team pitching staffs in MLB history, overhauling the pitching department was priority number one, the revamped coaching staff features Alon Leichman as the pitching coach, Gabe Ribas as assistant pitching coach, Matt Buschmann as the bullpen coach and Matt Daniels as the director of pitching.
President of baseball operations, Paul DePodesta, along with Leichman, has talked at length about the need to become innovative and experimental in developing a winning pitching strategy for Colorado. What exactly will that look like? Well, that’s what to look for in spring training. The Rockies have kept their intentions close to the chest, but once games get underway, we’ll likely see some of their ideas come to fruition. We know they want to help pitchers, particularly starters, expand their arsenals while also encouraging pitchers to pound the zone and stop nibbling.
So, sequencing and perhaps new pitches will become more evident for the arms the team deploys. We could also see the team try out pitch calling from the dugout, utilize openers and bridge arms to figure out new roles that could play a part in 2026. The new pitching brain trust has a lot on its plate, and spring training will their first crucial chance to set the tone for the year.
Who fills out the rotation?
After a rough year in 2025, the rotation had plenty of questions heading into the new season. Kyle Freeland will surely lead the group, but it was a little less certain after that. The team solidified the rotation with the signing of Michael Lorenzen, who is eager to take on Coors Field, and also signed veteran Japanese pitcher Tomoyuki Sugano and veteran lefty Jose Quintana yesterday. With those four filling up the rotation, that leaves roughly one more spot up for grabs in camp.
It stands to reason that Ryan Feltner will be the one to win the spots. Injuries limited Feltner to just a handful of starts in April last season, preventing the Rockies from seeing if he could build up his excellent second half in 2024. Can he return healthy and be a significant boon for the rotation?
Chase Dollander made his MLB debut in April and had an up-and-down season. He performed well on the road but struggled at home, as is to be expected from a first-year pitcher at Coors Field. His storyline will be one to follow during the season with the revamped coaching staff. Can the 2023 ninth-overall pick take a big step forward in 2026?
Tanner Gordon will also be up for a rotation spot after figuring some things out near the end of 2025 and posting some big wins against notable teams in big spots. Will it have been enough to garner a spot over someone like Dollander?
The team has also brought in a varied number of arms capable of starting, like Pierson Ohl and Keegan Thompson, who could fit into the rotation if needed, while looking towards the bullpen. Prospects like Sean Sullivan and Gabriel Hughes will also have a chance to make a strong impression and position themselves for a promotion this season.
The rotation needs to take a massive step forward in 2026, and the additions of Lorenzen and Sugano give the Rockies a pair of arms that have a deep pitch-mix and will be interesting to watch in camp while the younger arms try to prove their mettle.
The bullpen bunch
While the rotation is a little more clear-cut, the bullpen has become increasingly crowded heading into spring training. The arm barn was certainly a strong suit for the Rockies in 2025, and its depth was expanded even more during the offseason. That means there will be plenty of opportunities to battle for spots for the Opening Day roster.
Perhaps the most intriguing player to watch is R.J. Petit, the Rockies’ first overall selection in the Rule-5 Draft back in December. Petit is a mountain of a man who was well-regarded in the Detroit Tigers system. He is viewed as a power reliever who could become a bulk reliever. He has to be carried on the 26-man roster or be offered back to the Tigers, so the pressure is on for him to earn his keep to start the season.
Beyond that, the swath of veterans on minor league deals will be interesting to watch, particularly the addition of John Brebbia, who would seem like a prime candidate to break camp. The youth of the bullpen was a strength, but the team is likely hoping to hedge its bets in protecting some of those that may need more development time in the minors if spring training doesn’t quite go their way.
All eyes will also be on pitchers like Seth Halvorsen, who missed the latter part of the season with injury. Can those who dealt with some injuries rebound and replicate some success after the heavy workload in 2025?
The role of a long reliever seems to be prevalent coming into camp. Thompson and Ohl can easily fit that role, but the team also has Antonio Senzatela earning $12 million in his final guaranteed year with the club. Having multiple long reliever/swingman-type players seems like a useful tool, but how will it shake out with who is available? Senzatela seems like it’s do-or-die time for the veteran righty after losing his starting spot last season.
Suffice it to say that the bullpen is primed for some interesting battles in camp.
Who backs up Goodman?
We know Hunter Goodman is going to be the catcher come Opening Day, pending any sort of injury or drastic move. However, the backup position is a little less certain, at least in the sense that there will be some competition.
Braxton Fulford seems the easy bet after his debut last season and brings the tool of speed to his game, something manager Warren Schaeffer likes. However, his bat struggled, and the defense was a little lacking, leaving the window open for an alternative option.
The team brought in Brett Sullivan and Kyle McCann on minor league deals, both of whom have good reputations with the glove behind the dish. Prospects Bryant Betancourt and Cole Messina will also audition in camp, but it’s not expected that either of them will crack the big league roster.
What does stand out is that three of the four non-roster invites are left-handed batters. The Rockies have made an effort to add more left-handed hitting options this offseason and catchers have been no different. If there was a player to watch, it would be McCann, who had a solid rookie campaign in 2024 but missed all of 2025. However, a .319/.450/.611 slash in the Mexican League could be what he needed to propel himself back in a big league role with the Rockies, providing a quality left-handed backup for Goodman.
Fulford has the inside track, but the team will have to figure out if he will be better suited playing every day in Albuquerque or playing every couple of days with the big league squad. It’s a small pool of players, but the catching battles will be interesting.
Conclusion
2026 is going to be an incredibly interesting year for Rockies pitching. The experimentations and new faces will help shape the pitching strategy for a team that plays half its games at an unforgiving ballpark. Spring training has a lot of questions surrounding a 119-loss team and that can only foster some innovation and problem-solving to make sure that never happens again.
Pitchers are ready to embrace the challenge and long-tenured players like Freeland are ready to try anything if it wins, winning more games as a team. And then, seeing how the catchers fit into the mold of not only improving their offensive and defensive games, but also how they handle this pitching staff is going to be huge.
Next week, we’ll look at some position player storylines once they report to camp. What other pitching and catching storylines are you looking for this year? What player do you think needs to have a great spring training? Continue the discussion below!
Feb 1, 2026; Portland, Oregon, USA; Cleveland Cavaliers center Jarrett Allen (31) warms up before a game against the Portland Trail Blazers at Moda Center. Mandatory Credit: Troy Wayrynen-Imagn Images | Troy Wayrynen-Imagn Images
In 2021, the Cleveland Cavaliers were part of a three-team trade involving James Harden and Jarrett Allen. At the time, it was seen as savvy to get in on a trade where the Brooklyn Nets needed to offload Allen to take on Harden. It feels almost surreal that a half-decade later, Allen and Harden are now a pivotal pairing in this new era of Cavaliers basketball.
In Harden’s short time in the wine and gold, what’s stood out most hasn’t been his scoring, but his ability to connect with Allen. This shouldn’t come as much of a surprise to those familiar with Harden-oriented offenses since his Houston Rockets days. Harden has led to career years for his bigs, such as Clint Capela in Houston, Joel Embiid in Philadelphia, Ivica Zubac in Los Angeles, and now Allen.
What is it about Harden that leads to this transformation amongst talented big men? It’s not like Harden turns pumpkins into All-Stars. The bigs listed above are all talented. It’s the consciousness and precision of Harden’s movements and understanding of how defenses respond to his every step.
Harden’s reputation as a three-level scorer demands attention. There’s a respect in how tightly defenders crowd him, knowing that at any moment the pitter-patter dribble into a step-back is coming — the move that frustrates both opposing fans and defenses alike. That looming threat forces defenders to split their attention. Stay home, and Harden steps back. Press up, and he’s by you — with a rolling big diving into space.
This was apparent from the jump with Harden.
Keeping an eye on how the James Harden/Jarrett Allen P&R chemistry develops. High P&R can engage a big early, opens Allen back up on the short roll. Combine that with Cleveland's spacing/cutting and should give it a boost. pic.twitter.com/Iv0m7bCHz3
Not sure how *much* Harden gets two on the ball from teams but that's a plus for Cleveland especially if Donovan Mitchell is on the bench. Going to put the spotlight on the bigs to make reads/plays but I think CLE will take creating an advantage. pic.twitter.com/RgTo6G6C4q
Kings tried to keep the Harden/Allen P&R on the side, the tricky part is Harden is going to engage the big. Always get the feel that the pace in which Harden comes off screens suits Allen, lets him release and roll pic.twitter.com/VZRxoK1MLp
Yes, this is the Sacramento Kings, who were trudging out a G-League roster with cameos from Russell Westbrook and DeMar DeRozan. However, look at how the defense is having to react to the Harden and Allen pairing. Right at the beginning of the pick and roll, defenses are met with multiple choices. Those quick decisions include whether to switch, pressure Harden on ball with a double, or to rotate to meet Allen off the roll. All needs to be decided within two seconds. These actions happen in a blur, and defenses through two games have not.
Allen has posted 29 points and 22 points with Harden in the lineup. That is not something to brush off. Allen, for long stretches this season, has been an offensive afterthought. He was a name to monitor at the deadline, as it appears the Cavaliers threw their hands up with their former All-Star big man.
Allen is not the dynamic on-ball threat that some bigs are, where he can get the ball on the block and create his own shot. Allen is a play finisher, which is exactly where Harden comes in. The Cavaliers’ offense, led by Donovan Mitchell handling primary on-ball duties, was not unlocking the bigs like Harden has.
Lineups with Harden running point with Allen at center have been on an absolute heater. The Cavaliers are posting 120.7 points per 100 possessions (88th percentile) and 108.9 points per 100 possessions in the half-court (98th percentile) with both on the floor. Swap out Harden for Mitchell on point, and those numbers drop to a 116.2 offensive rating (59th percentile) and 101.3 half-court offensive rating (78th percentile).
This isn’t a slight on Mitchell, who obviously is as dynamic a player as there is in the league. Harden is simply more of a play starter for his teammates than Mitchell. This only shows that Harden can take some of the responsibility for the Cavaliers’ offense off Mitchell.
This season, it felt like the Cavaliers could only survive if Mitchell is at his best. That usually doesn’t involve him trying to get the bigs involved. If anything, it feels like with Mitchell’s slashing ability, the Cavs’ bigs more often than not can get in the way on drives to the hoop.
Harden’s play is complementary to the bigs. Hence why Allen is standing out from the opening tip. This isn’t a short-term thing, there are tons of context throughout the career of Harden to know that this is here to stay.
Harden is a center’s best friend. Allen, who at one point was the one who seemed most likely of the core four to be on the move, instead will be the biggest beneficiary of the Cavaliers’ win-now move.
On the first day of NBA All-Star Weekend, the fifth annual HBCU Classic will cap a busy Friday night with Hampton University and North Carolina A&T meeting at the Kia Forum in Inglewood, California.
Conference rivals in the Coastal Athletic Association, this will be the first appearance in the HBCU Classic for Hampton (5-6 CAA, 11-13 overall) and North Carolina A&T (2-9, 9-13).
This will be the teams' second meeting this season. On Jan. 19, Hampton rallied from an 11-point first-half deficit for an 82-61 victory as junior guard Jalyke Gaines-Wyatt scored a game-high 24 points off the bench for the Pirates.
The Aggies are trying to avoid their fifth consecutive losing season. Redshirt freshman forward Lewis Walker leads North Carolina A&T with 19.2 points per game.
NBC and Peacock will have coverage of the Castrol Rising Stars Championship on Friday, the State Farm 3-Point Contest, the Kia Shooting Stars and the AT&T Slam Dunk Contest on Saturday and the Stripes vs. World All-Star Game on Sunday.
This will be the fifth edition of the game, which highlights the NBA’s commitment to increasing support and awareness for athletics and advancing educational, career and economic opportunities in partnership with Historically Black Colleges and Universities. The NBA HBCU Classic started with the 2022 All-Star Weekend in Cleveland.
A majority of the HBCUs were founded during the latter half of the 1800s with an original goal of providing education for African Americans in an era when most colleges and universities in the United States did not allow Black students to enroll. There are 107 recognized HBCUs across 20 states, the District of Columbia and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
Which teams are playing in the 2026 NBA HBCU Classic?
Hampton University and North Carolina A&T, which are both HBCUs.
Hampton University was founded in 1868 and is located in Hampton, Virginia, with an enrollment just under 5,000 in more than 80 academic programs. Among its notable alumni are author Booker T. Washington, Alberta Williams King (mother of Martin Luther King Jr.), comedian Wanda Sykes, Olympic medalist and U.S. Track and Field champion Kellie Wells-Brinkley and former NBA champion Rick Mahorn.
North Carolina A&T is located in Greensboro, North Carolina and is the country's largest HBCU with an enrollment of more than 15,200. Founded in 1891, the school ranks No. 1 for African American undergrads in engineering and agriculture. Among its notable alums are civil rights activist Jesse Jackson Sr., North Carolina Supreme Court chief justice Henry E. Frye, Basketball Hall of Famer Alvin Attles, Pro Football Hall of Famer Elvin Bethea and Olympic track and field gold medalist Trevor Stewart.
Where is the 2026 NBA HBCU Classic played?
The Kia Forum, which was the home of the Los Angeles Lakers and Los Angeles Kings from 1967-99.
History of the 2026 NBA HBCU Classic:
Each year, the HBCU Classic features two new schools:
2022 (Cleveland): Howard 68, Morgan State 66
2023 (Salt Lake City): Grambling 69, Southern 64
2024 (Indianapolis): Winston-Salem State 64, Virginia Union 47
2025 (Oakland): Tuskegee University 68, Morehouse College 55
What other NBA events are on NBC and Peacock for All-Star Weekend?
Peacock NBA Monday will stream up to three Monday night games each week throughout the regular season. Coast 2 Coast Tuesday presents doubleheaders on Tuesday nights throughout the regular season on NBC and Peacock. On most Tuesdays, an 8 p.m. ET game will be on NBC stations in the Eastern and Central time zones, and an 8 p.m. PT game on NBC stations in the Pacific and often Mountain time zones.
Check local listings each week. Both games will stream live nationwide on Peacock. NBC Sports will launch Sunday Night Basketball across NBC and Peacock on Feb. 1, 2026. For a full schedule of the NBA on NBC and Peacock, click here.
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NBA on NBC 2025-26 schedule:
Click here to see the full list of NBA games that will air on NBC and Peacock this season.
Charlotte's Moussa Diabate (14) and Miles Bridges confront Detroit's Jalen Duren (0) during an on-court brawl Feb. 9 at Spectrum Center. (David Jensen / Getty Images)
Four players have been suspended by the NBA in connection with a brawl that broke out during the Detroit Pistons-Charlotte Hornets game Monday night, the league announced Wednesday.
It was the same four players that were ejected during the Pistons' 110-104 victory at Spectrum Center in Charlotte, N.C.
Detroit center Isaiah Stewart was suspended seven games for leaving the bench area, agressively entering an on-court altercation and fighting. This is Stewart's fifth suspension in his six-year NBA career. One resulted from an altercation with the Lakers' LeBron James in 2021 and another from an altercation that spilled into the stands during a game against the Minnesota Timberwolves last year.
"The length of Stewart's suspension is based in part on his repeated history of unsportsmanlike acts," the NBA said in a statement.
Charlotte forwards Miles Bridges and Moussa Diabaté were each suspended four games for fighting and escalating the altercation. Detroit center Jalen Duren received a two-game suspension for initiating the altercation and fighting.
The incident took place midway through the third quarter after Duren was fouled by Diabaté while driving toward the basket. Duren approached Diabaté and the two men appeared to bump into each other. Duren then appeared to hit Diabaté in the face with an open hand to ignite a brawl that lasted more than 30 seconds.
Bridges and Duren exchanged punches at one point, and Stewart left the bench and fought with Bridges.
The suspensions begin Wednesday, when the Pistons play the Raptors in Toronto and the Hornets host the Atlanta Hawks.
Soon after the punishments were announced, Diabaté posted an apology to "the Hornets coaches, staff, front office, teammates, and best fans in the NBA" on his Instagram Story.
"As a player, I pride myself on my passion and my commitment to giving everything on the court during every possession," he wrote. "However, in the heat of a highly competitive and physical matchup, I allowed my emotions to get the better of me, and for that, I am truly sorry.
"I understand the responsibility I carry as a professional athlete and as a role model. I view this as a learning experience and am fully committed to growing from it both as a player and a person. ... Thank you for your understanding and continued support."
The American League East should be baseball's finest pennant race this season, with three to five teams battling for a title that ended last year with the Toronto Blue Jays and New York Yankees each landing on 94 wins.
And now a most unlikely character has emerged to stir the pot.
Isiah Kiner-Falefa played for the Yankees from 2022-23, joined the Blue Jays at the 2025 trade deadline and played a key role in their run to the World Series. Now, he's a Boston Red Sox, and did not hold back in propping up his new team and tweaking the Yankees.
The Blue Jays won the division over the Yankees on a tiebreaker, then awaited the winner of a Boston-New York wild-card series in the ALDS. And Kiner-Falefa didn't hesitate to say who the Blue Jays preferred to play in the ALDS.
"We definitely felt (Boston) was a tougher matchup for us," Kiner-Falefa told reporters upon arriving Tuesday, Feb. 10 at the Red Sox's spring training camp in Fort Myers, Fla. "Once we saw the other team, we were a lot happier.
"It was definitely a topic.”
The Blue Jays proved as much, dispatching the Yankees 3-1 in the ALDS. Kiner-Falefa said the Red Sox proved themselves a far scrappier team than the Yankees, and he feared the presence of ace Garrett Crochet could tip the balance of the series.
That didn't leave his old boss, Yankees manager Aaron Boone, in too cheery a mood.
"I guess he was right," Boone said of Kiner-Falefa in his first spring press conference Wednesday, Feb. 11 in Tampa. "Little surprising to hear IKF say that.
"But whatever, that's fine."
Kiner-Falefa does have a knack for attracting main character energy, given his .660 career OPS and status as a utility infielder. He fielded hateful messages from Blue Jays fans all winter after he was forced out at home representing the potential World Series-winning run in the ninth inning of Game 7.
Following instructions, Kiner-Falefa stayed close to the bag to avoid a back pick, then, he explained Feb. 10, was intent on breaking up a double play at home to ensure Ernie Clement – the Blue Jays' hottest hitter at the time – got a chance to hit with two outs.
Kiner-Falefa did not see Dodgers second baseman Miguel Rojas slip after fielding the ball.
"From my instinct, from where I was, I was initially just thinking, break up that double play right there and get our best, hottest hitter up at the time," says Kiner-Falefa. "It almost paid off. Ernie almost got the job done on the next one, but at the end of the day it’s just a great learning experience. And I’m ready to flip the page."
Kiner-Falefa also wished he'd had a chance to explain that way back in November. But in the chaos of an 11-inning Game 7 loss, reporters did not approach him about the play and the controversy did not emerge until there was greater scrutiny on various angles of his forceout at home.
"It blew up without me getting a proper interview, so I thought that was unfair," he says.
Now, he's got a lot to say, and follows in Sonny Gray's footsteps as former Yankees tweaking their old team now that they're on Boston's side of the rivalry.
Detroit Tigers manager A.J. Hinch, left, talks to pitcher Justin Verlander after practice during spring training at TigerTown in Lakeland, Fla. on Wednesday, Feb. 11, 2026. | Junfu Han / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
The whiplash from the surprise of the Justin Verlander signing, to the images of the franchise’s greatest pitcher working out in his old haunts alongside Tarik Skubal, Jack Flaherty, and Framber Valdez on Wednesday, made from some fine visual storytelling. Pitchers and catchers reported to the Detroit Tigers complex in Lakeland to kick off spring training on Wednesday. Along with the traditional first injury report, which held a few minor surprises, we got our first look at the refurbished 2026 starting rotation.
There were a few features, as Framber Valdez had his press conference alongside Scott Harris and GM Jeff Greenberg. There was an interesting note as his full group of rotation mates, Tarik Skubal, Justin Verlander, Jack Flaherty, and Casey Mize all walked in as the presser was starting to support their teammate. You like to see them working on that unity within the group from the start.
A.J. Hinch talked to reporters about recruiting Framber Valdez, whose nickname is La Grasa. It literally refers to grease, but can be taken as something like “Slick” and comes from his former catcher Martin Maldonado teasing Valdez about his cologne and hair products rather than his pitching motion.
Hinch also announced the Skubal will be the Opening Day starter. It’s a pretty good bet that Verlander will be lined up for the April 3 home opener against the Cardinals. It’s also a pretty good bet that the crowd is going to be downright ravenous even compared to most home openers.
Your 2026 starting rotation.
Skubal, Verlander, Flaherty and Mize were all on hand for Valdez’s intro presser. Hinch and Fetter as well. pic.twitter.com/BicrLe2YzJ
We also got the first injury report of the spring, which always holds some surprises. Jackson Jobe and Jake Miller were throwing from 60 feet, which is particularly positive in Jobe’s case as he’s still only about eight months out from his Tommy John surgery. On the most optimistic timetable, he’ll be ready for a rehab assignment in July. Miller, in my eyes the Tigers top pitching prospect right now, is recovering from hip labrum surgery and may require a little extended spring training time before returning to Double or Triple-A to begin his season.
The only thing to really give any pause was the note that Dillon Dingler had his second elbow arthroscopy in two years. The procedure is generally very minor, used to clean up any scar tissue or bone spurs around the UCL. Still, while he’s expected to be fully on schedule for Opening Day, it’s worth keeping in mind. LHP Bailey Horn and RHP Troy Watson, both expected to provide minor league depth to the bullpen and rotation, also had the procedure but are on track. Beyond that it’s the usual litany of minor injuries.
Dillon Dingler had an elbow procedure this winter but doesn’t sound like a huge deal. His volume could be slightly limited early in camp but he doesn’t expect to miss any time. He had the same operation two years ago pic.twitter.com/wWMInJJiFN
Finally, Parker Meadows wasn’t checking his phone over the past 24 hours and got a surprise when he arrived to find Justin Verlander in the clubhouse.
Parker Meadows had no idea the Tigers signed Justin Verlander until Justin Verlander strolled into the clubhouse in Lakeland yesterday. Had to ask a clubby what JV was doing there.
Feb 10, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Lakers guard Bronny James (9) moves the ball against San Antonio Spurs forward Carter Bryant (11) during the second half at...
The short-handed team is likely going to lose, with the talent disparity and lack of on-court familiarity too great for the under-manned team to overcome.
Bronny James scored a season-high 12 points against San Antonio. Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images
This came to fruition, with the Spurs blowing out the Lakers 136-108 in a game the hosts at one point were down by 41 points and trailed by at least 25 points for the entire second half.
But what also happens is that players who are either at the back end of the rotation or don’t regularly play receive playing time they usually don’t.
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Bronny James was among those players, with the second-year guard and son of Lakers star LeBron James having his highest-scoring and most productive game of the season so far.
The younger James scored a season-high 12 points against the Spurs to go along with a season-high-tying six assists and three rebounds in 25 minutes.
“Feel different,” Bronny said. “Feel way more comfortable. My teammates believe in me; my coaches beleive in me. That’s all I’ve wanted. It’s just good to get out there and take advantage of the minutes I get.”
What was different about the younger James’ performance against the Spurs is that it came without him receiving as much playing time with the franchise’s South Bay G League affiliate leading up to Tuesday.
In his rookie season, James played 18 games with South Bay as part of his development process, including 12 by mid-February. He didn’t go more than a month without playing a game in the G League, in addition to most of his playing time with the Lakers coming once the result of the game was decided.
Tuesday’s performance likely won’t have any impact on James’ standing in the rotation. NBAE via Getty Images
He’s played in nine G League games so far this season, with most of his playing time with the Lakers once again coming in garbage time outside of briefly being in the rotation in the early parts of the season when the team was short-handed.
Despite the irregular playing time, James looked as comfortable as he has so far in his brief career.
He confidently shot and knocked down a pair of 3-pointers. There was the sequence where he blocked Kelly Olynyk at the rim before he knocked down a step-back 3 in Olynyk’s face on the ensuing possession.
Coach JJ Redick mentioned he had two “really good” defensive possessions in the first half against Victor Wembanyama, who was virtually unstoppable en route to a 40 point-12 rebound double-double in 26 minutes.
“I’d say defensively, that’s my role that I want to excel at, especially on this team,” Bronny said. “We have a lot of guys, Luka [Doncic], LeBron [James], [Austin Reaves]. Those guys can go get buckets whenever we need them. But they need guys like myself, [Jarred Vanderbilt], Jake [LaRavia], guys who can defend. Definitely get more satisfaction out of that.”
James had a season-high-tying six assists and three rebounds in 25 minutes. Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images
James provided another highlight during a night that didn’t feature many for the Lakers with his alley-oop in the fourth quarter to rookie forward Adou Thiero, who played in his first game since late December after being sidelined for six weeks because of a sprained right MCL.
“He had a great game, just shooting open shots, knocking them down, creating for others,” Thiero said. “I saw Bronny had the balI. I feel like we have the connection now to where I put my finger in the air and he already knows to throw the ball up.”
Tuesday’s performance likely won’t have any impact on James’ standing in the rotation.
But on a night in which the result was pretty much decided before the opening tipoff, James provided what you’d want to see from a player in his position.