Buster Posey interview ruined by embarrassing hot mic moment

Giants president of baseball operations Buster Posey has recently been featured in headlines for the team’s poor performance as well as the organization’s Pride Night scandal.

But as buzz surrounding both has seemingly died down lately, Posey has taken another hit.

On the “Murph & Markus” show on KNBR, Posey conducted what was seemingly a routine 25-minute interview — until it wasn’t.

Brian Murphy and Markus Boucher hosted Giants president of baseball operations Buster Posey on KNBR.

The following segment of the morning show featured KNBR’s Brian Murphy and Markus Boucher discussing Posey’s responses regarding the MLB draft and the Giants’ selections.

Then, a KNBR producer could be heard testing the microphone.

He said “talk” several times before adding: “Yeah, I hear ya, I gotcha. I gotcha 100%.”

Buster Posey has received much criticism for the Giants’ spiral this season. Santiago Mejia/San Francisco Chronicle via AP

The producer then unknowingly gave his honest opinion on Posey.

“Posey sucks, man,” he said.


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Neither Murphy nor Markus visibly reacted to the hot mic moment, but a caller on the next segment of the show referred to the incident. The show’s hosts attempted to glaze over it but concluded by saying they would investigate behind the scenes.

The YouTube broadcast of the show has since been deleted.

Buster Posey became the Giants’ president of baseball operations in 2024. Getty Images

The Giants’ disastrous season has been a frequent topic of conversation as the team stood at 41-55 before the All-Star break, ranking 24th in runs per game and 22nd in ERA.

While the nightmarish year doesn’t boil down to one person, Posey has been the face of much criticism. The latest incident doesn’t bode well for the public perception of the Giants executive, but it’s evidently a reflection of the fan base’s feelings toward the team’s performance in 2026.

NBA Las Vegas Summer League 2026: Rockets Defeat Nets 100-83 at Cox Pavilion

LAS VEGAS, NV - JULY 16: Egor Dëmin #8 of the Brooklyn Nets handles the ball during the game against the Houston Rockets on July 16, 2026 at the Cox Pavilion in Las Vegas, Nevada. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Stephen Greathouse/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Nets Summer League tournament run ended in a 100-83 loss to the Houston Rockets on Thursday, but not before a fourth-quarter surge nearly turned the tide. Despite trailing by 21, Brooklyn’s best was a 10-point deficit with a little more than three minutes in the fourth.

Dëmin finished the game with 21 points on 8-of-20 shooting.

It wasn’t only Egor that sparked a little life. Brooklyn played better defense and forced five turnovers in the final five minutes — including an eight-second violation. Dëmin’s step-back jumper at the 3:31 mark brought Brooklyn within 10 points at 87-77, which was the closest they would get.

Mikel Brown Jr. was met with physicality and endured his toughest summer showing, going 3-of-15 in 27 minutes. Meanwhile, Drake Powell couldn’t carry over his recent momentum, finishing just 1-of-6. The effort was there… but the shots just didn’t fall.

With the loss, the Nets were eliminated from Summer League championship contention. However, Brooklyn’s Summer League schedule is not over — the team will play one final consolation game this weekend. 

The date, time, and opponent have yet to be announced.

For the Rockets, Bruce Thornton was the leader of the pack with 23 points, Tristen Newton added 20 points and six rebounds, and Isaiah Crawford recorded 12 points and eight rebounds before his fourth-quarter ejection.


What’s up with Michael Porter Jr.?

Speculation is heating up. In his discussion with reporters two days ago, Sean Marks painted a positive picture of the Nets situation with Michael Porter Jr.

“I’m sure we’ll have those discussions. I think we’ve got time. There’s no immediate hurry right now with Mike. We value him a lot. He had a terrific year last year, arguably his best year as a pro. I give him a lot of credit for that,” Marks said. “It’s been great to see what Mike’s done for us. I look forward to having those discussions, and seeing what Mike can do the rest of the summer and the rest of the season.”

Marks added he won’t rush any decisions at all.

However, Chris Haynes, senior analyst for TNT, suggests that if the Nets and Porter can’t come to an agreement, a trade might be in the works.

“Michael Porter Jr’s agent…is scheduled to meet with the Brooklyn Nets…towards the tail end of summer league or at the end of summer league to begin dialogue on an extension,” said Haynes on NBA TV’s “The Association” Wednesday. “If it becomes apparent early on that an extension is not in play, then I do believe the next step will be the Brooklyn Nets and Michael Porter Jr potentially parting ways and potentially looking to move him.”

Read the full story here.


St. Louis Cardinals 2027 Schedule Full of Challenges and Opportunities

ST. LOUIS, MO - JULY 11: Jordan Walker #18 of the St. Louis Cardinals takes batting practice prior to the game between the Atlanta Braves and the St. Louis Cardinals at Busch Stadium on Saturday, July 11, 2026 in St. Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Ali Overstreet/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The St. Louis Cardinals released their 2027 schedule today and it starts with a long road trip, but ends with opportunities.

The first 6 games for the 2026 MLB campaign starts with the Cardinals on the road to play the Reds for the first game of a 3-game series in Cincinnati on Thursday, March 25, 2027 followed by 3 games at Wrigley Field against the dastardly Cubs. The first homestand at Busch Stadium is April 1 as the cross-state rivals the Royals come to town.

There are two separate nine-game homestands. The first starts in the second half of April starting on the 19th through the 28th against the Twins followed by the Blue Jays and Braves. The other nine-game homestand is in September from the 3rd through the 12th as the Giants, Padres and Rangers.

Interleague matchups in 2027 will see the Cardinals doing battle with the Royals, Twins, Blue Jays, Athletics, Tigers, Yankees, Angels and the Astros. The Yankees series will be at Busch Stadium the weekend of July 9 through July 11.

The end of next season could have some interesting storylines assuming that the Cardinals are competitive next year as there’s a big road series in Milwaukee at the end of August. The Brewers will then come to St. Louis September 20-22 for what could be a division-deciding series. St. Louis also has NL Central matchups against the Reds in September and 6 games against the Pirates the last two weeks of next season.

The elephant in the room when looking at any MLB schedule for 2027 is the question of how the upcoming collective bargaining agreement negotiations will impact it. Let’s hope for the sake of the sport that both sides can figure out the best way to move forward without delaying or eliminating what looks to be a compelling 2027 season.

Smoked by the Mets: Mets 4, Phillies 1

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - JULY 16: Francisco Alvarez #4 of the New York Mets reacts after hitting a solo home run in the top of the seventh inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on July 16, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Mets defeated the Phillies 4-1. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s important to remember who is playing who and what these games always mean. It’s the Phillies and Mets, so clean baseball, good decision-making, and even normal weather conditions are not guaranteed.

The air quality was so bad they moved the game up an hour, and probably should’ve just delayed it to tomorrow with both teams having the off day. Trea Turner botched a routine groundball, Francisco Lindor and Bo Bichette botched Kyle Schwarber’s bad baserunning blunder, and Don Mattingly left multiple pitchers in for way too long. Even if there wasn’t a prototypical Mets’ing on display, this is what to expect when these two teams play each other.

While the Phillies offense was struggling to figure out Christian Scott the first time through the order, Mets catcher Francisco Alvarez was able to capitalize on one of Aaron Nola’s few mistakes, smoking a hanging slider to dead-center field to break the scoreless tie.

The fifth inning rolled around with Nola displaying new adjustments to his pitch mix, he is emphasizing the changeup more, throwing 21 of them over his 97 pitch effort. He worked plenty of curveballs for called strikes early in counts and chase on strikeouts and the changeup kept the seven left-handed or switch-hitting Mets off the fastball.

When Nola has the feel for both, there is still a good pitcher in there, even when he runs into trouble.

The fifth inning against the bottom of the Mets order looked like a mess, Jared Young walked on six pitches followed by a Brett Baty single to center field. After two straight pitches out of the zone to Alvarez, he threw a pretty good sinker that was on the strike-zone line but JT Realmuto didn’t challenge, Alvarez walked to load the bases.

With the top of the order coming up for New York, it looked like the time Nola hits a disaster that spirals the outing. AJ Ewing took a breaking ball down and got a changeup to hit but fortunately, it was off the end of his bat and a routine lineout double play to keep anyone from scoring.

After an intentional walk to Juan Soto, Nola is able to handle Bo Bichette with a weak flyball on a down-and-away curveball to end the threat.

But Christian Scott spoils the potential Phillies momentum by retiring the side in order with a pair of strikeouts in the bottom half of the fifth and cruised until Kyle Schwarber stepped up in the sixth.

Schwarber launched a hanging curveball right off the metal railing, back into play that was reviewed and ruled a double based on the rules of the ballpark. Weirdly, this is the second time that exact thing has happened on an ESPN broadcast between the Phillies and Mets, if anyone remembers when Rhys Hoskins did the exact same thing back in 2021.

That was it for Scott as interim manager Andy Green went to his bullpen for Brooks Raley. After a four-pitch walk to Bryce Harper, Raley got Brandon Marsh looking silly on a down-and-away sweeper to keep the score at 1-0.

With Green pulling his pitcher at the proper time, maybe a batter too late, Mattingly kept Aaron Nola in the ball game after six innings of one-run ball against the bottom of the Mets order, even though they had three days off, and an off-day tomorrow.

It backfired in the worst possible way. Brett Baty took a high fastball to the seats in right field and then Alvarez took a sinker barely over the fence in left that made the game 3-0. After a really encouraging six innings with six strikeouts, he gave up back-to-back home runs to leave on.

Skipping to the eighth, Trea Turner turned on a Luke Weaver fastball to make it 3-1 and the Phillies might still be in it with Devin Williams closing the ninth.

After pitching a clean top of the eighth, Seth Johnson is sent back out for the ninth despite there being a full bullpen. He walked Jared Young, who later scored on an AJ Ewing double to make it 4-1. Williams then retired the Phillies for a weird 4-1 loss.

Citizens Bank Park has been through a lot with the Futures Game, the home run derby, the All-Star Game (that took way too long), and the other All-Star Game events. But nothing is more exhausting than a Phillies-Mets series. The Bank could use a day off too.

First round pick RHP Cameron Flukey signs with Tigers

OMAHA, NEBRASKA - JUNE 21: Cameron Flukey #2 of the Coastal Carolina Chanticleers pitches against the LSU Tigers during the first inning during game one of the Division I Baseball Championship held at Charles Schwab Field on June 21, 2025 in Omaha, Nebraska. (Photo by Tyler Schank/NCAA Photos via Getty Images) | NCAA Photos via Getty Images

The Detroit Tigers have reportedly come to terms with their first five draft picks in the 2026 amateur draft, as well as few select other picks so far. We’ve been waiting for numbers to be announced so we can begin to get an idea how many of their prep and JUCO picks they might actually be able to land. On Thursday evening, Jim Callis of MLB Pipeline announced the first and biggest number on their board. First round selection, right-handed starting pitcher Cameron Flukey has signed with the Tigers for a reported $3.8 million, which is roughly $282,000 under slot for the 22nd overall pick.

The big right-hander out of Coastal Carolina has an overpowering mid to high 90’s fourseam fastball that misses bats, as does his sharp 12-6 curveball in the high 70’s. He also has a good track record of locating both pitches for strikes. Development of his slider and offspeed pitch, along with refining his command a little further, will be keys to turning Flukey into the frontline starter he has the potential to become.

So the Tigers saved $282,000 here, and this is the plan. Hopefully they can trim a hundred thousand here and there from college draft picks’ slot bonuses, while landing a lot of their later college picks further on in the draft for around the league minimum. The savings would then be used to lock up their prep and JUCO picks, who have the option to honor their four-year college commitments should they not get an offer they’ll accept from the Tigers.

The strategy usually results in a few players going back to school, but by locking up as much teenaged talent as possible the Tigers hope to get future first round talents before they get that far and become much more expensive to sign. So far, leaning into that strategy hasn’t done a whole lot for the farm system, but it takes a lot more time to really know how prep players will play out. At the same time, this strategy continues to become tougher as colleges can now offer NIL dollars to their recruits to try and convince them to pass on their draft offers and hope to improve and raise their draft stock signficantly in time for their junior seasons of college, when most top college talent is drafted and signed.

The Tigers entered this draft with $9,165,100 in total bonus pool. Prior to round 11, all money paid as a bonus to draftees counts against that total bonus pool. Beyond the 10th round, teams can pay a player up to $150,000 without it counting against their bonus pools. That $150,000 threshold is often referred to as the minimum bonus, although teams can pay less. The Tigers have done pretty well finding athletic, undervalued college players later in the draft for close to that minimum number in recent years.

The Tigers do have a number of prep and JUCO picks they’ll have to try and find enough money to sign. 8th rounder, 3rd baseman Robert Omidi, a left-handed hitter out of St. Martin Secondary School in Ontario, Canada is the first example. 11th rounder, left-handed hitting first baseman Will Adams, a high schooler out of Hoover HS in Alabama is another one, and Adams has reportedly signed as well, though no number has been reported. He has one of the more raved about swings and overall hit tools in the prep ranks, with developing power that should get to plus or better as he fills out. Those two will be priorites and command well above slot bonuses.

Other picks who have reportedly signed, but not had their bonus number reported include competitive balance round B selection RHP Evan Dempsey, RHP Declan Dahl, the Tigers fifth rounder, and 9th round pick RHP Kenneth “KJ” Ward. Fourth round pick, prep SS Dominic Pellegrin and eight round prep selection 3B Robert Omidi have reportedly agreed to sign, but those haven’t been made official.

JUCO center fielder Tyler West, who has a commitment to transfer to Texas A&M, will be a crucial one to watch. Prep right-hander Dustin Dunwoody, selected in the 15th round out of Royal HS in California, is another big one to land, and he holds a commitment to USC. RHP Jack Byers, from Artesia HS in New Mexico, has a commitment to the University of Arizona. 20th round selection, right-hander Will Zielinksi from Vauxhall HS in Alberta, Canada, rounds out the list of players that will be the trickest for the Tigers to land.

One more relevant rule is that the Tigers could go 5% over their bonus pool, about $450,000, and the penalty would be a 75% tax on the overage. That’s pretty minor, as the Tigers have previously had significantly higher bonus pools the past three drafts and thus spent more money overall anyway. If they go any further, the penalities could included forfeiting future draft picks. No one has tested that limit before, and the Tigers won’t be the first, but spending the extra $450,000 makes plenty of sense and should help them to get most of their tougher signings locked up. Presumably one or two will slip through the cracks as usual.

Christian Scott, bottom of lineup power Mets to win over Phillies in smoky conditions

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows New York Mets pitcher Christian Scott (45) throws a pitch during the first inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park, Image 2 shows New York Mets catcher Francisco Alvarez (4) celebrates his second home run of the game during the seventh inning, Image 3 shows New York Mets' Brett Baty reacts to his home run during the seventh
mets

PHILADELPHIA — Maybe it’s a sign of the apocalypse. 

No, not the smoke-filled swath covering much of the East Coast on Thursday; that was expected. 

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Instead, it was the Mets opening the second half of their season with a 4-1 win over the Phillies. 

Powered by solo homers from Francisco Alvarez — who had two — and Brett Baty, as well as a strong start by Christian Scott, the reeling Mets avoided falling 18 games under .500 for the first time this year. 

After the start of the game was moved up an hour due to air quality concerns caused by Canadian wildfires — which forced both teams to shorten their pregame routines after their truncated All-Star break — the Mets played an unusually solid game. 

“I’m not gonna lie: Towards the end, it got a little thick,” Scott said of playing through the smoke. “It felt like breathing in some metal. … A little spoonful of adversity never hurt anybody.” 

New York Mets pitcher Christian Scott (45) throws a pitch during the first inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on July 16, 2026. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

The Mets have downed plenty of adversity this season, and there’s little chance of a turnaround, especially as they’re expected to sell at the Aug. 3 trade deadline. 

They also have the toughest schedule the rest of the season and start the second half visiting second-place division rival Philadelphia and NL Central leader Milwaukee before hosting the NL West-leading Dodgers and NL East-topping Braves. 

New York Mets catcher Francisco Alvarez (4) celebrates his second home run of the game during the seventh inning. Eric Hartline-Imagn Images

But they can try to avoid being blown away by what’s ahead of them over the final two-plus months of the season. 

“We’re well aware we’re staring down one of the hardest schedules in baseball for the second half,’’ interim manager Andy Green said. “We should relish that, like that and rise up and meet that. I don’t think there’s another attitude to take.” 

It’s performances like what they got from Alvarez and Baty at the bottom of the lineup and a promising young starting pitcher like Scott that could boost them. 

On Thursday, as the Philadelphia skyline slowly disappeared in the distance due to the worsening conditions, the Mets took the lead in the top of the third on Alvarez’s first homer of the night, a one-out shot to dead center. 

Baty added his fifth of the year, leading off against Aaron Nola in the seventh. 

New York Mets’ Brett Baty reacts to his home run during the seventh inning. AP Photo/Chris Szagola

Alvarez followed in the next at-bat with his second of the game to end Nola’s night. 

On the other side, Scott retired 10 of the first 11 batters he faced before Bryce Harper doubled down the right field line with one out in the bottom of the fourth. 

Brooks Raley replaced Scott after just 79 pitches to face Harper. 

Harper reached on a four-pitch walk, but Raley got Marsh swinging to end the threat. 

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The Phillies got to Luke Weaver with two outs in the eighth as Trea Turner took him deep to make it 3-1. It snapped Weaver’s 27-inning streak without allowing a home run. 

The Mets got the run back when A.J. Ewing doubled in Jared Young in the ninth to finish off a strange afternoon and evening. 

“I didn’t think it was bad till the last couple innings,” Baty said. “My eyes were burning and itching a little bit. [Carson] Benge said it felt like you were sitting by a campfire. … It was fun … but it didn’t feel great playing ball with it.” 

The results, though, were pretty good for a change.

Jaden Akins scores 21 off the bench, but Knicks fall to Warriors, 87-77, in Summer League action

Undrafted rookie Jaden Akins gave the Knicks 21 points off the bench, but it wasn't enough as the Warriors defeated New York, 87-77, on Thursday night.

New York is now 1-2 in Summer League action.

But the night was competitive in the first half. Golden State got out to a 26-19 lead after one, but then the offense on both sides took a nose dive. The Knicks won the quarter, 17-10, to get the game tied 36-36 at halftime.

Tyler Nickel led the Knicks at halftime with nine points on 3 of 5 shooting (all from the three-point line).

Pacome Dadiet had six while Liam Robbins posted five points and six rebounds, and Dillon Jones grabbed five points and five rebounds. Jack Kayil struggled, scoring just two points on 1 of 5 shooting, coming down with four rebounds and dishing two assists in his 15 minutes to round out the starting five.

On the other side, LJ Cryer roasted the Knicks, scoring 11 points on 4 of 8 shooting (3-for-7 from three) to lead all scorers at the halfway point. 

The third quarter saw the Warriors get out to a lead thanks to a 7-0 run to start, but the Knicks fought back, chipping away. However, Golden State took a 65-57 lead into the final frame. The Warriors would pull away early in the fourth, building a 16-point lead that the Knicks would try to cut into, but whenever New York did -- getting it to 10 points -- Golden State punched back and held on for the 10-point win.

The Knicks starters did not have a great night. Nickel was stuck at nine points in his 31 minutes on the court while Dadiet posted just nine in his 28 minutes. Robbins was the only starter with a positive plus/minus as he dropped 13 points to go along with nine rebounds, four blocks and two assists in his 20 minutes. 

Jones finished with five points and Kayil's struggles carried over into the second half. The 2026 draft pick scored just two more points and was 2 of 9 from the field in his 29 minutes. He did come down with five rebounds and dished four assists, but was a minus-9 on the day. 

As for Akins, he led the entire Knicks team in scoring. He was 9 of 20 from the field (3 of 8 from three) with two rebounds and one assist. The former Michigan State guard had a better showing than his Summer League debut when he finished with just two points in 21 minutes. 

Akins, who was a G-League All-Star a season ago, averaged 16.1 points, 4.0 rebounds and 7.6 assists in 14 games. 

Cincinnati Reds reach agreement with 1st round pick Justin Lebron

HOOVER, AL - MAY 21: Infielder Justin LeBron #1 of the Alabama Crimson Tide readies to turn a double play over infielder Ethan Surowiec #10 of the Florida Gators during the SEC Baseball Tournament Quarterfinals game between Florida Gators and Alabama Crimson Tide on May 21, 2026, at Hoover Metropolitan Stadium in Hoover, Alabama.(Photo by David Buono/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

It did not take long for the Cincinnati Reds to come to terms with their 1st round pick from last weekend’s MLB Draft. Justin Lebron, a shortstop out of the University of Alabama, fell to the Reds at pick #18, and Cincinnati was ecstatic that the college player with perhaps the single most upside in the entire draft fell right into their laps.

The Reds have signed Lebron to a reported $5 million bonus, per MLB.com’s Mark Sheldon, going slightly over the slot value of $4.6955 million to do so.

Lebron entered the 2026 season with some folks suggesting he’d be the #1 overall pick in this summer’s draft, but despite all the tools in the world his play slumped a bit against Southeastern Conference pitching after a hot start to the year. Still, his elite combo of light-tower power, 70+ grade speed on the bases, and ability to play plus defense at the infield’s most premium position made those brief struggles an afterthought for Nick Krall & Co. at pick #18, and Lebron’s future became tied to that of the sporting future of the state of Ohio.

Lebron. Contract talks. The state of Ohio. It’s all truly coming together.

Welcome to the Reds, Justin!

Here’s a list of other players with whom the Reds have already reached agreements so far:

NHL schedule winners, losers: Chicago Blackhawks get no favors

The NHL released its 2026-27 schedule on Thursday, July 16.

There's no midseason international tournament, but the All-Star Game will return and have an international theme.

There will be 84 games, not 82, to create a balanced division schedule, and the season will start on Sept. 29 instead of early October. There will be fewer preseason games, always a plus.

The opening game will be a good one with the defending Stanley Cup champion Carolina Hurricanes raising the banner before playing the 2024 and 2025 champion Florida Panthers.

Here are some of the winners and losers of the NHL's 2026-27 schedule release:

WINNERS

Washington Capitals fans

The NHL has a nice sense of symmetry this year. The Capitals play their home opener against the rival Pittsburgh Penguins and their home finale against the same team. That's two more times to watch the Alex Ovechkin-Sidney Crosby matchup if Ovechkin doesn't play beyond this season. This is also the final year of Crosby's contract.

The season finale

All 32 teams will play on the season finale on April 10 − the second 16-game day in 2026-27. It's heavily division-oriented, so final playoff spots could be determined during the busy schedule.

European NHL fans

The NHL is increasing the number of Monday afternoon games so they can be watched in prime time in Europe and build the audience there. There will be two games in Finland (Hurricanes vs. Kraken) and Germany (Senators vs. Blackhawks). Finnish fans get to see countrymen Sebastian Aho and Kaapo Kakko, and German fans get to see Tim Stutzle.

Brady Tkachuk

The Florida Panthers offseason acquisition gets a great first test against the Hurricanes on opening night. Does he fight playoff MVP Jordan Staal as he did with the Ottawa Senators at the start of the playoffs? Plus, Tkachuk gets his return to Ottawa out of the way early with an Oct. 21 game.

LOSERS

Chicago Blackhawks

The Blackhawks weren't going to be a playoff team and even less so with Connor Bedard out for all of October and into November after shoulder surgery. But the schedule makers did them no favors. They face 12 playoff teams through the first week of November, including two meetings with the Hurricanes. Among the non-playoffs teams are two meetings with the recent champion Panthers.

Winter Classic timing

The Colorado Avalanche visiting the Utah Mammoth, good. Beautiful setting, good. New Year's Eve, meh. At least the game starts at 4 p.m. local time, so the Wasatch mountains will be visible before the 5:09 p.m. sunset.

Calgary Flames fans

Remember the symmetry for Capitals fans? NHL schedule makers didn't do that in Calgary. This is the final season for the Saddledome. The final regular season opponent is the Vancouver Canucks, not the archrival Edmonton Oilers.

NHL shares the spotlight

There wasn't much time to digest the NHL schedule before Major League Baseball said its 2027 season would start on March 24. That assuming, of course, that they get a collective bargaining agreement done in time.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NHL schedule winners, losers: Chicago Blackhawks get no favors

Francisco Alvarez blasts two home runs, Christian Scott strikes out seven in Mets' 4-1 win over Phillies

The Mets hit three solo home runs against veteran Aaron Nola to beat the Phillies, 4-1, and win their first game after the All-Star break.

Here are the takeaways...

-- Francisco Alvarez stepped up with his seventh career multi-HR game, hitting two solo home runs to lead the offense.

He gave the Mets a 1-0 lead in the top of the third inning with a solo HR to dead center off of Nola. The homer traveled 416 feet through the smog and was his 10th of the season. The 24-year-old shook off getting hit by a backswing in the third inning and helped deliver clutch insurance runs, hitting back-to-back homers with Brett Baty off Nola in the seventh. The two solo blasts pushed the Mets' lead to 3-0. 

-- Christian Scott gave the Citizens Bank Park crowd another show following the All-Star festivities earlier in the week, tossing 5.2 scoreless innings with seven strikeouts.

The right-hander retired the first six Phillies he faced, including two strikeouts. He let up his first hit to J.T. Realmuto to lead off the bottom of the third inning before settling back in to get the next three outs, including two more strikeouts. Scott got beat by Bryce Harper with a one-out double in the fourth, but was able to escape the inning with two quick outs.

Scott nearly ruined his impressive performance in the sixth inning. He allowed a double to Kyle Schwarber that was initially thought to be a home run, but it hit the railing in RF and stayed in play. His night then ended before facing more left-handed hitters, throwing 79 pitches (56 strikes) and allowing just three hits.

-- Juan Soto opened his second half of the 2026 season with a first-inning single that bounced off Trea Turner's glove, but New York's hitting struggles with runners on base continued as Bo Bichette grounded into an inning-ending 3-6-3 double play.

Soto walked with two outs in the third inning, although Bichette couldn't come through again and struck out to end the frame.

-- Despite loading the bases with no outs against Nola in the fifth inning, the Mets weren't able to add to their lead. Jared Young lined out to Harper, who was able to touch first base in time for the double play. Bichette got his third big opportunity after Philadelphia intentionally walked Soto, but flied out to right field to end the scoring chance.

-- Brooks Raley was able to get the third out of the sixth inning after Schwarber's near homer, striking out first-time All-Star Brandon Marsh with two on base. Huascar Brazoban kept the Philly bats quiet with a 1-2-3 seventh inning. Luke Weaver's scoreless streak of 25 straight appearances ended in the eighth, letting up a solo home run to Turner as the Phillies trailed, 3-1.

-- A.J. Ewing put the Mets back up three runs in the top of the ninth with a two-out RBI double to left field that ricocheted off the wall in foul territory, driving in Young from first base to go up 4-1. Devin Williams closed things down with a 1-2-3 ninth inning.

Game MVP: Francisco Alvarez

On a weird night with the poor air quality, Alvarez found a way to lift two home runs and give the offense some life.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets and Phillies will have off on Friday and then resume their three-game series on Saturday afternoon. First pitch is slated for 4:05 p.m. on SNY.

Sean Manaea (2-4, 4.56 ERA) will face fellow left-hander Jesus Luzardo (8-4, 3.51 ERA).

 

Raptors Reacts Survey: Were fans wrong about Allen Graves?

LAS VEGAS, NV - JULY 13: Allen Graves #22 of the Toronto Raptors looks on during the game against the Indiana Pacers during the 2026 NBA Las Vegas Summer League on July 13, 2026 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas, Nevada. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by David Becker/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NBA. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Raptors fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

This week’s survey questions the average Raptors fan’s initial reaction to the selection of Allen Graves. After General Manager and Vice-President Bobby Webster used the No. 19 pick on the Santa Clara product, the decision met with a mostly confused reception. Toronto already has Scottie Barnes and Collin Murray-Boyles in the ‘jumbo wing that hounds defensively and bullies offensively” archetype.

With the Raptors headed into their fourth final Summer League game on Thursday against the Miami Heat, Allen Graves is averaging 14.6 points, 7.0 rebounds, 2.6 assists, 3.3 stocks (steals and blocks), while shooting 51.4 per cent from the field and 43.7 per cent from three.

Cast your vote, tell us in the comments, and we’ll be back soon with more Reacts.

Yankees’ Hunter Dietz knows he still has ‘a lot of potential’ to unlock after being first-round pick

Arkansas Razorbacks pitcher Hunter Dietz in a grey and red uniform mid-pitch.
Hunter Dietz is pictured during a May 2026 game for Arkansas.

Entering his redshirt sophomore season at Arkansas, Hunter Dietz had thrown just 1 ²/₃ innings in his college career because of a stress fracture in his left elbow.

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But across 16 starts this spring, the left-hander gave the Yankees plenty of reasons to be excited about drafting him with their first-round pick (No. 35 overall) last weekend and betting on his upside as they try to inject more talent into their system.

“There’s a lot of gears that I can hit in my game going forward,” Dietz said Thursday on a video conference call after signing for a reported below-slot value of $2,497,500. “There’s a lot of potential that I need to unlock. I just feel like this staff is perfect for me, once I start my buildup, just to get ready for next year and the coming outings that I’m going to have. I feel like it’s just perfect for me as a player.”

Hunter Dietz is pictured during a May 2026 game for Arkansas. Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Unbeknownst to Dietz, the Yankees have actually been following him since he was in high school at Calvary Christian — not far from their player development complex in Tampa — but then this spring saw him become “what we thought he would be out of high school,” vice president of domestic amateur scouting Damon Oppenheimer said this week.

The 6-foot-6, 235-pound Dietz pitched to a 3.57 ERA for the Razorbacks while striking out 131 in 85 ²/₃ innings.

“I feel like it just shows who I am as a pitcher, finally getting healthy after the one injury at the end of my freshman year and struggling mechanically my sophomore year,” Dietz said. “Piecing it all together and having a great year, I feel like this year was just kind of the floor for me. I’m just going to keep getting better and better, especially with the Yankees staff by my side.”

Dietz said he has gotten comparisons to current Yankees lefty Carlos Rodón, who he recently got some advice from after meeting him in the club’s Tampa facility a few days ago.

Since 2020, most of the pitchers the Yankees have drafted have spent the rest of that year working out at the player development complex before being sent to an affiliate the following year, which is likely the path Dietz will take.

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“Big, powerful left-handed pitcher,” Oppenheimer said. “He’s big, strong, fits our mold. He’s got a big fastball that’s up to 98, it’s got movement. He’s got a slider that’s basically a wipeout strikeout pitch. And a curveball that we think can be developed. … The control just keeps getting better. Ecstatic that we were able to get this where we picked and have this top end of the rotation ceiling.”


The Yankees will begin the second half with Gerrit Cole starting on Friday (against Roki Sasaki), Ryan Weathers on Saturday (Emmett Sheehan) and Cam Schlittler on Sunday (Yoshinobu Yamamoto) in their showdown with the Dodgers.


If there is actually a 2027 season and it starts on time — with a labor war and likely lockout threatening to disrupt that — the Yankees are scheduled to open the season at home against the Blue Jays on March 25.

The schedule also includes home games on Memorial Day (Royals) and Independence Day (Astros), hosting the Mets on July 16-18 and playing them at Citi Field on May 28-30.

Why 2026-27 NBA schedule is in limbo until LeBron James picks new team

The question of where LeBron James will play next has lingered for about three weeks after he told the Los Angeles Lakers that he'd opt for a new team in free agency.

The news sent the basketball world into a frenzy. As teams and players are all making their pitch to James in hopes that he'd join their team, there are some that are wishing he'd wrap this process up.

Most notably, NBA commissioner Adam Silver.

Silver spoke at the CNBC Sport x Boardroom Game Plan Summit in New York and addressed James' decision-making process in an interview with CNBC’s Andrew Ross Sorkin. He expressed his desire for James to make a selection so that the league can continue with its business ahead of the 2026-27 season.

"I guess all politics are local. The way I think about it is, we have to finish up the schedule," Silver said. " And where LeBron plays will affect the schedule. So I would like him to make his announcement already, so we can finish the schedule, because, as you might imagine, the teams are calling us, the networks are calling us, and everybody wants to lock in the schedule. But it will influence how we set the schedule, how we set opening week, Christmas Day, etc. So I need him to make a decision."

Silver: 'No inside information' on James' destination

When it comes to predicting James' next destination, Silver's guess is as good as ours.

"The direct answer is, I have no inside information," Silver said at the CNBC Sport x Boardroom Game Plan Summit. " I have my own inkling, but it's not based — it's not based on anything that LeBron or Rich have told me. I'm not going to share it with you, but I'm just saying, it's not, it's, I don't know."

Silver is a fan of the game. He's not rooting for James to join one team over another, but rather the best storyline leading into next season and to end his career.

"There's certain stories that I prefer over others, and even on his behalf. But he's going to be 42 this fall. It's amazing what he's done for the sport, for the league, and he deserves exactly what -- the opportunities that were presented to him to be able to make his own decision on what's best for him and his family. So I completely respect that. But, as I said, I think on behalf of the league, I think there are certain storylines that may be better than others, but I don't want to prejudge it. Let's see what he does."

Silver likes LeBron James with Cavaliers or Warriors

Silver doesn't happen to have any details on James' decision but that's not stopping him imagining different storylines and gauging which would be best, or coolest. He's a fan, too.

Sorkin threw two potential scenarios that James could lean towards: Cleveland and Golden State.

"Let's admit that's a great storyline," Silver said about James potentially going back home to play for the Cavaliers.

When Sorkin asked if Silver liked that storyline, he responded, "among others, yes."

One of those other storylines would be James teaming up with Stephen Curry and Draymond Green in Golden State, helping the Warriors pursue another championship ring.

"Well, the only part about it is, and, honestly, I mean, he played for Steve Kerr for the Olympic team. He's close to Draymond. Playing with Steph is wonderful. I don't think LeBron at this point in his career – and I think he presumably would say the same thing – he doesn't have to chase a ring. So I don't think ... it would be different," Silver said. "I mean, LeBron's career is complete. I think, on his behalf, whatever that storyline is, I think he should go somewhere he's going to – there's going to be true joy around the game."

He added: "And I think, again, for LeBron, at this point of his career, I think what we want the fans to see, too, is like the genuine joy that they have. And I think, for somebody like LeBron, I mean, he's – he's not coming back for the money. And that's why that, to your point, the latter part of your storyline in terms of the ring, I'm sure he would love to win another championship. But I think, most importantly, I think I would love, and fans would like him to see, where he's playing with a group of players and for a coach that he really wants to be around, and he's going to – and the community's going to get great joy from it, and he's going to get great joy from it."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY Sports: Why 2026-27 NBA schedule is in limbo until LeBron James picks new team

Padres must play with urgency after All-Star break

Major League Baseball has reached the ceremonial halfway point of the 2026 season with the San Diego Padres firmly entrenched as the worst offensive team in baseball with a .500 record.

The record portrays them as a mediocre team, losing and winning the same number of games. The stats tell a story of a team that started strong, with lots of late-game heroics, and then struggled to score runs and pitch effectively since.

With a series win over the Toronto Blue Jays before the All-Star break, the Friars salvaged that record after slipping below .500 with a dismal June and beginning of July. Padres fans don’t need a rehash of everything the team has dealt with over the past two months. Poor performance is the leading culprit, but injuries have also significantly contributed to a team underperforming its expectations.

Offensive doldrums

Of the current active roster, only Fernando Tatis Jr. and Luis Campusano are close to what should be expected from them, with Campusano on the injured list for the better part of two months.

Infielder Ty France is performing very close to his career norms and is on track to finish on par with his best season in 2022. He has been a welcome bright spot for the Friars.

Third baseman Manny Machado is having his worst season as a hitter but is trending toward matching his season norms for both home runs and RBI. Remarkably, he just achieved a batting average over .200 while hitting 19 homers with 55 RBI.

Worse than expected pitching

The pitching is a whole other level of miserable for the Padres. After having the best bullpen in baseball in 2025, the Padres have leaned heavily on their ‘pen with the starting rotation struggling to get into the fifth inning in many of their starts. The bullpen ERA is 3.68, fifth in baseball. That is still very good considering what has been asked of them.

The starting rotation, which is mostly pieced together by reclamation projects acquired by general manager A.J. Preller during the offseason, has a 4.78 ERA and sits at No. 27 out of 30 teams. Inconsistency has been the downfall of this group. Injuries have also taken a big toll, losing Nick Pivetta early on.

While they have all had encouraging and effective starts, Michael King is the only one with an ERA below 4.71. His 3.41 makes him the ace of the staff while averaging 5.7 innings per start.

Sprinting to the finish

A team must have more than 80 wins to get to any level of the playoffs, 83 wins has been the lowest in recent years. The Padres sit at 48-48 with 66 games left in the season. Assuming 83-87 wins will get to the wild card spot, the Padres must win a minimum of 35 of their next 66 games to hope to get there. Eight games over .500 would be a safer bet and that would be 40 wins out of 66 games . 

The current starting rotation does not appear likely to achieve that level of success. With the trade deadline on Aug. 3, the next two-and-a-half weeks will determine the fate of the 2026 season.

Mason Miller gets a batter

Padres closer Mason Miller got a one-batter appearance in the All-Star Game on Tuesday in Philadelphia. National League manager Dave Roberts brought him in at the top of the ninth inning to face AL hitter Munetaka Murakami and Miller struck him out on four pitches. Roberts then removed him and gave the ball to Phillies closer Jhoan Duran for the final two outs. 

Injury updates and roster moves

LHP Wandy Peralta was placed on the bereavement list on July 15. He will be replaced on the roster by RHP Jhony Brito, recalled from Triple-A.

RHP Matt Waldron was recalled after Brito made his one appearance on July 7. He covered three innings with no earned runs and two hits after relieving Walker Buehler’s two-inning start against the Blue Jays.

David Morgan was placed on the injured list on June 29 with left knee inflammation. He was sent for a rehab assignment on July 15 (ACL Padres).

RHP Randy Vásquez was placed on the injured list on July 3 with a right ankle contusion after being hit by a batted ball during his start. He was assigned to the ACL team for a rehab stint on July 14.

Outfielder Samad Taylor was placed on the injured list on July 8 with a right oblique strain. There have been no updates on his status. Infielder Luis Rengifo was called up from El Paso to take his roster spot.

Catcher Freddy Fermin is with the El Paso Chihuahuas on a rehab assignment after being placed on the injured list on July 3 with a head contusion.

RHP Nick Pivetta has been throwing bullpens in his effort to return from the right flexor tendon strain that put him on the injured list on April 14. On Aug. 22, Pivetta will hit the 130-day deadline for the injury clause on his contract. The Padres could void the player option of his deal if he is not back with the team by that date.

RHP Joe Musgrove is also advancing in his throwing program and has at least two bullpen sessions under his belt. The latest update, per Kevin Acee’s daily newsletter on July 12, reports that both Musgrove and Pivetta could be throwing to hitters by next week. He reports Musgrove is pain-free with his throwing and hopes to accelerate his throwing progression.

There has been no update on RHP Jason Adam, who was placed on the injured list with a right shoulder strain on July 2.

RHP Jeremiah Estrada is close to a rehab assignment per Kevin Acee’s newsletter. He could be throwing with a minor league team before the end of July. He has been on the injured list since June 5 with right knee inflammation.

RHP Lucas Giolito, placed on the injured list on June 23 with right elbow inflammation, has been working with the training staff to build his strength and stamina while progressing on a throwing program. It was recently reported (Kevin Acee, July 13 newsletter) that he has built up strength and his fastball now sits at 94 mph. He should begin a rehab assignment by the end of July.

Latest LeBron James rumors: He does not announce his decision, but says it will be soon

There was speculation that LeBron James would use an appearance at Fanatics Fest in New York on Thursday to announce his decision about his next destination.

No such luck.

Tyrese Haliburton was the guest co-host for the live taping of the "Mind the Game" podcast, and Hali tried, as reported by Dave McMenamin of ESPN.

"Is there a decision that still has to be made?" Haliburton asked...

"We literally talked about this in the back, Rese," James said, reiterating that revealing his next team would not be on the agenda.

"OK, my fault, my fault," Haliburton replied. "I didn't know if you wanted to ... OK, OK, I'll leave it alone."

However, later in the day at the Boardroom Game Plan presented by CNBC Sport (also at Fanatics Fest), LeBron did say a decision is coming sooner rather than later. However, he added this is not easy and there is a lot that goes into it for him, including thinking about spending time with his now former teammate Bronny (who is staying with the Lakers, don't expect a trade), Bryce (playing his second year in college at Arizona), and his daughter, Zhuri, 11, who will stay in Los Angeles with LeBron's wife and her mother, Savannah.

"People are like, 'hurry up and make a damn decision, LeBron.' It's not just about the team," he said. "There's so many other factors that I'm factoring in right now: What best fits me as a player, what best fits me as a person, what best fits me and my happiness and also my family as well. I won't hold you guys up too much longer, but the family portion is huge for me."

LeBron later added, "It's going to be pretty fun wherever I land. I'm going to do what I do best."

The timing is good news for NBA Commissioner Adam Silver, who stepped on stage at the same Game Plan event and said LeBron is starting to hold up league business.

"We have to finish up the schedule and where LeBron plays affects the schedule..." Silver said. "It will influence how we set the schedule: Opening week, Christmas. So I need him to make a decision."

Final Pitches to LeBron

While LeBron is reportedly still talking to potential future teammates, the pitches to LeBron are pretty much done and everyone is waiting. Donovan Mitchell made his final pitch for LeBron to return to Cleveland.

League sources continue to tell NBC Sports that another return to Cleveland is the most likely outcome. However, other reports say Miami and Philadelphia are seriously in the mix. Golden State, and reuniting with Stephen Curry, or signing to play the four at Minnesota reportedly also are under consideration, but the reports suggest LeBron wants to win and realizes what that road looks like in the West, so he is likely headed back to the Eastern Confernece (which has the defending champions and teams that got better, but does not have the Thunder or Spurs powerhouses looming at the top).

Honestly, Pat Riley of the Heat said it best: At this point, everybody is just waiting for LeBron to announce his decision.

When LeBron does make his decision, a lot of other dominoes are going to fall quickly, as the teams that miss out will pivot to other moves, and there will be a mini-rush of signings. However, most teams have wrapped up their business, and there is not that much left to do. What does remain waits on LeBron.