What Should the St. Louis Cardinals Do with Jordan Walker?

WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA - MARCH 11: Jordan Walker #18 of the St. Louis Cardinals at bat during a spring training game against the Washington Nationals at CACTI Park of the Palm Beaches on March 11, 2026 in West Palm Beach, Florida. (Photo by Rich Storry/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Jordan Walker is a riddle wrapped up in enigma hidden inside of a 3-lock box for the St. Louis Cardinals. Since his major league debut in 2023, Walker has seen the optimism about his abilities fade into pessimism about whether he really can be fixed.

I asked the question of what you would do if you were President of Baseball Operations Chaim Bloom regarding Jordan Walker’s future. The answers varied from letting him be the starting right fielder for the Cardinals on Opening Day because the team doesn’t have a better option, send him to the low minor leagues and make him earn his promotions back to the big club or designate him for assignment.

In case you missed our interview with St. Louis Cardinals manager Oli Marmol, here are his comments about Jordan Walker:

“This has been one that…keeps us up at night. We have to figure it out. When I say I’m committed to it, I need to think of a stronger word to make sure that this dude figures it out…with us…because there’s a real skill set there, but I do feel like we missed some time in getting to where we’re at now. I wished we would have gotten to this point sooner. What I mean by that where there’s real vulnerability of what has actually happened…how do we feel…how are we gonna get on the other side of this to create real change…not just say we’re working on something, (but) six months later it looks very similar. I feel like we’re finally at a point where that’s happening. It could be a month before we feel good about it…it could be three months before we feel good about it…I may feel good about it in 3 hours….I don’t know. I like where we’re at with what’s taking place. There’s a real responsibility on both ends here…on mine, on Brownie and that whole hitting department…to unlock what he’s capable of…and there’s real responsibility on (Jordan’s) end, too…of carrying the work that he’s doing into the game. We’re doing everything possible for that to be the case…but this is one that has not gone well and we need it to go well. All hands on deck for this one.”

This is just my speculation because Oli didn’t say it outright, but I could sense that the time for Jordan Walker to show real progress is ticking down quickly. It also felt like there is frustration from the Cardinals management that Jordan didn’t get to the point where he’s accepting coaching direction quicker. When he emphasized that he hopes that Jordan Walker figures out his problems “with us”, I got the feeling that Walker not being “with us” might be a possibility. Everyone realizes his immense talent and potential high ceiling, but I’ve heard it said that one skill he has never really displayed is a true command of the strike zone. Yes, that can be taught, but there also needs to be something built into the player’s instincts about pitch recognition as part of his approach. I’m not the only one questioning if that is something that Jordan Walker can acquire.

Jordan Walker still has one more option left and I really hope the team makes use of it and has him start the season at Triple A Memphis. Why not start Nelson Velázquez who has had an excellent Spring or Nathan Church? I don’t want to witness Jordan Walker trying to figure this out in front of a Busch Stadium crowd again because I believe the patience of the fanbase is spent. No matter if the previous St. Louis Cardinals management rushed him through the minor league system too quickly or not, the time for a solution is now. The runway for Jordan Walker is ending soon. Would be a shame for such a talented player to not see his potential realized.

Xavi Simons provides spark of inspiration as Spurs show overdue fight | Nick Ames

Two-goal display against Atlético gives Tudor hope his playmaker can inspire strugglers to Premier League safety

The kind of night that saves a season? That might be pushing it. A comeback for the ages was on, then off, then on again for a little while: a flickering traffic light that, like Tottenham’s season to date, stopped ultimately on red. But they will hoover up any morsels of hope at this point and at least, when a considerably sub‑capacity crowd applauded them off at the end, the appreciation was deservedly heartfelt. If the adage goes that a win can work wonders, perhaps Igor Tudor will be able to cajole a brand of magic now that he has finally achieved one.

Most of the inspiration here, on a night when nobody let a customarily depleted Spurs down, came from the sparkly feet of Xavi Simons. His year in north London has taken on the same stuttering pattern, weeks of liftoff and others of inconsequence. He had started Tudor’s first two games, a reward of sorts for the dynamic form that could not ultimately save Thomas Frank, but his new manager’s affections had quickly waned. Recalled to chase an essentially lost cause, Simons’ task was to display the ingenuity and drive that might propel Spurs out of peril in the longer term.

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Everything changed for the Lakers when one player looked in the mirror and faced a brutal truth

DeAndre Ayton has heard the noise. 

He knows the expectations that have followed him since being the No. 1 overall pick in the 2018 NBA Draft. He knows what he was supposed to become. 

But somewhere between a frustrating night in Denver and a humbling moment in Houston on Monday watching Clint Capela of all people, Ayton finally realized something. 

DeAndre Ayton has heard the noise. He knows the expectations of being the No. 1 overall pick in the 2018 NBA Draft. NBAE via Getty Images
But recently he finally realized something: he’s not that guy. NBAE via Getty Images

You’re not that guy.

For most players, that realization feels like failure. For Ayton, it became freedom.

“I just started looking in the mirror and said ‘Yo bro, … you’re not that guy. You don’t need to be on this team doing that at all,” Ayton toldDan Woike of the LA Times after the Lakers 100-92 victory over the Rockets on Monday.

“This team, you came here to be the effort guy and close out possessions, rebound. Run the damn floor hard as hell, make bigs work, make superstars work. And I’m having fun with it, I’m not gonna lie.”

Ayton has looked great in stretches this season, disinterested in others. But when he stripped away the illusion and stopped chasing stardom something shifted.

Ayton realizes he doesn’t have to be the focal point of the offense on a team with Luka Doncic, LeBron James, and Austin Reaves. He can be an energy and impact guy instead

NBAE via Getty Images

When he bought into that role, suddenly everything clicked. 

The Los Angeles Lakers have won six straight games and nine of their last 10. Yes, that’s in large part to the “Big 3” mentioned above, but it’s also because of role players like Ayton who have been willing to do the dirty work, possession after possession, without the applause and accolades. 

Ayton has been a force on the glass. He’s protected the rim like it was personal. In the waning seconds of their thrilling 127-125 overtime victory over the Nuggets, Ayton blocked three-time NBA MVP Nikola Jokic’s shot.

He sets screens with intent and rolls hard to the rim. He’s made sure opposing bigs feel him in their chest like his breakout second quarter against Rudy Gobert and the Wolves last Tuesday. 

Ayton has been a force on the glass. He’s protected the rim like it was personal. Getty Images

That shift has fueled a surge. There was a familiar moment against Houston when Ayton could’ve drifted. Benched early. The game slipping away.

In the past, Ayton has disengaged and that’s it for the night. Instead, he stayed locked in—eyes glued to the floor, waiting, ready. When his number was called, he didn’t try to prove he was “that guy.” 


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He proved he could be a guy. 

That’s the paradox of basketball at its highest level. Identity isn’t about what you can do—it’s about what your team needs you to do. And for Ayton, the acceptance of that truth may have unlocked the most important role of his career.

“I was energized, and I was having fun,” Ayton told Woike after that game against the Rockets. “So I really like that the team is trusting me, man. I just don’t want to lose the trust, bro.”

“That’s really what’s getting my juices going and me biting my fingernails waiting to get back in the damn game for real. Just getting back to having fun — I’m not gonna lie.”

Ayton is having fun and has found his purpose, and in Los Angeles, that’s translated to much-needed wins on the court. 

Arizona Diamondbacks 16, Chicago Cubs 8

Mar 18, 2026; Salt River Pima-Maricopa, Arizona, USA; Arizona Diamondbacks center fielder Alek Thomas (5) celebrates with right fielder Corbin Carroll (7) after hitting a two run home run against the Chicago Cubs in the third inning at Salt River Fields at Talking Stick. Mandatory Credit: Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images | Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images

Record: 12-12-1. Change on 2025: -1. 5-inning Record: 8-15-2.

Arizona stretched their unbeaten streak to five games with an emphatic victory over the Cubs at Salt River Fields. It looked unlikely, considering the D-backs were 5-1 down in the middle of the third. But scoring fifteen unanswered runs is never a bad thing. A six-run third was followed by a seven-run fourth, Arizona pounding out seventeen hits and five walks. Jordan Lawlar reached base three times on a hit and two walks, while there were two-hit days for Geraldo Perdomo, Carlos Santana and Jorge Barrosa. Good to see Corbin Carroll hitting his first post-hamate home-run. Alek Thomas (top, with Carroll) and Barrosa also went deep, and the team were 7-for-13 with RISP.

Given all of the above, what the pitchers did was almost irrelevant. Merrill Kelly’s second appearance was an improvement on his first: he went 2.2 innings, allowing five hits and two runs, with no walks or K’s. Joe Ross somehow got the W, despite an ugly outing which included allowing a grand-slam. But Juan Morillo struck out three of the four batters he faced, and there was a clean inning from Paul Sewald too. Kade Stroud’s rough spring continued in the eighth, because he allowed as many home-runs as he recorded outs (two of each). But all told, a pretty satisfactory day for the Diamondbacks.

Tomorrow, it’s over to Camelback Ranch for an evening game against the other residents of Chicago, the White Sox. 6:05 pm first pitch there, with Michael Soroka making his first start since coming back from the World Baseball Classic as part of Team Canada.

"Every Point Is Big Now": Red Wings Look Ahead To Critical Tilt Against Canadiens

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The last time that the Detroit Red Wings took on the Montreal Canadiens at Little Caesars Arena, things didn't work out so well for the host Red Wings. 

By the time the first period was over, the Red Wings had not only surrendered multiple odd-man rushes but allowed Montreal to score three times en route to what was an eventual 5-1 victory. 

The good news is that Detroit was able to figure Montreal out in their next matchup in Quebec, a 4-0 Red Wings win on January 10. 

But their third and final matchup of the season takes place at a most critical time for the Red Wings, who trail the Canadiens by two points in the standings in the ultra-tight Atlantic Division standings. 

For the Red Wings, their season-opening setback against the Canadiens serves as a blueprint for avoiding a similar fate.

"We've gotta stay above them," said Alex DeBrincat on how to counter Montreal's quick and active forwards. "I think that first game of the year, we made a lot of mistakes, and it was kind of maybe a good thing that we learned from early. I thought we played better when we went into their building, so hopefully we can play more of that game than our first game."

"They're a fast, skilled team," he continued. "We know they want to get behind us, and they can make plays on that, so I think for the most part, staying above their forwards and making them go through five guys will be tough on them." 

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The Red Wings didn’t receive any help from around the NHL on Tuesday night.

Not only did the Columbus Blue Jackets defeat the Metropolitan Division–leading Carolina Hurricanes, but both the Canadiens and the Boston Bruins also picked up a point in Montreal’s overtime victory.

Detroit currently occupies the second and final Wild Card position in the Eastern Conference, tied in points with the Bruins and two points behind Montreal, currently in third place in the Atlantic Division. 

"Every point is big now, the whole East is pretty close right now," DeBrincat continued. "We need to find a way to try and win some games and pull away a little bit, and hopefully we can play some good games at home here and go on from there." 

"It's Huge": Todd McLellan Praises 'Swagger' Of Goaltender John Gibson "It's Huge": Todd McLellan Praises 'Swagger' Of Goaltender John Gibson Thanks to another strong performance in net by goaltender John Gibson, the Detroit Red Wings picked up two huge points in the standings on Monday evening.

While the Red Wings will remain shorthanded without team captain Dylan Larkin, head coach Todd McLellan said there's no choice but to continue with the players available and apply the standard that helped make them successful. 

"All the work we've put in this year puts us in a spot where we have to continue to apply our game," McLellan said. "We've had to make adjustments due to injuries, but throw our best game out there night after night, and we're in control." 

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Senators At Washington In Latest 'Biggest Game Of The Season'

Once you're inside the final month of the NHL regular season, which we are, it's generally desperation time.

Either you're facing desperate teams fighting for a playoff spot or better positioning, or you're facing an also-ran filled with players desperate to stay in the league next season.

Desperation is a fine label for the Ottawa Senators' latest biggest game of the year on Wednesday night when they face the Capitals in Washington.

The Senators' desperation is well-documented. By his own admission, GM Steve Staios says he felt like the Senators "pissed away a lot of points early on." Now they're paying for that, forced to make a late-season charge.

They're winning a lot these days, rocking an 11-2-2 mark since January 25. With the out-of-town scoreboard so consistently working against them, it may be feel like they've been sprinting on a treadmill on the standings.

But when they started this run, they were seven teams and nine points out of the playoffs. Now they're two teams and five points out, with two games in hand on both of the wild card holders, Boston and Detroit.

The Blue Jackets are wedged into the mix, too, just one point out of a wild card.

One of the teams the Senators have managed to put behind them in the standings is the Washington Capitals, who will host them on Wednesday night (7;30pm SN, TVAS).

The Capitals are not only eight points out of a playoff spot, but they have to climb over four teams to get there, one of them being the Senators. So any slim hope of a comeback will all but evaporate if they don't get two points on Wednesday.

In the face of all that desperation, Sens head coach Travis Green isn't tinkering with anything, same lineup, same starting goalie.

"Our approach isn't really changing," Green told the media. "We're gonna play a desperate team (on Wednesday night), so our desperation level needs to be high as well."

The Senators will again be without Jake Sanderson and Nick Jensen. Sanderson is expected to start skating within the week, while Jensen is out for at least six weeks with a knee injury.

For Washington, Cole Hutson, brother of Montreal defenseman Lane Hutson, will make his NHL debut. He's expected to play alongside. Matt Roy and on the second power-play unit.

The Capitals figure he's mentally and physically ready to jump right into a near must-win NHL game for the Capitals.

Hutson was chosen 36 picks after Carter Yakemchuk in the 2024 NHL Draft. Despite the Senators recently losing two defensemen to injury, Yakemchuk, the reigning AHL player of the week, remains in Belleville, still waiting to make his NHL debut.

Here are Wednesday's line combinations and pairings, as per NHL.com.

Senators projected lineup

Drake Batherson -- Tim Stutzle -- Claude Giroux

Brady Tkachuk -- Dylan Cozens -- Ridly Greig

Nick Cousins -- Shane Pinto -- Michael Amadio

Warren Foegele -- Lars Eller -- Fabian Zetterlund

Thomas Chabot -- Artem Zub

Tyler Kleven -- Jordan Spence

Dennis Gilbert -- Nikolas Matinpalo

Linus Ullmark

James Reimer

Scratched: Stephen Halliday, Kurtis MacDermid, Lassi Thomson

Injured: Jake Sanderson (upper body), Nick Jensen (lower body)

Capitals projected lineup

Anthony Beauvillier -- Dylan Strome -- Alex Ovechkin

Aleksei Protas -- Hendrix Lapierre -- Tom Wilson

Connor McMichael -- Pierre-Luc Dubois -- Ryan Leonard

Brandon Duhaime -- Justin Sourdif -- Ethen Frank

Martin Fehervary -- Rasmus Sandin

Jakub Chychrun -- Trevor van Riemsdyk

Cole Hutson -- Matt Roy

Logan Thompson

Charlie Lindgren

Scratched: David Kampf, Ivan Miroshnichenko, Timothy Liljegren, Declan Chisholm, Dylan McIlrath

Injured: None

Steve Warne
The Hockey News

Barack Obama's March Madness bracket predictions include upsets, Final Four

Millions around the nation are placing their predictions, and some bets, on who they believe is going to advance, and win the 2026 Men's NCAA Tournament. Former President Barack Obama is also in on the fun.

If you haven't already filled out your brackets for this year's March Madness, you might want to get yours finished. All the fun begins Thursday when the first round of games is set to begin.

It's friendly competition amongst friends, family, co-workers or even the holy grail of a group chat. Each year, there has been a presidential bracket submitted out of the millions of predictions.

Barack Obama, the 44th President of the United States of America and an avid sports fan, has his picks set as he makes his prediction for how he thinks the 2026 NCAA Tournament will play out.

Barack Obama March Madness bracket picks

Obama typically fills out a bracket for both men and women, and 2026 is no different.

Lakers’ Luka Doncic deserves to be mentioned among NBA MVP candidates

Lakers star Luka Doncic

Luka Doncic has been playing out of his mind. 

And he might not make the All-NBA first team?

He has carried the Lakers to third place in the Western Conference. He leads the league in points (32.9 ppg). He’s third in assists (8.5). And he’s tied with MVP front-runner Shai Gilgeous-Alexander for individual plus/minus at +8.1.

The Lakers’ Luka Doncic (77) has had three triple-doubles, including a 51-point performance, in his last five games. Getty Images

Most recently, he has led the Lakers to win nine of their last 10 contests, including six straight. In his last five games, he has had three triple-doubles, a 51-point performance against the Bulls and a game-winner over the Nuggets in overtime. 

His revenge season is in full swing after the most shocking NBA trade of all time sent him from the Mavericks to the Lakers ahead of last season’s trade deadline. 

Yet Doncic is fourth on the NBA’s MVP ladder. He has the fifth-best odds of winning the award, according to FanDuel Sportsbook. And ESPN analyst Kendrick Perkins said he wouldn’t even give him first-team All-NBA honors in an appearance on “First Take.”

It would be a wild snub if he were omitted for first-team All-NBA.

There’s stiff competition for individual awards this season. 

The league’s other front-runners, Gilgeous-Alexander, Cade Cunningham, Jaylen Brown, Nikola Jokic and Victor Wembanyama are all deserving of the league’s highest honors.

The Thunder’s Gilgeous-Alexander is the best player on the best team in the league. Cunningham has stunningly led the Pistons to the top seed in the East. Jokic is arguably the most dominant player in the world. 

Brown stunned the NBA world by carrying the Celtics to second place in the East despite Jayson Taytum being sidelined the first 62 games of the season because of a torn Achilles. And Wembanyama is considered “not even human” by Brown and an “alien” by LeBron James because of his two-way skills. 

So, what gives?

That’s a hard question to answer. But there’s no way Doncic doesn’t deserve to make that elusive team. He’s the most prolific scorer in the league and has carried a Lakers team with LeBron James and Austin Reaves in and out of the lineup to only trail the Thunder and Spurs in the West. 

Luka Doncic is being overlooked as an NBA MVP candidate, Lakers coach JJ Redick said. Getty Images

Lakers coach JJ Redick believes what Doncic is doing is being overlooked. 

“He’s playing as well as anybody in the NBA right now,” Redick said after the March 12 win over the Bulls. “… It’s probably not being talked about enough. So I’m going to talk about it.”


Two nights later, after Doncic made an 18-foot step-back jumper with 0.5 seconds left to lead the Lakers to a 127-125 overtime win over the Nuggets, James called Doncic a “generational player.”

What happens over the next month could ultimately determine whether Doncic makes the cut for first-team All-NBA.

Doncic opened the season playing MVP-caliber basketball, leading the Lakers to a 15-4 start. After a rough patch extending from December through the first few weeks following the All-Star break, the Lakers and Doncic are turning heads. 

If Doncic continues to play at his recent level, it would be hard to imagine him not being a first-team All-NBA player this season. 

The Lakers are in the midst of a tough six-game road trip, with big tests coming against the Rockets, Heat, Magic and Pistons. 

If Doncic can help the Lakers secure the third seed, creating more separation between them and the Rockets, Nuggets and Timberwolves, who are only 1 ½ games behind LA, the conversation around Doncic will need to shift. 

Or else?

Perhaps it’s fair to wonder if Redick is onto something and Doncic’s feats need to be celebrated more. 

Hawks at Mavs: start time, TV, streaming, radio, game thread

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - MARCH 16: Zaccharie Risacher #10 of the Atlanta Hawks dunks during the third quarter against the Orlando Magic at State Farm Arena on March 16, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Todd Kirkland/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Atlanta Hawks (37-31) forge ahead for their 11th straight win against the banged up Dallas Mavericks (23-46).

Starting lineup:

  • CJ McCollum
  • Nickeil Alexander-Walker
  • Dyson Daniels
  • Jalen Johnson
  • Onyeka Okongwu

Please join in the comments below as you follow along.

Where, When, and How to Watch and Listen

Location: American Airlines Center, Dallas, TX

Start Time: 8:30 PM EDT

TV: FanDuel Sports Network Southeast (FDSNSE)

Radio: Sports Radio 92.9 the Game (WZGC-FM)

Streaming: ESPN+, FanDuel Sports Network app, Fubo (out of market), NBA League Pass (out of market), Youtube TV (NBA League Pass out of market)

Diamondbacks 16, Cubs 8: Jefferson Rojas hit a grand slam, but Edward Cabrera gets hit hard

Wednesday was a very hot afternoon in the Phoenix area. The temperature reached 101 degrees, breaking the record for the month:

“Hot” also described the Cubs bats, at least early in the game. The D-backs came back, though, hitting Edward Cabrera hard, and won the game 16-8.

The D-backs scored first, off Cabrera in the first inning. The run was unearned. Corbin Carroll reached on an error by Matt Shaw, who was playing right field. Carroll then stole second and scored on a single by Geraldo Perdomo.

Carroll suffered a broken hamate bone during a BP session earlier in camp and this was just his fourth Spring Training game. Perdomo had been off at the WBC playing for the Dominican Republic and this was his first game back. So the D-backs took advantage of a couple of their good players being back in the lineup.

The Cubs took the lead in the third, when the teams combined for 11 runs. Shaw led off with a double and scored on a Miguel Amaya single. After Michael Conforto hit into a double play, the Cubs loaded the bases on a single by Kevin Alcántara and walks to Jonathon Long and BJ Murray.

Jefferson Rojas followed with a grand slam, his third homer of the spring. This kid is going to be a really good player.

That ball was a towering drive that went a long way [VIDEO].

Here’s a look at the homer [VIDEO].

The D-backs flipped the script in bottom of the third. First, on a two-run homer by Alek Thomas, another player back from the WBC. Then Cabrera walked Nolan Arenado and he was replaced by minor leaguer Grayson Moore, who gave up a single and two more walks, making it 5-4. A wild pitch tied the game and then Moore gave up a two-run double to give Arizona a 7-5 lead.

Cabrera re-entered the game in the fourth and well, maybe he shouldn’t have. He served up another homer, this one to Carroll, then D-backs hitters continued to tee off on him until the score was 10-5 Arizona. Then minor leaguer Dawson Netz, who had relieved Moore in the third, entered to relieve Cabrera. At this point you are forgiven if you think the heat has gotten to all of these men. The D-backs just kept scoring. One run was charged to Cabrera, but Arizona wound up with an eight-run inning and led 14-5 at the end of the fourth.

Here’s a look at Cabrera’s outing [VIDEO].

After all the minor leaguers were done relieving Cabrera and each other, Gavin Hollowell shut the D-backs down 1-2-3 in the fifth. Hollowell has thrown well this spring and might have an Opening Day bullpen spot.

Ben Brown entered to throw the sixth, against mostly D-backs minor leaguers. He loaded the bases on three singles, but got out of the inning with a pair of strikeouts, both swinging.

Alcántara smacked a two-run homer in the eighth, his first of the spring, and one of three hits he had on the afternoon. Long followed with another long ball, also his first home run of the spring. Alcántara’s homer went a long way [VIDEO]

Manager Craig Counsell’s son Brady, playing for the Diamondbacks, went 1-for-2 in this game and scored twice.

The Cubs have Thursday off, and then will play their only split-squad game of Spring Training 2026 on Friday. Both games were originally scheduled for Friday afternoon and both have been moved to Friday evening because of a forecast high of 106 degrees.

Against the Reds at Sloan Park Friday, Matthew Boyd will face Brandon Williamson. That game will begin at 8:05 p.m. CT. No TV for the Sloan Park game, there will be a radio broadcast on the Reds flagship station WLW 700.

Against the A’s at Hohokam Stadium Friday, Jameson Taillon will go for the Cubs. At the time of this recap the A’s didn’t have a starter listed. That game will begin at 8:10 p.m. CT and be televised on Marquee Sports Network and NBC Sports California. There will be a radio broadcast with the A’s announcers on ATH Audio.

Collin Sexton returns for the Bulls while Isaac Okoro remains out

CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Bulls guard Collin Sexton returned to the lineup on Wednesday night after being sidelined for four games because of a lower left leg contusion.

Coach Billy Donovan said Sexton was available for the team's game against Toronto. Sexton got hurt during a 126-110 loss at Sacramento on March 8.

Fellow guard Isaac Okoro was ruled out against the Raptors because of right knee pain. He missed his fifth consecutive game.

“I'd say he's probably a little bit longer than day to day,” Donovan said. “Just dealing with the knee soreness there. I think he's still feeling it. ... He's on the court doing some stuff, but it's pretty limited right now.”

Okoro, 25, was acquired in a trade with Cleveland. He is averaging 9.0 points in 55 games in his first season with Chicago.

“He's incredibly unselfish, in terms of he's not like trying to hunt shots, trying to hunt points,” Donovan said. “Everything, when you talk to him, it's never about him. It's always about the team.”

The 27-year-old Sexton was acquired in a February trade with Charlotte. He is averaging 16.2 points in 12 games with Chicago going into the matchup with Toronto.

___

AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba

How Lakers’ rotation is shaping up one month until NBA playoffs

Lakers stars Luka Doncic and LeBron James

HOUSTON — The Lakers have been honest about having a “playoff mentality” during the final stretch of the regular season — evident in their play during the six-game winning streak they entered Wednesday’s matchup against the Rockets. 

The last few weeks, with the team having a healthy roster in most of their games since the All-Star break, have also made it clear who’ll be in the rotation once the playoffs start. 

Luka Doncic has the Lakers in third place in the Western Conference standings a month before the NBA postseason begins. Getty Images

Here’s a projection of the Lakers’ 2026 postseason rotation:

Starters

Luka Doncic 

Austin Reaves 

Marcus Smart 

LeBron James 

Deandre Ayton

This has been the Lakers’ first unit since getting fully healthy, and there’s no reason for it to change before the playoffs.

This starting group has the third-best net rating (plus-9.9) among Lakers lineups that’ve played at least 100 possessions, according to Cleaning The Glass, and is among the most balanced units the team can deploy. 

Doncic, Reaves and James all averaged at least 39 minutes during last season’s five-game first-round loss to the Timberwolves. 

Even if the Lakers make it out of the first round, or at least extend their opening series to beyond five games, expect Doncic and Reaves to hover around 40 minutes per game and James to come in at the highs 30s. 

The Lakers’ Deandre Ayton is the biggest wild card among the starters from a playing-time perspective once the postseason begins. NBAE via Getty Images

Smart can be penciled in around 32-34 minutes. 

Among the starters, Ayton is the biggest wild card from a playing-time perspective — he could play anywhere from 25-35 minutes depending on the matchup and his individual performance. Putting him at 28 minutes is in line with his playing time during the regular season. 

Bench players

Rui Hachimura: Hachimura has been the Lakers’ sixth man in 2026, sometimes averaging more minutes than Ayton off the bench during stretches of the season. 

Along with Luke Kennard, Hachimura has been one of the Lakers’ best 3-point shooters. And at 6-foot-8, he can credibly defend multiple frontcourt positions. 

Expect for Hachimura to play the most among Lakers bench players and don’t be surprised if he closes games depending on the matchup and Ayton’s performance.

Luke Kennard: As the player with the best 3-point shooting percentage in the league, Kennard has provided a significant boost to the offense. 

Statistically, he raises the ceiling of the team’s offense more than any other player on the roster. 

But the team struggles defensively just as much as it thrives offensively while Kennard is on the floor. 

During the games he’s knocking down shots, Kennard could play as many as 24-26 minutes in the playoffs. But during the games he isn’t, he could also come in around 14-16 minutes and be a two-shift player. 

Jaxson Hayes: The 7-foot Hayes has been a consistent part of the bench since the start of the season, playing at least 10 minutes in every game he’s finished healthy. 

If Ayton isn’t producing at the level he’s capable of, or the small-ball lineups aren’t as viable depending on the matchup, Hayes has shown he can scale up his play with more minutes.

Jake LaRavia: LaRavia and Hayes have comfortably been the Lakers’ eighth and ninth players in the rotation since the break. LaRavia’s best chances of playing more would come if the Lakers rely on more center-less lineups or his 3-point shot is falling. 

Lakers star LeBron James figures to be part of the team’s closing lineup during the NBA playoffs. Getty Images

Closing lineup

Doncic 

Reaves 

Smart 

James 

Ayton

Ayton has been established as the team’s X-factor.

If he’s playing at the level he’s expected to, he brings a combination of physical tools and skill that nobody else on the roster has. 

But if he’s not, don’t be surprised if the Lakers close games with a center-less group that swaps Ayton for Hachimura. Hayes would be third in line as a closer if the Lakers need a big man on the floor. 


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Dodgers option River Ryan, starting rotation becoming clearer

GLENDALE, ARIZONA - MARCH 16: River Ryan #77 of the Los Angeles Dodgers smiles on the field prior to a Spring Training game against the Milwaukee Brewers at Camelback Ranch on March 16, 2026 in Glendale, Arizona. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Dodgers continued sorting out their roster on Wednesday, sending both pitcher River Ryan and utility man Ryan Fitzgerald to minor league camp.

Ryan, who is on the 40-man, was optioned, while non-roster invitee Fitzgerald was reassigned to the minors. Earlier Wednesday, the Dodgers also optioned pitcher Kyle Hurt and selected infielder Santiago Espinal to the roster.

Ryan has been quite impressive this spring, returning after Tommy John surgery and missing all of last season. In his four appearances and 9 2/3 innings, Ryan had a 1.86 ERA with four walks and 12 strikeouts, fanning a third of his batters faced. But the Dodgers are taking the conservative route with his return, as we’ve seen in past years with Walker Buehler, Tony Gonsolin, and others in returning from surgery.

After Hurt and Ryan were optioned, only 16 healthy non-Ohtani pitchers remain in camp, which means only three more cuts to go to finalize the pitching side of the opening day roster.

Yoshinobu Yamamoto is starting opening day. Tyler Glasnow, Shohei Ohtani, and Roki Sasaki are rotation locks, the latter reiterated by manager Dave Roberts on Wednesday morning despite Sasaki struggling all spring. Emmet Sheehan and Justin Wrobleski are still vying for rotation spots. Both could claim them should the Dodger use a six-man rotation out of the gate, but also one of them could make the team as a reliever, too.

The Dodgers have four off days in the first 22 days of the regular season, including three Thursday off days in a row before a more taxing schedule kicks in.

Edwin Díaz, Tanner Scott, Alex Vesia, Blake Treinen, and Jack Dreyer are roster locks. Ben Casparius, Will Klein, and Edgardo Henriquez are in the mix for bullpen spots as well.

The other three still active in camp are starter Landon Knack plus non-roster relievers Chris Campos and Antoine Kelly.

Fitzgerald played in 18 games this spring, mixing time between second base, third base, and shortstop, with 17 of those games coming in reserve. Fitzgerald hit .333/.412/.533 with four doubles, a triple, and four walks, with eight runs scored and seven driven in.

Mariners win 7-3 behind big day from Luke Raley

TEMPE, ARIZONA - MARCH 14: Luke Raley #20 of the Seattle Mariners runs back to first base during the Spring Training game against the Los Angeles Angels at Tempe Diablo Stadium on March 14, 2026 in Tempe, Arizona. (Photo by John E. Moore III/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Emerson Hancock had 70ish pitches to work with today and made them last for 3.2 innings – not as efficient as one would hope. He had to dance around some trouble right away, loading the bases in the first on three singles, but was able to work out of the trouble by striking out Reese McGuire, who chased after a high-and-away fastball at 96.5 mph, and getting Brock Wilken to ground into a forceout.

Brendan Donovan gave Hancock a little breathing room in the bottom of the inning with his first homer of the spring, ambushing a first-pitch fastball, poorly located, from Brewers starter Carlos Rodriguez:

But Hancock gave that run right back in the second, giving up a hard-hit single followed by a double; the runner then scored on a sacrifice fly. Hancock’s velocity was slowly climbing in the inning, working up from 94 to 95 to 96 on both his four-seamer and sinker, and he polished off the inning by dismantling Brandon Lockridge on four pitches: three straight sweepers before getting him swinging after a four-seamer away.

The Mariners built a lead in the bottom of the third thanks to a Luke Raley three-run homer that scored Brendan Donovan, who had walked, and Josh Naylor, who had singled, although some of the credit for Raley’s blast belongs to Naylor, who was an absolute pest at first base, urging Donovan into a double steal and just generally wreaking havoc with the pitcher. Rodriguez then delivered Raley a 94.5 mph fastball right in the middle of the plate and Raley, having a good spring now that he’s finally healthy and enjoying frequent playing time with so many outfielders away for the WBC…did not miss it.

Hancock was on his way to a shutdown inning in the fourth, opening with back-to-back strikeouts, but then left a 94 mph fastball on the plate for Cooper Pratt, who singled and then promptly stole second. Another single on a slider that wound up in the middle of the plate moved him to third, and then both runners scored on a Tyler Black triple to shave the Mariners’ lead down to 4-3 and end Hancock’s day. It’s a shame because the triple was actually on a well-located sweeper at the bottom of the zone that Black just flicked into the wind and floated into the deepest corner of Peoria Stadium, and Hancock had made several good pitches in the at-bat, obviously emptying the tank with some 98 mph fastballs. Baseball! Wyatt Lunsford-Shenkmen, who has one of my favorite nicknames (“The Law Firm”) came in and got a groundout to end the threat there.

In the bottom of the fifth, it was Luke Raley again, this time with an RBI double as he ambushed a first pitch from former Mariner Easton McGee. He then scored on Randy Arozarena’s first homer of the spring, making the game 7-3 and helping deliver the Mariners another Cactus League win.

Spring training doesn’t matter, but having a complete team in spring training does matter if you want to win games, it seems.

Dodgers superstar dominates on the mound after Sports Illustrated cover reveal

Shohei Ohtani pitching in a Los Angeles Dodgers uniform during a spring training game.
Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Shohei Ohtani, of Japan, throws against the San Francisco Giants during the fourth inning of a spring training baseball game, Wednesday, March 18, 2026, in...

The morning belonged to cameras, photoshoots, and cover stories

By the afternoon, it belonged to the mound.

Shohei Ohtani was revealed as the April cover of Sports Illustrated–posed beside Aaron Judge, both men dressed like baseball’s answer to royalty in suits underneath the headline: “Super Powered.”

Shohei Ohtani was revealed as the April cover of Sports Illustrated–posed beside Aaron Judge.

Hours later at Camelback Ranch, the illusion gave way to reality. The tailored suits were gone. The spotlight remained.

Ohtani made his 2026 Cactus League pitching debut against the San Francisco Giants on Wednesday. He dominated his rivals with 4 and 1 third scoreless innings on 61 pitches. 

Ohtani made his 2026 Cactus League pitching debut against the San Francisco Giants on Wednesday. AP

Ohtani did not hit in the game, but will be the DH in Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts lineup on Friday. 

Inside the cover story by Tom Verducci, Ohtani and Judge are leading a “new golden era of baseball.” That might be selling it short.

Ohtani and Judge have seven MVPs between them and the former can dominate you twice in the same night like he did in Game 4 of the National League Championship Series against the Milwaukee Brewers. 

That’s more than just a golden era. That’s the dawn of a new day for a sport that is now global because of Ohtani. 

Roberts said Ohtani is expected to pitch again in the Freeway Series, setting up his 2026 regular season debut at Dodger Stadium against the Cleveland Guardians somewhere between March 30 and April 1st.