BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA - NOVEMBER 5: Members of the Indiana Hoosiers warm up wearing traditional candy stripe Adidas warmups before of the NCAA basketball game between the Indiana Hoosiers and the Alabama A&M Bulldogs at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall on November 5, 2025 in Bloomington, Indiana. (Photo by Michael Hickey/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Indiana men’s basketball made a front office type of move on Monday with the hiring of Ryan Carr, a former program manager, as Executive Director of Basketball, effectively a general manager type role with a focus on roster building.
Such hirings have become more common in college basketball due to relatively recent shifts in team and program building philosophies with the onset of NIL and the transfer portal. Indiana has plenty of connections around the basketball world with former players and managers in coaching and front office roles around college basketball, the NBA and other levels. Carr, working just up the road in Indianapolis with plenty of scouting and leadership experience, seems a natural fit.
Which seems to be the broad takeaway from the move based on reactions around social media. Here’s some that stick out:
Pacers guards Tyrese Haliburton and T.J. McConnell:
Pacers point guards T.J. McConnell and Tyrese Haliburton wish executive Ryan Carr well in his newly-created role with #iubbpic.twitter.com/JpHiFnu23G
Former Indiana men’s basketball head coach Tom Crean:
This is absolutely awesome for @IndianaMBB to have @Ryan_Carr11 join in this role. As good as an evaluator, connector, executive and truth teller that he is, he’s even a far better Person, Family Man and encourager. @IUHoosiers nailed this one. Ryan truly loves @IndianaUnivhttps://t.co/fBXsDTy8kN
Significant hire for Indiana. Carr is one of the most respected scouts/front office members in the NBA and has deep ties to the state. https://t.co/RXmlA9EGKg
This is a major hire for Indiana. Ryan Carr is a longtime, highly respected NBA executive and former IU manager who ran the Pacers’ pre-draft process for years and has been a constant presence on the scouting circuit. https://t.co/MLne71eJjR
One of the first guys I met in the business as an advance scout in 2005. While others were cold/competitive, he was kind, embracing and a huge help. He’s one in a million with greater and deeper purpose. Go Ryan!🙏 https://t.co/O5zD9h1tDI
Feb 23, 2026; Peoria, Arizona, USA; Milwaukee Brewers catcher Gary Sanchez (99) walks out of the dugout in the fourth inning against the San Diego Padres at Peoria Sports Complex. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images | Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images
The Milwaukee Brewers looked well on their way to picking up their first Cactus League win this afternoon when a late bullpen collapse by players you’ve probably never heard of meant another day with a zero in the win column for the Brewers.
Of course, winners and losers in the Cactus League don’t really matter at all, so who did what?
Milwaukee jumped out to an early lead in this one when, following a Joey Ortiz single (the hardest-hit ball of the game, according to Statcast, at 109.1 mph), Andrew Vaughn hit a one-out bomb to put the Brewers up 2-0.
The Brewers kept the pressure on San Diego starter JP Sears after that. Gary Sánchez was hit by a pitch and Brandon Lockridge singled to put two more on base with still just the one out. A David Hamilton fielder’s choice led to the second out, but with two outs one of the new faces on the Brewers, Jett Williams, showed off one of his gifts—speed—with a two-run triple:
Easton McGee and Abner Uribe both had nice early-inning appearances for the Brewers; Uribe gave up a bloop single to Ty France but otherwise neither pitcher allowed anything and they both struck out two batters. Craig Yoho pitched a scoreless third, though he didn’t strike anybody out.
The first two Brewers of the fourth inning were retired on calls that went to ABS challenges: the Padres successfully challenged a 3-2 pitch on Williams that was initially called a ball, and the next batter, Luis Lara, unsuccessfully challenged a called third strike.
The Padres got on the board in the fourth when Miguel Andujar hit a two-out solo homer off of Drew Rom, and the Brewers added one in the seventh when Lockridge—Brandon Lockridge!—hit his second homer of the spring.
That made it 5-1, and it looked like the game might end there, but bottom of the eighth, things went sideways. Pitcher Bjorn Johnson entered the game walked the first batter, got a pop-out, gave up a single, walked another guy, gave up a bases-loaded double, and walked another guy before getting pulled. Joshua Quezada replaced Johnson, gave up a single, balked, and gave up another single, and the Padres had six runs in with only one out. Thankfully, a double play ended the inning after that, but San Diego was up 7-5 heading into the ninth. Johnson’s line was a little scary: two hits, three walks, and five earned runs in 1/3 of an inning, which equates to an ERA of 135, if you’re curious.
Milwaukee got a couple of two-out baserunners in the ninth when Dylan O’Rae singled and Jesús Made walked; they both stole their way into scoring position, but a strikeout of Jordyn Adams ended things there, which I’m sure the players didn’t mind.
Ortiz was a notable bright spot. In addition to the single he stung in the first inning, he hit a strong double in the fifth (at 107.2 mph, it was the third-hardest-hit ball of the day), and in the third he made this nifty play:
For those who spent large parts of last season concerned about Jackson Chourio’s plate discipline, he took two more walks today. We’ve already covered all the extra-base hits, but among the interesting prospects, Lara and Brock Wilken also hit singles. In addition to McGee, Uribe, and Yoho, the Brewers also got scoreless innings from Jacob Waguespack, Ethan Dorchies, and Wande Torres, though only Waguespack managed a three-up, three-down inning.
The 0-4 Brewers will take another shot at picking up their first win tomorrow afternoon at 2:05 p.m. central time when they take on the Athletics in OaklandSacramentoKansas CityPhiladelphia Mesa.
SCOTTSDALE, AZ - FEBRUARY 20: Zac Veen #13 of the Colorado Rockies greets manager Warren Schaeffer #4 as teams are announced on the opening day of Spring Training games at Salt River Fields on Friday, February 20, 2026 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by Kyle Cooper)
Today, the Colorado Rockies walked off the Chicago White Sox in a 5-4 win after Zac Veen (No. 9 PuRP) hit a crushing 468 feet walk-off homer. For more details, go here.
MIAMI, FL - FEBRUARY 9: Jusuf Nurkic #30 of the Utah Jazz drives to the basket during the game against the Miami Heat on February 9, 2026 at Kaseya Center in Miami, Florida. 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 Issac Baldizon/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
Per NBA insider Chris Haynes, the Jazz will be without backup center Jusuf Nurkić moving forward due to an urgent medical procedure:
BREAKING: Utah Jazz starting center Jusuf Nurkić will undergo a surgical procedure on his nose Wednesday that will sideline him for the remainder of the season, league sources tell me. pic.twitter.com/MFYjY333GU
I’m not a doctor, but I figure this procedure is urgent because Jusuf Nurkić is playing too well. For the Jazz, who are fighting to keep pace in a hotly contested race for draft position, every loss matters.
This leaves the Jazz with frontcourt rotations which will include Lauri Markkanen, (for now) Kyle Filipowski, Kevin Love, Oscar Tshiebwe, John “Jitty” Konchar, and Blake Hinson. The Jazz now have an opportunity to a) improve their draft position and b) Evaluate their end-of-the-bench talent before going all-in on competing next season. Kyle Filipowski has proven to be a skilled offensive player, but his defensive footwork leaves much to be desired. Can he learn to hang with upper-end NBA talent? New additions John Konchar and Blake Hinson have shown promise, but will they be part of the team’s long-term plans? The answers to these questions may be more clear after 30 games of watching them play big minutes.
Admittedly, if you had told me prior to this season that the Jazz would be Urgently Resting Nurkić for a Very Urgent Surgery, I would not have believed you. I was stuck in the past, dwelling on stuff like this:
I have officially gone from “Well, I guess we had to take back salary to unload Colin Sexton” to “Wow, Nurk is a really nice backup with a cool skillset. It would be great if he re-signed here this summer.” Turns out that, sometimes, professional basketball players are really good at playing basketball, even if six-foot nothing, 5PPG-at-the-local-pickup-game guys like me think they’re washed.
Jazz coach Will Hardy has a few hours to re-work his rotations as the team prepares to take on the Houston Rockets at 7:30pm MT.
NEW YORK, NY - FEBRUARY 21: Jalen Brunson #11 of the New York Knicks looks on during the game against the Houston Rockets on February 21, 2026 at Madison Square Garden in New York City, New York. 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 Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
This hasn’t been the dream season we envisioned entering the year. If you came from the future and told everyone the Knicks would be the No. 3 seed and considerably behind the No. 1 seed in late February, I’d imagine near-universal disappointment. That’s fine, that’s reasonable.
What’s not reasonable is the way some people act after every single loss. Losing sucks, there’s no question about it, but you don’t need to write a thinkpiece about the entire organization after an off night. It’s an 82-game season, you’re not going undefeated. I think most people understand that, but then you also get takes like this on social media after the team’s disheartening loss against the Pistons on Thursday.
"I cannot wait till we get to the summer so they could blow this team the f*** up… Has there ever been a more unlikeable 'good' team in NBA history?"@JCMacriNBA condemns the Knicks effort after their 3rd loss of the season to the Detroit Pistons, bringing their total margin… pic.twitter.com/ExtPJ3aHPH
If you’re ever on social media, especially when one of these games are going on, you see the same tropes.
“This team doesn’t care”, “They’re soft.”, “They’re pathetic.”
This is especially the narrative after all the Pistons games. I understand it’s a different Pistons team than last year, but we also have to remember the regular season doesn’t tell the whole story. There’s also a misrepresentation of how Thursday’s game went. While the Knicks absolutely got punked in the first two meetings, they overall played with a good amount of intensity on Thursday. You know why the score was lopsided? The No. 3 3pt shooting team in basketball couldn’t buy one, while the worst wide-open shooting team in basketball once again shot over 40%.
The sky is not falling because the Pistons seem to have our number. There’s no guarantee that, assuming the Knicks stay in the 2 or 3-seed, the Pistons would even be the matchup in the Eastern Conference Finals! People saying that these three matchups are the reason they have no chance to come out of the East are being dishonest.
Different sects of the fanbase have different criticisms of the team. Some blame Jalen Brunson’s isocentric playstyle, which prevents guys like Mikal Bridges and Karl-Anthony Towns from getting in rhythm. Some blame Mike Brown’s coaching style for not getting Towns the ball and treating him more like Domantas Sabonis. Some get on Josh Hart for the bad stretches when he misses an assignment off-ball defensively, and his reluctance to shoot. And then, of course, there’s criticism of Bridges and Towns for being soft.
Are some of these criticisms warranted? Sure! The Knicks are far from perfect, but they’re still a damn good basketball team. But some of these narratives are silly, especially the small, small sect that calls Brunson a ballhog and shows misleading on-off numbers.
But honestly, the most frustrating part about this stuff is glorifying the past. And no, I’m not talking about the 1990s or the 2013 Knicks, I’m talking about the recent teams. There was an unironic tweet during the 11-game skid that the 2021 Knicks, because of the defense and physicality, would beat this team in a playoff series.
(Speaking of the 11-game skid, this is possibly the worst tweet I‘ve ever seen.)
Watching the Knicks these last two seasons has been as bad as watching them during the 2021-22 season & the beginning of the 2022-23 season
Nostalgia is a real virus. That 2021 team was the first playoff team for an entire generation of Knicks fans, but they were tremendously flawed. Once the Hawks learned to turn Julius Randle’s water off, it was over. Do we really think that team would be able to score enough in the playoffs and lock up Brunson and KAT? Seriously?
The more sensible nostalgia acts are coming from the 2023-25 teams. The Knicks played with a certain level of grit then, but people forget how things went for those teams.
The 2023 Knicks were an inspiring group that was genuinely ten-deep. The problem? The team’s second-best playoff performer was 23-year-old Quentin Grimes. Randle, RJ Barrett, and Immanuel Quickley were terrible against the Heat.
The 2024 Knicks might’ve been the most fun team to root for, and that’s what this boils down to. You love to root for the undermanned underdog with likable players and personalities, who play with a certain level of nastiness. But that team had a ceiling; their second option was Donte DiVincenzo. Now, if you want to talk about the January 2024 Knicks, I’m listening. They were special. But you were never getting that team again, not with the CBA forcing Isaiah Hartenstein to OKC.
There’s also a lot of comparing Tom Thibodeau to Mike Brown, some reasonable, some not. But let’s not act like the same people who are yearning for Thibs weren’t the ones begging for him to be fired midseason last year.
The Cavs fired JB Bickerstaff despite leading the team to the playoffs for three straight seasons, and now they’re 32-5 under Kenny Atkinson. Meanwhile, Knicks fans say we can’t fire Thibs because “we were bad before he got here”😂 pic.twitter.com/xW37HBTdAn
But remember alot of Knicks fans celebrated thibs being fired in the offseason and wanted to act like Mike Brown was the reincarnation of Pat Riley pic.twitter.com/GlEdq4ZlFn
And that’s my point. There has always been something to complain about. In 2021, they couldn’t score. In 2023, they had no offense aside from Brunson in the playoffs. In 2024, a similar story. Then, when you add the offensive firepower, the pendulum swings the other way.
Make no mistake, this is the best Knicks team since Patrick Ewing was wearing orange and blue. They’re on pace for 52 wins. While they’ve had frustrating losses to Detroit and San Antonio, they’ve beaten Boston, Cleveland, Houston, Toronto, and Denver. They went 0-10 vs the top-three teams last year and 5-14 against teams that won at least 50 games. This year, they’re 7-5 (technically 6-5 but the NBA Cup counts to me, dammit) against teams playing at a 50 or more win pace. It’s a Pistons issue right now, not a crippling league issue.
It’s one thing when the likes of Draymond Green or Charles Barkley use buzzwords to insult this team. They’re outside media personalities who benefit from clicks. It’s disingenuous when it’s our fans doing it, pretending that we aren’t less than six years removed from Mo Harkless starting games with regularity and less than eight years removed from Allonzo Trier being our most promising player.
You know what, maybe I just need to get off social media.
Feb 5, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Atlanta Hawks forward Corey Kispert (24) dribbles against the Utah Jazz in the second quarter at State Farm Arena. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images | Brett Davis-Imagn Images
The Washington Wizards are playing the Hawks in Atlanta tomorrow night. I’ve got you covered with the preview:
Game info
When: 7:30 p.m. EST on Tuesday, Feb. 24
Where: State Farm Arena in Atlanta, Georgia
How to watch: Monumental Sports Network
Injuries
Wizards — Trae Young, Anthony Davis, Alex Sarr and Cam Whitmore are all listed as OUT. Tristan Vukcevic and Justin Champagnie are listed as DAY-TO-DAY. Additionally, D’Angelo Russell is not being asked to report to the team.
Hawks — Jonathan Kuminga is listed as OUT and has yet to make his Hawks debut.
Game notes and more
The Atlanta Hawks were a hip NBA Finals contender ahead of the season, yet even in a rollercoaster of a season they’ve failed to kick their play-in addiction. They’ve traded their franchise player in Trae Young, minted a new All-Star in Jalen Johnson, rolled the dice on Jonathan Kuminga and watched Zaccharie Risacher, who they selected no. 1 overall last year, fail to make an impact. They are still the same middling old Hawks, and they currently sit at a meager 28-31, fending off a challenge from the flaming hot Charlotte Hornets.
The aforementioned Young was, as any reader of this site is no doubt aware, traded to the Wizards ahead of the trade deadline. He has yet to make his debut, and it is unknown whether he will be playing this season or not, as all team-issued updates have been quite vague.
VITORIA-GASTEIZ, Spain (AP) — Lucas Boyé scored twice for Alaves to draw with Girona 2-2 in an end-to-end La Liga encounter at Estadio Mendizorroza on Monday.
The second straight draw for Alaves lifted it three points clear of La Liga’s relegation zone.
Girona was three places and three points better off, although only six points separate Girona in 11th and Mallorca in the last of the three relegation spots.
The home side took the initiative after just five minutes when Girona goalkeeper Paulo Gazzaniga missed Yusi’s low cross, allowing Boyé to side-foot home from close range.
However, Girona came roaring back and 14 minutes before the break it was level, Axel Witsel’s glancing header touched into the net by Vladyslav Vanat.
Girona took the lead in the 73rd minute when Azzedine Ounahi’s superb reverse pass split the Alaves defence. Viktor Tsygankov showed a cool head to round the keeper and slot the ball into the empty net.
But Boyé’s header a minute from time gave Alaves a deserved draw that could be crucial in its fight against the drop.
“We’re at home, and we know that to reach our objective as quickly as possible we have to pick up three points here, especially against direct rivals,” Boyé said. “We’re frustrated by the draw and by not getting all three points.”
PHOENIX, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 07: Jalen Green #4 and Dillon Brooks #3 of the Phoenix Suns walk during a timeout in the second half against the Philadelphia 76ers at Mortgage Matchup Center on February 07, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. 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 Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Coming out of the All-Star break, the Phoenix Suns had three games in four nights, going 1-2 with a dramatic win over the Orlando Magic and tough losses where the offense struggled against the San Antonio Spurs and Portland Trailblazers. While it was a short week, the team lost multiple key players due to injury.
Here are the main questions for Week 18 that we want your thoughts on:
Getting Through the Injury Bug/Jalen Green’s big shot
Two questions in one block here. In the Suns’ three games this week, Devin Booker, Dillon Brooks and Jordan Goodwin all went down with injuries and missed the next game. Booker will be re-evaluated later this week, Brooks broke his hand and is out without a timeline, and Goodwin strained his calf and is also without a timeline.
Phoenix has now played 14 games this year without Booker and are en route to play at least two more. On a side note, if Booker misses four more games, he’ll be ineligible for All-NBA awards this year.
With the Suns’ top scorers likely out for an extended period, look for Jalen Green to get more into a rhythm with his new teammates. He played 30 minutes for the first time as a Sun on Saturday in the team’s double-overtime win that ended with him hitting a buzzer-beating three, green has been inefficient so far in his first ten games as a Sun, shooting 38% from the field and 31% from three. His shooting splits are the lowest of any season of his career. Averaging over 20 points per game in his previous three seasons combined, he has the potential to lead the team in scoring amid the injuries.
JALEN GREEN HITS THE GAME-WINNING @TISSOT BUZZER-BEATER TO WIN IT FOR THE SUNS IN 2OT!
Is the answer to the Suns’ injury issues getting Jalen Green more acclimated into the offense? Who else needs to step up for the time being?
Offensive Issues
The Suns didn’t shoot over 40% from the field once this week. Their win against Orlando was the first time since 2023 a team won while shooting under 35% from the field, and their 77 points against Portland was the least points they’ve scored in a game all year, and is tied for the second-least points a team has scored in a game this season.
To win games, independent of whose in the lineup, the Suns need to hit more shots. While Grayson Allen missed Sunday’s contest due to injury management, he should be back in the lineup Tuesday.
What is wrong with the Phoenix offense? How can it improve?
For more questions on the Suns follow @HoldenSherman1 on X for content after every game.
Jalen Green went 6/26 from the field, but finished the game with a buzzer beater.
What do you make of his performance tonight and his ability to come up clutch when he's most needed?@BrightSideSun
When New York Islanders defenseman Alexander Romanov went down with a right-shoulder injury on Nov. 18, the fear was that we wouldn't see him back on the ice for quite a while. The initial prognosis was that Romanov would miss five-to-six months after undergoing right-shoulder surgery. That would put Romanov on the shelf for the rest of the regular season, at least, which included his contract being placed on Long-Term Injured List.
With much time left in the schedule at that point, thinking about the playoffs wasn't really a realistic conversation, just yet.
Now it is.
The Islanders entered the 2026 Winter Olympic break sitting in third place in the Metropolitan Division with a four-point lead over the Columbus Blue Jackets and Washington Capitals. Romanov is still far away from a potential return, but is progressing well as he hit the ice before last Friday's skate, taking shots:
Romanov is back on the ice, firing shots as he continues a challenging recovery. His mid-playoff-round return date hasn't changed.
With Romanov, potentially, available in the mid-playoff rounds if the Islanders get there, there's something that general manager Mathieu Darche needs to keep in mind between now and the 2026 NHL Trade Deadline on March 6.
There's a new rule that went into place regarding playoffs and the salary cap.
Teams must have a cap-compliant 20-player roster for each playoff game. So, in theory, if the Islanders wanted Romanov to play, they'd need to make sure his $6.25 million cap hit fits.
With this current roster, here's a projection for the forward group, defense group, and goaltending, including Romanov's hit.
Forwards: $61.07 million
Defensemen: $24.375 million
Goaltending: $9.25 million
Total: $94.69 million
That hit allows the Islanders to be compliant with the salary cap for 2025-26 at $95.5 million.
However, where things get more complicated is if the Islanders add cap ahead of the deadline. They have $6.02 million in available cap space and could use that room to upgrade their team, whether that's adding a big name to the top six of depth options.
If Romanov is activated, Soucy's $3.25 million would likely come out of the playoff lineup.
The Islanders have the room for sure, especially with the uncertainty surrounding Romanov. But his potential return is something the Islanders should keep in mind when making deals, especially if they bring in a player with a $6 million or more cap hit.
Feb 23, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Seattle Mariners infielder Cole Young against the Los Angeles Dodgers during a spring training game at Camelback Ranch-Glendale. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images
Well, that was more spring baseball.
The Mariners fourth Spring Training game on Monday was more of the same: weak at bats, sloppy play, and a bunch of names so unremarkable they didn’t even bother printing them on the jerseys. I still enjoyed it, though. These games might be meaningless, but they are still baseball, still something to pass the time, still a chance to see your favorite players, however briefly. Only four more weeks until the real thing. We’re getting there.
The Mariners lost to the Dodgers 3-0. They collected just four hits and one walk. Here’s what I thought was notable.
Cole Young and Colt Emerson
Mariners’ brass got another chance to see Cole Young and Colt Emerson in direct competition for an infield spot. Young hit seventh in the lineup and played second base; Emerson hit eighth and played shortstop. Neither’s day at the plate was all that notable. Young struck out in both his plate appearances, both times against a lefty. Emerson drew a nice walk against a righty in his first at bat, then popped out against a lefty in his second.
Both made nice plays in the field. With a runner on first, Emerson got a line drive right to him at short. He dropped it intentionally and tried to turn the double play. The umpires didn’t buy it and called it a catch, but it was a nice display of awareness regardless. The game doesn’t look too big for him so far.
Young was especially impressive. In the third, he backed up first base on a ball that squirted out of Patrick Wisdom’s glove, adjusted his momentum to get to the ball, and made a nice short throw to first. Later in the inning he made a strong throw across the infield while turning a double play. In the fifth, he ranged to his right and snagged a grounder with a dive, then popped up and fired to first. These are the specific plays that really sunk Young’s value last year in the field—going to his right and making quick, unconventional throws—and its encouraging to see some improvement right out of the gate. This is the type of thing I can get excited about in Spring Training.
Logan Gilbert
Logan Gilbert made his first start of Spring Training. Like all Mariners starting pitchers, I’m interested in whether we might spy any arsenal tweaks, like new pitch types or shapes. FanGraphs’ Michael Rosen noted Gilbert was throwing what looked like a redesigned cutter. The rest of his stuff looked pretty sharp, too. His velocity was up from last year at 96+ mph, and he picked up a few strikeouts.
Gilbert’s 2025 is tough to summarize. He took a notable step forward in “stuff,” generating whiffs and strikeouts at an elite level. But it seemed to come at the expense of efficiency, as he struggled to work deeper into games. We don’t know much about how he might resolve that issue in 2026 after Monday’s outing, but we’ll see what adjustments he makes as he stretches out.
Jose Ferrer
Jose Ferrer’s time with the Mariners started out great. He got a three pitch strikeout on Andy Pages and celebrated with a little spin. It was nasty a pitch—an 85 mph changeup below the zone off back-to-back heaters up. Pages looked fooled.
Ferrer then gave up three consecutive hits and a walk and was removed from the game before recording another out. The contact he allowed wasn’t especially good and one of the hits really should have been caught by Victor Robles in right field. But Ferrer will take solace in that his performance with the Mariners can only improve from here.
Andrew Knizner
Andrew Knizner made three challenges. The first two he called correctly from behind the plate, stealing strikes for his pitchers and even ending a fourth inning jam with a challenge K. He also challenged a high strike as a batter and lost. It’s interesting to see the Mariners’ catchers testing out the new system early on.
GLENDALE, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 23: Pitcher Landon Knack #96 of the Los Angeles Dodgers throws against the Seattle Mariners during the first inning of a spring training game at Camelback Ranch on February 23, 2026 in Glendale, Arizona. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Dodgers are on a roll to begin the spring as they notched their third consecutive victory with a 3-0 shutout win over the Seattle Mariners on Monday.
Landon Knack was given the start for Monday’s contest, making quick work of the Mariners by facing the minimum in the first inning while tossing just nine pitches.
Jack Dreyer made his first appearance of the spring, giving up a two-out single to Andrew Knizner but managing to escape the second inning unscathed. Ben Casparius, Kyle Hurt and Alex Vesia all made their first appearances of the spring, each notching a scoreless inning in relief.
Andy Pages added another two hits with a pair of singles in his second game of the spring, giving him four hits and a .667 batting average.
Scoring was hard to come by on Monday, even more than Sunday, but the Dodgers took advantage with runners in scoring position as Alex Freeland roped an opposite field double off of Jose A. Ferrer to plate Dalton Rushing and Santiago Espinal to give the Dodgers a 2-0 lead in the bottom of the fourth inning. Zach Ehrhard reached on a fielding error from Rhylan Thomas to plate a run and make it a three run Dodger lead in the bottom of the sixth inning.
Nick Robertson made his first appearance as a Dodger since the 2023 regular season, notching the save with a scoreless ninth inning to give the Dodgers a 3-0 start to the spring.
The Dodgers are now averaging 7.7 runs per game this spring, but they have yet to hit a home run as a team so far.
Up next
The Dodgers are back at Camelback Ranch on Tuesday as they host the Cleveland Guardians (12:10 p.m. PT, SportsNet LA). Gavin Stone makes his spring debut against right-hander Gavin Williams.
So you’ll have to deal with descriptions, and a few MLB Gameday graphics.
Ben Brown threw the first two innings for the Cubs. It was a good outing. He allowed two hits, no runs and struck out three.
Here is one of the strikeouts, of Salvador Perez. Brown stuck with his fastball and curve, and check out some of the velocity:
Hopefully, Brown will begin to mix in some of the other pitches he says he’s been working on. He threw 30 pitches (20 strikes).
Javier Assad threw 1.1 innings and didn’t allow a run, throwing 20 strikes among his 29 pitches, a good first outing of the spring.
In the fourth, Jefferson Rojas gave the Cubs a 1-0 lead with his first home run of the spring. This is an excellent location for a pitch to hit and Rojas did not miss:
The Cubs scored two more runs in the fifth off former Cubs No. 1 draft pick (2017) Alex Lange, thanks in part to an error from the usually sure-handed Royals shortstop Bobby Witt Jr. James Triantos singled in both runs. Triantos and Scott Kingery also stole bases in that inning.
There were a number of ABS challenges in this game and here’s one made by Royals center fielder Kyle Isbel. The call on the field was strike three and it was confirmed. As you can see, it was close, but a strike:
For the Cubs, Ariel Armas and Justin Dean both challenged and the calls were confirmed, so by the sixth inning the Cubs had no challenges left. That’s fine for a spring game where guys are testing out the system, but in a regular season game you probably won’t see two challenges like that, that early.
Porter Hodge had a much better outing this time than his first time out, striking out a pair in a scoreless inning, with just one walk. I’d think Hodge still has a chance at the Opening Day roster, if he can put together more innings like this.
Ryan Rolison and Collin Snider, both of whom could wind up on the Iowa Shuttle this year, threw scoreless innings against mostly Royals minor leaguers. Josh Rojas homered off Cubs minor leaguer Tyler Ras for KC’s only run.
That’s about all I’ve got from this one, without any video to show you.
The Cubs will return to Sloan Park Tuesday afternoon to face the Padres. Shōta Imanaga will start for the Cubs and Marco Gonzales will go for San Diego. Game time Tuesday is again 2:05 p.m. CT. No TV again Tuesday, and there will be a radio broadcast online via SD Audio.
William Stromgren is turning heads in the American Hockey League.
The 22-year-old Swedish forward was named AHL Player of the Week after a dominant three-game stretch with the Calgary Wranglers, piling up three goals and three assists for six points while posting an impressive plus-6 rating. Stromgren’s strong two-way play and offensive touch were on full display, driving the Wranglers’ attack and providing consistent production at even strength.
The recent surge adds to what has been a steady and productive campaign. Through 45 games this season, Stromgren has registered 10 goals and 27 assists for 37 points, continuing to solidify himself as one of the organization’s most promising young forwards.
Originally selected 45th overall in the second round of the 2021 NHL Draft by the Calgary Flames, Stromgren is beginning to show why the club invested a high pick in the skilled winger. His development has been trending upward, combining size, skating ability, and offensive instincts into a reliable AHL presence.
While his time with the big club was brief, his recent AHL performance suggests it may not be long before Stromgren pushes for another look. For now, he continues to build confidence and momentum in Calgary’s system — and his Player of the Week honours are further proof that his development is right on track.
Lakers backup center Jaxson Hayes’ status is being considered “day-to-day” after imaging on his right ankle revealed a “little bruise,” coach JJ Redick told reporters after Monday’s practice.
Hayes played five first-half minutes during Sunday’s home loss to the Celtics before the team ruled him out of halftime because of a right ankle injury.
Jaxson Hayes guards Payton Pritchard of the Boston Celtics. Getty Images
When in the lineup, the 7-foot Hayes has consistently been the backup big man behind starting center Deandre Ayton.
Hayes has averaged 6.8 points on 77% shooting and 3.8 rebounds through 47 games.
Redick said he believed Hayes would be listed as questionable for Tuesday’s home game against the Magic.
Magic guard Jalen Suggs is listed as questionable for Tuesday because of a strained back after sitting out Orlando’s Sunday win over the Clippers because of back spasms.
Yankees baseball is back, and even though it’s only been a handful of games it feels like a turning point in the year to see the boys put on pinstripes and take the field at last. We’ve got a loaded schedule this year for spring with the World Baseball Classic right around the corner, and several Yankees participating in the competition means they’ve got to be in game shape quite quickly. To his credit, Aaron Judge certainly appears so after he made his spring debut memorable with a pair of homers already on his soon-to-be-wiped stat line.
With all this going on, there’s plenty to react to and look forward to as spring begins to unfold. Will we see a dark horse emerge from the spring hopefuls to make the roster? Will any of the regular starters stand out with a particularly hot spring, and does it matter if they do? Who has the deepest roster heading into the WBC? If you have questions like these, or anything else on your mind, send ‘em in for a chance to be featured in our Yankees mailbag.
Answers will run on Friday afternoon. All questions received by the night of February 19th will be considered. You can leave your submissions in the comment section below or by e-mail to pinstripealleyblog [at] gmail [dot] com.