Here are the lineups. For the Phillies:
For the Red Sox:
Let’s talk about it.
Here are the lineups. For the Phillies:
For the Red Sox:
Let’s talk about it.
It feels like the Athletics are on the precipice of something great. For all the difficulties the organization has had with its ugly breakup with the city of Oakland and the will-they-won’t-they future in Las Vegas, the actual on-field baseball product looks very promising. There’s a very strong core already established on the position player side of things and the team has done very well to lock up a lot of those young stars to long-term contract extensions.
The pitching staff is definitely a few steps behind the position player core which is a big reason why they’re not projected to be in the AL Wild Card mix this year. Their temporary home in West Sacramento played a very significant role in boosting offense to the detriment of the home team’s pitchers in 2025 and it’ll continue to be a factor as long as they’re stuck in limbo there. The result is a pretty lopsided roster — it’s very possible the A’s will outslug all of their opponents, but they’ll be fighting an uphill battle with a pitching staff that’s allergic to preventing runs.
| Position | Athletics Projected WAR | Mariners Projected WAR | Edge |
|---|---|---|---|
| Catcher | 3.1 | 6.1 | Mariners |
| First Base | 3.6 | 2.9 | Athletics |
| Second Base | 3.0 | 2.7 | Athletics |
| Shortstop | 3.7 | 2.8 | Athletics |
| Third Base | 2.0 | 3.0 | Mariners |
| Left Field | 2.4 | 2.2 | Athletics |
| Center Field | 2.6 | 6.0 | Mariners |
| Right Field | 2.3 | 2.0 | Athletics |
| Designated Hitter | 3.0 | 1.6 | Athletics |
| Starting Pitching | 10.2 | 14.2 | Mariners |
| Relief Pitching | 1.4 | 3.4 | Mariners |
| Total | 25.7 | 46.8 | Mariners |
The contours of how the Athletics and Mariners lineup against each other are actually pretty interesting. The A’s hold the projected advantage at six of the nine field positions but the M’s are projected to earn 3.6 fWAR more in total from their position players. Such is the advantage of Seattle’s superstars at catcher and center field. And as you can see from each position’s projected fWAR, the Athletics don’t have that caliber of superstar at any position like the Mariners do — each position has an above average projection but no elite contributor. The pitching is the problem. It’s a long shot but if they manage to develop one of their back-end starters into a mid-rotation arm, it would go a long way towards pulling their pitching staff out of the depths of misery.
Just like their stadium situation, the A’s big league roster is in a state of limbo, not yet fully realized but making steady progress towards something tangible. If enough things break their way this year, they could sneak into the AL Wild Card picture, but they’re more likely to play the role of very dangerous spoiler for their rivals in the division. —JM
2026 FanGraphs Depth Charts projections: 78.7-83.3, 4th in AL West, 25.3% playoff odds
2026 PECOTA projections: 76.9-85.1, 4th in AL West, 10.8% playoff odds
Youth hasn’t got anything to do with chronological age. It’s times of hope and happiness. – Wallace Stegner, Crossing to Safety
Warner L. Thomas is (finally) alone in the elevator and all he can do is laugh.
At the silly West Sacramento peasants scuttling all over this place.
At the gaudy green and yellow pin affixed to the lapel of his light gray custom suit.
At the way the universe really does continue to cast him in an ever-radiant beam of sunlight.
Seven years ago, his predecessor signed a contract locking in 15 years of naming rights for this dinky little ballpark. The amount wasn’t made public and, frankly, Warner can’t be bothered to learn or care, but it was certainly less than a decade of his salary. Warner can’t be bothered with much of this pomp and circumstance, to be honest. When this place became Sutter Health Park, home of the Lake Rats or whatever the hell they were called, he was down in Louisiana, far too busy orchestrating a steady monopoly on healthcare in the state to think about a b-side city in California, let alone baseball.
But a year after he was hired as President and CEO, a baseball team – one of the real ones, not like the Lake Rats – announced they would be playing their games for the next three years at Sutter Health Park. It was an embarrassment of marketing and PR riches simply thrown into their laps. They’d paid for naming rights to a ballpark for babies, and now they were namechecked constantly on a national level.
Most audacious of all? The team had been good this year. Good enough that an October wind had caused goosebumps to break out uncomfortably across the top of his exposed head as he’d loitered importantly on the field before the game. Everyone around him there had looked young and vibrant, evidence of their vitality clearly displayed beneath garish yellow and green. Warren felt small alongside these men, which he did not like, and confused, which he liked even less. Why was someone talking about churning 50 tubs of butter? How are they yelling for someone named Rook, while also jabbering to a child, who looks nothing like the aforementioned Rook, about an AL Rookie Race? None of that matters to Warner, though. He has done what is required of him, and soon (he hopes; the sounds the elevator makes do not give him confidence) he will be sipping something dark and expensive in the indoor portion of a suite. He’ll be able to see the sell out crowd, the teeming masses of yellow, and green, and teal, but he won’t have to actually be near them. Just as he likes it.
What a time of hope and happiness, indeed. —IM
Home is a notion that only nations of the homeless fully appreciate and only the uprooted comprehend. – Wallace Stegner, Angle of Repose
To know a home is to leave it, a thing that can only be understood in its absence. Two years in, it starts to weigh on them. In visible ways: the running list in the group chat of visitor clubhouses, always cramped and small and smelly, that are nicer than their so-called home clubhouse. In less visible ways, too, ways that crawl under their skin and stay there: ATH the only line in the box score, a jarring contrast against the other teams known by their city names. What is a place without a name? What is a team?
It’s hard not to feel a twinge of jealousy, visiting other ballparks packed to the brim with hometown fans. They’d played angry that first year, putting an exclamation point on the fact that it might be a minor-league park but they were still major-league players. In the second year of this, with no promise of it ending soon, they’re still angry, still defiant, but also so tired. Tired of the subpar facilities, tired of the snide remarks, tired of living minor-league lives in West Sacramento. They’ve all worked hard, proven themselves, just as much as any other player in the league; they all know they deserve better. At the same time, they all know that doesn’t change anything, that the decision is made above their heads. They all tell themselves they’re fine with it, because what choice do they have?
Rooker, Butler, and Soderstrom started them off, signing extensions that promised a future, to themselves, to A’s fans everywhere, and to their teammates. Next off-season, Wilson and Kurtz follow. This is a core. This is a future. Everything else might be shifting sands around them but this foundation is ironclad.
The cracks appear in mid-May, during a brutal stretch, 19 games in 20 days. They don’t have to leave California, technically, but it feels like they’ve traveled all over. It starts with two interleague series, always weird, and they manage to sweep the Cardinals but then get demolished by the Giants in a sweep, their orange-and-black fans swarming all over Sutter Health Park. Then a four-game set at Anaheim, objectively a worse team than them, but they struggle towards a split, the big red A looming above like it’s taunting them. From there they go to San Diego, the ballpark jammed full for a weekend series, fans crowded into every available space soaking up the late spring sunshine, and this is what it should be like. They scrape out one win in the series and they’re lucky for that, a ninth-inning two-run go-ahead blast by Kurtz that feels like they could get back on track, at least until they’re steamrolled in Sunday’s finale. A sell-out crowd in San Diego watches the Padres dismantle the A’s pitching staff. They have to bring out a position player to pitch the bottom of the eighth. The San Diego fans are insufferable. The mood on the flight home is poisonous.
They go back home, but it doesn’t feel like it. Mariners fans descend on the ballpark for their first series of the year, teal just as prominent as kelly green in the stands. It’s like they’re back in Mesa at Hohokam. They lose the series, slip further back in the AL West. Then the Yankees come to town, with their media circus and their massive staff and their legions of fans who line the ballpark in stark black and white, chanting MVP every time Judge steps on the field. Soderstrom gets into it with a Judge fan in left field and gets fined. Then in the series finale, Wilson, facing a flamethrowing Yankees reliever with terrible command, takes an inside pitch off his wrist and they can all hear the sick crack of the bone breaking. McNeil, who’s standing in the on-deck circle, charges the mound and they’re brawling, an empty-the-bullpens, highlights-on-ESPN kind of brawl. They get swept.
Sometimes moments like these are turning points, bringing the team together to battle through adversity. That’s not what happens here. Everything has become too much. They have exceeded the angle of repose, the highest things can be piled up before they start to slip apart. When you don’t have a home base, everything is on shifting ground.
They finish fourth in the AL West. The timeline is adjusted on the ballpark, adjusted again. A lockout looms. A cold comfort: they don’t have anywhere to be locked out from. —KP
The Michigan Wolverines baseball team continued their strong start to the season last weekend with a series win at San Diego. Taking 2-of-3 brought the Wolverines’ record to 6-4 overall on the young season, with three wins coming against ranked teams.
Michigan stayed put in California, having played at Cal State Northridge on Tuesday. The Wolverines will also face Pepperdine in a three-game series this weekend. Let’s take a look at what happened against the Matadors, and then preview the upcoming series at Pepperdine.
The Wolverines and Matadors needed extra innings to decide the outcome of the game, and it was Cal State Northridge coming out on top, 9-8, in 12 innings on Tuesday.
After the Matadors scored a run in the second to get things started, Michigan exploded for six runs in the top of the third inning thanks to a Jack Laffitte RBI single, a Colby Turner RBI double, a Brenden Stressler two-run single and then a Cade Ladehoff home run. All of a sudden, the Wolverines were up 6-1.
Turner hit another RBI double to plate two more to Michigan up, 8-1, but Cal State Northridge answered with a run in the fifth, five runs in the sixth and another run in the eighth to tie the game up at 8-8. The Matadors hit the game-winning single in the 12th to seal the deal.
The big matchup of the week will be this weekend against the Pepperdine Waves. The Waves have struggled mightily so far to start the year, getting out to a 2-9 start. They were swept by USC to begin the season, and then beat Fresno State once before losing the next two to the Bulldogs. Pepperdine’s most recent series was against Yale, and the Bulldogs took 2-of-3.
Like Michigan, Pepperdine also had a Tuesday game this week. The Waves went on the road to take on Cal Poly and got obliterated, 12-2.
It’s not a big surprise to see Pepperdine get off to a rough start, as its 2025 season was a struggle. The Waves finished with an ugly 12-42 record last season. They failed to qualify for the WCC Tournament.
Most of these California schools are solid given the year-round warmth, but Pepperdine is one that is struggling right now.
Pepperdine has struggled offensively this season, and there are no players on the team hitting above .300. First baseman James Dell’Amico has been the most consistent, as he is hitting .281 after 32 at-bats. However, power isn’t a big strength of his, as he has zero extra-base hits and only two RBIs. Infielder Joshua Woodworth is hitting .294, but he only has 17 plate appearances on the year.
On the mound, Michigan will likely see Casey Euper, Collin Valentine and Tommy Scavone starting for the Waves. Euper has been sensational so far this year, as he currently has a 0.87 ERA through 10.1 innings. He has given up just five hits and one earned run with four strikeouts and three walks.
Valentine has also been terrific this year. He currently has a 2.35 ERA with 15.1 innings pitched. He has allowed 14 hits and four earned runs with six strikeouts and five walks. Lastly, Scavone has given up eight earned runs in 15 innings pitched for a 4.80 ERA. He has been a strikeout machine, however, ringing up 16 batters so far while only walking six. He has given up 10 hits.
Despite the offensive struggles, Pepperdine has a solid pitching rotation that will present a challenge for Michigan. However, the Waves have issues out of the bullpen, so if the Wolverines are able to get to the starters early in the game, that would go a long way in winning at least a couple games in this series. It would be pretty disappointing if Michigan doesn’t win at least two.
The Los Angeles Lakers (37-24) travel to Ball Arena for a game against the Denver Nuggets (38-24) tonight. Luka Doncic and the Lakers take the court on a three-game winning streak while Nikola Jokic has the Nuggets treading water but maintaining a Top 4 seed in the West despite injuries to key rotation pieces including Aaron Gordon and Peyton Watson. That 4-seed will be put on the line tonight as the Lakers sit just a half game behind Denver.
The individual battle between superstars Luka Dončić and Nikola Jokić remains the headline attraction. Dončić, the league's leading scorer at 32.4 points per game, has been the catalyst for the Lakers' recent surge, which includes dominant wins over the Warriors and Kings. Meanwhile, Jokić continues his MVP-caliber campaign, averaging a triple-double (28.7 points, 12.6 rebounds, and 10.3 assists).
These teams met earlier this season on January 20 with the Lakers winning at home, 115-107. Luka Doncic had a triple-double and LeBron James chipped in with 19 points. Nikola Jokic missed the game due to injury. A win tonight clinches the season series for the Los Angeles.
This matchup is widely considered a "prove-it" game for the Lakers, who have struggled against the elite teams in the West. A win tonight would not only mark a four-game streak but also give the Lakers the No. 4 seed and the potential tiebreaker advantage in the conference standings if one is needed.
Lets take a closer look at tonight’s matchup and take into consideration lineups, injuries, and other factors affecting the line and total.
We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on how to catch tipoff, odds courtesy of DraftKings recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.
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This game opened Nuggets -4.5 with the Total set at 238.5.
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Ricky Tiedemann is a 23-year-old, left-handed pitcher. The Jays picked him in the third round of the 2021 draft. He was added to the 40-man roster on November 18th, 2025. He’ll be using his first option year this year.
As you know, he had Tommy John surgery in August of 2024, missing all of the 2025 season. And, just to add to our worries, he’s been on the shelf this spring, since February 24, because of elbow soreness. The team said that an MRI came back clean. They also said that he could be shut down for but I haven’t seen anything suggesting he is throwing again.
I’m ok with them taking things slowly. It isn’t all that unusual for some soreness when coming back from Tommy John.
Until the Tommy John, he was progressing very nicely. In 2024 he was #1 on our prospect list. Tom M wrote:
2023 was derailed by injuries, including shoulder soreness that delayed his debut by a couple of weeks and a bicep strain that knocked him out from early May through late July. In the 44 innings he managed, mostly at AA, he was as comically dominant as ever, posting a 44% strikeout rate and a 1.68 FIP. He got 18 more innings of work in the Arizona Fall League.
Tiedemann has the prototype power pitcher’s frame at 6’4” and a broad shouldered 220lbs. He throws from the far first base side of the rubber with a slingy delivery and low, wide arm slot that makes the ball feel like it’s coming straight at righties and from behind lefties’ ears. That release point complements the big horizontal movement on all three of his pitches. The fastball sits 94-96 and touches 98 without much vertical rise but with huge arm side run. His best secondary has been a changeup with depth and run, although it backed up a bit in 2023. His slider is a big sweeper, again with huge horizontal break (so much that hitters are sometimes able to lay off it because it looks like a ball inside before breaking all the way across the zone and being called a ball outside), which he has great feel to land in the zone for strikes. It’s three pitches that can all be plus, although he hasn’t regularly had all three sharp at the same time yet. Tiedemann’s command never quite locked in in 2023 with all the disruptions, but in spite of a somewhat unorthodox delivery it could wind up being average or a little above with time.
Unfortunately, the ‘derailed by injuries’ has been a continuing thing.
When he has pitched, he’s been terrific. In 41 minor league starts, 140 innings, he has 226 strikeouts and 68 walks.
He is only 23. There is lots of time for him to right the ship. There has been several pitchers who had injuries troubles when they were young and still went on to have a great career (I can almost hear people saying back that there have been lot of pitchers who had injury troubles when they were young and never got their careers back on track. Both are true).
If his arm can’t stand up to the stress of being a start, a left-handed reliever who can throw 98 mph isn’t a bad thing to have on your pitching staff.
MLB Pipeline still lists him as our number 5 prospect. They say:
Prior to the injury, Tiedemann had come into camp at 245 pounds and was bulked up closer to 255 by mid-season, but now he’s about 15 pounds above his listed weight of 220, a much more natural and athletic size for a pitcher. This has helped him become more fluid on the mound again. While 32 starts and 200 innings may never be in the cards for Tiedemann, that’s just fine. He’ll build up in a bulk role this season when he’s ready to roll, and while all of this comes with a “but” related to his health, he still has as much raw talent as any player in the Blue Jays’ system.
After it was reported that the Buffalo Sabres were strongly interested in Robert Thomas, but the deal fell through, they shifted their sights onto another St. Louis Blues player.
The Sabres are looking to add a right-handed defenseman, and according to a report from TSN’s Darren Dreger, they’ve struck a deal with the Blues involving veteran defender Colton Parayko.
The reported deal at the moment is Parayko heading to the Sabres for prospect Radim Mrtka and a first-round pick. While there could be other parts to the deal, this is the information that has been made public. The only holdup for this trade is Parayko’s approval.
The 32-year-old is in the fourth season on an eight-year, $6.5-million contract that holds a full no-trade clause until 2028. Any deal the Blues want to make involving Parayko needs his approval. If he doesn’t want to move, he can simply decline the trade and remain with the Blues.
Dreger first reported that the trade had been agreed upon and was awaiting Parayko’s approval at 4:30 on Wednesday, yet Parayko has still not made a decision.
If Parayko does accept the trade, he’ll join a Sabres blueline that is quickly becoming one of the better ones in the NHL. They boast multiple lengthy defenders, all of whom are strong skaters. Parayko would provide the Sabres with additional defensive fortitude and further balance out the defense core.
As for the Blues, they would receive the 2025 ninth overall pick, Radim Mrtka. The 18-year-old defender stands 6-foot-6, like Parayko, but possesses strong offensive instincts and a mature two-way game. Mrtka played in four AHL games before returning to the WHL, where he’s notched one goal and 29 points in 35 games.
Mrtka took home a silver medal with Team Czechia, alongside Blues prospect Adam Jiricek, at the 2026 World Junior Championship. Mrtka was the second defenseman selected at the 2025 NHL draft.
If the reports are true and Parayko does agree to be traded, the Blues will add another right-handed defenseman to their prospect pool, as well as another first-round pick.
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The Houston Astros (2-6-3) travel to Jupiter, FL to take on the Miami Marlins (4-6).
RHP Tatsuya Imai is set to make his second start of the Spring and will be opposed by 2022 NL Cy Young Award winner RHP Sandy Alcantara.
ABOUT IMAI: In January, the Astros signed free agent RHP Tatsuya Imai to a three-year deal.
In his Spring debut on Feb. 26 vs. NYM, he tossed a scoreless 1.0 inning (10 pitches). Imai, 27, has been one of the top starting pitchers in Japan in recent years. In 2025, he was an All-Star for the Seibu Lions in the Nippon Professional Baseball Organization (NPB), where he went 10-5 with a 1.92 ERA (35ER/163.2IP) in 24 games.
Among qualified pitchers, Imai posted the lowest WHIP (0.89) in the Pacific League, while ranking second with 178 strikeouts in his 163.2 innings pitched. Imai has been an NPB All-Star three times in his career (2021, 2024, 2025) that has spanned parts of eight seasons (2018-25). He went 58-45 overall with a 3.15 ERA (337ER/963.2IP) in 159 games in the NPB.
TODAY’S POTENTIAL RELIEVERS: RHP Spencer Arrighetti, LHP Tom Cosgrove, RHP Anthony Maldonado, LHP Steven Okert, RHP Logan VanWey, RHP Amos Willingham and RHP Sam Carlson.
VS. THE MARLINS: Today will mark the second of five Grapefruit League matchups between the Astros and Marlins this Spring. The clubs will also meet for a Spring Breakout exhibition on March 19 at CACTI Park of the Palm Beaches. The Astros are 1-0 vs. the Marlins this Spring.
TODAY’S ROSTER MOVES: Prior to today’s game, the Astros optioned LHP Colton Gordon and RHP Miguel Ullola to minor league camp. The Astros now have 59 players in camp, including 21 non-roster invites – 32 pitchers, seven catchers, 11 infielders and nine outfielders.
ASTROS IN THE WBC: IF Shay Whitcomb is off to a fantastic start for Team Korea in this year’s WBC, going 2×4 with a pair of homers and three RBI in the team’s opener vs. Team Czechia this morning at the Tokyo Dome in Japan.
Game Date/Time: Thursday, March 5, 12:10 p.m. CST
Location: Roger Dean Chevrolet Stadium, Jupiter, FL.
TV: none
Streaming: MLB.com (audio only)
Radio: KBME 790 AM/94.5 FM HD-2
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) — The Houston Astros sent All-Star shortstop Jeremy Peña to see a hand specialist on Thursday for further examination of an injury to his right ring finger that has made his immediate availability for the World Baseball Classic unclear.
Astros manager Joe Espada told reporters at the team's spring training complex that Peña had some damage to the nail area on the finger after fielding a hard groundball for the Dominican Republic national team during an exhibition game on Wednesday. Peña was pulled after that.
The Dominican Republic plays its first game of the WBC on Friday in Miami against Nicaragua.
The 28-year-old Peña is coming off a career-best season in 2025, when he made his first All-Star team and batted .304 with an .840 OPS and 20 stolen bases.
___
AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB
The Toronto Raptors, by just about any measure, are enjoying a highly successful season. At 35-26, they’ve surpassed all reasonable expectations for a team that picked up just 30 wins last year. They have two All-Stars, and are well on their way to a playoff appearance.
And yet, Tuesday’s loss to the New York Knicks cemented a concern that’s been on many Raptors fans’ minds: They can’t seem to beat good teams.
The Raptors are currently just 4-16 against the 10 teams ahead of them in the NBA standings. Three of those four wins came early on against the then-struggling Cleveland Cavaliers who had not yet added James Harden. Four of the losses, meanwhile, have come against the Knicks, each by a margin of 16 or greater.
On the flip side, the Raptors are a dominant 31-10 against the 18 teams beneath them in the league standings. Beating bad/mediocre teams is not a useless exercise: Those results make a big difference when it comes to fighting for playoff seeding.
But as the playoffs draw closer, the Raptors’ woes against top teams are becoming an increasingly worrying indicator that they’ll struggle in the postseason.
Their recent results bear out this trend. Toronto is 3-3 in their last six games: The losses all came against teams in a playoff spot, while each win was against a team outside of the playoff picture.
Tonight, the Raptors will have their work cut out for them as they head to Minnesota to take on the 39-23 Timberwolves, at 8 p.m. EST on Sportsnet.
These two teams last faced each other about a month ago, when the Wolves won 128-126 led by a 30-point performance by Anthony Edwards. The Wolves have been especially hot since the All-Star break, winning seven of their last eight games. Meanwhile, the Raptors could be without their top scorer as Brandon Ingram is questionable with a thumb injury.
Ingram scored 25 and was a +2 in their loss against the Wolves. And following Tuesday’s loss to the Knicks, in which Toronto came within two points with six minutes left only to end up losing by 16, Ingram spoke about the need to overcome their persistent issues executing in the fourth quarter.
“I think every time we play a good team, they know exactly where they want to go in the fourth quarter, and they do it over and over again,” Ingram said.
He added, “The good thing is, we’re in the games. But we got to figure out how to finish the game.”
That fourth quarter execution issue was on full display when the Wolves overcame an 18-point deficit to beat the Raptors in February.
The Raptors may be down their top scorer in their rematch against the Wolves, but they’ll have a new weapon for the rematch: Jakob Poeltl missed that first game and will be active tonight. While sometimes looking diminished as he returns from his back injury, Poeltl has been valuable for the offense as a screener, and his size will be key in matching up against Rudy Gobert. Collin Murray-Boyles remains out.
The Raptors have some things to clean up outside of fourth quarter execution. Their defense looked at times lethargic against the Knicks, and they made a number of mistakes and miscommunications that led to rapid scoring opportunities that may very well have cost them the game.
The Timberwolves have the league’s sixth-rated defense which features Gobert, a perennial Defensive Player of the Year candidate/winner down low, and Jaden McDaniels, one of the league’s premier perimeter defenders. The Timberwolves have also added guard Ayo Dosunmu since their last matchup.
Scottie Barnes may need to shoulder a larger offensive load if Ingram is out – and he may also draw the assignment of guarding Edwards, one of the league’s most dynamic and athletic scorers.
It won’t be easy for the Raptors. But if they want to change the narrative about facing good teams, they’ll have to win some tough ones.
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Joining the Golden State Warriors hasn’t been as glamorous as Al Horford hoped.
The veteran was supposed to be a complementary piece on a championship contender, but with injuries ravaging the Dubs, Horford is carrying more of the load lately.
My Warriors vs. Rockets predictions and NBA picks for Thursday, March 5 bank on “Big Al” to battle on the boards.
Don't miss tip-off at 7:30 p.m. ET on Prime Video.
Warriors vs Rockets best bet: Al Horford Over 5.5 rebounds (-112)
Al Horford’s floor time jumped in the past seven outings, logging more than 26 minutes and hauling in an average of 5.2 rebounds.
He’s snagged six or more boards in four of those showings, and his rebounding chances spiked to 9.2 in that frame — up from 7.7 before that uptick in action.
He could face less competition on the glass vs. a Houston Rockets frontcourt missing a ton of size, with its top four rebounders either questionable or out Thursday.
Projections sit north of six rebounds from Horford, with Over 5.5 priced as high as -130 at other books.
Houston is back home after a road-heavy schedule. The Rockets are trying to hold on to the No. 3 seed in the West, while the Golden State Warriors are sinking like a stone with two wins in the last seven games and little motivation to make the postseason cut.
Horford is getting more run with the Dubs roster depleted, and Houston’s frontcourt could be running thin, with several forwards dealing with ailments.
Gui Santos is enjoying an uptick in offensive touches due to the Warriors’ injury issues. Before a bad outing vs. the Clippers, he scored 13 or more points in nine of his last 10 games and is projected for 14.4 points tonight.
There’s no love lost between these former teammates. Draymond Green gets the Golden State offense going while Kevin Durant comes up short on his scoring total, but helps pick up the slack on the glass.
Houston is the best home Under bet in the NBA, going 9-17-1 Over/Under inside Toyota Center. Find more NBA betting trends for Warriors vs. Rockets.
| Location | Toyota Center, Houston, TX |
| Date | Thursday, March 5, 2026 |
| Tip-off | 7:30 p.m. ET |
| TV | Prime Video |
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Andrew McCutchen turns 40 this October. Yet his desire to extend his Major League Baseball career runs deep enough that he's willing to try and make a team to keep it going.
McCutchen agreed to a minor-league contract with the Texas Rangers, the Dallas Morning News reported, ending a three-season rekindling of his relationship with the Pittsburgh Pirates in which the club could not rekindle its days of playoff contention when the outfielder was in MVP form a decade ago.
Though McCutchen batted just .242 in his three-season reunion in Pittsburgh, he remained a league average hitter for the stint, posting a .736 OPS and 104 adjusted OPS as the Pirates continued to struggle creating a contender. This season, the seemingly open invitation McCutchen had in Pittsburgh faded away, as the club signed Ryan O'Hearn to be their primary right fielder.
It seemed a lane might exist for McCutchen to get at-bats against left-handed pitchers, but trades with Boston and Tampa Bay that added Jhostnyxon Garcia and Jake Mangum, respectively, closed that off.
So, McCutchen will aim to win a job out of the Rangers' camp in Surprise, Arizona. The club has emerging star Wyatt Langford, oft-injured Evan Carter and recently acquired Brandon Nimmo as their primary outfielders, but several iterations remain where McCutchen is a fit, particularly against left-handed pitching.
McCutchen won the 2013 NL MVP for the Pirates and has hit 332 homers that also included stops with San Francisco, Philadelphia, Milwaukee and the New York Yankees.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Andrew McCutchen contract with Texas Rangers on minor league deal
Reported asking price for Robert Thomas trade is high: Should Bruins pay it? originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston
There are less than 24 hours remaining before Friday’s 3 p.m. ET NHL trade deadline, and the Boston Bruins still haven’t made a move.
B’s general manager Don Sweeney typically is pretty active at the trade deadline, whether he’s a buyer or seller. Last year, he dealt away a ton of veterans and received several quality prospects and draft picks in return. Those trades, at least so far, are looking very promising for the franchise.
Those assets give the Bruins extra firepower to make moves ahead of this year’s deadline if there’s a player(s) that interests Sweeney.
The top player rumored to be available is St. Louis Blues forward Robert Thomas. He is a first-line caliber center early in his prime at just 26 years old.
Thomas is an elite playmaker who has tallied 60-plus assists and 80-plus points in each of the two previous seasons. He also averaged 21.25 goals scored over the last four seasons. A potential first-line duo of Thomas and David Pastrnak would be a lot of fun to watch.
Thomas’ production this season has been down a bit. He has scored 13 goals with 24 assists in 44 games. But he has missed 17 of the Blues’ 61 games.
A No. 1 center has been the Bruins’ top roster need since Patrice Bergeron retired in 2023. Elias Lindholm is a very good player, but he’s not a true No. 1 center. Fraser Minten is having the best season of his young career, but it’s no guarantee he develops into a top-six center on a contending team.
Bringing in Thomas would bolster the Bruins’ biggest weakness. And it wouldn’t be a rental, either, because Thomas is signed long-term. His contract runs through the 2030-31 season with an $8.125 million salary cap hit, which isn’t steep at all when you consider how much the salary cap is projected to rise in the near future.
The cost to acquire Thomas via trade is understandably very high.
The Athletic’s Jeremy Rutherford, on Feb. 26, reported it to be “three first-half-of-the-first-round assets. For example, that could mean an established young player, a drafted prospect and a draft pick who were all selected or could be taken in the first 15 or so picks.”
Based on Rutherford’s parameters, a hypothetical trade package from the Bruins might have to include a first-round pick and a top prospect such as James Hagens or Dean Letourneau, plus another asset or two, to satisfy the Blues’ asking price. Hagens was the No. 7 overall pick in the 2025 NHL Draft and is having a fantastic season for Boston College. Letourneau, who was the No. 24 overall pick in 2024, is having a great season for BC, too. Both players are Hobey Baker Award nominees this year. Boston’s best young players with NHL experience are Minten, Mason Lohrei and Matt Poitras.
The question the Bruins must ask themselves is how soon can Hagens develop into a valuable contributor? Will Hagens ever develop into a player of Thomas’ caliber?
The Bruins’ core is Pastrnak (29 years old), Charlie McAvoy (28), Jeremy Swayman (27), Morgan Geekie (27), Hampus Lindholm (32), Elias Lindholm (31), Pavel Zacha (28) and Fraser Minten (21). Most of the core is still in its prime, but outside of Minten, they’re not necessarily young, either. How old will Pastrnak and McAvoy be by the time Hagens is a key part of the team? Can the Bruins afford to wait that long with this group?
Thomas, at 26 years old, fits the age timeline of Boston’s core players. He’s already a legit top-six forward, and he still has room for improvement. He would accelerate Boston’s journey toward being an elite team again.
The Bruins, as a result of last year’s trade deadline selling, would still have plenty of quality young players/prospects even if they gave up a lot to land Thomas. Boston’s prospect pool and draft pick stash would not have to be completely gutted to get him, despite the asking price for the Blues star being very high.
The B’s could still have a potential lottery pick in the 2026 NHL Draft (via the Toronto Maple Leafs’ first rounder, top-five protected), plus an extra first-rounder in 2027 from the Florida Panthers. Boston also owns all its future second-round picks and has three fourth-rounders in 2026.
If the Bruins had to part with Hagens in a hypothetical Thomas trade, they’d still have Letourneau and North Dakota wing Will Zellers as prospects with the potential to be difference makers at the NHL level.
Parting with a couple awesome assets for Thomas would be tough for Bruins fans. There’s no doubt about that. But No. 1 centers are extremely difficult to find. You have to draft and develop them, or make a trade for one. They almost never get to free agency anymore. And players of Thomas’ caliber and age rarely are available via trade, either.
It’s a unique situation the Bruins should take advantage of. Adding Thomas wouldn’t immediately make the Bruins one of the top three Stanley Cup contenders this season, but it gets them a lot closer to being in that group.
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It’s a jam-packed night of hoops action with nine games on the board, full of NBA player props for bettors to dive into.
I’ve found my three favorites for today, which include Devin Booker staying hot for the Phoenix Suns and Nikola Jokic dishing out the dimes against the Los Angeles Lakers.
Those and more NBA picks below on Thursday, March 5.
| Player | Pick | |
|---|---|---|
| Double-double | +290 | |
| Over 2.5 made threes | +140 | |
| Over 10.5 assists | +105 |
+290 at bet365
The Orlando Magic are fighting to avoid the Play-In, and that means taking care of business against a banged-up Dallas Mavericks team.
The Mavericks' injury list is long and includes No. 1 pick Cooper Flagg, who is questionable with a foot injury. It’s also devastated their depth in the frontcourt, and teams have taken advantage.
Dallas ranks dead last in opponent points in the paint per game.
So, I’m targeting Wendell Carter Jr. He’s averaging 10 points and 10 rebounds over his last seven games, so getting him to record a double-double at +290 is great value tonight.
+140 at bet365
Devin Booker returned after missing 12 of 15 games and immediately let it fly against the Sacramento Kings, going 4-for-9 from 3-point range.
I’m betting the Phoenix Suns’ star guard stays hot in another great matchup against the Chicago Bulls.
The Bulls’ defensive effort has waned, as they rank 28th in defensive rating over the last 15 games. They are also surrendering the sixth-most opponent-made threes per game over that stretch.
At this price, I love backing Booker to have another big night from beyond the arc.
+105 at bet365
The Los Angeles Lakers and Denver Nuggets are similar teams, which is probably why they’re battling in the Western Conference standings.
These are two excellent offensive rosters that aren’t giving the same effort at the other end. The Lakers, in particular, rank 22nd in defensive rating and allow the fourth-worst opponent effective field goal percentage.
The Nuggets obviously move the ball well, and the Lakers also rank 26th in opponent assists per possession. So, let’s not overthink this. Nikola Jokic averages 10.3 assists per game, and we are getting plus money for him to go Over a number he’s topped in five of his last 10.
These props are available now at bet365, one of our best betting sites.
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With the trade deadline upon us, rumours are swirling everywhere around the league, and there are a couple of big-name goaltenders reported to be on the market. Given how the Montreal Canadiens have struggled in net, could they try to bolster the position before tomorrow’s trade deadline?
Samuel Montembeault has struggled out of the gate this season and has a 10-8-3 record on the season with a 3.37 goals-against average, while rookie Jakub Dobes, who started the season as the backup, has a 19-6-4 record with a 3.04 GAA and a .889 SV. Despite not having great numbers, Dobes leads all rookie goaltenders in wins with his 19 triumphs. San Jose Sharks’ rookie Yaroslav Askarov also has 19 wins, but he earned them in 38 games, while Dobes saw only 29 games of action.
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Despite the goalies’ underwhelming numbers, the president of hockey operations, Jeff Gorton, said in an interview with Sportsnet’s Eric Engels that the Canadiens are probably more comfortable than most people think with their goalies. But Kent Hughes and Gorton have both said in the past that Hughes has his fingers on the pulse of the trade market and that it’s his job to know what’s out there and how much it could go for. When Gorton spoke to Engels, the names of Sergei Bobrovsky and Jordan Binnington weren’t out there.
Now that the Florida Panthers are on their way to missing the playoffs after winning back-to-back Stanley Cups, and the veteran goaltender is in the last year of his contract, he could become a solid rental option. Despite being 29 years old, Montembeault has only played three playoff games in his career, just like 24-year-old Dobes, meaning the Canadiens could certainly use some experience in net.
However, with his $10 M cap hit, Bobrosky would be tricky to acquire; the Canadiens would need the Panthers to be willing to take Patrik Laine and a goaltender in return, which doesn’t appear very likely. It wouldn’t be cheap to convince them to play ball, and the Habs have said in the past that they do not want to have to part with assets to move the big Finn.
Besides, it’s hard to imagine Hughes being willing to sacrifice assets for a very temporary solution. As for Binnington, he’s in year five of his six-year, $6M cap hit contract. The St. Louis Blues have been in a lot of trade rumours of late because of their abysmal results, and it’s not hard to imagine them being ready to move on from the netminder.
He has proven he can win, guiding the Blues to a Stanley Cup as a rookie in 2019 and winning the 4 Nations Face-Off with Canada last year. However, he is having an awful season; he’s 8-18-6 in 33 games with a 3.60 GAA and a .867 SV. Would a change of scenery instantly make him better? That’s doubtful.
There’s no denying that the Canadiens will soon have to make a big decision when it comes to their goaltending. Prospect Jacob Fowler didn’t look out of place in the 10 games he played in the big league this season, and he could very well end up starting the next season in Montreal, making one of Montembeault and Dobes surplus to requirements. Acquiring Binnington would probably delay his arrival, and if the Habs’ brass deems him ready, it would make very little sense. Unless, of course, they intend to move on from both Montembeault and Dobes, but that’s easier said than done.
It feels as if the Canadiens are likely to get reinforcements in net, they are more likely to come from the Laval Rocket than from outside. Giving Fowler some playoff experience would make much more sense than acquiring a band-aid solution.
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Daniel Jesus Palencia, the 26-year-old Venezuelan native, is the Cubs’ current closer. It’s his second year in the top spot, and so far he looks like he plans to stay there.
Palencia throws the ball hard and has evidenced decent control of his offerings. Last year, he had a losing record (1-6), but also logged a 2.91 ERA, with 22 saves and 61 strikeouts, in 52.2 innings in 54 games, good for 0.6 bWAR (1.0 fWAR). He have up 5 home runs and issued 16 bases on balls. That’s good stuff.
Projections generally have him throwing a few more innings but continuing in the same vein, which would be just fine with the Cubs, I would imagine. A 25 plus strikeout percentage, and a 10% or under BB% are other features that Palencia is predicted to gather.
Palencia threw three pitches in 2025, out of five he has on hand. His FB can reach triple digits and sits around 98 mph, his splitter travels around 88, and his slider is around the same. He abandoned his changeup in 2024 and his curve last year. He doesn’t seem to need them. He also throws a very occasional sinker, Baseball Savant says.
Palencia gets his power from his tree-trunk thighs and Cal Raleigh fundament. At 26, he should be able to keep those heaters coming for a while still.