2008 – Randy Johnson moves into second place on the all-time major league strikeout leaderboard. He strikes out eight in 6.1 innings, most importantly getting Mike Cameron in the 1st to pass Roger Clemens for second place with 4,673. The 44-year-old “Big Unit” trails only Nolan Ryan but will not catch him.
2012 – Carlos Zambrano hits his 24th career homer as the Marlins beat the Phillies, 5-1. That ties him with Bob Gibson for second-most dingers by a pitcher in the post-1962 era, still nine behind leader Earl Wilson.
1970 – Ray Davies of The Kinks travels round trip NY-London to change one word in “Lola,” (Coca-Cola to Cherry Cola) because of a BBC commercial reference ban.
1972 – “Hot Rod Lincoln” by Commander Cody & His Lost Planet Airmen hits No. 9.
1976 – Queen’s “Bohemian Rhapsody” goes Gold.
1992 – “MTV Unplugged” broadcasts singer-songwriter Paul Simon and 11 of his band members performing in Queens, NYC.
2013 – New Zealand teenage singer-songwriter Lorde releases her debut single “Royals”.
2019 – Jay-Z named the world’s first billionaire rapper by Forbes magazine.
2023 –Ed Sheeran concert with 77,900 concertgoers breaks attendance record at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Chris Suero of the Binghamton Rumble Ponies hits the ball during a Minor League Baseball game at TD Bank Ballpark in Bridgewater, United States, on May 17, 2026. (Photo by Dan Squicciarini/NurPhoto via Getty Images) | NurPhoto via Getty Images
Early on, the RailRiders and Mets matched each other tit-for-tat, with both teams failing to score in the first and second and then both teams scoring a run apiece in the third and fourth. In the later innings, the RailRiders pulled ahead and took a lead that eventually proved too large for the Mets to catch up. They certainly did, rallying in the bottom of the ninth and scoring three runs- all with two outs- but Kevin Parada flied out to former Met Kennedy Corona to end things with the tying run on second.
Binghamton got shutout, logging only two hits- both Chris Suero singles. Suero also added a stolen base, and outside of a Nick Lorusso walk, that was literally all the Rumble Ponies managed on the evening.
Don’t look now, but the Brooklyn Cyclones are now the winners of their last 4- this one, sadly, was not a shutout. The BlueClaws got on the board first, scoring a run off of Noah Hall in the bottom of the second, but the Cyclones recouped that run and then some in the sixth. With Grae Kissinger on first, Corey Collins hit his fifth homer of the season off of the fence in right center into the “Jersey Shore” boardwalk area, putting Brooklyn on top. Dakota Hawkins pitched a 1-2-3 seventh, Ryan Dollar worked around a walk in the eighth, and Hoss Brewer did the same in the ninth, shutting the door on the BlueClaws and recording his second save.
Don’t look now, but the Detroit Tigers are undefeated in June after their 8-0 victory over the Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field on Tuesday night. Sure, the month is only two days old, but the Motor City Kitties have already scored as many runs (18) over the past pair of games as they did in the final six-and-a-half games of May.
I have no clue what happened to this team when the calendar flipped, but I am loving it!
On Wednesday afternoon, AJ Hinch’s squad will try to complete the sweep of the Rays with right-hander Troy Melton on the mound. The 25-year-old has provided some much-needed quality innings in his two starts so far in the 2026 campaign, and hopefully, he can continue to do so in the finale of the three-game series.
This will be his first-ever appearance against Tampa Bay.
Up against him will be fellow righty Nick Martinez, who has been superb so far this season, throwing seven straight quality starts — including three straight coming into Wednesday — while allowing no more than two runs in any of his 11 outings. The 35-year-old’s strikeout numbers are not particularly impressive, but he has been extraordinarily stingy when it comes to handing out free passes.
The last time Martinez faced the Tigers was last year on June 13, when he allowed four runs on eight hits and two walks while striking out five over five frames to take the loss. Hopefully, Detroit can replicate that effort — or better — on Wednesday.
Here is a look at how the two match up.
Detroit Tigers (24-38) vs. Tampa Bay Rays (36-22)
Time (ET): 1:10 p.m. Place: Tropicana Field, St. Petersburg, Florida SB Nation Site:DRaysBay Media: Detroit SportsNet, MLB.TV, Tigers Radio Network
Game 63: RHP Troy Melton (1-0, 1.42 ERA) vs. RHP Nick Martinez (5-1, 1.62 ERA)
ST PETERSBURG, FLORIDA - JUNE 02: Gleyber Torres #25 of the Detroit Tigers rounds the bases on his lead-off home run in the first inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field on June 02, 2026 in St Petersburg, Florida. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images) | Getty Images
After getting Monday off on their way back from the west coast, the Yankees returned to action Tuesday night, opening a series against the Guardians. And, well…it could have gone better.
For one, Aaron Judge was out of the lineup, as he apparently is dealing with a bone bruise, which flared up over the weekend in Sacramento. On the field, Cam Schlittler had arguably the worst start of his young career, as he gave up five runs in just 4.1 innings. Mainly thanks to Paul Goldschmidt, the Yankees’ offense kept going back and forth with Cleveland for a while. However eventually, more Guardians’ hits started to find some grass, and they pulled away and broke the game open.
While the Yankees will licking their wounds after that one, did the loss come back to haunt them in the standings? Let’s check in on Tuesday’s action in this morning’s Rivalry Roundup.
Detroit Tigers (24-38) 8, Tampa Bay Rays (36-22) 0
The Tigers have really been struggling following their playoff berths in the last two seasons, but you might not have known that in this one. They got to the Rays early an often, doing the Yankees a solid in the process.
Facing Rays’ starter Steven Matz, Detroit opened up a big lead early. In his return from the IL, Gleyber Torres took Matz deep on the fifth pitch of the game to open the scoring, and Wenceel Pérez added a two-run shot in the second. By the time the top of the second was over, the Tigers had opened up a 5-0 lead, and never really had any concerns after that.
Detroit also never really had any worries as their pitching had a big game themselves. Jack Flaherty opened the game with five scoreless innings, scattering five hits and two walks. After him, reliever Enmanuel De Jesus came in and stream-rolled the rest of the way. De Jesus inherited a runner from Flaherty when he came in for the sixth and immediately induced a double play. He then retired every batter he faced after that, meaning that he managed to throw four innings despite facing just 11 batter.
The Tigers’ offense tacked on another couple runs from there, recording 10 hits on the day, and coming away with the victory.
Other Games
Atlanta Braves (41-20) 4, Toronto Blue Jays (29-32) 3: Despite outhitting the Braves 9-6, the Blue Jays couldn’t cash in more on their opportunities, dooming them to a one-run loss. Toronto managed to quickly come back after Atlanta had taken a 2-0 lead in the first, but eventually they couldn’t continue answering after falling behing. Matt Olson’s towering sixth-inning homer just cleared the right field fence, and ended up breaking the tie for good and giving the Braves the win.
Seattle Mariners (33-29) 8, New York Mets (26-35) 3: The Mariners racked up 8 runs on 11 hits, including a trio of home runs, to dash the Mets’ Bullpen Game plans. While the Mets were initially able to answer an early 2-0 Seattle lead, the M’s started to add on and pull away after that. Right after the Mets tied the game at two in the top of the third, the Mariners responded with a run courtesy of two Mets’ errors in the bottom of the inning. Seattle then tacked on five more runs over the next couple innings, including three on a Jhonny Pereda homer.
Jun 2, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Jhoan Duran (59) celebrates win after striking out San Diego Padres left fielder Jase Bowen (4) (not pictured) to end the game in the ninth inning at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images | Eric Hartline-Imagn Images
I know the big news is the Phillies winning last night, but how about how impressively bad the Padres are at hitting with runners in scoring position? I think McCarthy said they were 0 for their last 27 against the Phillies? That’s just horrid.
May 31, 2026; Houston, Texas, USA; Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Jacob Misiorowski (32) walks to the dugout after retiring the side against the Houston Astros during the seventh inning at Daikin Park. Mandatory Credit: Erik Williams-Imagn Images | Erik Williams-Imagn Images
Jacob Misiorowski just almost went a whole month without allowing a run. Over 38 1/3 innings across six starts, he had a 0.23 ERA, he struck out 57 batters, and he walked only six.
It’s an arbitrary cutoff, but there are only four other pitchers in the history of baseball to strike out at least 57 batters and have an ERA as low as Misiorowski’s 0.23 in any six-start span: Hall of Famer Rube Waddell, who did it twice during the Deadball Era; R.A. Dickey, during his 2012 Cy Young year; Félix Hernández, during his 2010 Cy Young year; and Chris Sale in 2018, when he finished fourth in Cy Young voting despite making only 27 starts.
While Misiorowski’s six-start stretch was not the greatest in the history of baseball—it may not even have been the best in the last month, with a tip of the cap to Cristopher Sánchez—I did wonder if it was the best that Brewers fans had ever seen from one of their players.
There is a compelling case, but there’s also one mammoth, overlooked figure from the franchise’s history who needs to be given his due. Here are, from 7-to-1, the seven best six-start spans in Brewer history, according to me.
Note: A couple of these extend for more than six games. To keep things simple, in those cases I’ve taken the best six games from whatever the longer streak is, and I did not include another streak-within-a-streak. However, if a player had multiple distinct streaks, I considered them.
Another note: I will reference the Bill James stat “Game Score” in this piece. Game Score is a single number that’s used to put a sort of quick and dirty rating on a start, but in general it’s pretty accurate at reflecting effectiveness. It is calculated this way:
Start at 50
Add 1 point for each out and 2 points for each completed inning after the fourth
Add 1 point for each strikeout
Subtract 2 points for each hit, 4 points for each earned run, 2 points for each unearned run, and 1 point for each walk
7. Corbin Burnes, April 13 – May 13 2022
40 2/3 IP, 71 average Game Score, 1.33 ERA, 2.62 FIP, 53 K, 5 BB
Surprise: Burnes’ best stretch as a Brewer did not come during his 2021 Cy Young season. It came at the beginning of the next year.
At his best, Burnes was an absolute assassin. He didn’t walk anyone. He never missed spots. His best stretch put those things on display. The remarkable thing here is the walks: just five in 40 2/3 innings. He had double-digit strikeouts in three straight starts from April 19-May 1, and allowed only six runs total.
Somehow, Milwaukee only went 3-3 in these games. But it was still an awe-inspiring display of control, and Burnes’ 10.6 K:BB ratio during the span is the best of any of the contending seasons.
6. Brandon Woodruff, May 1 – May 30 2021
42 IP, 73 average Game Score, 1.07 ERA, 2.48 FIP, 49 K, 8 BB
Here you have it: during Burnes’ Cy Young season, it was Woodruff who had the best six-game stretch. And what’s even more impressive is that it was all part of a much larger streak: from April 7th, Woodruff’s second start of the season, through June 6th, he made 12 starts, never allowed more than two runs, had a 1.25 ERA, and struck out 92 batters while walking 15 in 79 innings.
By Game Score, the six starts he made in May were the best six. Woodruff completed at least seven innings in four of those, and had double-digit strikeouts in three, one of which was a 7 2/3 innings, 10 strikeout, one walk, three hit, one run gem over the division rival Cardinals on May 12th.
5. CC Sabathia, July 13 – August 8 2008
51 innings, 74 average Game Score, 1.41 ERA, 2.33 FIP, 47 K, 7 BB
Picking a six-game stretch for Sabathia as a Brewer is hard. There’s a different six-game stretch that overlaps with this one by one game that’s arguably just as impressive: if you start on August 8th and go to September 5th, his ERA actually drops to 0.96 (though he didn’t throw quite as many innings and walked a few more batters, which accounts for the slight drop in average game score from 74 to 72). There’s also no real way to squeeze in his brilliant and meaningful starts in the last two games of the season, because he allowed eight runs (though only five were earned) in the two starts prior to those last two.
Sabathia wasted no time as a Brewer. In his first start with the club on July 8th, he allowed three runs (two earned) in six innings. Pretty good. But after that, he ripped off an 11-game stretch in which he had a 1.31 ERA, struck out 89, and walked 15 in 89 innings. He completed six of those games, three of which were shutouts. Sabathia personally went 8-0, and the team was 10-1.
The best six-game stretch by Game Score is from his second start on July 13th through August 8th. The first of three of those were all complete game victories; in those 27 innings he struck out 26 and walked three, culminating with a 3-0 shutout of the Cardinals. After a brief hiccup against the Cubs on July 28th in which he gave up four runs (three earned) in 6 2/3, Sabathia continued with 8 1/3 innings of two-run ball against the Braves and a nine-strikeout, one-walk shutout of the Nationals.
Sabathia’s best start by Game Score with the Brewers that season—and the best of his 19-year Hall-of-Fame career—came on August 31st in Pittsburgh. That’s the game where he was a bunt-hit away from a no-hitter and struck out 11.
4. Teddy Higuera, August 15 – September 10 1988
48 1/3 IP, 76 average Game Score, 0.93 ERA, 1.57 FIP, 44 K, 10 BB
We’ll see Higuera again below for what he did during the 1987 season, but by some measures, the streak he had in 1988 was better. The 1987 one was special for a different reason which we’ll get to, but by the measures of ERA and FIP, his 1988 streak was better.
From August 15 to September 10, Higuera made six starts and completed at least seven innings in all of them. In four of those, he allowed one run (one of which was unearned); in the other two, he allowed zero and two runs. His ERA for the streak was 0.93, and his FIP was a microscopic 1.57.
The Brewers went 5-1 during the streak, but how could you blame Higuera for the loss? Against Seattle on September 10th, he threw a complete game and allowed only three hits, but Seattle won 1-0.
Two starts especially stand out. On August 25th, Higuera went the distance against the Yankees, allowed only three hits, walked one, and struck out nine; that Yankee lineup had two Hall-of-Famers (Rickey Henderson and Dave Winfield) and two Hall-of-Very-Gooders (Don Mattingly and Jack Clark) at the top. The other was an outing against the Tigers on September 4th; Higuera held that talented team to one hit while shutting them out for seven innings.
3. Mike Caldwell, June 28 – July 22 1978
56 IP, 75 average Game Score, 1.13 ERA, 2.59 FIP, 25 K, 7 BB
My list of potential streaks here included 22 different six-start spans. Of that group, Caldwell’s 56 innings were the most. If you do a little math here, you’ll come to the realization that 56 divided by six is more than nine. Yes, during this streak, Caldwell averaged 9 1/3 innings per start. He also had the lowest BB/9 of any of the contenders at just 1.1.
The streak started with a complete game shutout of the Yankees—the eventual World Series champs—on June 28th. On July 2nd, Caldwell went 10 innings in an eventual 4-3, 11-inning loss. (Of historical note: Seattle’s starting pitcher in this game was named, and I am not making this up, Dick Pole.) On July 7th, Caldwell shut out the Yankees again. That lineup in 1978 had six different guys who got MVP votes, including one Hall of Famer (Reggie Jackson) and two or three more guys who should be in the Hall (Thurman Munson, Graig Nettles, Willie Randolph).
On July 13th, the Brewers blew out the Royals 13-2, but heck, why not let Caldwell complete the game? On July 17th, he pitched all nine innings of a 6-1 victory over the White Sox.
The cherry on top of this streak was a 10-inning complete game against the Rangers on July 22nd. In those 10 innings, Caldwell only struck out one batter. The internet tells me it was 95 degrees that day in Dallas. The Rangers played outside back then. It was a night game, at least. Milwaukee won 2-1.
2. Jacob Misiorowski, May 1 – May 31 2026
38 1/3 IP, 77 average Game Score, 0.23 ERA, 0.66 FIP, 57 K, 6 BB
The thing about Game Score is that it rewards innings pitched. You rack up points by accruing outs; a player who pitches six innings starts with a 72 Game Score before factoring in anything else, while a pitcher who goes nine starts with an 87 Game Score. Those extra innings add up.
That’s what makes it so impressive that Misiorowski managed the second-highest average Game Score for any streaking Brewers starter, despite throwing less than 40 innings.*
*Technically, there are five six-game streaks ahead of Misiorowski, but they all belong to the same 1987 stretch by Higuera (see below).
This is fresh in our brains, so I won’t spend a ton of time, but a few things from Miz May:
The Brewers went 5-1 during the streak; in the only game they lost, Misiorowski handed a 1-0 lead to his bullpen after seven shutout innings.
Miz struck out at least eight batters in all six games and had double digits three times.
That he walked just six batters in those six games is remarkable. That equates to 1.4 BB/9. Across four minor league seasons, Misiorowski’s BB/9 was 5.4, and last season in the majors it was 4.2.
Misiorowski’s K/9 in those six games was 13.4. The current record for a pitcher with at least 1,000 innings pitched is Blake Snell at 11.2. (13.4 K/9 is actually below Miz’s season average of 13.7, which leads baseball, obviously.)
Misiorowski allowed one extra-base hit during his six starts, a double with one out and nobody on to Isaac Paredes on Sunday. Opponents slugged .110 against him. Ben Sheets slugged .134 in 2004.
1. Higuera, August 10 – September 6 1987
53 IP, 80 average Game Score, 1.19 ERA, 2.38 FIP, 45 K, 16 BB
I think this has to be the answer to this question, and here’s why: in the last three of these six games, Higuera threw three straight shutouts. One of them was ten innings.
Higuera’s start of August 26th, 1987 against Cleveland is tied for the second-best game in Brewers history by Game Score.* Higuera went all ten innings, struck out ten, walked two, and allowed just three hits. Milwaukee’s Rick Manning walked off future Brewer Doug Jones in the bottom of the tenth with an RBI single.
*This is a fun list:
Number one, also against Cleveland, is the game when Burnes combined with Josh Hader for a no-hitter. Burnes went eight, struck out 14, and walked one for a 95 Game Score.
Two starts are tied with Higuera with a 94 Game Score: on September 27, 1974, Jim Colborn threw the first 13 innings of a 1-0, 17-inning loss to Baltimore. He walked six and gave up eight hits but didn’t allow a run.
The other is Sheets’ 18-strikeout game. He went nine, allowed three hits and a run, and walked one.
Sabathia’s near-no-hitter, cited above, is just behind those four, at 93.
Juan Nieves’ no-hitter, the only single-person no-hitter in team history, scores an 89, tied for 13th. He walked five and “only” struck out seven in that game.
In his next start, Higuera allowed just one hit and two walks while striking out nine in a 2-0 shutout of the Royals. Another close game! Ross Jones hit a two-out triple in the bottom of the eighth in a 0-0 game, which was the only thing preventing a Higuera no-hitter. But the next batter popped out, Milwaukee got two two-out runs off of Kansas City ace Bret Saberhagen in the top of the ninth, and Higuera sat down Willie Wilson, Kevin Seitzer, and George Brett in order in the bottom of the ninth.
The third shutout came against that season’s World Series champions, the Minnesota Twins. The Brewers won comfortably, 6-0… but they were only ahead 1-0 until the 6th and 2-0 until the 8th. The Twins only managed two hits and three walks, and Higuera struck out seven. A weird piece of trivia for anyone who likes seeing baseball legends on the “wrong team”: the losing pitcher in this game was Steve Carlton! It was the eighth-to-last appearance of his 24-year, 741-game career.
So that’s the three shutouts that Higuera threw toward the end of the 1987 season. But while he wasn’t quite at that level in the three games before that, he was still good. In the first game of this streak on August 10th, Higuera threw the first 11 innings of a 12-inning, 4-3 win over the Rangers. He lost a duel with Baltimore’s Mike Flanagan on August 15th but threw all eight innings and allowed just two runs in the loss. The only game of the streak that Higuera didn’t go at least eight innings was on August 20th, when he allowed two runs on three hits in six innings. But Milwaukee was up 14-2 when he left that game, so they must’ve decided they could let the bullpen get some work.
The last note about this 1987 streak: it was really an eight-game streak. From August 5th through September 11th, Higuera had a 1.27 ERA in 71 innings and averaged a Game Score of 79. Pretty darn good.
A couple quick honorable mentions, for fun:
Cal Eldred had a 0.58 ERA over 46 2/3 innings from August 14th to September 13th of his magical 1992 rookie season.
Rubén Quevedo (!) had a six-game stretch with a 0.68 ERA from May 7th to June 5th, 2002… though the first of those six appearances was a scoreless one-inning relief appearance.
Somebody named Bill Parsons had a six-game stretch in July and early August of 1972 which included four straight complete games. Two were shutouts, and in a third he allowed zero earned runs (but still lost).
Chris Bosio had an excellent season in 1989, and that was largely due to a stretch from July 19th through August 12th in which he had a 0.77 ERA in 47 innings.
Sheets’ 18-strikeout game was included in a stretch where he allowed nine runs in 46 innings (a 1.76 ERA), struck out 48, and walked only eight.
Finally, Jim Slaton had a stretch from August 18 to September 11, 1974, when he had a 0.54 ERA over 50 innings. The peripherals were ugly: he had just a 1.7 strikeout-to-walk ratio. But he was effective.
SAN ANTONIO, TX - DECEMBER 31: De'Aaron Fox #4 of the San Antonio Spurs is fouled by Karl-Anthony Towns #32 of the New York Knicks in the second half at Frost Bank Center on December 31, 2025 in San Antonio, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Ronald Cortes/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Good morning, BBN!
The NBA Finals tip off tonight, and like many Finals in the past, this one has plenty of former Cats looking to get a ring.
San Antonio Spurs: De’Aaron Fox, Keldon Johnson
New York Knicks: Karl-Anthony Towns
Obviously, SGA has been showing out for UK, coming off a championship last year and back-to-back MVP awards.
This year, there will be at least one Cat who wins their first ring.
Fox has been harboring an ankle injury, but he played a huge part in getting the Spurs past the Thunder in Game 7, while Keldon Johnson also had a big game to help the Spurs advance. They scored 15 points and 11 points, respectively.
Meanwhile, KAT has been elite for the Knicks this postseason, averaging 16.9 PPG, 10.6 RPG, and 5.9 APG on 57.2FG%/48.93P%. He’s a big reason the Knicks are there and have been dominating this postseason.
It should be a fun series! Which Cat will get their first ring?
Tweet of the Day
Kentucky got a good one.
Milan Momcilovic was 1 of 2 players in the country to shoot 50% from the field, 45% on three-pointers, and 85% on free throws this season.
In addition to having a 7-foot-4 alien who can shoot, pass, dribble and single-handedly stop elite offenses from getting to the rim, what makes the San Antonio Spurs’ run to the NBA Finals unique is they possess what most champions typically lack: youth.
When the NBA’s championship round tips off Wednesday night, the Spurs will be looking to become the youngest Finals winner in recent NBA history.
NBC News analyzed the average ages of NBA champions’ playoff rotations since 2016, and San Antonio would be the youngest team to win a title — out-young-ing last year’s Oklahoma City Thunder.
The Spurs rotation’s average age is 24.4, while their opponent, the New York Knicks, are coming in at a relatively ancient 28.8.
Compared with the overall average championship age of 27.8, San Antonio is 3.4 years younger, while the Knicks are 1.0 years older.
The Spurs aren’t just a relatively young team on the whole — their best players are also on the younger side.
San Antonio’s leading scorer in the postseason is center Victor Wembanyama, who is only 22 years old and in his third year in the league. Wembanyama would be the youngest leading scorer to lead his team to a Finals victory in recent history. (If he wins Finals MVP, he would join Magic Johnson and Kawhi Leonard as the youngest players to win it.)
The Spurs’ three leading scorers — Wembanyama, Stephon Castle and De’Aaron Fox — would also be tied with last year’s Thunder as the youngest top-scoring trio of the last 11 NBA Finals.
Compared with New York, San Antonio is led by neophytes. The Knicks’ leading scorer, Jalen Brunson, is 29 and in his eighth season in the NBA. New York’s top three scorers — Brunson, Karl-Anthony Towns and OG Anunoby — also average 29, with none younger than 28.
The median age of leading champion scorers is 27, with Wembanyama coming in a clean five years younger.
At least through three playoff rounds, youth and inexperience haven’t been barriers for the Spurs. They’ve already beaten a team that made two straight conference finals, the Minnesota Timberwolves, as well as last year’s champion, Oklahoma City, en route to the Finals.
In fact, less playoff seasoning may even help San Antonio.
“The lack of experience is a strength of us,” Wembanyama told ESPN on Tuesday. “Because we could do impossible stuff because we don’t know it’s impossible.”
Did you know this is their first trip to the Finals since 1999? Did you know they haven’t lost in more than a month? Did you know they have the most famous fans in the world? Did you know tickets to games at Madison Square Garden cost more than a car?
Stahhhhhp.
Fortunately for folks who aren’t Knicks fans, which is pretty much the rest of the country, New York’s opponents in these Finals are the San Antonio Spurs, who might just be the most down-to-earth team in the NBA.
The San Antonio Spurs are America's team in the NBA Finals
They’re small market and worth about half what the Knicks are. Their nickname does not bring instant recognition. Their arena does not have name recognition in their own state, let alone the whole world. Their most famous fans are nuns, not celebrities.
Instead of hanging out with Kardashians, Wemby spent last off-season with monks. While not an actual alien, he is interested in outer space and can talk at length about it. He’s responsible for an uptick in reading in San Antonio, for goodness sake.
The Spurs are what you want in a championship team.
The Knicks are … what New York wants in a championship team.
Knicks are a team only New Yorkers can love
Every sport has at least one team that everyone else loves to hate. The Dallas Cowboys in the NFL. The New York Yankees in Major League Baseball. Duke in men’s basketball.
It’s usually a byproduct of success, a toxic owner or an arrogant fan base. In the Knicks’ case, it’s a little bit of everything. Well, maybe not the success part. Not lately, at least. But the owner and the fan base more than make up for that.
Longtime Knicks owner James Dolan is easily the worst owner in the NBA. With Dan Snyder having sold the Washington Commanders, he can make a case for worst owner in all of sports.
He’s picked fights with superfan Spike Lee and Knicks legend Charles Oakley. He provided cover for Isiah Thomas after he was the subject of a sexual harassment lawsuit. Dolan treated his WNBA team like something he found on the bottom of his shoe.
Dolan also has reportedly used surveillance technology to track those who are critical of him and ban them from Madison Square Garden in retaliation. Even Knicks fans hate the man.
As for those fans, they’re brash, they’re loud and, let’s be honest, they’re a little arrogant. And that’s just Timothée Chalamet! New Yorkers see New York as the center of the universe and don’t have much use for anything outside the five boroughs.
Maybe New Jersey.
Maybe.
That kind of smugness is as annoying as a pebble in a shoe to people who aren’t from New York. Since we can’t take our irritation out on the city itself, its teams become the proxy. The Knicks, the Yankees, the Mets, the Rangers — whoever they’re playing becomes everybody else’s second-favorite team.
(Yes, I know I left out the Giants and the Jets. They’re too pathetic to hate.)
And if it’s the post-season? The loathing ratchets up to another level.
San Antonio Spurs are easy to root for
Which brings us back to San Antonio.
The Spurs are an incredibly likeable team on their own. This is the franchise of David Robinson, Tim Duncan and Gregg Popovich. This is the franchise that showed it really is possible for people from all corners of the world to work together. This is the franchise that has Wemby, who is revolutionizing the game in real time while also being an utterly decent human.
San Antonio’s bandwagon would need extra room regardless of who they were facing in the Finals. That they’re playing the Knicks makes them America’s Team.
C'mon Spurs. Do the rest of the country a solid. The last thing anyone needs is to give New York another reason to brag about itself.
Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.
Leon Rose and the Knicks focused on trades and free agency to construct their core, San Antonio mostly became a contender again by maximizing its draft capital, leading to a rematch of the 1999 NBA Finals, won by the Spurs.
The Post dissects how the Knicks took shape.
Jalen Brunson
When he arrived: 2022
How he was acquired: Inked a four-year, $104 million deal in free agency that seemed like a reach but has since become a bargain.
Jalen Brunson gives directions during the Knicks’ practice at Frost Bank Center in San Antonio on June 2, 2026. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post
The superstar who left money on the table with his extension two years ago. Brunson has single-handedly shifted the reputation of the Knicks, turned them into a contender and etched a place on their Mount Rushmore, averaging 26.3 points per game while unlocking another tier of that production on the postseason stage.
Karl-Anthony Towns
When he arrived: 2024
How he was acquired: A connection years in the making, the Edison, N.J., native arrived via trade in exchange for a package headlined by Julius Randle and Donte DiVincenzo.
How he’s helped them get here: Towns, who grew up a Knicks fan, is one of the best shooting centers of all time and was pegged as the missing piece, the superstar to complement Brunson. The six-time All-Star has averaged 22.2 points and 12.3 rebounds per game across his two seasons with the Knicks, and his point-center role this postseason ignited the offense.
Karl-Anthony Towns takes part in a shooting drill at Knicks practice in San Antonio on June 2. 2026. Jason Szenes for New York Post
OG Anunoby
When he arrived: 2023
How he was acquired: When the first domino in a series of Leon Rose trades fell, Anunoby (and Precious Achiuwa) arrived in exchange for RJ Barrett and Immanuel Quickley.
How he’s helped them get here: Known for his defensive skills, Anunoby has added a dynamic scoring ability since coming to the Knicks — and has averaged 19.7 points per game during this playoff run. He’s an unassuming two-way star who typically draws the most difficult matchup, keeps getting snubbed from All-Defensive First Team honors and makes the most expensive contract in Knicks history ($212.5 million) worth every penny.
OG Anunoby (right) and Mitchell Robinson participate in the Knicks’ practice on June 2 in San Antonio. Jason Szenes for New New York Post
Josh Hart
When he arrived: 2023
How he was acquired: Ahead of the trade deadline in 2023, Hart landed from the Trail Blazers for a package that included Cam Reddish.
How he’s helped them get here: Hart’s career with the Knicks has been defined by adjusting on the fly and fitting into a variety of roles.
He has started and has come off the bench. He’s demanded defensive matchups and taken over games offensively. His friendship with Brunson and Mikal Bridges from their days at Villanova — and his personality — make every press conference a must-see too.
Mikal Bridges
When he arrived: 2024
How he was acquired: Via a blockbuster that sent five first-round picks back to the Nets.
How he’s helped them get here: Bridges, known for his durability and defense, could never quite escape the price that Rose paid to land him and the price the Knicks paid to keep him (a $150 million extension) last summer. It led to a polarizing relationship with fans, especially when he’d get benched.
But the Knicks’ 11-game winning streak has perhaps altered his image for good, with Bridges averaging 16.6 points per game on a sizzling 62.6 percent shooting.
Mikal Bridges catches a pass during a speed shooting drill on June 2 in San Antonio. Jason Szenes for New York Post
Miles McBride
When he arrived: 2021
How he was acquired: In the second round after the Knicks traded down to No. 36 on draft night.
How he’s helped them get here: McBride’s three-year, $13 million extension in 2023 was an absolute bargain, as he has embraced his role coming off the bench and providing a spark. He can rip off 3-pointers in bunches (career-best 41.3 percent on 6.6 attempts per game during the regular season) and has answered questions about whether he could make it at this level with his 6-foot-2 frame.
Mitchell Robinson
When he arrived: 2018
How he was acquired: Drafted in the second round in 2018 at No. 36 overall.
How he’s helped them get here: The oft-injured Robinson is the longest-tenured Knick and has seen it all. He ceded the center position to Towns while still being their best offensive rebounder and interior defender.
His most encouraging stat this year? Robinson’s 73 games between the regular season and playoffs, the most of his career and proof of a season-long load management plan working.
Landry Shamet
When he arrived: 2024
How he was acquired: The Knicks signed Shamet two weeks before training camp began in 2024, and he re-signed with them last summer on a non-guaranteed contract.
How he’s helped them get here: Who knows what would’ve happened if Shamet’s 3-pointer didn’t bounce in and help force overtime in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals? The 29-year-old overcame a pair of shoulder injuries the past two seasons and regained his lost spot in the rotation this year before becoming a forever name because of that shot.
Jordan Clarkson
When he arrived: 2025
How he was acquired: After agreeing to a buyout with the Jazz, Clarkson signed with the Knicks on a veteran minimum deal.
How he’s helped them get here: It hasn’t been the smoothest of seasons for the former Sixth Man of the Year, as he fell out of Mike Brown’s rotation before recovering a spot late in the year thanks to a commitment to defense.
Jordan Clarkson talks with reporters after Knicks practice in San Antonio on June 2. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post
But he assisted the Knicks by signing for the minimum in exchange for a chance at a title. He averaged a career-worst 8.6 points per game during the regular season but has turned back the clock on occasion.
Jose Alvarado
When he arrived: 2026
How he was acquired: The Brooklyn native arrived from the Pelicans ahead of the trade deadline, in exchange for Dalen Terry and two second-round picks, to boost the Knicks’ guard depth.
How he’s helped them get here: This was a homecoming made in basketball paradise. Alvarado is the energizer off the bench capable of thriving in the spotlight of the Garden, someone who can hit 3s — like he did eight times against the 76ers in February — or frustrate opponents to the point of turnovers.
Ariel Hukporti
When he arrived: 2024
How he was acquired: The Knicks landed the rights to Hukporti — the No. 58 overall pick by the Mavericks — on draft day in 2024.
How he’s helped them get here: As the Knicks’ third center, Hukporti has been thrust into critical moments when one or both of Towns and Robinson were out — or when Hack-a-Mitch returned. A Dec. 7 win, when Hukporti earned the team’s Defensive Player of the Game against a tough Magic team, served as a tangible sign of his value, too.
Tyler Kolek
When he arrived: 2024
How he was acquired: The Knicks moved up to No. 34 to take Kolek in exchange for three second-rounders.
How he’s helped them get here: Kolek quickly became a fan favorite as he competed for backup point guard minutes, delivering memorable performances in the NBA Cup final comeback and on Christmas Day to help save the Knicks. He has fallen out of the rotation since but has two more years of team control remaining to snag a role.
Mohamed Diawara
When he arrived: 2025′
How he was acquired: The Knicks took him with the 51st overall pick in 2025.
How he’s helped them get here: The Knicks don’t win their Dec. 29 game against the Pelicans without Diawara, who collected a career-best 18 points, and he adds wing depth with his rangy length and athleticism. He won’t log meaningful minutes in the Finals unless something goes terribly wrong, but Diawara — on an expiring deal — flashed enough potential to become an intriguing offseason decision.
Jeremy Sochan
When he arrived: 2026
How he was acquired: Sochan, the No. 9 pick in 2022, signed with the Knicks in February after getting waived by the Spurs.
How he’s helped them get here: Signed as bench depth, Sochan struggled to carve out a role in Brown’s rotation. But when Robinson missed Game 2 of the Eastern Conference semifinals, the Knicks needed him to log 55 seconds of meaningful time with both Towns and Hukporti in foul trouble. He’s a break-in-case-of-emergency option.
Pacôme Dadiet
When he arrived: 2024
How he was acquired: Dadiet was drafted No. 25 overall, joining the Knicks as an 18-year-old forward from France.
How he’s helped them get here: Dadiet remains a G-League player (23.1 points, 4.8 rebounds per game for Westchester this year) logging NBA minutes during garbage time, but on a team filled with expensive veterans, he has two seasons remaining — if the Knicks pick up the final option — to become an inexpensive rotation piece.
A Long Island rooted diehard Knicks fan living in the heart of Celtics territory is going viral for turning New York playoff wins into clever Billy Joel lyrics — and it might just be a good luck charm for the NBA Finals vs. the Spurs.
“When I decided to do it, they had won maybe five straight by that point,” 21-year-old Luke Wenner of Attleboro, Massachusetts, told The Post after the streak reached 11 straight.
Diehard Knicks fan Luke Wenner has gone viral for his Billy Joel style game recaps.
“I was like, yeah, might as well see how it goes. Obviously, it’s worked out pretty well,” added Wenner, who has gotten praise from Mick Jagger’s son, Lucas.
“It’s eight o’clock on a Tuesday, the regular Knicks shuffle in / They swiftly go down from their rustiness — and soon the comeback begins,” Wenner sang and played on piano.
He changed “She’s Always a Woman” to “It’ll Always Be New York for Me” when the Knicks swept Cleveland in four, in a clip that was liked over 10,000 times.
The Knicks haven’t lost since Wenner started his songs. Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post
“I’ll sit there, as I’m watching the games, I’ll either pick a song or two of Billy Joel’s to keep in mind,” said Wenner, who idolizes Hicksville’s hometown hero Joel.
“I’ll be reading the lyrics, and I’m like, ‘oh, this player’s name would work perfectly in this verse.'”
Wenner showed The Post his “For the Longest Time” rework he will release ahead of the team’s first finals appearance since 1999.
“Maybe some had thought our hope was gone, but the true New Yorkers did stay strong,” it goes.
Wenner grew up a massive Billy Joel fan. Getty Images
“And now the time’s come, let’s go and take home this one — we have been waiting for the longest time.”
The recent psychology and criminal justice grad began with about 70 followers after dropping the Game 1 jingle. He’s close to 3,000 in a matter of days since blue and orange nation became touched by his tunes.
“It’s just been so great seeing that a huge majority of the comments are very favorable, and they definitely love what I’ve been doing,” Wenner said. “It’s just been nuts.”
Wenner has become an overnight sensation for his Billy Joel Knicks videos.
And, Wenner’s river of dreams is a long time coming after putting up with the folks around Beantown.
“I’ve definitely gotten a lot of flak throughout my whole school career, because, pretty much all of my teams have been pretty horrible,” lamented Wenner.
He likened the Knicks’ underdog outlook to that of his G-Men when they faced the Patriots in Super Bowl XLII and again in Super Bowl XLVI.
Wenner is hopeful that Jalen Brunson and the Knicks will win it all this time. Getty Images
“They didn’t give the Giants a chance. So, I think it’s possible,” said Wenner.
“It would just mean the world to me, especially given that I can rub it in the faces of my fellow Celtics fans.”
With Justin Verlander on the mound, the Mud Hens’ offense honored their famous temp by absolutely mauling Cubs’ pitching on Tuesday.
Verlander, sidelined after one start this spring with a hip issue, looked pretty good. He had no trouble at all with the Cubs, scattering three singles and a double without allowing a walk. He struck out four, pounding the zone consistently throughout his outing. The slider and his changeup were both pretty sharp, and his fastball command looked good as well. Verlander averaged 93.5 mph and 19 inches of IVB, with several pitches topping out at 95 mph. That will do pretty nicely, and hopefully he can find a little more gas in the tank as he builds up. He threw 48 of 64 pitches for strikes. Presumably he’ll get one more rehab start before returning to the Tigers.
Funny and nostalgic seeing Verlander in a Mud Hens uniform. Last time I saw him pitch at Fifth Third Park was a rehab start in 2015 before he returned to the Tigers and served notice that his incredible career was nowhere close to done. The only guy who hit him in that game was a young prospect named Francisco Lindor.
Justin Verlander, pitching for the Toledo Mud Hens for the first time in 11 years, ends the first inning of his rehab start with a high fastball for a strikeout. pic.twitter.com/Uuue30yTGR
The Hens gave the future Hall of Famer run support right out of the chute. Max Clark started the game with a walk, and two batters later Max Anderson cracked a two-run shot to left. In the third, Ben Malgeri and Anderson doubled back-to-back, and then Eduardo Valencia cleared the bases with his 10th homer on the year to make it 5-0.
In the fifth, Malgeri led off with his second double of the game, and Anderson reached on an error. Gage Workman plated Malgeri with a single and Valencia singled to load the bases. Trei Cruz stepped into the box and lifted a towering shot to left for a grand slam. 10-0 Hens. They went on to score two more runs in the inning.
Trei Cruz blows the game open for Toledo with this grand slam to left center. It’s 10-0 Mud Hens. pic.twitter.com/z38SO9bNfq
Jack Little gave up the lone Cubs run in the seventh. Max Clark launched a solo shot in the eighth against a position player, his third on the year. With Anderson and Workman on in the ninth, Cruz lined out to center field, but a poor throw from the Cubs center fielder allowed both runs to score and make it 16-1.
Anderson: 4-6, 4 R, 4 RBI, 2B, HR
Cruz: 2-6, R, 4 RBI, 2B, HR, K
Clark: 1-3, 3 R, RBI, HR, 3 BB
Valencia: 2-3, 2 R, 3 RBI, HR
Verlander (W, 1-0): 5.0 IP, 0 R, 4 H, 0 BB, 3 K
Coming Up Next: It’s a 1:08 p.m. ET start in Des Moines on Wednesday.
A late rally fell just short on Tuesday night in Richmond.
The SeaWolves scored quickly as Seth Stephenson doubled to open the game, and then scored on a John Peck grounder that went for an error. That 1-0 lead didn’t last, as Max Alba allowed three runs in the bottom half and single runs in the fourth and fifth.
In the top of the fifth, Stephenson singled with one out and stole his 25th base of the season. Brett Callahan followed with a walk, and Peck reached on an infield single to load the bases. Patience and a good eye from Thayron Liranzo helped him draw a walk that forced in a run, but Chris Meyers struck out and Andrew Jenkins grounded out to squander a chance at a big inning to get back into this one.
So it was 5-2 Richmond heading into the seventh inning. Stephenson drew a leadoff walk, but was shockingly caught stealing. Brett Callahan drew a walk to replace him, and Peck reached on an error. Liranzo drew another walk to load the bases, and with two outs, Jenkins came through with a two-run single to make it a 5-4 game.
Johan Simon did a nice job taking over from Alba and racking up five straight outs, but Dariel Fregio came on to allow three more runs in the bottom of the seventh. The Flying Squirrels needed those add-on runs.
In the top of the ninth, Peck led off with a double. Liranzo took a called strike three, but Peck stole third and scored on an errant throw from Richmond catcher Ty Hanchey. Jenkins singled with two outs, and he rode home on Izaac Pacheco’s sixth home run to make it an 8-7 game. Peyton Graham followed with a single as the potential tying run and Aaron Antonini drew a walk. Stephenson unfortunately struck out to end it.
Izaac Pacheco with a 2-run moonshot to right to pull Erie within one run in the 9th. It’s his 6th home run of the year. pic.twitter.com/BxdLL1fy8G
Coming Up Next: They’ll get back at it on Wednesday at 7:05 p.m. ET.
Dayton Dragons 10, West Michigan Whitecaps 4 (box)
Hayden Minton put together an extemely Jekyll and Hyde outing, and the Whitecaps bullpen did nothing to let them get back into this one.
Minton punched out 10 hitters in 4.1 innings of work. He walked just one and allowed just four hits. The problem was that three of those hits were home runs. He allowed three in the top of the third, and one more as he departed in the fifth.
The Whitecaps answered right back after the Dragons three-run outburst with three of their own in the bottom of the third. Andrew Sojka led off with a walk and Junior Tilien singled. A Woody Hadeen ground out to first moved the runners, and two batters later Garrett Pennington launched a three-run shot, his ninth on the year.
Juanmi Vasquez and Zack Lee each allowed a run in relief. In the bottom of the eighth, Bryce Rainer drew a walk and Clayton Campbell singled. Rainer scored as Jackson Strong grounded into a double play to make it 6-44, but Ethan Sloan allowed four runs in the top of the ninth to end hopes of a comeback.
Pennington; 1-3, R, 3 RBI, HR, BB, K
Rainer: 1-2, R, 2 BB, K
Minton (L, 2-3): 4.1 IP, 4 ER, 4 H, BB, 10 K
Coming Up Next: It’s a 6:35 p.m. ET start in Comstock Park on Wednesday.
Fort Myers Mighty Mussels 10, Lakeland Flying Tigers 2 (box)
We got some good news in this one, as left-hander Jake Miller made his season debut in a rehab outing. Miller was our preseason top pitching prospect in the system, although that’s a bit of a dubious honor considering he’s still not a top 100 caliber starter. After an injury plagued season in 2025 in which he was diagnosed with lumbar back issues that were later linked to hip labrum tears that required surgery on both hips, Miller spent until early May rehabbing and is just now ramping up in game action.
The game, however, did not go the Flying Tigers’ way as Grayson Grinsell was rocked in relief of Miller. Miller fired two scoreless innings of one-hit ball with a pair of strikeouts. He’s still going to need to develop a cutter or a harder breaking ball to go with a good fourseam-changeup combination and a slow sweeper, but Miller pounds the strike zone and has some deception and good armspeed that helps his stuff play up.
Nice to see Jake Miller back on the mound for Lakeland. Here’s his first inning of work today. pic.twitter.com/eMPERkZxOT
Jesus Pinto, rapidly getting love in Tigers’ prospecting circles, blasted a solo shot in the bottom of the second to give the Flying Tigers an early lead. Grinsell took over from Miller in the third and surrendered three runs. Jack Goodman answered back with a solo shot in the bottom of the third.
So it was 3-2 Fort Myers, and Grinsell then was tagged for three more runs in the fifth. They added on against Pedro Garcia, and the Flying Tigers offense stalled out despite several scoring opportunites later in the game.
Warwick: 2-4, 2B, 2 K
Espinal: 2-4, K
Miller: 2.0 IP, 0 R, H, 0 BB, 2 K
Grinsell (L, 3-2): 2.2 IP, 6 ER, 7 H, 2 BB, 5 K
Coming Up Next: It’s a 6:30 p.m. ET start on Wednesday.
Rookie Ball
Our favorite lesser known pitching prospect, RHP Jhonan Coba, led the FCL Tigers to an 8-0 victory on Tuesday, although Johnathan Rogers, the Tigers 20th rounder in Scott Harris’ first draft in 2023, who recently re-signed with the club at age 21, got the win. Coba went three innings, allowing two hits, no walks, while striking out five. Cris Rodriguez doubled in that game, but struck out twice.
In the second game of a doubleheader, the FCL Tigers roster beat the Phillies 4-3 as well. Cristian Perez, a name to watch, homered in that one, his fifth already on the year for the 19-year-old center fielder. He holds a .990 OPS so far in 19 games.
What a Jhonan Coba 97 MPH, 21.35" IVB fastball looks like up in the zone, traced. pic.twitter.com/klvSrECqxE
SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 29: Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees takes batting practice before their game against the Athletics at Sutter Health Park on May 29, 2026 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Yankees lost an annoying game last night in a series opener in the Bronx against the Guardians, but that’s probably not what’s front-of-mind for most of their fans. For the first time all year, Aaron Judge was absent from the startng lineup, as manager Aaron Boone revealed that he’s been battling a bone bruise on his right rib cage that’s affected his shoulder.
In short, it stinks, and while Judge is set to see a specialist today to get another opinion, it appears that for now, the Yankees are in “wait and see” mode with no IL move just yet. What was that Homer Simpson once said about The Waiting Game?
Yeah. We don’t have a collective game of “Hungry Hungry Hippos” to distact us, so instead I ask you to rate your concern about Judge’s injury. Maybe it won’t be much in the grand scheme of things—remember when the world freaked out about Juan Soto’s elbow in June 2024 and those were almost literally the only games he missed all year? And yet we can’t rule out something more.
So let’s say it’s a scale of 1-5, with 1 representing no conern at all and 5 representing PANIC CITY. I think I’m honestly at a 2. Bone bruises just make me wary on principle; call it long-term damage from what Derek Jeter’s 2012 bone bruise turnedinto, though obviouly he was four years older than Judge is now and it was a different part of the body. But I do think that this will ultimately be something minor causing Judge to only miss a few games. Maybe. Hopefully.
My primary hope is that if it’s looking like they do need to put him on the IL after the specialist meets with him, they just get it over with and don’t play a man short for too long. Again, different injury, but Judge had a quick 10-day IL stint last year to get over a right elbow flexor strain and didn’t miss a beat upon returning. Fingers crossed that this is the worst-case scenario.
Today on the site, Josh will deep-dive on what’s going on with Aaron Judge and what his bone bruise may or may not be affecting (as compared to his age), Matt will run through the Rivalry Roundup, and Jeremy will celebrate the 51st birthday of a former World Series champion and true defensive genius behind the plate. Later, we’ll talk prospects, as Scott looks back at a bumpy May for the Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders, Michael breaks down George Lombard Jr.’s first month at Triple-A, and Andrés considers Carlos Lagrange’s development within the past month amid the recent news that he’ll be working out of the bullpen.
BOSTON, MA - NOVEMBER 1: Jaylen Brown #7 of the Boston Celtics and Kevin Durant #7 of the Houston Rockets looks on during the game on November 1, 2025 at TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. 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 2025 NBAE (Photo by Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NBA. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Rockets fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.
Hey, everyone. Sorry for the delay on this one. School is finishing up this week, so I’ve been busy grading, and cleaning my classeroom, and wrapping things up administratively. It’s no excuse, but it’s why I’m a little behind right now.
Anyway, we asked you last week, if the Rockets were to trade for a star, which one of the guys they are currently being linked to would you most want them to trade for? Your options were Kyrie Irving, Giannis Antetokounmpo, Jaylen Brown, Donovan Mitchell, or Kawhi Leonard. Here’s what you said:
And by a landslide, the Jaylen Browns have it. I think that’s a prudent choice. He’d obviously fit right in with Ime Udoka, and is arguably the best roster fit in my opinion. I doubt that the Rockets do anything, though. My guess is that they run it back. I don’t think that’s the right move, but if they did trade for one of these available stars, Brown would be my choice as well.
Thanks for voting. We’ll be back soon with more Reacts.
Across an NBA Finals, it’s often the matchups within the matchups that determine the victor.
And, interestingly, both the New York Knicks and San Antonio Spurs feature players they can leverage in specific matchups to gain minor advantages in a game-by-game basis.
Slowing Wembanyama will be a team effort, but expect Anunoby to be the primary defender on him, at least early in the series. Though he gives up eight inches in height, Anunoby, a second-team All-Defensive selection, owns the wingspan and strength to prevent Wembanyama from getting comfortable in the paint.
Anunoby, who is 6-foot-7, actually outweighs Wembanyama by five pounds, per their official playing weights. Anunoby doesn’t shy away from contact and uses his 7-foot-2 wingspan to contest jumpers. Obviously, Wembanyama’s reach makes him a nightmare to stop, so the key will be for Anunoby — and others — to keep their leverage and use their arms and forearms to prevent Wembanyama from getting deep into the paint. The best bet for the Knicks is to try to force Wembanyama to be more of a perimeter player because when he gets going down low, he’s singular.
“He’s pretty unique,” Anunoby said Tuesday, June 2 when asked about guarding Wembanyama. “There’s little things, maybe like guarding a (Nikola) Jokić, or (Kristaps) Porziņģis or Joel (Embiid), but he’s different, like you said. He’s taller. But, yeah, just being aware of where he’s at all over the floor. He can do everything. He’s super talented. Just trying to make it as difficult as possible.”
That said, Anunoby will not be the only defender on Wembanyama. At some point, presumably, Karl-Anthony Towns will have to guard Wembanyama. Prone to spells of foul trouble, Towns will need to stay disciplined to not commit the cheap fouls that could force him out of the game.
Knicks help defense against the Spurs pick-and-roll with Wembanyama as the screener
San Antonio found massive success in the Western Conference finals with an action it ran over and over against the Thunder.
Essentially, the Spurs asked ball-handlers De’Aaron Fox and Stephon Castle to initiate pick-and-rolls with Wembanyama as the screener. After setting the pick, Wembanyama rolled hard to the basket, which created multiple options out of the same action; Fox or Castle could use the space from the screen to attack or pull up for jumpers, they could feed Wembanyama in the paint for slashing looks at the rim, or the ball would swing to open shooters in the corners or the wings.
Wembanyama’s gravity sucks in extra defenders, which forces those players to face a decision: either they leave their shooters to help on Wembanyama, or they sit tight with their man, leaving the paint more exposed.
If that help does come on Wembanyama, San Antonio’s shooters will need to capitalize on those looks but expect the Knicks, who had plenty of time to scout the Spurs, to anticipate this action.
Josh Hart spacing the floor vs. Wembanyama
In previous matchups earlier this season, the Spurs had Wembanyama on Josh Hart as his primary assignment. This is by design; on defense, San Antonio wants Wembanyama to hover near the paint as much as possible. So while it would seemingly make sense for Wembanyama to guard Towns, a 7-footer, Towns’ ability to stretch the floor with his shooting range would inherently draw Wembanyama away from the basket, which would then allow the space for Knicks guards and wings — Brunson, Anunoby, Mikal Bridges — to attack the paint.
Therefore, if San Antonio looks to put Wembanyama on Hart once more, Hart could provide massive value if he’s able to knock down some 3s early in the series, forcing the Spurs to guard him.
At times, the Cavaliers left Hart wide open and let him shoot. And though Hart is shooting just 30.3% from 3 these playoffs, he did erupt in Game 2 of the Eastern Conference finals, going 5-of-11 from deep.
San Antonio’s effort to get Karl-Anthony Towns into foul trouble
As mentioned above, Towns is a high-intensity player on both ends, though he sometimes falls into foul trouble. Usually, it’s the careless fouls that create problems. And when Towns is off the floor for lengthy stretches, the Knicks aren’t nearly as potent.
While Towns is a decent rim protector, San Antonio should make a concerted effort to use his energy against him and try to draw contact through intentional drives to the rim.
Stephon Castle on Jalen Brunson
Similar to defending Wembanyama, defending Brunson will be a team effort. But if there’s one player who has had success against him, it’s second-year guard Stephon Castle.
He should draw the primary assignment on Brunson, and Castle’s lateral speed and athleticism should make it difficult for Brunson (6-foot-2, 190 pounds) to carve spaces in the lane. Castle (6-foot-6, 215 pounds), however, cannot rely simply on his size and strength, because Brunson is superb at head fakes and knows how to put defenders in compromising positions.
Jalen Brunson when guarded by Stephon Castle in his career:
“I think what’s worked for me is trying to be physical with him,” Castle said Tuesday. “He’s obviously shorter than me, but he’s a very physical guard, he gets to his spots well. Uses deception well, has great footwork. Trying to be as disciplined as I can, crowd his space, but not give him the angles that he's looking for.
“At this point he has seen pretty much every coverage, been guarded all kinds of ways. Just trying to impose my will and use my physicality to my advantage.”