Behind Wheeler and massive 7th inning, Phils beat Mets and grab sole NL East lead

Behind Wheeler and massive 7th inning, Phils beat Mets and grab sole NL East lead  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Phillies poured on the runs in the seventh inning and extended a miserable run for the Mets on Friday night at Citizens Bank Park.

Behind Zack Wheeler and a six-run seventh, the Phils earned a 10-2 victory over the Mets in the series opener. They grabbed sole possession of first place in the NL East and moved to 46-30 this season. New York dipped to 45-31 with a seventh consecutive loss. 

Wheeler tossed five scoreless innings, scattering four hits, walking three and striking out eight. 

The Mets loaded the bases in the top of the first inning through a Brandon Nimmo single and walks by Juan Soto and Pete Alonso. Wheeler prevented any immediate damage by inducing a Jeff McNeil double-play ball. 

While Wheeler’s command remained a bit worse than his excellent norm — he needed 61 pitches to complete three innings — the Phils’ ace otherwise mowed down the Mets. Over the third and fourth innings, Wheeler racked up five strikeouts. 

Mets righty Blade Tidwell fared well in the early stages of his second big-league start. He retired the first five Phillies hitters and threw strikes on 15 of his first 19 pitches.

Tidwell didn’t finish the fourth inning and the Phils pulled in front. 

Nick Castellanos and J.T Realmuto singled, Bryson Stott walked, and Otto Kemp got a bases-loaded opportunity with one out. He just about cashed in, hitting a chopper to third base, hustling to first and avoiding a double play. Tidwell exited and lefty Jose Castillo entered to face Brandon Marsh, who built the Phillies’ lead to 2-0 with an opposite-field RBI single. 

Wheeler wiped out a two-out Mets threat in the fifth inning. With Nimmo on second base, he appeared to have struck Soto out. However, Soto received a generous-looking check swing call to stay alive in the at-bat. Wheeler made sure it didn’t matter, throwing a sharp 3-2 sweeper that Soto whiffed at. 

After turning to their bullpen, the Phils’ advantage disappeared.

Alonso crushed a leadoff solo shot to center field off of Taijuan Walker and McNeil followed by smashing a middle-of-the-plate splitter over the right-field wall. Not Walker’s finest hour in a middle-relief role. 

Tanner Banks replaced Walker and provided some stability with 1 and 2/3 scoreless innings. Kemp chipped in a couple of nice defensive plays at first base, leaping to catch a Tyrone Taylor jam shot in foul territory and snagging a Soto one-hopper to his backhand side. 

Marsh kicked off the bottom of the seventh by lining a double down the left-field line. Trea Turner dinked a two-bagger to right, Alec Bohm and Castellanos kept the Phils’ rally rolling with base hits, and the game was suddenly much less tense.

The most memorable play of the inning was Stott’s one-out, bases-clearing double off the left-center wall. Realmuto was close to clipping Castellanos’ heels, but both slid in safely — simultaneously, almost — and the Phils went up 8-2. 

“I basically made a decision rounding third base,” Realmuto said. “In my head, I was like, ‘We’re either going to both be out or both be safe.’ Luckily, we both snuck in there.” 

Realmuto couldn’t recall ever being part of a similar play as a catcher.

“It kind of felt like playing a Little League game,” he said. “Even getting back into the dugout, everyone was laughing and having fun with it. Just a different scenario than you usually see in a game. To be able to have that fun … it was a special moment.” 

When he nailed a two-run dinger in the eighth, Castellanos had the luxury of jogging around the bases.

“Hitting’s contagious and when you’ve got the momentum going like that and everyone’s rolling, it’s a lot of fun,” he said.

The Phillies will try to lock down a series win Saturday night. Mick Abel (2-0, 2.21 ERA) is set to face the Mets’ Griffin Canning (6-3, 3.80 ERA).

Harper swinging again 

Bryce Harper took a step forward Friday in his rehab from the right wrist injury that’s kept him out since June 5. 

“I felt good today,” Harper told reporters pregame. “I threw and that felt good, and then I took 20 dry swings and 20 off the tee. Felt better than I thought it was, so I’m happy about that.”

Harper is unsure why his wrist pain returned, though he noted “there’s no structural issues” and he “won’t need surgery or anything like that.”

“We haven’t really gotten too many answers about it,” Harper said. “It’s been pretty sporadic I guess, trying to get some answers on stuff. Obviously, there’s a lot of inflammation in there. Just try to calm that down as best we can and do the best we can with that.”

He’s hopeful that the rest and rehab enables him to come back without pain. 

As for a return timeline, Harper doesn’t have anything firm yet. 

“I don’t know,” he said. “It’s the first day swinging a bat, so I’ve just got to see how it feels tomorrow, see if we can progress. Once we do, then I’ll ramp up and see where I am.”

Behind Wheeler and massive 7th inning, Phils beat Mets and grab sole NL East lead

Behind Wheeler and massive 7th inning, Phils beat Mets and grab sole NL East lead  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Phillies poured on the runs in the seventh inning and extended a miserable run for the Mets on Friday night at Citizens Bank Park.

Behind Zack Wheeler and a six-run seventh, the Phils earned a 10-2 victory over the Mets in the series opener. They grabbed sole first possession of first place in the NL East and moved to 46-30 this season. New York dipped to 45-31 with a seventh consecutive loss. 

Wheeler tossed five scoreless innings, scattering four hits, walking three and striking out eight. 

The Mets loaded the bases in the top of the first inning through a Brandon Nimmo single and walks by Juan Soto and Pete Alonso. Wheeler prevented any immediate damage by inducing a Jeff McNeil double-play ball. 

While Wheeler’s command remained a bit worse than his excellent norm — he needed 61 pitches to complete three innings — the Phils’ ace otherwise mowed down the Mets. Over the third and fourth innings, Wheeler racked up five strikeouts. 

Mets righty Blade Tidwell fared well in the early stages of his second big-league start. He retired the first five Phillies hitters and threw strikes on 15 of his first 19 pitches.

Tidwell didn’t finish the fourth inning and the Phils pulled in front. 

Nick Castellanos and J.T Realmuto singled, Bryson Stott walked, and Otto Kemp got a bases-loaded opportunity with one out. He just about cashed in, hitting a chopper to third base, hustling to first and avoiding a double play. Tidwell exited and lefty Jose Castillo entered to face Brandon Marsh, who built the Phillies’ lead to 2-0 with an opposite-field RBI single. 

Wheeler wiped out a two-out Mets threat in the fifth inning. With Nimmo on second base, he appeared to have struck Soto out. However, Soto received a generous-looking check swing call to stay alive in the at-bat. Wheeler made sure it didn’t matter, throwing a sharp 3-2 sweeper that Soto whiffed at. 

After turning to their bullpen, the Phils’ advantage disappeared.

Alonso crushed a leadoff solo shot to center field off of Taijuan Walker and McNeil followed by smashing a middle-of-the-plate splitter over the right-field wall. Not Walker’s finest hour in a middle-relief role. 

Tanner Banks replaced Walker and provided some stability with 1 and 2/3 scoreless innings. Kemp chipped in a couple of nice defensive plays at first base, leaping to catch a Tyrone Taylor jam shot in foul territory and snagging a Soto one-hopper to his backhand side. 

Marsh kicked off the bottom of the seventh by lining a double down the left-field line. Trea Turner dinked a two-bagger to right, Alec Bohm and Castellanos kept the Phils’ rally rolling with base hits, and the game was suddenly much less tense.

The most memorable play of the inning was Stott’s one-out, bases-clearing double off the left-center wall. Realmuto was close to clipping Castellanos’ heels, but both slid in safely — simultaneously, almost — and the Phils went up 8-2. 

When he nailed a two-run dinger in the eighth, Castellanos had the luxury of jogging around the bases.

The Phillies will try to lock down a series win Saturday night. Mick Abel (2-0, 2.21 ERA) is set to face the Mets’ Griffin Canning (6-3, 3.80 ERA).

Harper swinging again 

Bryce Harper took a step forward Friday in his rehab from the right wrist injury that’s kept him out since June 5. 

“I felt good today,” Harper told reporters pregame. “I threw and that felt good, and then I took 20 dry swings and 20 off the tee. Felt better than I thought it was, so I’m happy about that.”

Harper is unsure why his wrist pain returned, though he noted “there’s no structural issues” and he “won’t need surgery or anything like that.”

“We haven’t really gotten too many answers about it,” Harper said. “It’s been pretty sporadic I guess, trying to get some answers on stuff. Obviously, there’s a lot of inflammation in there. Just try to calm that down as best we can and do the best we can with that.”

He’s hopeful that the rest and rehab enables him to come back without pain. 

As for a return timeline, Harper doesn’t have anything firm yet. 

“I don’t know,” he said. “It’s the first day swinging a bat, so I’ve just got to see how it feels tomorrow, see if we can progress. Once we do, then I’ll ramp up and see where I am.”

Giants insider explains why Kyle Harrison should excite Red Sox fans

Giants insider explains why Kyle Harrison should excite Red Sox fans originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The drama around Rafael Devers’ departure from the Boston Red Sox has overshadowed the trade that sent him to the San Francisco Giants. What about the players Boston received in the blockbuster deal?

The Red Sox acquired left-hander Kyle Harrison, right-hander Jordan Hicks, minor-league outfielder James Tibbs III, and minor-league righty Jose Bello in exchange for their homegrown slugger. While Harrison and Hicks should be able to help the big-league club this season, Red Sox fans can’t help but wonder if they could have gotten more for a player of Devers’ caliber.

NBC Sports Bay Area’s Giants insider Alex Pavlovic shared his thoughts on the Red Sox’ return during Friday’s Early Edition.

“I was a little surprised by the overall return,” Pavlovic said. “I think just from what I know about this team and their system, I think it was a little bit light, probably.

“Having said that, I am a huge fan of Kyle Harrison, and I know the Giants are as well. He’s about a year and three months removed from being the best left-handed pitching prospect in baseball.”

Indeed, Harrison was MLB’s No. 1 ranked left-handed pitching prospect heading into the 2024 season. The 22-year-old posted an underwhelming 4.56 ERA and 1.34 WHIP in 24 starts, but those numbers were partially tainted by nagging injuries.

“Just some context on his career here: He looked really, really good when he came up in 2023. He looked like a future star here,” Pavlovic added. “Last year, he tried to pitch through an ankle injury and tried to help these guys because they needed the rotation help, and that led to some shoulder inflammation and really just set him back the second half of last year and put him in a tough spot in the offseason.

“But he did come back last month. He was throwing 96, 97 (mph), looked like the Kyle we saw two years ago. I will say, I mean, he is as mature a young man as I’ve ever covered here. So I think he’s gonna be a good one, I think the Red Sox did very well there. The rest of the package, they probably could have done a little bit better.”

Harrison’s boasts an outstanding high-90s fastball, but the Red Sox optioned him to Triple-A Worcester to work on the rest of his pitching repertoire. A reliable third pitch would help him immensely as he aims to work his way into Boston’s starting rotation.

As for the rest of the return, the hard-throwing Hicks spent his first seven MLB seasons as a reliever before joining the Giants starting rotation in 2024. He hasn’t fared well as a starter, compiling a 4.83 ERA and 1.48 WHIP in 42 appearances (29 starts) over his one-and-a-half seasons in San Francisco. Red Sox chief baseball officer Craig Breslow said Hicks will come out of Boston’s bullpen when he returns from the injured list.

Tibbs was the 13th overall pick in the 2024 MLB Draft, one pick after the Red Sox’ selection of fellow outfielder Braden Montgomery, who was traded to the Chicago White Sox as part of the offseason Garrett Crochet trade. The 22-year-old was San Francisco’s No. 3 prospect and hit .246 with 12 homers, 32 RBI, 42 walks and 45 strikeouts in 57 games for High-A Eugene this season.

Bello, 20, was signed by the Giants as an international free agent out of the Dominican Republic in 2023. He recorded a 2.00 ERA across eight rookie-ball appearances (18 innings) this season, striking out 28 batters and walking three.

Trading an elite hitter like Devers typically would bring a bigger haul, but the Red Sox managed to dump all of the $254 million remaining on Devers’ contract. Rather than focusing on the best possible return, Breslow and Co. jumped at the opportunity to get Devers’ money off the books.

Devers will play his first game against his former team Friday night when the Red Sox and Giants begin a three-game series at Oracle Park.

NBA Trade Rumors Roundup: Latest Kevin Durant trade rumors, Lakers search for center, more

With the NBA Finals going seven games, don't bet on a resolution to the Kevin Durant trade circus before Monday — the league does not want a trade upstaging Game 7. Not that a deal was imminent anyway, but with the NBA Draft on Wednesday, it's becoming a small window.

Let's get into the latest trade buzz, starting with the latest on Durant.

Kevin Durant trade latest

Let's break down all the KD news via bullet points.

• "Game of Chicken" between Suns, Durant suitors. The Phoenix Suns are not going to trade Durant away for a lowball offer. They know they aren't going to get back what they gave up to get him, but they still expect a quality return. The teams Durant wants to go to — the Rockets, Heat, and Spurs — have yet to meet that threshold. ESPN’s Shams Charania summed it up well as a "game of chicken."

"I had one team tell me today it's kinda a game of chicken at this point. From the Houston Rockets to the Miami Heat to the Minnesota Timberwolves, it's literally one or two pieces away, either which way, that can get a deal done. ... My understanding is they are in talks with those three teams specifically."

Along the same lines, the Rockets are betting that the price the Suns are asking for Durant will drop, reports ESPN's Brian Windhorst.

This is how negotiations work. The question is, who blinks? Or does something else change that breaks the deadlock?

• Does Durant want Timberwolves? Minnesota is one of those teams mentioned to be in talks with Phoenix, but it's not one of the teams on Durant's original list of preferred landing spots. Therein lies the conflict in getting a deal done, report Marc Stein and Jake Fischer of The Stein Line.

"[The Timberwolves] are said to be reluctant to go ahead with a trade unless they know Durant would embrace it."

By all accounts, Durant has no interest in the Timberwolves. Would Minnesota follow the path Toronto did with Kawhi Leonard and roll the dice on trading for him and hope he stays (Leonard didn't)? Minnesota seems unlikely to take that risk, considering their roster has made the Western Conference Finals consecutive years, but nothing is settled.

• Grizzlies not pursuing Durant. Memphis landed four first-round picks in the Desmond Bane trade, which led to some speculation that they might try to flip those and insert themselves into the Durant sweepstakes.

That's not happening, reports Fischer and Stein, which seems somewhat obvious. I feel like the Grizzlies saying they are not in the running for Durant is a lot like me saying I am taking myself out of the running to date Sabrina Carpenter. Still, the rumor persisted. Along those same lines, forget the rumors that the Grizzlies are going to trade Ja Morant or Jaren Jackson Jr. and rebuild. As previously reported here, league sources shot that idea down to NBC Sports. Or, take Morant's word for it.

DeRozan becomes Durant fallback?

There will be losers in the Kevin Durant sweepstakes, and Stein and Fischer suggested that some of those teams could turn their attention to Sacramento's DeMar DeRozan, who is considered available. DeRozan will be 36 next season, but is still a midrange assassin who averaged 22.2 points and 4.4 assists per game last season.

If the Kings trade DeRozan in the coming days, it will likely be for a draft pick (and matching salary). They do not currently have a first-round pick, but are reportedly seeking one.

Lakers talking to teams about centers

The Buss family selling the Lakers: Surprise.

The Lakers are reaching out to other teams about their centers: Opposite of a surprise.

The worst-kept secret in the league is the Lakers looking for a rim-running center, so it's no surprise that Anthony Irwin of Clutch Points reports the Lakers have reached out to the Nets about Nic Claxton, the Jazz about Walker Kessler, and the Trail Blazers about Robert Williams III. All three of them have been linked to the Lakers in the past and are rumored to be available — as is another Lakers' target (and the best fit of that group), Daniel Gafford of Dallas — but because everyone knows the Lakers need a five other GMs are going to ask for the moon.

Expect this to take some time to play out. The Lakers can keep the idea of signing Clint Capela or Brook Lopez to the taxpayer midlevel exception in their back pocket, but they should aim higher.

76ers want to move up from No. 3 pick in draft

A report came out this week that the 76ers plan to run it back next season with Joel Embiid, Paul George, and Tyrese Maxey, betting on better health. Of course they are, they don't have another choice. They are not going to trade the young Maxey. George is close to untradeable, considering his contract and his play last season, and the market for Embiid would not be what they hope for, either.

Daryl Morey is also hoping he could move up one spot — from No. 3 to No. 2 in the draft, reports Marc Stein. That rumor has been circulating for a while, but it would take something very enticing to persuade the Spurs to part with the second pick and Dylan Harper, and the 76ers don't have that on their roster.

Whatever happens with the No. 3 pick, don't expect it to be Ace Bailey, who is falling down draft boards around the league and cancelled a workout with Philadelphia.

Bucks to be aggressive in upgrading roster

The Giannis Antetokounmpo trade talk has tied down, and what Antetokounmpo told Brazilian publication Coast to Coast only seems to confirm that (translation by Eurohoops).

"The Finals are different, I hope to be back soon with the Bucks."

The Bucks were not close to making the Finals this season, and it's hard to picture how that changes next season with Damian Lillard out for most of it due to a torn Achilles. Still, they're going to try, reports Bobby Marks at ESPN.

"Sources confirmed to ESPN that Milwaukee will be aggressively exploring options in free agency and trades to complement Antetokounmpo."

The Bucks have the money to use the full $14.1 million midlevel exception, but they don't have much cap room if they plan to re-sign backup center Bobby Portis (and with Brook Lopez a free agent, they are expected to). Milwaukee can try to find a trade for Kyle Kuzma, but the return there would not be great.

That said, look for the Bucks to try and do something, they need to show Antetokounmpo they are trying.

NHL Trade Rumors: Flyers Could Hijack Canucks Trade for Bowen Byram

The Flyers and Canucks could get into a bidding war for Sabres defenseman Bowen Byram. (Photo: Bob Frid, Imagn Images)

It's a poorly-kept secret that the Philadelphia Flyers like Bowen Byram, but so do the Vancouver Canucks, who are raring to strike a trade for him first.

The Flyers' interest in Byram dates back to his time with the Colorado Avalanche before he was dealt to the Buffalo Sabres for Casey Mittelstadt last season.

Byram, 24, was said to be one of the Flyers' main targets in a potential Cutter Gauthier trade, but, as we now know, ultimately settled on the Anaheim Ducks' package of Jamie Drysdale and a second-round pick in the 2025 NHL Draft.

According to multiple reports, the Flyers are still interested in Byram, as well as star Sabres forward J.J. Peterka. The only problem for Philadelphia is that the trade cost is said to be quite high, as will be the next salaries of the two players.

Both players are pending restricted free agents in need of new contracts come July 1, otherwise other NHL teams can sign the standouts to offer sheets.

It would behoove the Sabres, who are in desperate need of change and roster players, to trade Byram and/or Peterka before July 1 to secure NHL talent instead of acquiring only draft capital from prospective offer sheets.

Flyers Offer Sheet Target Mavrik Bourque No Longer Within ReachFlyers Offer Sheet Target Mavrik Bourque No Longer Within ReachThe shrinking list of offseason Philadelphia Flyers trade targets and offer sheet gambles just got a whole lot smaller.

Out West, it's been rumored that Canucks management has been looking to get Byram in Vancouver since their watch first began, and they have further incentive to acquire the 2019 No. 4 overall pick with captain Quinn Hughes free to leave to join his brothers on the New Jersey Devils in 2027.

The NHL trade market is interesting this summer, to say the least. In one corner, the Flyers, afraid to pay the price necessary for acquiring elite talents, both via trade and in salary. In the other, the Canucks, desperate to keep their elite talents in the building and desperate to be prepared in the event that the elite talents leave.

The stark contrast between these two ideologies could either create a bidding war or end up with one decisive winner at the end of the day.

If the Flyers are serious about hijacking this potential Canucks trade for Bowen Byram, it could mean parting ways with one of their many wingers, like Owen Tippett, Bobby Brink, or Tyson Foerster, or a pending RFA defenseman of their own in Cam York.

It helps that Byram has an elite offensive skillset, as the Flyers ranked 30th in the NHL in points from defensemen last season ahead of only Boston and San Jose.

The Flyers are quickly finding out that, to get, they have to give, especially at the expense of the hungry Canucks. But will they?

Golden Knights Release 2025-26 Preseason Schedule

Vegas Golden Knights fans celebrate a second period goal against the Chicago Blackhawks at United Center. Mandatory Credit: Talia Sprague-Imagn Images

The Vegas Golden Knights have released their 2025-26 preseason schedule, which will feature four home games and three road games. 

The Golden Knights will begin their preseason with a road game against the San Jose Sharks on Sep. 21 before playing back-to-back home games against the Los Angeles Kings on Sep. 23 and the Utah Mammoth on Sep. 25. They'll then play back-to-back road games with a matchup against the Sharks on Sep. 26 and the Colorado Avalanche on Sep. 30. They'll conclude preseason action with home games against the Avalanche on Oct. 1 and the Sharks on Oct. 3. 

The Golden Knights also announced, via a press release, that the dates and rosters for Rookie Camp will be announced at a later date. 

Sunday, September 21, Golden Knights at San Jose Sharks, 5 p.m. PT (SAP Center)

Tuesday, September 23, Golden Knights vs. Los Angeles Kings, 7 p.m. PT (T-Mobile Arena)

Thursday, September 25, Golden Knights vs. Utah Mammoth, 7 p.m. PT (T-Mobile Arena)

Friday, September 26, Golden Knights at San Jose Sharks, 7 p.m. PT (SAP Center)

Tuesday, September 30, Golden Knights at Colorado Avalanche, 5 p.m. PT (Ball Arena)

Wednesday, October 1, Golden Knights vs. Colorado Avalanche, 6 p.m. PT (T-Mobile Arena)

Friday, October 3, Golden Knights vs. San Jose Sharks, 7 p.m. PT (T-Mobile Arena)

Stay updated with the most interesting Golden Knights stories, analysis, breaking news and more! Tap the star to add us to your favourites on Google News to never miss a story.

Impressive St Helens sink Leeds to relieve pressure on Wellens

  • St Helens 18-4 Leeds

  • Cross, Dagnall and Sailor run in tries for Saints

St Helens potentially breathed new life into their season and quietened some of the noise surrounding their inconsistency with a victory over Leeds Rhinos that could easily represent a watershed moment for the remainder of 2025.

Paul Wellens’ side have been some distance from the standards many expect from the most successful team in Super League history, with the Saints some way adrift of the leading pack at the halfway stage of the season. They were expected to fall short here too against a Leeds side that once again look like title contenders.

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What's the 2025 NBA Draft order? Here's an updated list of all 59 picks

What's the 2025 NBA Draft order? Here's an updated list of all 59 picks originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

There have been some changes to the 2025 NBA Draft order as the two-day event nears.

The most recent deal involving picks in this year’s draft was between the Indiana Pacers and New Orleans Pelicans. The Pacers reacquired their 2026 first-rounder from the Pelicans in exchange for the No. 23 selection and the rights to guard Mojave King, who was a 2023 second-round pick.

That Pacers-Pelicans deal followed a blockbuster trade between the Memphis Grizzlies and Orlando Magic. Orlando paid a steep price to acquire standout guard Desmond Bane from Memphis, sending out four first-round picks — including No. 16 this year — and one pick swap along with guards Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and Cole Anthony.

Who has the first pick in the 2025 NBA Draft?

The Dallas Mavericks are picking first overall thanks to one of the most unlikely draft lottery wins in NBA history. Months after controversially trading Luka Doncic to the Los Angeles Lakers, Dallas moved up 10 spots in the order to No. 1 despite boasting 1.8% lottery odds.

The Mavs are widely expected to kick off the draft by taking Duke forward Cooper Flagg, the consensus top prospect in this year’s class.

What’s the 2025 NBA Draft order?

The rest of the top five, in order, includes the San Antonio Spurs, Philadelphia 76ers, Charlotte Hornets and Utah Jazz.

Here’s an updated look at the full draft order:

  1. Dallas Mavericks
  2. San Antonio Spurs
  3. Philadelphia 76ers
  4. Charlotte Hornets
  5. Utah Jazz
  6. Washington Wizards
  7. New Orleans Pelicans
  8. Brooklyn Nets
  9. Toronto Raptors
  10. Houston Rockets (from Phoenix through Brooklyn)
  11. Portland Trail Blazers
  12. Chicago Bulls
  13. Atlanta Hawks (from Sacramento)
  14. San Antonio Spurs (from Atlanta)
  15. Oklahoma City Thunder (from Miami through LA Clippers)
  16. Memphis Grizzlies (from Orlando)
  17. Minnesota Timberwolves (from Detroit through New York, OKC and Houston)
  18. Washington Wizards (from Memphis)
  19. Brooklyn Nets (from Milwaukee through New York, Detroit, Portland and New Orleans)
  20. Miami Heat (from Golden State)
  21. Utah Jazz (from Minnesota)
  22. Atlanta Hawks (from LA Lakers through New Orleans)
  23. New Orleans Pelicans (from Indiana)
  24. Oklahoma City Thunder (from LA Clippers)
  25. Orland Magic (from Denver)
  26. Brooklyn Nets (from New York)
  27. Brooklyn Nets (from Houston)
  28. Boston Celtics
  29. Phoenix Suns (from Cleveland through Utah)
  30. Los Angeles Clippers (from OKC)
  31. Minnesota Timberwolves (from Utah)
  32. Boston Celtics (from Washington through Detroit and Brooklyn)
  33. Charlotte Hornets
  34. Charlotte Hornets (from New Orleans through San Antonio, Phoenix and Memphis)
  35. Philadelphia 76ers
  36. Brooklyn Nets
  37. Detroit Pistons (from Toronto through Dallas and San Antonio)
  38. San Antonio Spurs
  39. Toronto Raptors (from Portland through Sacramento)
  40. Washington Wizards (from Phoenix)
  41. Golden State Warriors (from Miami through Brooklyn and Indiana)
  42. Sacramento Kings (from Chicago through San Antonio)
  43. Utah Jazz (from Dallas)
  44. Oklahoma City Thunder (from Atlanta)
  45. Chicago Bulls (from Sacramento)
  46. Orlando Magic
  47. Milwaukee Bucks (from Detroit through Washington)
  48. Memphis Grizzlies (from Golden State through Washington and Brooklyn)
  49. Cleveland Cavaliers (from Milwaukee)
  50. New York Knicks (from Memphis through OKC and Boston)
  51. Los Angeles Clippers (from Minnesota through Atlanta and Houston)
  52. Phoenix Suns (from Denver through Charlotte and Minnesota)
  53. Utah Jazz (from LA Clippers through LA Lakers)
  54. Indiana Pacers
  55. Los Angeles Lakers
  56. Memphis Grizzlies (from Houston)
  57. Orlando Magic (from Boston)
  58. Cleveland Cavaliers
  59. Houston Rockets (from OKC through Atlanta)

What are the 2025 NBA Draft dates?

The NBA draft will take place over two days for the second straight year. The first round, which includes the first 30 picks, is on Wednesday, June 25, followed by Round 2 on Thursday, June 26.

What is the 2025 NBA Draft location?

The Barclays Center, home of the Brooklyn Nets in New York, is hosting the entire draft.

Why are there only 59 picks in the 2025 NBA Draft?

There are typically 30 picks per round in the NBA draft, but the New York Knicks were docked their 2025 second-rounder after the league found they had violated tampering rules before signing Jalen Brunson in 2022 free agency.

What's the 2025 NBA Draft order? Here's an updated list of all 59 picks

What's the 2025 NBA Draft order? Here's an updated list of all 59 picks originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

There have been some changes to the 2025 NBA Draft order as the two-day event nears.

The most recent deal involving picks in this year’s draft was between the Indiana Pacers and New Orleans Pelicans. The Pacers reacquired their 2026 first-rounder from the Pelicans in exchange for the No. 23 selection and the rights to guard Mojave King, who was a 2023 second-round pick.

That Pacers-Pelicans deal followed a blockbuster trade between the Memphis Grizzlies and Orlando Magic. Orlando paid a steep price to acquire standout guard Desmond Bane from Memphis, sending out four first-round picks — including No. 16 this year — and one pick swap along with guards Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and Cole Anthony.

Who has the first pick in the 2025 NBA Draft?

The Dallas Mavericks are picking first overall thanks to one of the most unlikely draft lottery wins in NBA history. Months after controversially trading Luka Doncic to the Los Angeles Lakers, Dallas moved up 10 spots in the order to No. 1 despite boasting 1.8% lottery odds.

The Mavs are widely expected to kick off the draft by taking Duke forward Cooper Flagg, the consensus top prospect in this year’s class.

What’s the 2025 NBA Draft order?

The rest of the top five, in order, includes the San Antonio Spurs, Philadelphia 76ers, Charlotte Hornets and Utah Jazz.

Here’s an updated look at the full draft order:

  1. Dallas Mavericks
  2. San Antonio Spurs
  3. Philadelphia 76ers
  4. Charlotte Hornets
  5. Utah Jazz
  6. Washington Wizards
  7. New Orleans Pelicans
  8. Brooklyn Nets
  9. Toronto Raptors
  10. Houston Rockets (from Phoenix through Brooklyn)
  11. Portland Trail Blazers
  12. Chicago Bulls
  13. Atlanta Hawks (from Sacramento)
  14. San Antonio Spurs (from Atlanta)
  15. Oklahoma City Thunder (from Miami through LA Clippers)
  16. Memphis Grizzlies (from Orlando)
  17. Minnesota Timberwolves (from Detroit through New York, OKC and Houston)
  18. Washington Wizards (from Memphis)
  19. Brooklyn Nets (from Milwaukee through New York, Detroit, Portland and New Orleans)
  20. Miami Heat (from Golden State)
  21. Utah Jazz (from Minnesota)
  22. Atlanta Hawks (from LA Lakers through New Orleans)
  23. New Orleans Pelicans (from Indiana)
  24. Oklahoma City Thunder (from LA Clippers)
  25. Orland Magic (from Denver)
  26. Brooklyn Nets (from New York)
  27. Brooklyn Nets (from Houston)
  28. Boston Celtics
  29. Phoenix Suns (from Cleveland through Utah)
  30. Los Angeles Clippers (from OKC)
  31. Minnesota Timberwolves (from Utah)
  32. Boston Celtics (from Washington through Detroit and Brooklyn)
  33. Charlotte Hornets
  34. Charlotte Hornets (from New Orleans through San Antonio, Phoenix and Memphis)
  35. Philadelphia 76ers
  36. Brooklyn Nets
  37. Detroit Pistons (from Toronto through Dallas and San Antonio)
  38. San Antonio Spurs
  39. Toronto Raptors (from Portland through Sacramento)
  40. Washington Wizards (from Phoenix)
  41. Golden State Warriors (from Miami through Brooklyn and Indiana)
  42. Sacramento Kings (from Chicago through San Antonio)
  43. Utah Jazz (from Dallas)
  44. Oklahoma City Thunder (from Atlanta)
  45. Chicago Bulls (from Sacramento)
  46. Orlando Magic
  47. Milwaukee Bucks (from Detroit through Washington)
  48. Memphis Grizzlies (from Golden State through Washington and Brooklyn)
  49. Cleveland Cavaliers (from Milwaukee)
  50. New York Knicks (from Memphis through OKC and Boston)
  51. Los Angeles Clippers (from Minnesota through Atlanta and Houston)
  52. Phoenix Suns (from Denver through Charlotte and Minnesota)
  53. Utah Jazz (from LA Clippers through LA Lakers)
  54. Indiana Pacers
  55. Los Angeles Lakers
  56. Memphis Grizzlies (from Houston)
  57. Orlando Magic (from Boston)
  58. Cleveland Cavaliers
  59. Houston Rockets (from OKC through Atlanta)

What are the 2025 NBA Draft dates?

The NBA draft will take place over two days for the second straight year. The first round, which includes the first 30 picks, is on Wednesday, June 25, followed by Round 2 on Thursday, June 26.

What is the 2025 NBA Draft location?

The Barclays Center, home of the Brooklyn Nets in New York, is hosting the entire draft.

Why are there only 59 picks in the 2025 NBA Draft?

There are typically 30 picks per round in the NBA draft, but the New York Knicks were docked their 2025 second-rounder after the league found they had violated tampering rules before signing Jalen Brunson in 2022 free agency.

Cubs legend Sammy Sosa returns to Wrigley Field after 20-plus-year hiatus

CHICAGO — Legendary Cubs slugger Sammy Sosa returned to Wrigley Field for the first time in more than 20 years on Friday before Chicago's afternoon game with the Seattle Mariners.

Sosa, who is set to be inducted into the Cubs' team Hall of Fame this year, arrived at the iconic North Side ballpark in a black SUV. He was greeted by owner Tom Ricketts, who embraced him in a hug as he exited the vehicle.

Sosa became the face of the Cubs franchise where he played 13 seasons after coming in a trade from the crosstown White Sox in March 1992. A seven-time All-Star, Sosa hit 545 homers in 1,811 games with the Cubs and hit a franchise-record 66 in 1998 when he was named the NL's MVP.

Sosa, now 56, played his final game with the Cubs at Wrigley on Oct. 2, 2004, when he homered and had two hits in an 8-6 loss to Atlanta. During his years with the Cubs, Sosa appeared to bulk up drastically and was a headliner in a generation of baseball's biggest names linked to performance-enhancing drugs.

The Cubs traded him to Baltimore with cash in February 2005 for three players.

Sosa appeared to acknowledge using performance-enhancing drugs in December when he released a statement saying he was sorry for mistakes, without specifying them.

“There were times I did whatever I could to recover from injuries in an effort to keep my strength up to perform over 162 games,” he said in the statement. “I never broke any laws. But in hindsight, I made mistakes and I apologize.”

On Friday morning, Sosa posed for photos with rising Cubs star Pete Crow-Armstrong outside the team's clubhouse and a video showed Sosa embracing manager Craig Counsell in his office before the game.

“(Sosa) saw the wind blowing out today and planned this trip around a good day to be here,” Counsell joked. “He asked to be in the lineup because the wind's blowing out.”

The Cubs honored Sosa with a video board tribute after the second inning. Sosa waved and bowed to fans from a suite during the presentation.

In Thursday's 8-7 loss to Milwaukee, Crow-Armstrong went deep to set a new team record for reaching 20 homers and 20-plus stolen stolen bases the fastest, doing it in 73 games. Sosa had the old mark of 96, set in 1994.

Counsell, who faced Sosa as a player, saluted the former slugger for his strength at the plate and long homers, as well as star power.

“Probably the best thing, Sammy was a true entertainer," Counsell said. "I think when you're in this long enough, you realize that's part of this.

“We're also here to entertain and I think Sammy was great at that.”

Flames Re-sign Forward Dryden Hunt To Two-Year Two-Way Contract

Calgary Flames left wing Dryden Hunt (15) (Photo: Sergei Belski-Imagn Images)

The Calgary Flames have re-signed winger Dryden Hunt to a two-year two-way contract extension with an AAV of $825,000.

The 29-year-old played 33 games for Calgary in two seasons, scoring three goals and 11 points.

He has played 89 games for Calgary's AHL affiliate team, the Wranglers, scoring 28 goals and 86 points, but it was last season where he scored a-point-a-game in 49 games with 16 goals, prompting Calgary to sign him to a two-way extension.

The former undraftee has played a total of 235 NHL games, scoring 18 goals and 54 points. 

Warriors' Draymond Green reacts to LeBron James' viral ‘ring culture' comments

Warriors' Draymond Green reacts to LeBron James' viral ‘ring culture' comments originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

LeBron James’ viral comments about “ring culture” quickly garnered the attention of the basketball and sports world, including that of Warriors star Draymond Green.

“I don’t know why it’s discussed so much in our sport and why it’s the end-all-be-all of everything,” James said on the “Mind the Game” podcast. “You tell me Allen Iverson, Charles Barkley, and Steve Nash weren’t f–king unbelievable? They can’t be talked about with these guys because they won rings? It’s like saying Peyton Manning can’t be in the same room with Tom Brady or [Patrick] Mahomes because he only has one ring.

“They don’t ever discuss that in their sport. Barry Bonds never won a World Series, and you can’t sit here and tell me that he’s not the greatest baseball player to ever touch a bat. … Jerry West went to like nine straight NBA Finals and was only able to win one ring. And he’s the logo of our league.”

Green and his podcast co-host Baron Davis discussed James’ comments on the latest episode of “The Draymond Green Show with Baron Davis,” where Davis initially said he “definitely” agrees with James.

And while Green does too, he shared a more thought-out response with a big-picture perspective.

“I think ring culture took a big turn and came into play in large part due to the success of the Golden State Warriors. What Bron was saying is that you get guys like Stephen A. [Smith], and to me it felt like Stephen A is someone who talks a lot about rings and you don’t know what it takes to win a ring because you’ve never won a ring. You don’t understand because you’ve never gone through it. And because you don’t know how hard it is because you’ve never gone through it, then you start using it to lessen the greatness of some of the greats.

“Is having a ring important? Of course. Does it add to legacies? Does it stamp legacies? Absolutely. I’m not going to sit here and act like having a ring or rings doesn’t matter. It does matter. But it doesn’t make [Charles] Barkley less great than he was. It doesn’t make Allen Iverson less great. I think when people use it, they use it to dim the greatness, dim the light on guys. And that’s what I felt like Bron was getting at.”

To Green’s point, both Barkley and Iverson are Naismith Basketball Hall of Famers, 11-time NBA All-Stars and one-time league MVPs.

But some critics have downplayed their greatness over the simple fact that they never hoisted the Larry O’Brien Trophy.

In more recent times, players such as James Harden, Russell Westbrook, and probably more than anyone, Chris Paul, have been scrutinzed for never getting over that hump of winning a championship.

“CP and James Harden, if they don’t run into us [the Warriors], they probably do win a championship,” Green said. “Sometimes, that’s just how the cookie crumbles. But that don’t mean those guys aren’t great. That don’t mean Chris Paul isn’t a winner. Chris Paul is a winner. There’s so many things that have to go right for you to win a championship.

“So to just lessen someone’s greatness because of it, I think that’s wrong. Again, I’m not saying that having the rings don’t matter. When I walk in a room, I feel great about the four rings I have. But that does not lessen someone else’s greatness.”

While people will have their own opinions and continue to debate their stance, Davis ended with a pretty level-headed statement.

“There are more great players than great players that won rings,” Davis said, as Green agreed. “There are more great players who haven’t won rings than great players that have won rings. That’s the way we got to look at it.”

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