Poll: Which Anaheim Ducks Offseason Acquisition are You Most Anticipating?

This has been the busiest summer of Pat Verbeek’s four offseasons as the general manager of the Anaheim Ducks. He gave the roster a significant facelift, shipping out long-time pieces Trevor Zegras and John Gibson while acquiring four players set to fill important roles on the depth chart.

Along with new faces on the ice, a largely new coaching staff will play a crucial role in the upcoming and pivotal season for the Ducks franchise. Verbeek’s contract is coming to an end, and playoffs have been the stated mandate from both Verbeek and ownership alike.

Poll: Was Beckett Sennecke a Good Pick at Third Overall in 2024?

Poll: Who is the Anaheim Ducks' Number One Defenseman of the Future?

Focusing on the depth chart, Chris Kreider, Mikael Granlund, Ryan Poehling, and Petr Mrazek are all expected to elevate and insulate the Ducks’ young core while impacting games on a nightly basis in their designated roles.

Danny Wild-Imagn Images

Chris Kreider

Chris Kreider (34), along with former New York Rangers captain and current Ducks defenseman Jacob Trouba, was part of a widely publicized and now notorious memo from Rangers GM Chris Drury stating the pair's availability for trade.

The Ducks parted with prospect Carey Terrance and a 2025 third-round pick (Artyom Gonchar) to acquire Kreider and a 2025 fourth-round pick (Elijah Neuenschwander).

Following his three best seasons from a goalscoring perspective from 2022 through 2024, where he totaled 52, 36, and 39 goals, respectively, he only managed 22 goals in 2024-25 and added just eight assists for 30 points in 68 games, his lowest points-per-game average in his 13-year NHL career.

Much of his poor season may be attributed to a slew of injuries, including back spasms, a broken hand, and a bout with vertigo; injuries he admittedly shouldn’t have attempted to play through.

Kreider’s speed, tenacity, and net front skill are all components that the Ducks have lacked during the latter stages of their rebuild, and he seems like a seamless fit anywhere on the left side of the Ducks' top nine.

He has two years remaining on his contract, which carries a $6.5 million AAV and a 15-team NMC.

Bob Frid-Imagn Images

Mikael Granlund

After failing to make a splash during the 2024 free agency period, the Ducks signed Mikael Granlund (33) to a three-year contract, carrying an AAV of $7 million and a full no-trade clause in year one that decreases to a 15-team NTC in year two and a ten-team NTC in year three.

One of Granlund’s most notable strengths is his versatility. He can play up and down the lineup, in every forward position, and features often on both special teams units.

He’s eclipsed the 60-point mark in three of the last four seasons despite playing for four different organizations, including scoring 105 (27-78=105) points in 121 games for a lowly San Jose Sharks team from 2023 to 2025.

Though analytics call into question his defensive prowess, he is a 200-foot contributor who displays disruptive and proper defensive tendencies while providing above-average hockey IQ and creativity on the offensive end.

Nick Wosika-Imagn Images

Ryan Poehling

Perhaps the most controversial trade of Verbeek’s tenure in the Ducks' front office was trading Trevor Zegras to the Philadelphia Flyers in exchange for Ryan Poehling (26), a 2025 second-round pick (Eric Nilson), and a 2026 fourth-round pick.

Poehling fits the role and the Ducks' need for a prototypical bottom-six center. He’s struggled to replicate the offensive production at the NHL level that made him a successful NCAA player a St. Cloud State University and AHL player for the Laval Rocket.

He’s a straight-line, defensively impactful, forechecking center who kills penalties and has shown a higher degree of transition offense than his archetype would dictate. 2024-25, his fourth full season in the NHL, yielded his highest offensive output, as he scored 31 points (12-19=31) in 68 games for the Flyers.

Poehling’s contract has one year remaining at a $1.9 million AAV, after which, he will become a UFA.

Matt Marton-Imagn Images

Petr Mrazek

Petr Mrazek (33) was acquired along with a 2027 second-round pick and a 2026 fourth-round pick in exchange for John Gibson.

The Ducks have made the awaited transition and handed their crease over to one of the best young goaltenders in the NHL, Lukas Dostal. Gibson’s departure, after two seasons of deploying a tandem, meant the team needed a viable backup for Dostal.

They have Ville Husso on the roster as well, but he’s proven more volatile than once hoped or expected, so the team now has insurance in the form of Mrazek, an unquestionable NHL-caliber goaltender.

To this point in his career, Mrazek has played for five NHL organizations in his 11 years in the league. He’s won 184 games and has started 397, posting a career .906 SV% and 26 shutouts.

His performances have been unpredictable in the past few seasons, but the hope is that in a role where he’s the clear and designated backup to a fellow Czech countryman (Dostal), he will capitalize on the opportunity to find consistency in a contract year.

Mrazek has one year remaining on his deal that carries an AAV of $4.25 million.

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Poll: How Would You Grade the Anaheim Ducks Rebrand?

The Mets and Yankees’ high-priced rosters are stumbling at a terrible time – but why?

If current trends continue, the Mets and Yankees could both drop out of playoff position.Photograph: Justin Casterline/Getty Images

The New York Mets and New York Yankees will have disbursednearly $640m in player salaries by the end of the 2025 season, but money hasn’t bought happiness for either New York City fanbase. After enjoying hot starts to begin the 2025 season, the Yankees are now in third place in the American League East while the Mets are a woeful 11-16since the All-Star Break and 4-11 in the month of August.

Even though both teams would qualify for the postseason if the season ended today, neither of them are meeting their lofty preseason expectations. With under 40 games remaining in the season, what is ailing the teams that enjoyed comfortable first-place leads earlier this season? And is all hope lost as they enter the last quarter of the season?

Related: Mariano Rivera tears achilles during Yankees Old-Timers’ Day game

The Mets

When the Mets signed Juan Soto to a record-setting 15-year, $765m contract in December, they lured the superstar away from the wealthy crosstown rival Yankees and inherited the weighty expectations that come with a historic signing. When Soto started (relatively) slowly over the first two months of the season, the Mets covered for him with some of the best pitching in baseball (a 2.88 ERA through 31 May) and a strong offensive season from first baseman Pete Alonso.

When Soto found his usual form in June, the Mets started faltering. Since the start of June, Soto has hit 21 home runs and posted a .408 on-base percentage, but the Mets are a dreary 28-36 in that same time span. The month of August has been an ongoing nightmare for their pitching staff: the starting pitching that anchored the team to start the season has a ghastly 6.22 ERA in August, which has taxed a tired bullpen that added two major pieces (Ryan Helsley, Tyler Rogers) at the trade deadline in July.

The Mets’ bullpen is responsible for eightof the team’s elevenlosses in August. Helsley, a two-time All-Star who led the National League in saves last year with the St Louis Cardinals, was brought in to set up All-Star closer Edwin Díaz. Unfortunately, Helsley has stumbled to a 7.11 ERA in his first eight games with his new team. It’s an uncharacteristically bad stretch for one of baseball’s most dominant relief pitchers, and the Mets need him to find his usual form if they want to compete in a loaded National League playoff race.

Even with their horrendous run of recent form, the Mets remain one of the most talented teams in baseball and a viable pennant contender. Shortstop Francisco Lindor – who finished second to Shohei Ohtani in last year’s NL MVP race – is one of the game’s most admired leaders and consistent producers. Even after battling through two major slumps earlier in the season, Lindor has already hit 20 home runs and stolen 20 bases for the fifth time in his career.

If the Mets want to make their playoffs, they’ll need to play like a postseason team until the end of September. Of their final 38 games, 22 of them will be against teams in the thick of a playoff race (including seven against the division-leading Phillies). For a team that was 21 games over .500 in the middle of June, it would be nothing short of an epic collapse if the Mets were somehow left home in October.

Related: ‘There was more at stake today’: Brewers’ victory wins burgers for entire city of Milwaukee

The Yankees

The Yankees won their first American League pennant in 15 years last season, but their World Series loss to the Dodgers was a bitter end marred by terrible defense and poor hitting in clutch situations. This year’s team has better balance than the 2024 version – they added top starting pitcher Max Fried, former MVP Cody Bellinger and two-time All-Star relief pitcher Devin Williams after losing Soto to the Mets – but the Yankees still suffer from inconsistent relief pitching and sloppy defense.

Aaron Judge is a good bet to win his third MVP award in four years – he leads baseball in batting average, on-base percentage, slugging percentage and times on base – and infielder Jazz Chisholm Jr is, like Lindor, one of eight players this season to hit at least 20 home runs and steal at least 20 bases. By the end of the season, shortstop Anthony Volpe might join them as a member of the 20-20 club. The offense hasn’t been the problem: it has the highest slugging percentage (.430) and more home runs than any team in baseball (195). A lineup featuring Judge, Bellinger (22 home runs this year) Giancarlo Stanton (441 career home runs) will terrify any opposing pitcher.

The problem is the pitching staff. Since the All-Star Break, the Yankees have the worst ERA (4.70) of any team competing for a playoff spot and have walked more hitters (110) than any team in baseball in that span. Like the Mets, the Yankees traded for two former All-Star relief pitchers (David Bednar and Camilo Doval), to try to stabilize the struggling staff and push the team into the postseason. While Bednar has adapted nicely (a 2.16 ERA and three saves), Doval has labored to a 6.43 ERA with six walks in eight appearances. General manager Brian Cashman likely envisioned Doval, Bednar, former closer Luke Weaver and Williams vanquishing hitters in the late innings. Instead, the team is experimenting with different roles while trying to fix what is ailing Williams.

After three consecutive seasons with a sub-2.00 ERA in Milwaukee, Williams has endured a nightmare opening season in the Bronx, which has seen him lose the closer job before regaining it, only to lose it again after surrendering runs in five consecutive outings over July and August. In 140 innings pitched from 2022-2024, Williams allowed 26 total earned runs and seven home runs. In 47 1/3 innings this season, he has allowed 28 earned runs and five homers. Whether his issues are mechanical or psychological, Williams has not been the pitcher that the Yankees thought they were acquiring this offseason.

And then there is the defense. Since their notoriously bad performance in Game 5 of the 2024 World Series, the Yankees’ defense is more scrutinized than any other team in baseball. They might not be as bad as some people say – Volpe is a Gold Glove-quality shortstop, Paul Goldschmidt remains a reliable first baseman and Bellinger is one of baseball’s best defensive outfielders – but some embarrassing blunders have kept that conversation alive. Ultimately, it isn’t a trustworthy unit.

The Yankees offense is so good, though, that it’s unlikely they’ll miss the playoffs. The American League is a much weaker overall group than the National League this season, which means the Yankees may very well find their way to a second consecutive pennant. But they’ll need to shore up their pitching and defense if they expect to return to the World Series.

Former Shark, Canuck Claimed Off Waivers In KHL

Russian defenseman Nikolai Goldobin, 29, has been claimed off KHL waivers by SKA St. Petersburg, the KHL website announced on Monday. He had been waived by Spartak Moscow, the club for which he’d played the past two seasons.

Born in Moscow, Goldobin went overseas at age 16 to play junior hockey for the OHL’s Sarnia Sting. He became a first-round pick of the San Jose Sharks in the 2014 NHL Entry Draft, selected 27th overall.

Goldobin spent most of the 2014-15 season playing in Finland for HIFK Helsinki before signing with the Sharks late in the season and moving to the AHL’s San Jose Barracuda.

Between 2015 and 2019, Goldobin played 125 NHL games for the Sharks and Vancouver Canucks, recording 46 points and 24 penalty minutes. In February 2017, he was traded from San Jose to Vancouver for Danish winger Jannik Hansen.

Ex-Canuck Nikita Tryamkin Signs 3-Year Contract Extension In KHLEx-Canuck Nikita Tryamkin Signs 3-Year Contract Extension In KHL Russian defenseman Nikita Tryamkin, 30, has signed a three-year contract extension with Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg that will run through the end of the 2027-28 season, the KHL club announced recently.

Goldobin has spent the past five seasons in the KHL playing for CSKA Moscow, Metallurg Magnitogorsk and Spartak, recording 277 points in 339 regular-season and playoff games.

A perennial powerhouse in the KHL, last season SKA finished a disappointing seventh in the Western Conference and was eliminated in the first round of the playoffs despite a star-studded lineup that included Ivan Demidov, Alexander Nikishin, Mikhail GrigorenkoEvgeny Kuznetsov, Arseni Gritsyuk, Nikita Zaitsev and Tony DeAngelo.

Heading into 2025-26, only Zaitsev remains from that group. The team has replaced coach Roman Rotenberg with Igor Larionov and added center Igor Larionov Jr. and North Americans Rocco Grimaldi Trevor Murphy, Brennan Menell and Joey Blandisi, who have some NHL experience.

Alexander Burmistrov & Adam Clendening Latest To Sign With Chinese KHL TeamAlexander Burmistrov & Adam Clendening Latest To Sign With Chinese KHL Team Ever since a major rebranding a week ago, the Shanghai Dragons have hired a high-profile head coach and signed 14 new players, including several ex-NHLers. On Saturday, five new signings were announced, including Russian center Alexander Burmistrov and the re-signing of American defenseman Adam Clendening. Rocco Grimaldi Will Play For Igor Larionov In KHLRocco Grimaldi Will Play For Igor Larionov In KHL American forward Rocco Grimaldi, 32, has signed a two-year contract with SKA St. Petersburg, the KHL announced on Wednesday.

Draymond Green sparks Jimmy Butler dialogue over Heat's Haywood Highsmith trade

Draymond Green sparks Jimmy Butler dialogue over Heat's Haywood Highsmith trade originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

“Don’t put that evil on me, Ricky Bobby! I had nothing to do with it!”

Jimmy Butler channeled his inner Will Ferrell when Draymond Green dragged him into a back-and-forth on social media over the weekend.

The exchange took place after the Miami Heat traded forward Haywood Highsmith to the Brooklyn Nets on Friday. The trade sent Highsmith and a 2032 second-round pick to the Nets in exchange for a protected 2026 second-round pick.

Highsmith was looked at as a key piece to Miami’s future while Butler still was with the team before the Feb. 5 trade to the Warriors, but Green appears to believe the praise, by some, was exaggerated.

Highsmith averaged 24.6 minutes per game last season with the Heat, while scoring only 6.5 PPG.

Butler averaged 17.5 PPG last season, which puts these two in completely different categories.

The Heat reportedly made offers to the Phoenix Suns for now-Houston Rockets forward Kevin Durant this offseason, but Miami team president Pat Riley was unwilling to include young assets like Highsmith.

The complexities of Butler’s relationship with the Heat organization ultimately were unreconcilable in the end, but he seems much more at home now with the Warriors and isn’t too excited to contribute to Green’s social media banter.

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Emma Raducanu and Jack Draper to face each other in revamped US Open mixed doubles

  • Britons to meet in first round of 16-pair event

  • Raducanu and Alcaraz will play Draper and Pegula

Jack Draper and Emma Raducanu, will face each other in the first round of the revamped US Open mixed doubles. The event has been moved to before the main tournament, on 19 and 20 August, with $1m (£750,000) in prize money at stake for the winners of the 16-pair event.

Draper will play with the American Jessica Pegula after their original partners, Paula Badosa and Tommy Paul, withdrew. With both inside the top five in the singles rankings, the pair have been handed the top seeding and will kick off their campaign against the wildcard pair of Raducanu and Carlos Alcaraz.

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Athletics reportedly promoting top prospect Leo De Vries to Double-A Midland

Athletics reportedly promoting top prospect Leo De Vries to Double-A Midland originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Athletics are promoting top prospect Leo De Vries to Double-A Midland after the switch-hitting shortstop’s recent hot stretch with High-A Lansing, MLB.com’s Martín Gallegos reported Sunday, citing a source.

De Vries is the league’s No. 3 overall prospect and was the A’s critical return piece in the deal that sent All-Star closer Mason Miller to the San Diego Padres at the 2025 MLB trade deadline.

At 18 years old, De Vries slashed .249/.354/.426 with 91 hits, 58 RBI and 10 home runs over 97 games between the Padres’ High-A Fort Wayne affiliate and the Athletics’ High-A Lansing team in 2025. He began his professional career with the Padres organization at just 17 years old in 2024, playing 93 games between Single-A Lake Elsinore and the Arizona Fall League’s Peoria.

De Vries will be the youngest player at the Double-A level when he debuts for the RockHounds, according to Baseball America, and will be the 19th player to reach Double-A at 18 years old since 2010.

A’s general manager David Forst told Chris Townsend about his expectations for De Vries on “A’s Cast” on Wednesday — and it was quite the foreshadowing.

“I think Leo De Vries has a chance to be a superstar,” Forst said, adding that “there is a learning curve no matter where you are, but I’d like to think he gets his feet wet in Double-A before the end of the year, starts there next year, and then he’s off and running.”

The A’s have liked what they have seen from De Vries and look forward to seeing him — the equivalent of a high school senior — get his feet wet at yet another big-boy level.

Brewers at Cubs Game 1 prediction: Odds, expert picks, starting pitchers, trends, and stats for August 18

Its Monday, August 18 and the Brewers (78-45) are in Chicago to take on the Cubs (70-53) in the first of a day / night doubleheader. Sitting eight games behind the Brewers, it is a crucial series for the Cubs' division title hopes...assuming there is still a flicker of hope there.

Freddy Peralta is slated to take the mound for Milwaukee against Cade Horton for Chicago.

The Cubs won yesterday 4-3 at Wrigley against the Pirates to take two of three in the weekend series. Dansby Swanson drove in the winning run to secure Sunday's win but far more important for Chicago was the weekend for Pete Crow-Armstrong. At one time an MVP candidate, the centerfielder broke out of an extended slump (3-41 previously in August) with five hits in eight official at bats in the three games.

The Brewers saw their 14-game winning streak snapped yesterday by the Reds, 3-2, in ten innings. Cincinnati tied the game at two with a run in the ninth and walked it off at The Great American Ballpark in the tenth on an Austin Hays' single. Jose Quintana allowed a single run over 6.1 innings in another strong start for Milwaukee.

Lets dive into the matchup and find a sweat or two.

We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on the how to catch the first pitch, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.

Follow Rotoworld Player News for the latest fantasy and betting player news and analysis all season long.

Game details & how to watch Brewers at Cubs

  • Date: Monday, August 18, 2025
  • Time: 6:20PM EST
  • Site: Wrigley Field
  • City: Chicago, IL
  • Network/Streaming: FDSNWI, MARQ, MLBN

Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out.

Odds for the Brewers at the Cubs

The latest odds as of Monday:

  • Moneyline: Brewers (+101), Cubs (-121)
  • Spread:  Cubs -1.5
  • Total: 8.0 runs

Probable starting pitchers for Brewers at Cubs

  • Pitching matchup for August 18, 2025: Freddy Peralta vs. Cade Horton
    • Brewers: Freddy Peralta, (14-5, 2.90 ERA)
      Last outing: August 12 vs. Pittsburgh - 0.00 ERA, 0 Earned Runs Allowed, 3 Hits Allowed, 1 Walks, and 7 Strikeouts
    • Cubs: Cade Horton, (7-3, 3.07 ERA)
      Last outing: August 13 at Toronto - 1.59 ERA, 1 Earned Runs Allowed, 1 Hits Allowed, 2 Walks, and 8 Strikeouts

Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!

Top betting trends & insights to know ahead of Brewers at Cubs

  • Christian Yelich was 0-8 in the final 2 games against the Reds but is 21-59 (.356) in August
  • Freddy Peralta has struck out 7 in each of his last 2 starts and at least 6 in 6 of his last 8 starts
  • Kyle Tucker is 2-21 (.095) over his last 6 games
  • Cade Horton struck out 8 hitters in his last start after having struck out even six just three times in his 16 starts this season

If you’re looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our MLB Top Trends tool on NBC Sports!

Expert picks & predictions for tonight’s game between the Brewers and the Cubs

Rotoworld Best Bet

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Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts.

Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Monday's game between the Brewers and the Cubs:

  • Moneyline: NBC Sports Bet is staying away from a play on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: NBC Sports Bet is leaning towards a play ATS on the Milwaukee Brewers at +1.5.
  • Total: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the over on the Game Total of 8.0.

Want even more MLB best bets and predictions from our expert staff & tools? Check out the Expert MLB Predictions page fromNBC

Follow our experts on socials to keep up with all the latest content from the staff:

  • Jay Croucher (@croucherJD)
  • Drew Dinsick (@whale_capper)
  • Vaughn Dalzell (@VmoneySports)
  • Brad Thomas (@MrBradThomas)

Former Canadiens Honoured With A Statue

A few days ago, former Montreal Canadiens goaltender Carey Price was honoured when a statue of the netminder in action, carved in wood with a chainsaw, was gifted to the city of Williams Lake by the district of Chetwynd.

The work of art, titled “The Goalie,” depicts the Habs goaltender in action with his glove hand extended. The unveiling took place at the Cariboo Memorial Recreation Complex. While Price himself was unable to attend, his parents, Linda and Jerry Price, were in attendance to speak on his behalf.

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Through his father, the Canadiens’ winningest goaltender said that for someone who doesn’t like to be the center of attention, it feels funny to have a statue of themselves, but also expressed how proud he was to be from the Cariboo Chilcotin and acknowledged the fact that the people helped to shape the man he became.

Chief Kukpi7 Willie Sellers, who was also in attendance, mentioned that watching Price play in the finals when he was in junior hockey was one of his fondest hockey memories. He also credits Price for inspiring him to pick up the pads again, even if it wasn’t at the same level as the Canadiens’ netminder.

Jeffrey Samudsocky of JMS Wood Sculpture is the artist who gave life to the statue, and this is one of the many statues that the District of Chetwynd has donated to other communities as a recognition of their partnership and to encourage collaboration.

There’s no denying that Price has been an inspiration to many First Nation youth during his NHL career, not only because of his performance on the ice but also because of the way he handled adversity. He fought his way through many injuries and setbacks to come back to play and wasn’t afraid to seek help from the NHL and NHLPA Player Assistance program when he felt he needed it because of substance abuse.

Unfortunately, after overcoming all that and winning the Bill Masterton Trophy, the all-star netminder only went on to play five more NHL games, winning the last one of his career, a 10-2 triumph over a watered-down version of the Florida Panthers who were resting some players in the previous game of the regular season.


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Plaschke: Sweep Diego! Dodgers dominate stumbling Padres and prove they're better

Los Angeles, CA - August 17: Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Alex Vesia (51) celebrates.
Dodgers reliever Alex Vesia celebrates after the final out of the Dodgers' 5-4 series-sweeping win over the San Diego Padres on Sunday at Dodger Stadium. (Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Times)

Slammed Diego.

Those pesky rivals from down south staggered away from their weekend stay at Dodger Stadium Sunday with spirits bruised, egos bloodied and Manny Machado flattened.

Canned Diego.

Arriving here shortly after stealing first place, little brother spent the next three days giving it back to a Dodger team that met the moment while the Padres recoiled from it.

Fanned Diego.

It was a sweeping sweep of a sweep, the Dodgers winning their third consecutive game from the Padres Sunday by a 5-4 margin that does not begin to elucidate the difference between these two teams.

The Dodgers now lead the National League West by two games, but it feels like 20. Both teams have 38 games remaining in the season, including three next weekend in San Diego, but any sort of real challenge by the Padres feels fabricated.

The Dodgers are the deeper team. The Dodgers are the more focused team. The Dodgers are the better team.

Read more:Amid a season of struggle, Mookie Betts delivers in Dodgers' sweep of Padres

The final weekend blow was an eighth-inning, game-winning drive into the left-field pavilion by Mookie Betts, but this series wasn’t nearly that close.

The Dodgers did everything right, and the Padres did everything dumb.

The Dodgers charged, and the Padres choked.

“Didn't play as well as we'd like to have, and the series didn't go like we wanted it to,” Padres manager Mike Shildt said. “But ... this team is more than in a great place.”

That would nonetheless currently be second place, which, after this weekend, seems like an appropriate spot.

Meanwhile, for one of the few stretches in this curious summer, the Dodgers behaved like the first-place tenants they are.

“I don’t think anyone in that clubhouse doubted our abilities and how good we can be,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “Honestly, it was just good to play a really good series, start to finish.”

Truly, from start to finish. The injury-prone Dodgers starters allowed just three runs in 17 innings, the much-maligned Dodger bullpen finished with just three allowed runs in 10 innings, and the Padres were bad enough that nothing else mattered.

Read more:Plaschke: The 'legend' Clayton Kershaw is legendary again for Dodgers

On Friday, Machado gave the Dodgers a run when he botched a bunt, and later hastily popped out on the first pitch in the eighth inning with two out and the tying and go-ahead runs on base.

On Saturday, the Padres were thrown out attempting to steal three times in the first two innings while center fielder Jackson Merrill added to the madness by dropping a fly ball that cost them two runs.

Then on Sunday, the Padres outhit the Dodgers 10-6 but couldn’t get out of their own way long enough to ever pose a real threat.

In the third inning, Freddy Fermín ran into an out on a single to right-center, Andy Pages nailing him by a mile. Then, with a runner on third and two out, Machado swung at the second pitch and grounded out to first.

Two innings later, Machado stranded two more runners with a groundout, but his humiliation was just beginning. In the seventh, Machado threw his bat and walked toward first on a strike call. After sheepishly returning to home plate amid a taunting roar from the hostile Dodger Stadium crowd, he flied out with a runner on second.

San Diego's Manny Machado reacts to a called strike in the seventh inning Sunday against the Dodgers.
San Diego's Manny Machado reacts to a called strike in the seventh inning Sunday against the Dodgers. (Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Times)

Machado wasn’t done yet. Appropriately, he was the final out of the game, swinging wildly at an Alex Vesia fastball for a strikeout on a foul tip that left the former Dodger one for 12 for the weekend.

“We can blink, and I'm pretty confident within a week or so, we'll be talking and be like, 'Man, Manny's got eight RBIs in the last five days,' so we're not concerned about it,” said Shildt, who claimed his star was stung by bad calls by home plate umpire Jeremie Rehak. “Unfortunately, some pitches that are outside the strike zone got called on him. Which, again, is unfortunate when they're not trying to throw strikes all the time to him. They're taking their chances and to get rewarded on balls that are outside the zone is a little frustrating.”

Before the series, in the wake of four consecutive dispiriting losses, Roberts called on his team to show more focus and urgency. Their final answer, on a day they could have easily shrugged off after winning the first two games of the series, came quickly and dramatically.

Tyler Glasnow, pitching in his biggest game as a Dodger, struck out three in the top of the first en route to eight strikeouts in five innings.

Freddie Freeman, right, celebrates with Shohei Ohtani after hitting a three-run home run.
Freddie Freeman, right, celebrates with Shohei Ohtani after hitting a three-run home run in the first inning Sunday against the Padres. (Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Times)

Then, in the bottom of the first against the Padres’ Yu Darvish, Shohei Ohtani singled, Betts walked and Freddie Freeman blasted a home run over the right-center field fence. One out later, Pages homered to left and the tone had been set.

“I think we all know who we are in here, in this team and how good we can be,” said Freeman. “We just gotta play good baseball like we did this weekend ... we know who we are inside. And gotta keep it going.”

Roberts was as good as any of them, doing a masterful job all weekend handling his outmanned bullpen, succeeding again Sunday by listening to his most reliable reliever.

After finishing up an eighth inning during which the Padres tied the game on a Jose Iglesias grounder, Vesia was promptly told he was done for the day, as Justin Wrobleski was scheduled to pitch the ninth.

Read more:Dodgers capitalize on Padres' sloppiness to retake sole possession of first place

But Vesia had a better idea. He told Roberts he wanted the ball if the Dodgers took the lead in the eighth, and when Betts homered, Vesia was ready.

“So I told Doc, I walked up to him and said, 'Hey, like, if we're up, I want it.'" Vesia recalled. “He was like, 'OK, you got it.' Sure enough, Mook, bang, homers. Sweet, let's go.”

Sweet indeed. Vesia’s hitless ninth was symbolic of a bullpen that spent the weekend making every big pitch ... while the Padres missed every big pitch.

“It's the dawg, right?” said Vesia. “We still have that. That doesn't just go away. Every single one of us, we're leaning on each other. And we know as a group how good we are.”

So, too, do the Padres.

Done Diego.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Alperen Şengün claims Warriors ‘fouled a lot' in NBA playoffs despite ‘crying'

Alperen Şengün claims Warriors ‘fouled a lot' in NBA playoffs despite ‘crying' originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Sometimes it’s hard to let go of the past.

Houston Rockets center Alperen Şengün, in an appearance on the “Socrates Dergi” podcast, didn’t mince words when looking back at last year’s postseason matchup with the Warriors.

“They’re a very experienced team,” Şengün explained. “They fouled a lot. In the playoffs, they don’t call it. But they were the ones crying all series about fouls not being called.”

Physicality was at an extreme all series, but the foul differential actually was in favor of the Rockets. The Warriors had 150 fouls throughout the series, while the Rockets were called for only 124.

The Turkish All-Star also praised his head coach for the discipline he instills in his players.

“When it comes to us, we’re not really allowed to complain,” Şengün added. “It’s more of an internal thing. Ime Udoka doesn’t allow it. He loses his mind if we complain.”

The series was decided in a pivotal Game 7, in which Golden State blew out Houston 103-89. Buddy Hield had his best game as a Warrior, scoring 33 points along with nine 3-pointers.

Both teams ended that game with 14 personal fouls. Şengün went on to mention how the two teams matched up.

“The Warriors were probably the one team that would have gave us the most trouble, and we drew them,” Şengün stated.

Houston revamped this offseason by trading for Kevin Durant, which makes for an even more entertaining matchup next season, where the physical play will remain a constant.

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Red Sox to sign first baseman Nathaniel Lowe after Nationals DFA: Report

Red Sox to sign first baseman Nathaniel Lowe after Nationals DFA: Report originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

A late-season reinforcement is coming to Fenway Park.

The Boston Red Sox reportedly will sign first baseman Nathaniel Lowe for the remainder of 2025, ESPN’s Jeff Passan reported late Sunday night.

Lowe, 30, was designated for assignment by the Washington Nationals earlier this month and went unclaimed on waivers.

The Red Sox have been searching for first base help since losing Triston Casas to a season-ending knee injury in May. Abraham Toro and Romy González have mostly split the role — Toro facing right-handers and González facing left-handers. Lowe could conceivably fill Toro’s spot with his recent struggles at the plate (.163 batting average in August).

The lefty-hitting Lowe has the credentials to make him an appealing flyer — Silver Slugger in 2022, Gold Glove and World Series champion with the Texas Rangers in 2023. But he showed serious regression in D.C. this season, posting career lows in batting average, on-base percentage and slugging percentage. Lowe hit .216 with 16 home runs and 68 RBIs in 119 games.

Before 2025, Lowe played for the Tampa Bay Rays (2019-2020) and Rangers (2021-2024). He was traded to Washington last December.

The Nationals will pay Lowe most of the remainder of his $10.3-million salary this season, with the Red Sox picking up the prorated portion of the league minimum. Lowe is arbitration-eligible this winter, so Boston can either bring him back in 2026 for more than his 2025 salary or non-tender him to free agency.

Who Are the Shanghai Dragons and Which Devils Will Be Represented?

The newest team in the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL) is the Shanghai Dragons.

The franchise is entering its first season under the Dragons name, but the club itself isn’t brand new. Previously known as Kunlun Red Star, the team spent eight seasons in the KHL before announcing a rebrand.

During their time as Kunlun, the club reached the postseason only once, in their inaugural 2016-17 season, where they lost in the Conference Quarterfinals. They have not returned to the playoffs since.

The Dragons plan to move their home games back to China in the future, but for now, they are building their roster and will play out of St. Petersburg, Russia.

Their roster features one former New Jersey Devil, one Devils draft pick who never signed, and several other players with NHL ties.

  • Nikita Popugaev: Drafted 98th overall by the Devils in 2017, Popugaev never signed with the team and has spent most of his career overseas. Now 26, he announced he will be suiting up for the Dragons this season.
  • Nick Merkley: Selected 30th overall in the 2015 NHL Draft, Merkley played four games with the Devils in 2019-20 and 27 games in 2020-21. He registered two points in his first season and 10 points in his second. The 27-year-old now joins the Dragons as another Devils connection.
  • Austin Wong: Drafted by the Winnipeg Jets in 2018, Wong was never signed but will be making history as part of the Dragons’ inaugural roster. The 24-year-old forward brings additional North American experience.

In addition to players, the Dragons hired a familiar NHL face behind the bench: Gerard Gallant, former head coach of the New York Rangers. Gallant, who has also coached the Columbus Blue Jackets, Florida Panthers, and Vegas Golden Knights, will lead the Dragons as their first-ever head coach.

As of now, the roster includes:

  • 5 Canadian players
  • 4 American players
  • 4 Russian players
  • 1 Slovakian player

Collectively, the roster of 14 skaters brings 387 NHL games of experience.

The Shanghai Dragons will look to end the franchise’s playoff drought and make their first postseason appearance since 2016, this time under a new name, new leadership, and a roster built on international and NHL experience.