Where are Texas players being projected in the 2025 NFL Draft? Here are the latest mock picks for the Longhorns:
Giants' top prospect Eldridge flashes familiar power in 2025 debut
Giants' top prospect Eldridge flashes familiar power in 2025 debut originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
SAN FRANCISCO — When he sat down for his daily pregame session with reporters on Tuesday, Giants manager Bob Melvin was aware that Bryce Eldridge was in Double-A Richmond’s lineup. But the Flying Squirrels started their game right around the time the Giants were taking the field for their workout, so Melvin hadn’t heard how Eldridge was doing in his season debut.
“Hopefully he gets off to a good start and does his thing and we’ll see where it goes from there,” he said.
The return to the field couldn’t have gone any better.
Eldridge, the organization’s top prospect, got a hanging breaking ball in his first at-bat of the season and crushed a solo homer to center. It was a nice reminder for the Giants of what might be on the way later this season if they need help at first base or designated hitter.
Top @SFGiants prospect Bryce Eldridge homers in his first at-bat of the season in Double-A 😤 pic.twitter.com/Tkj1GYOixb
— MLB (@MLB) April 22, 2025
Eldridge was in big-league camp this spring and homered in his first Cactus League game, too, but he felt left wrist discomfort in early March and was sidelined most of that month. He missed the start of the minor-league season and had been rehabbing in Arizona up until this week. The Giants did multiple tests on Eldridge’s wrist and never had concerns that there was a serious injury, but given his importance to the franchise’s future, they wanted to be overly cautious with the timeline.
The 20-year-old finally was cleared to return to action on Tuesday, and it wasn’t a surprise that he ended up back in Richmond. He played just nine games there last season before a late promotion to Triple-A to end the year, and the Giants were leaning toward a second crack at Double-A even before the wrist inflammation popped up. President of baseball operations Buster Posey and vice president of player development Randy Winn have made it clear that they no longer want to rush prospects, and Eldridge is the best talent the Giants have had in their minor-league system in years.
The 20-year-old is coming off a breakout first professional season that included a .890 OPS and 23 homers. The Giants know the power could play in the big leagues right now, but they want Eldridge to continue to sharpen his approach at the plate and his defense at first base, a position where he still is learning some of the basics.
Asked Tuesday if Eldridge’s timeline could be impacted by what’s happening in the big leagues, Melvin said he’s not sure. The Giants entered Tuesday’s game with a .476 OPS from their first basemen, which ranked 29th in the majors.
“He’s going to have to perform to get here, and that’s something Buster has stated,” Melvin said. “If you perform well, then you’ve got an opportunity to get to the big leagues, and we’ve done that here.”
Melvin pointed out that the Giants have gotten good production out of Wilmer Flores, their DH, and he said he’s still confident in LaMonte Wade Jr. The veteran is batting just .103 with one homer through 19 games.
“LaMonte is going to pick it up, too,” Melvin said.
The Giants won’t rush Eldridge, but given their lack of production at first, it sure will get interesting if he hits the ground running. Shortly after he said he hopes Eldridge gets off to a good start, Melvin was informed that he homered in his first at-bat and shown the video by a reporter.
“Alright, well, get him here now,” he joked.
Lakers use defense, physicality to flip script on Timberwolves, even series with win
Apr 22, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic (77) and Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James (23) leave a court after defeating the Minnesota Timberwolves 94-85 in game two of first round for the 2024 NBA Playoffs at Crypto.com Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images
Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images
Minnesota knew what was coming after pushing the Lakers around in Game 1 of this series.
“We knew they would come with high intensity, with energy. We knew it was going to be physical,” Julius Randle said.
Knowing the Lakers were going to play with a desperate intensity and dealing well with it are two different things.
“We were stagnant, missed open looks, missed layups,” Randle added.
The Lakers flipped the script in Game 2, going from the team getting pushed around to the aggressors, the more physical team on defense. They played like the team in desperate need of a win (because they were).
The result was the Lakers racing out to a 17-point first-quarter lead — again behind a hot start from Luka Doncic, who had 16 points of his 31 points in the first quarter — and this time holding on for the 94-85 win that evens the series 1-1.
LUKA PUTS ON A SHOW, LAKERS TIE UP THE SERIES
— NBA (@NBA) April 23, 2025
31 PTS
12 REB
9 AST
Game 3: Friday (4/25), 9:30pm/et on ESPN pic.twitter.com/fbVdA1TtBM
This series shifts to Minnesota on Friday night.
Los Angeles’s energy on defense was evident from the opening tip — the Lakers were pressuring out higher, and they put two on the ball whenever Anthony Edwards got it. It all threw the Timberwolves off their game.
“The way that they’re guarding us, when I catch the ball, they kind of go zone, and when I try to attack a gap, it’s like three people,” Edwards said. “I’ve just got to make my decisions a little quicker, and we’ll be all right.”
Doncic was again the focal point of the offense, they even used him in he post more, but what really changed was just an attention to detail — the Lakers did things like set good screens and made solid contact with the defenders, something they didn’t do in Game 1.
LeBron James had a strong night, finishing with 21 points, 12 rebounds and seven assists. He also had a key play in the fourth, a steal and a bucket, that gave Los Angeles the momentum back when Minnesota had put together a run to get the lead down to single digits.
LEBRON BIG STEAL & BUCKET LATE IN THE 4TH pic.twitter.com/huetkc1scX
— NBA (@NBA) April 23, 2025
While Randle (27 points) and Edwards (25) got theirs, the Timberwolves' bench, which was key in Game 1, was in foul trouble and much quieter in Game 2: Naz Reid had nine points, and Donte DiVincenzo had four.
Minnesota played better in the second half and can walk away from this game feeling positive: They got the split in Los Angeles and will not have another bad offensive half (or night) like they did in Game 2. What matters for Minnesota is that their defense held up, the Lakers still didn’t break 100 (and for all the focus the Lakers had on isolating Rudy Gobert, Doncic was 1-of-4 in those situations).
Both teams have reasons for optimism heading into Friday night and Game 3.
The Timberwolves believe their role players will feel more comfortable and be better at home. That is likely true.
While the Lakers can feel they've found their defense, they still have proven playoff winners in Doncic and LeBron, who tend to improve as a playoff series progresses.
Why Warriors must heed Riley's warning to win series vs. Rockets
Why Warriors must heed Riley's warning to win series vs. Rockets originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
Once again, it’s Jimmy Butler III vs. Pat Riley. Except in this battle, the Golden State Warriors are in the fight with Butler.
Two generations ago, when Riley was coaching the “Showtime” version of the Los Angeles Lakers, he frequently uttered four words of warning to his teams as they chased NBA championships: “No rebounds, no rings.”
More than 40 years later, Butler and the Warriors are formulating a rebuttal. They’re trying to win in deference to rebounding. They won Game 1 of their first-round Western Conference playoff series against the Houston Rockets on Sunday despite being outrebounded 52-36.
Trying that in Game 2 on Wednesday would invite a Rockets resurgence.
“We will be better on the glass tomorrow, for sure,” coach Steve Kerr said Tuesday, speaking to reporters in Houston. “But it’s definitely something we have to be vigilant about throughout the series.”
Golden State surely would like to narrow that 16-rebound deficit, but there isn’t much to inspire belief. This is no one-game anomaly. It’s an emerging and ominous trend.
The Game 1 totals represent the fourth consecutive game the Warriors have lost the rebounding war, and each game was consequential. They were minus-11 in the play-in tournament game against the Memphis Grizzlies – and won. They were minus-17 in the regular-season finale against the Los Angeles Clippers – and lost by five. They were minus-7 in the penultimate regular-season game against the Portland Trail Blazers – and won.
Four significant games, three victories, a .750 winning percentage. Maintaining such a pace in the postseason would ensure the 16 wins Golden State would need for champagne showers in June.
Is it realistic to consistently lose the rebounding battle and still win 75 percent of your postseason games? No. Which is why Riley stressed that facet to his teams as a coach and still does now as the team president of the Miami Heat, where Butler undoubtedly heard or saw his cautionary words.
“We’ve got to be better,” Kevon Looney told reporters after practice in Houston. “We’ve been a pretty great rebounding team all season, so I think they kind of beat us on the 50/50 balls. They’ve got a lot of guys, a lot of big guys. They missed a lot of shots too.”
The Warriors overcame the rebounding deficit in Game 1 because the Rockets shot as if blindfolded, managing only 22 points off 22 offensive rebounds. For context, Golden State scored 12 points off six offensive rebounds. Houston attempted 11 more field goals and made two fewer. Its guards, Fred VanVleet and Jalen Green shot a combined 7 of 34 (20.6 percent) from the field, including 2 of 17 (11.8 percent) from distance.
No matter how well the Warriors defend, and they were terrific in Game 1, they know it’s illogical to expect the Rockets to shoot so woefully in Game 2 and beyond.
“They missed some shots that they’ll probably make tomorrow,” Kerr conceded.
“They got a lot of open looks, which I’m sure they probably felt like they should have made,” Stephen Curry said after the 95-85 victory in Game 1. “A lot of them came off offensive rebounds. Our point-of-attack defense was great, (but) you can’t assume that they’re going to miss open looks if you’re giving them second, third and fourth opportunities.
“That’s going to be a big challenge for us if we want to win again on Wednesday. We expect them to play better, but you got to make it as difficult as possible.”
Riley’s mantra was formed through experience. As a Lakers assistant coach in the 1980 NBA Finals, he saw the team post a 308-223 rebounding advantage to beat the Philadelphia 76ers in six games. Two years later, as head coach, the Lakers again topped Philly in six behind a 284-250 rebounding advantage,
The following season, with the Sixers adding legendary rebounder Moses Malone, Riley’s Lakers were swept. They were outrebounded 192-171. Malone, who grabbed twice the rebounds of any Laker, earned the Finals MVP award.
Can the Warriors overcome their relative lack of size and athleticism against Houston and, should they advance, any opponents that follow?
It’s going to take all hands, beginning with starting “big men” Draymond Green and Butler, neither of whom is taller than 6-foot-7. They’ll need Looney, a 6-foot-9 rebounding specialist, to be exactly that. Quinten Post, a 7-footer who floats around the perimeter on offense, also must use his frame in the paint. Moses Moody, at 6-foot-5, sometimes is listed at “power forward,” but lives mostly on the perimeter as the primary point-of-attack defender.
Golden State’s leading rebounder in Game 1 was Brandin Podziemski, a 6-foot-4 guard, who snagged eight. Their leading rebounder in the play-in tournament game was Curry, who used his 6-foot-3 frame to grab eight. Podziemski was the leading rebounder, with eight, in the loss to the Clippers, and he tied with Green at seven in the win at Portland.
That speaks to the tenacity and fearlessness of Podziemski and Curry, and it’s something any undersized team must bring to give itself a chance to earn extra possessions.
“We know they’re going to rebound,” Kerr said of the Rockets, who in the regular season led the NBA in that category. “They’re going to get some offensive boards. We’ve got to do a better job in that area. But all in all, it’s about being poised, executing and keeping them from the easy stuff.”
Rebounding alone guarantees nothing, certainly not rings, no matter what Riley says. But winning without them requires appreciable superiority elsewhere, and the Warriors know that won’t be a given for the duration of their postseason.
Andrew Flintoff reveals anxiety after Top Gear accident: ‘I couldn’t get out of the room’
- Former England captain was injured on set in 2022 crash
- Rob Key helped encourage return to the England fold
Andrew Flintoff has spoken about his mental health following his life-changing car crash on the set of Top Gear in 2022.
In one of his first interviews since sustaining severe facial injuries in the accident, Flintoff told former the England captain and the Times’ cricket correspondent Mike Atherton of his initial reluctance to return to public life.
Continue reading...NHL 2025-26: Bold Predictions and Surprises in the Upcoming Season
This campaign had no shortage of surprises. Not many people would have accurately predicted that the Rangers and Bruins would both miss the playoffs after finishing 2023-24 with 114 and 109 points, respectively. Nor was Mikko Rantanen being traded -- twice -- on many people's bingo cards. Lane Hutson tying for the fifth-most points (66) in NHL history among rookie defensemen, surpassing greats like Ray Bourque (65), Chris Chelios (64) and Nicklas Lidstrom (60), was also something to behold.
NHL 2025-26: Bold Predictions and Surprises in the Upcoming Season
Although the regular season only just ended, let's have some fun by making bold predictions about what 2025-26 might feature.
Minnesota Wild Poised for Western Conference Dominance
The Wild squeaked into the playoffs this season with a 45-30-7 record, which is quite the accomplishment given that the centerpiece of their offense, Kirill Kaprizov, missed half the campaign, and they had a significantly smaller usable cap ceiling than the rest of the league due to the lingering impact of buying out Zach Parise and Ryan Suter.
A healthy Kaprizov alone would go a long way towards changing their fortunes. He played in 34 of Minnesota's first 35 games, and over that span, the Wild went 21-10-4 while generating an acceptable 2.94 goals per game. By contrast, when Kaprizov played in just three of 43 matches from Dec. 27-April 6, Minnesota went 21-19-3 and managed only 2.47 goals per game.
Of course, being that dependent on one player is a problem, but the Wild should be able to give him some significant help over the summer. Suter and Parise's buyouts combined to cost the Wild $14.74 million in dead cap space in 2024-25. Next season, that will dip to just $1.67 million. Combine that with the projected increase in the cap, and the Wild should have about $20.6 million in additional cap space to play this summer, per PuckPedia. Minnesota will need to lock up RFA Marco Rossi, who had 24 goals and 60 points across 82 appearances in the 2024-25 regular season, but outside of that, the Wild don't have any major players on expiring contracts, so they can afford to be aggressive on the trade and UFA markets.
The timing of this newfound wealth is also ideal. The team's core forwards of Kaprizov, Rossi and Matt Boldy, as well as starting goaltender Filip Gustavsson, are all in or approaching their prime. Meanwhile, key defenseman Brock Faber will be entering his third full NHL campaign. That combination suggests that the Wild are beginning a window of serious contention, and a big move or two over the offseason could be what pushes them over the edge.
Offensive Surge: Predicting Two 100-Point Defensemen in NHL
In the history of the league, there have been only 15 examples of a defenseman recording at least 100 points, with the most recent being Erik Karlsson in 2022-23. There has never been a time when two blueliners achieved that feat in the same campaign -- not even in the high-scoring 1980s and early 1990s.
Still, we're witnessing something of a golden age for offensive defensemen. Cale Makar is one of the best blueliners to ever play in terms of scoring production, so although he hasn't hit the 100-point mark in the past, no one would be shocked if he reached that mark in his upcoming age-27 season.
He's not the only one who has a shot of reaching that milestone, though. If Quinn Hughes can stay healthy, he's also a serious candidate to do it.
Having Hughes and Makar both achieve that feat is by far the most likely path to getting two 100-point defensemen in the same campaign -- although, when talking about a scenario as extreme as this, the word "likely" is being used generously -- but there are a few other defensemen who have a chance of picking up the slack with a career year if one of the two falls short.
If the Rangers rebound and Adam Fox stays healthy, then he has a chance of finding another level after surpassing the 70-point mark three times. Although Evan Bouchard took a step back in the 2024-25 regular season with 67 points compared to his previous 82, the Oilers blueliner has the potential to hit a new personal best in his age-26 campaign, especially if Edmonton's power play is kicked up a notch after finishing 12th (23.7 percent) this season.
Roman Josi and Victor Hedman seem less likely to have that kind of historic season given that they're in their mid-30s, but both are still high-end blueliners, so you never know.
Ultimately, that's what drives my fascination with this particular scenario: There are just a lot of candidates right now who, while not probable to hit the 100-point mark, are at least within the realm of possibility, so to have two of them accomplish it in the same campaign is far from impossible.
The Nashville Predators Will Finish With 100+ Points
Although a Predators rebound is far from a safe bet, it does feel meaningfully tamer than my previous pick. Still, I couldn't help myself. Nashville was one of the most interesting stories of 2024-25, adding two talented scorers over the offseason in Steven Stamkos and Jonathan Marchessault, only to see the team's offense completely collapse -- the Predators scored just 2.59 goals per game in 2024-25, down from 3.24 in the previous regular season -- resulting in a 30-44-8 record. There is reason for some cautious optimism, though. Per Moneypuck, Nashville finished with a goals-for above expected of -52.11. What that suggests is that part of the Predators' problem might have been exceptionally bad puck luck. Their goals-for above expected was by far the worst in the league, and the worst of any team since the 2015-16 Maple Leafs, which finished at -62.52. In terms of xGoals, the Predators finished 2024-25 with 264.11, which was good for 10th place.
Even taking a step back from that, it's not unreasonable to believe this core is capable of rebounding. Stamkos and Marchessault each recorded 13 points across Nashville's opening 28 games, and those slow starts from two important players are part of what snowballed the Predators into such a bad campaign. However, that duo was adjusting to a new environment after long stints with their previous teams -- that's especially true for Stamkos, who spent his first 16 seasons with Tampa Bay -- and that might have impacted those early-season results. At this point, they've settled in, though, so when given the opportunity for a clean slate in 2025-26, they're likely to perform better.
It's also reasonable to believe that we could see better from goaltender Juuse Saros, who finished 2024-25 with a 20-31-6 record, 2.98 GAA and .895 save percentage. While there is some cause for concern here -- Saros' 2023-24 regular season was better, but also a mixed bag -- he has shown in the past that he can be an elite netminder. Goaltenders also tend to have more extreme ups and downs than skaters -- just look at Sergei Bobrovsky's career -- and while that can be frustrating, it also gives room for cautious optimism after rough times.
Cautious optimism is a good phrase in general for the Predators because when you combine those factors with the hope of a healthier Roman Josi, there is certainly a path available to a bounce-back campaign.
The End of the Penguins' Greatest Era
Your mileage may vary on whether you view this as unlikely enough to be considered bold. After all, Evgeni Malkin will turn 39 in July and is entering the final season of his contract, so his retirement in the summer of 2026 wouldn't stun many. Still, I can't help but make special note of it after the trio of Malkin, Sidney Crosby and Kris Letang have played together for the better part of two decades.
I'll make things a little bit bolder by adding some meat to the scenario: All three of them open 2025-26 together, meaning that none were traded over the summer. Pittsburgh does fine, but not quite good enough to be anything more than a wild-card hopeful. By the trade deadline, the first domino falls: Letang, having been asked to waive his no-trade clause, is moved. Crosby won't be happy, but he'll press forward with the Penguins. Malkin, who is a little older than Crosby and has shown his age more -- although that's not much of a knock given that almost everyone shows their age more than Crosby -- will opt to either call it a career or conclude his playing days in the KHL after he finishes 2025-26 with Pittsburgh.
Crosby will still be with the team for 2026-27 as one of the final remnants of an amazing era of Penguins hockey. That campaign, a younger Penguins team, through a combination of fresh signings brought on by expired contracts and prospects making an increasing impact, will see some great progress. On the point of prospects: Pittsburgh has six picks in the top three rounds for the 2025 NHL Draft and already possesses an additional five for 2026, so the Penguins have a lot to work with going forward.
Barring a storybook turn of events, Crosby has won his final Stanley Cup as a player with Pittsburgh, but before his career ends, he'll likely see the promising start of a new era for the franchise.
From the Pocket: Anzac Day clash was born amid division but is now a reminder of how sport can bind us
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Footy is full of soldiers who never found a war and on the 80th anniversary of the Gallipoli landings, one of them was asleep in the birthing ward. Dermott Brereton was barrel-chested, chicken-legged, born for the big occasion and, on this day, a new father. He fused Frankston street smarts with Glenferrie conservatism; morning television affability with an Irish thirst for vengeance. At 30, his body was at war with itself. But as police escorted the team bus to the MCG for the inaugural Anzac Day game between Collingwood and Essendon, he heard the bugle call.
His apprentice that day was a mild-mannered discus thrower from Reservoir. A fortnight earlier, Saverio Rocca was playing in the reserves. “He was just a nice, well groomed, well cared for Italian boy whose mum probably cooked his dinner every night of his life,” Brereton later said. He was constantly in Big Sav’s ear that day – blocking, encouraging, gesticulating, cajoling. Rocca had the game of his life, and Brereton hasn’t stopped talking since.
This is an extract from Guardian Australia’s free weekly AFL email, From the Pocket. To get the full version, just visit this page and follow the instructions
Continue reading...Mets Notes: Pete Alonso's 'underappreciated' defense, Tyrone Taylor's deke
Mets manager Carlos Mendoza and players spoke to reporters after Tuesday's 5-1 win over the Philadelphia Phillies and addressed a number of different topics...
Pete Alonso's underappreciated defense
In a game full of big moments, Alonso's defense was a game-changer.
With the scored tied at 1-1 in the second inning, the Phillies were threatening with men on second and third and two outs. Trea Turner hit a slow grounder to Mark Vientos at third, who ranged to his left to pick it and throw off balance toward Alonso. The slugger made a beautiful pick while staying on the bag at first to end the inning and prevent the Phillies from taking the lead.
"I gave him a big hug right after that," Vientos said of the play after the game. "He gets underappreciated for how good he is over there and he works his tail off. He’s one of the best in the game at picking the ball and he’s been doing it since last year for me. He gets underappreciated."
"I think he's probably the best in the game at [picking the ball]," Mendoza said. "When it comes down to picking balls from the dirt, Pete is right there in the conversation with some of the best in the game. Today is a game-changer. Two guys on, not an easy Not an easy play for Vientos and for him to stay on the base and have the ability to pick the ball up... a big play there."
Pete Alonso makes a BEAUTIFUL pick at first base to keep the game tied! 💪 pic.twitter.com/9TPXurztKm
— SNY (@SNYtv) April 22, 2025
Mark Vientos staying hot
Tuesday was Vientos' first game back since a groin injury took him out of Saturday's game. While the young third baseman made some good plays at third base, his resurgent offense was the story in the Mets' win.
In the first inning, Vientos lined a Cristopher Sanchez changeup down the line for a double to score the game's first run. While that was Vientos' only hit, it was the continuation of a good pattern for the slugger.
Over his last seven games, Vientos has hit one home run, three doubles and driving in six runs. He had just two extra-base hits and one RBI in his first 14 games of the season.
"Same guy that I saw at the beginning of the year when he wasn’t getting results," Mendoza said of Vientos. "Swinging threw the strike zone and hitting pitches with authority. Now he’s getting some results."
"Doesn’t feel different, feels like I'm doing the same thing, just finding holes now," Vientos said. "Makes you appreciate the results that much more when you’re going through that slump and starting to get those results. It feels good."
Tyrone Taylor's deke
When facing a potent Phillies lineup, every out matters and Taylor was able to steal one thanks to some quick thinking and shoddy base-running by Philadelphia.
Kyle Schwarber was on first base with no outs in the eighth and the Phillies trailing 5-1. Ryne Stanek got Nick Castellanos to fly out to shallow center field, where Taylor slowed down and, for a quick second, made it seem he wouldn't be able to snag the ball. Once the ball went into Taylor's glove, he threw it back to first base, where he doubled off Schwarber.
"He’s a baseball player," Mendoza said, describing Taylor. "Once he knows he’s going to get there, he tricked him a little bit there. Catches it and throws a perfect throw to first base. Not an easy one. Some instincts in there, that’s who he is, he’s a baseball player."
"I didn’t know that I was going to have an opportunity until after I caught the ball. Then I saw him off too far, and I just went for it," Taylor explained." I tried to deke him a little bit, but I couldn’t tell if he fell for it or not. I just saw him too far and threw it to first base. I learned that from Jackie Bradley Jr., so hopefully, he sees this."
Tyrone Taylor dekes Kyle Schwarber and turns the 8-3 double play! pic.twitter.com/3YE2HpWyxd
— SNY (@SNYtv) April 23, 2025
Lakers win a physically demanding Game 2 to even series with Timberwolves
The only thing that moved slower than the Lakers was the clock.
They had poured their energy into fighting for everything while building a lead that stretched to 22 in the first half and lived at 20 deep into the second half. They had grabbed and clawed and got clawed and got grabbed and it was still there, a big lead, the Minnesota Timberwolves and the clock left to beat to even the series at 1-1 and save a split on their home court.
But Minnesota got stronger, faster and smarter.
And the Lakers, mentally and physically, got slower.
Two big mistakes from Jaxson Hayes led to five fast Minnesota points. Luka Doncic, who had been fully engaged on the defensive side of the ball, was flat-footed as Anthony Edwards rammed into the paint. Wide-open threes rimmed out.
And the kind of two-on-one fast break with Austin Reaves and LeBron James that usually would be an alley-oop became an alley-oops when Reaves threw the ball too high and James missed the layup.
But the clock kept ticking. And the Lakers kept fighting, drawing enough charges, grabbing enough rebounds, scoring enough (barely) to beat Minnesota, 94-85 on Tuesday night at Crypto.com Arena.
There was the timeout in the middle of the third quarter after Minnesota cut the Lakers’ lead to 11, with Lakers coach JJ Redick rage-walking and f-bombing away from and back to his team’s bench.
“It's not something that I'd want to do. It's not something I'm more than comfortable doing,” Redick said. “But I think tonight it was just more about getting that that urgency button switched back on.”
The switch flipped back on and the Lakers scored the next nine points.
Later in the fourth quarter, again, as the Lakers wore down and the Timberwolves chopped at their lead, Redick’s teams did just enough. Reaves scooted past Rudy Gobert for a big lay-in. James stripped Edwards, flipping a Minnesota transition chance into a bucket for the Lakers. Reaves sealed it by stopping another fast break by taking a charge, the Lakers finding ways to win even as they scored just 13 points in the final quarter.
According to StatMuse, the 13 points are the third fewest scored by a team in the fourth quarter of a playoff win since at least 2015.
Game 3 is Friday in Minneapolis.
“We could still be better offensively. I thought at times we were very sharp. But at times, we weren’t,” James said. “I think we could do a better job on the offensive end, but we’re going to continue to get better, continue to watch the film, see ways we can kinda break down the defense and continue to get good looks. I thought we had some great looks tonight. I know a lot of my shots in the fourth quarter were great looks that just didn’t go. If we can continue to get great looks like that, I think we believe in our percentages. But we gotta continue to work the habits.”
If Game 1 showed that the Lakers’ standing as heavy favorites in the series was wrong, Game 2 showed that whatever comes next might leave scars.
After Redick challenged his team to meet Minnesota’s intensity and physicality, the teams ripped and reached and held and hammered while they played like each possession would determine who wins and who loses.
The all-capital, bolded-letter story from the first quarter of the Lakers’ playoff opener Saturday was Luka Doncic showing why he’s one of the NBA’s most gifted difference-makers. He can be a one-man show, too hard for any player to stop, too skilled to be denied.
But it was singular.
The Lakers’ excellence in this series? It needed to be plural.
The playoffs would demand more than Doncic getting buckets. They would require James cutting sharply into the paint to create extra space. The Lakers would need Reaves to fight like hell for every step on the defensive end of the court.
It doesn’t work when it’s just the other way. It didn’t work when it was that way in Game 1.
So Tuesday night, facing the first unofficial “must-win” of the playoffs, the Lakers played in unison early on, even if Doncic was the only one really hitting shots.
“We did the same game plan. We didn't really change much,” Doncic said. “It was just a question of if we were gonna be more physical or not. And I think we showed that. And we were there for 48 minutes. We got up big in the first quarter. We learned from the last game. And we just stuck to it.”
And while Doncic was able to create the kind of mismatch advantages he’ll be able to utilize against anyone, the Lakers suddenly found themselves stifled by Minnesota’s defense.
Doncic finished with 31 points, James had 21 and Reaves scored 16, but the Lakers shot just 20.7% from three-point range. Luckily, Minnesota wasn’t any better, getting 42 combined points from Julius Randle and Edwards but not more than nine from anyone else.
It was the Lakers’ defense, intensity and effort that built their big lead, and ultimately allowed them to beat the clock to hang on to it.
“We were physical,” Redick said. “The playoffs require a different level.”
The Lakers got there — and stayed there long enough.
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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
Leafs Take 2-0 Series Lead After OT Win, Series Shifts Back To Ottawa Thursday
The Ottawa Senators are heading back to the nation's capital empty-handed, and it figures that Tie Domi’s son would eventually emerge as a factor in the Battle of Ontario.
3:09 into overtime, Max Domi's shot from the high slot went off the goalpost and in, beating Linus Ullmark and the Senators, 3-2. With the victory, Toronto takes a strong 2-0 series lead.
Ullmark stopped 18 of 21 Toronto shots on the night, while Anthony Stolarz made 26 of 28 saves. Ottawa got goals from Brady Tkachuk and Adam Gaudette. John Tavares had a goal and an assist for the Leafs, while Morgan Rielly had the other goal.
It was a much more disciplined effort from the Senators, who gave the Leafs only one power play on the night.
In regulation, the two clubs each swapped goals that weren't exactly the highlight reel variety.
For the second straight game, the Leafs grabbed a 2-0 first-period lead. The first goal came off a nice pass off the half-boards from William Nylander. Nylander out-hustled Thomas Chabot to find a passing lane, then hit Morgan Rielly at the far post. Drake Batherson was able to take Rielly's stick away, but Rielly redirected the puck into the net with his skate to make it 1-0.
Tavares made it 2-0 on the power play. His shot was stopped by Ullmark, but the puck then banked in off Nick Jensen and into the net.
The Sens did seem to get their feet under them after that and played an excellent second period, where they outshot the Leafs 13-3 and led in shot attempts 33-7. Tkachuk got the only goal of the second period when his centering pass deflected in off of Brandon Carlo’s skate to cut Toronto's lead in half.
While the Senators launched a shooting gallery at Stolarz in the second period, their first shot of the third period didn't come until just over 5 minutes left in regulation. It was a goal by Adam Gaudette, who tipped home a shot from the point over the right shoulder of Stolarz. The Leafs bench feverishly reviewed their replay monitors in hopes of challenging the goal for a missed offside. No luck.
That took the game to overtime, where it was decided just over 3 minutes in. On one ill-fated shift, the Senators' poise went right out the window.
Toronto's Simon Benoit grabbed the puck inside his own blue line and sprinted up the right wing on what turned out to be a 2-on-4 rush as the rest of the Leafs made a line change. Max Domi came along for the ride and accepted a drop pass from Benoit. Domi went right through Dylan Cozens and then right through Batherson, who both overcommitted and failed to take the body.
Then, with Chabot backing up too far to cover anyone, he and Benoit appeared to serve as the perfect screen. Domi then put one in off the post to win it.
Despite being down 0-2 now in the series, Senators head coach Travis Green was deadly calm in his post game availability, which set a fine example for his troops. He says there is no reason to panic.
"I think first of all, a lot of our guys haven't played a lot of playoff hockey,” Green said. “They haven't lost a playoff game in that way either. We talked about that quickly. I talked about earlier today that we had to play better. I really like the way we played tonight. A big step as a group. Looking forward to the next game.
“We came on the road, played two road games. Like someone said earlier, we probably deserved a better fate tonight. But that's part of playoff hockey, and we've said it all year: we don't get too far ahead of ourselves. We don't look behind. We worry about the next game, and if you do that, good things happen."
The Senators now face a near must-win situation on Thursday night at Canadian Tire Centre as the series shifts to Ottawa for Games 3 and 4.
Florida’s Todd Golden rounds out his coaching staff and officially fills 2 roster spots
Mets pitchers making early-season statement after back-to-back impressive showings against Phillies
Considering the relative ease of the early-season schedule and the less-than-name-brand nature of the starting rotation, it was fair to wonder whether the dominance of the Mets’ pitching would hold up against a powerhouse lineup like that of the Philadelphia Phillies.
Two major league scouts said as much before this three-game series began on Monday.
“I wouldn’t call what they’re doing a fluke, but facing the Phillies is definitely a step up from a lot of the lineups they’ve seen,” was how one scout put it. “I’ll be impressed if they shut them down, too.
Added another: “The Phillies are much more disciplined as a lineup than they were a year ago, so it would be quite a statement if the Mets go out there and do what they’ve been doing to other teams.”
Consider it a statement made, then. So far, anyway.
Yes, the remarkable storyline that is the Mets’ pitching in 2025 has not only survived the dangerous Phillies’ lineup but continued to thrive against it in taking the first two games of the series.
The final on Tuesday night was 5-1 as Griffin Canning gutted his way through five trouble-filled innings and the bullpen was spotless for the final four, enabling the Mets to lower their team ERA to 2.37, easily the best in the majors.
And while the score was 5-4 a night earlier, the Phillies only put up one run through eight innings and that may well have been it had Carlos Mendoza not gotten greedy, as he admitted Tuesday, and tried to push Max Kranick for a third inning in that game -- leading to a three-run home run against Edwin Diaz.
All of which led one of the scouts I had spoken with before the series to text me after Tuesday night’s win with a simple: “I’m impressed.”
Yes, the Mets are making believers by the day, it seems, as they continue to rocket through April even with an offense that has been spotty and so far has received little impact from Juan Soto.
To this point, anyway, Pete Alonso’s scorching bat and a suddenly-hot Francisco Lindor have been more than enough to carry the load offensively, especially on Tuesday night.
As such the Mets are rolling, extending their winning streak to six games while raising their record to 17-7, four games in front of these Phillies in the NL East, and Citi Field is rocking like it’s October, as the bigger-than-usual early-season crowds have added to the good vibes around these Mets.
Alonso is hitting .444 with two outs and runners in scoring position after his key seventh-inning double on Tuesday, oozing confidence in the clutch after failing too often in such spots last season.
And Lindor is now hitting .301 in April after going 3-for-5 in this game, and you know what that could mean, considering he’s a notoriously slow starter in his career.
On this night, it was also worth noting the Mets’ approach, as they keyed in on Cristopher Sanchez’s changeup, knowing he’d gotten a whopping 23 swings-and-misses against it in his last start against the San Francisco Giants, and made a point not to be fooled by it.
As a result, they fouled off a ton of pitches early, made Sanchez throw 58 pitches in two innings (before leaving with forearm tightness), and scored on Mark Vientos’ double down the line off a changeup and Lindor’s opposite-field single inside first base on a fastball while protecting against the changeup.
“We had to respect both his changeup and his fastball,” was the way Vientos put it. “I had a plan and I executed it.
“Our whole team was grinding. That’s what I like most about this lineup. Nobody gives away at-bats. If we continue to do that, we’re going to be a scary, scary team to play against.”
Yes, there is a lot of belief in the Mets’ clubhouse. Some of it goes back to last season, all the late-inning heroics that fueled their run to the NLCS, and some of it is the way they’ve played in 2025, finding ways to win even without a lot of offense at times.
Mostly it has been about the pitching, and that’s where the Phillies figured to provide a litmus test for the likes of Tylor Megill and Canning, two starters who likely wouldn’t have been in the rotation if not for injuries to Sean Manaea and Frankie Montas.
Both proved worthy of their early-season success; however, Megill with strikeout dominance and Canning with a knack for making big pitches to escape trouble on Tuesday, especially his slider-driven strikeout of Nick Castellanos with two outs and two runners on in the fifth inning.
“He knew what he wanted to do and he executed his pitches,” said Mendoza. “It was impressive.”
Same goes for the bullpen, which has been practically untouchable. On Tuesday, Huascar Brazoban, A.J. Minter, Ryne Stanek, and Jose Butto each delivered a scoreless inning, lowering the bullpen ERA to 2.47, third in the majors. That only pales in comparison to the starting rotation’s 2.29 ERA, which is the best in the majors despite the lack of star power.
Which brings us back to those scouts.
“I have to admit, I had my doubts about their rotation,” said one scout on Monday afternoon. “They’re doing something right over there, getting the most out of guys. But I still want to see how they do against the Phillies.”
So far, still dominant.
"We Stayed With It': Maple Leafs Halt Senators' Comeback Bid To Take 2-0 Series Lead
Max Domi scored the overtime winner as the Toronto Maple Leafs defeated the Ottawa Senators 3-2 to take a 2-0 lead in their best-of-seven series on Tuesday.
For a while, it looked like the Leafs were going to steamroll the Senators after scoring twice on their first four shots on goal for the second consecutive game. However, the Senators hung on and dominated the second period, which led to their first goal of the game from Brady Tkachuk.
The third period saw the Leafs play tighter defensively as they tried to hand on to the one-goal lead. But Senators forward Adam Gaudette deflected a shot past Toronto goaltender Anthony Stolarz to tie the game and force overtime.
It didn't take long before Max Domi scored the winner at 3:09. Toronto is 10-0 all-time in the best-of-seven series, where they won the first two games at home.
After the game, Maple Leafs head coach Craig Berube broke down the flow of the game.
"Yeah, it was great to see that goal by Max. Obviously a great play. (Simon) Benoit made a great play on it," Berube said. "But first period was really good. I liked our start a lot, came out playing on our toes, and got through our forecheck. We were aggressive. We got a good lead, our power play came through again. Second period I thought that they were the better team. We didn't make plays, we kind of looked like we were just protecting the lead a little bit and didn't make enough plays. Didn't advance and get to the offensive zone enough. Took a couple of penalties. And third period was fine. We were in good shape. The goal was the first shot we gave up in the third period. We were playing the right way and doing the right thing. It was a mistake and mistakes happen. We stayed with it and ended up getting the win."
In addition, Berube addressed:
* The change in Morgan Rielly's game (he scored Toronto's first goal of the game).
* Leafs goaltender Anthony Stolarz' performance (26-save performance)
* Why the Leafs elected not to challenge the Gaudette goal after mulling it over.
* The impact of Pontus Holmberg and his ability to draw penalties (leading to John Tavares' power-play goal that made it 2-0 Toronto)
Q: What have you seen different from Morgan Rielly that has allowed him to perform in the way he has? (one goal t
I don't think it's different in the playoffs than the last 20 games, I would say, or so, where he is up in the play more like I talked about. Playing with (Brandon) Carlo, I think he feels very comfortable with his partner. They got a good chemistry together and I think that he's freed up a little bit to do his thing offensively.
Q: Max looks like he's been putting in extra work. Good to see a goal like that pay off for him?
Yeah, he still works hard. I mean, he's always trying to improve and get better and work with people, skill guys, and practice and stuff like that. And I feel very good. I feel very happy for him to get a goal. It's a big goal, obviously, and it's a great feeling to score one of those. I've got a couple. *laughs* I'm very happy for him. He's a hard worker. I thought he had a good game tonight overall. You know, he was skating. I always say when Max skates and attacks, he's on his game.
Q: You've know Anthony his whole career. What are the lessons for a goalie who has waited this long to get his shot and see it pay off?
Yeah, I had him at the start of his career in Philly. He's just getting going in pro. You go through your career, how he went through it. Kind of always was like the backup, but, you know, not a starter. And still a valuable position. Ge's coming off a very good season last year and won him a Stanley Cup and he came in this year, wanting to be a starter. And I know it was a shared net for the most of the year. I think, you know, a lot of the reason for that was we had two guys that have not played a significant amount of games throughout the season. So I like the combination of both of them, but, you know, he's been excellent all year. I mean he got injured there, coming back from the injury, he took him a bit to establish himself again. But he's doing the job for us now.
Q: What did you make of Anthony sticking up for himself and take a roughing penalty?
I mean, I think it gets annoying after a while, right? And I've seen that with goalies before. I really don't have a problem with it.
Q: What was the conversation on the bench like of Ottawa's second goal?
Oh the tying goal? Well Stutzle's coming in, you know, he's not over the blue (line) the other way yet. And the puck just fired in and it looks like it hit him. We couldn't really identify that immediately, so call timeout so our video guys can take a little bit more time to look at it, but we made the decision that it did not hit him.
Q: Pontus draws a penalty. Can you talk about the little things he's done in this series?
He draws a lot of penalties. He's very good at that. One of the best. I think, like I said, I talked about Pontus and to me his game has gone to another level in the last 20 or so where he's way more aggressive. He has the ability to hang on to pucks and keep pucks and win battles and things like that. But for me, the skating part of it has gotten to another level where he's not waiting to be safe or, you know, he's just going now. Skating. I thought he had a real good game tonight. He was strong on things in the corner, helping out, battling, doing a lot of good things. He was at the net most of the night too for that line, which is important.
Q: You've been through a lot as a coach. How frustrating does it get when you go through stretches where it looks like your team stops playing?
Yeah, and I thought in a second, like I said, we stopped skating and watched a little bit and stopped making plays. It is frustrating, but at the same time as a coach, you've got to, you know, we're asking our players to be composed. I've got to be composed too. Talk to them about things, try to motivate them a little bit on the bench and get them going again, get them skating again. It was a funny period because it was a lot of different matchups going on and whistles and penalties. We had a couple penalties, so, you know, there's certain guys that don't hit the ice and they get out of rhythm a little bit. So we definitely got to play better in the second period.
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Mets' Luis Torrens rewards manager Carlos Mendoza's faith with two-run single to put Phillies away
There were a few key at-bats in the Mets' 5-1 win over the Phillies on Tuesday night, but one almost didn't happen.
With the Mets up 3-1 in the seventh inning, and runners on second and first with two outs, the Phillies brought in right-hander Orion Kerkering. Jesse Winker was intentionally walked after getting Kerkering fell behind 2-0. Despite walking the bases loaded, the Phillies needed just one more out to keep the Mets to three runs, and the matchup was better for the Phillies reliever to pitch to right-hander Luis Torrens than the slugging lefty Winker.
At least, that was one scenario. Mets manager Carlos Mendoza had Brandon Nimmo on the bench and could have forced Kerkering to pitch to another left-handed bat. It almost makes too much sense for Mendoza to make the move since Kerkering -- thanks to the three-batter rule -- would have to stay in.
Yet, the second-year skipper stood with Torrens. The backstop would reward his manager's faith with a two-run single that gave the Mets more than enough run support to take the series against the rival Phillies.
"I don’t know," Mendoza said with a chuckle when asked why he stuck with Torrens in that spot. "That was a tough one there. Having a guy like Nimmo off the bench. I don’t know. Looking at the matchup, Nimmo is going to say that’s the best matchup there, nothing against Louie. I just like my chances with him and hopefully he puts a ball in play and finds a hole. He gets an 0-2 hole, and I’m like, man. Then he gets the single, and I'm like 'alright.'"
"I had already failed in the first three at-bats. I didn’t get any hits," Torrens said after the game through an interpreter. "At that point, it’s ‘let me focus on this at-bat and try to get a good result out of it.’"
Torrens later added, "Feels good when the manager gives you the opportunity to be in that situation. It feels good."
Tuesday was Torrens' third game this season where he's driven in more than one run, and that's helped the Mets overcome Francisco Alvarez's offseason injury.
In 20 games, Torrens is batting .228 with an OPS of .653. And while those numbers don't jump off the page, he's come up big a number of times at the plate and with his defense.
"He’s been huge, man," Mendoza said of Torrens' contributions. "Last season, the impact we felt it right away. It carried over. This is a guy that’s prepared and knows his role. If he's not playing every day, you know he’s ready. And when he gets the opportunity to play every day, like right now, he shows he's capable of catching every day and handling a pitching staff.
"His ability to control the running game. He's going to give you good at-bats, puts the ball in play, goes the other way. There’s a lot to like about this guy."
With Alvarez rehabbing in Triple-A, his return to the lineup is imminent, which will move Torrens back to the backup role. But as the Mets saw last season as their primary backup, Torrens can contribute in that role as well.
Torrens was asked about what has led to his success at the plate early this season, and the 28-year-old said it comes down to one thing.
"Right now, I’m not thinking too much about [the success]," Torrens said. "But the biggest thing is the confidence you have going in each and every day."
Tkachuk scores twice in return, leads Panthers to Game 1 victory over Tampa Bay
There were plenty of fireworks during Game 1 between the Florida Panthers and Tampa Bay Lightning.
Receiving a boost from the return of Matthew Tkachuk to the lineup, Florida scored early and often, taking down the Lightning 6-2 Tuesday night at Amalie Arena.
It didn’t take long for the Panthers to get things going.
Sam Bennett picked up the puck in Florida’s zone and quickly moved it up the ice, where Mackie Samoskevich eventually poked it into Tampa’s zone along the boards.
The rookie quickly collected the puck and sent a saucer pass toward the net, where Bennett was quickly heading, and the veteran deflected the pass from the rookie to give the Panthers a 1-0 lead at the 3:44 mark.
Playing in his first Panthers game since early February, Matthew Tkahcuk took the game’s first penalty. It was a roughing call on a hit on Nikita Kucherov that was more than questionable, especially during the playoffs.
Florida nearly killed it off but a late faceoff led to Jake Guentzel plucking a Kucherov rebound from the side of the net and quickly dangling it behind Sergei Bobrovsky to tie the game at one.
Another deflection goal would give the Panthers their second lead of the game. This time it was Dmitry Kulikov sending a wrist shot toward the net that Sam Reinhart redirected past Andrei Vasilevskiy with just 44 seconds left in the opening period.
A great shift by the Anton Lundell line led to Florida’s third goal of the game.
Pinning the Lightning deep in their zone, Bennett came flying off the bench and forced a turnover along the boards. The puck was picked up by Brad Marchand, and after his shot was stopped by Vasilevskiy, Nate Schmidt came barreling down the slot and poked in the loose puck.
Tampa Head Coach Jon Cooper challenged the play for goalie interference, but after a quick review the goal was deemed good, and Florida was given a power play for the failed challenge.
It took only 14 seconds for the Panthers to make Tampa pay.
Reinhart found Tkachuk all alone in front of the net, and he showed off his soft hands, dangling around Vasilevskiy to give Florida a sudden and commanding 4-1 lead.
A questionable hit by Emil Lilleberg on Anton Lundell put the Panthers back on the power play, and once again it was Tkachuk beating Vasilevskly to pump Florida’s lead to four.
Just over three minutes later, Brayden Point one-timed a nice pass from Ryan McDonagh past Bobrovsky’s blocker to trim Florida’s lead by one.
Florida’s third power play of the game would lead to their third power play goal.
A perfectly placed wrist shot by Schmidt from the point beat Vasilevskiy over the glove, restoring the Cats’ four-goal lead just over five minutes into the final frame.
On to Game 2.
QUICK THOUGHTS
Two goals and an assist for Tkachuk in his first game in over two months. The three points match his playoff career high.
Bennett’s goal was his first since March 28 against Utah.
Reinhart picked up where he left off after finishing the regular season with seven goals in 12 games.
Bobrovsky finished with 20 saves, including on six of Tampa’s seven high danger shots.
Florida’s two goals in 14 seconds during the second period were the fastest two goals scored in Panthers playoff history.
Schmidt’s goals were the eighth and ninth he’s scored during the Stanley Cup Playoffs over 77 postseason games.
The Panthers improved to 20-0 when leading after two periods during the playoffs under Paul Maurice.
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