One of the most common frustrations for Ottawa Senators fans in recent seasons has been the inability to watch certain games on TV. You might settle in for a game, knowing you’re a TSN subscriber living in the Ottawa viewing region, only to see the dreaded message: The scheduled program is not available in your region. In other words, the Ottawa program you're paying for in Ottawa is not available to you in Ottawa.
The problem has already resurfaced this year, most recently during Tuesday night’s preseason game in Toronto. Ian Mendes, the Senators’ vice president of communications, addressed the issue in his website column on Monday.
The root of the problem, Mendes explained, comes from how internet providers register IP addresses. Some Ottawa residents are being mistakenly identified as living elsewhere in Ontario.
"Your internet cable provider thinks you’re trying to watch a TSN 5 game from out-of-market, even though you live within a stone’s throw of Canadian Tire Centre," Mendes wrote. "If you try and stream the game on your phone – using regular data – you’ll be fine because it will register that your device is in Ottawa. But try watching the game off Wi-Fi on that same phone and boom, you’re back to the same problem. It might think you’re in Kitchener."
Mendes said some fans have been able to work around the issue by contacting their internet service provider and asking them to ‘whitelist’ their IP address, or to watch the game using your cable provider’s app on your phone using data – and stream to your television."
That latter workaround, of course, only makes sense for fans with unlimited data plans.
No English Radio or TV in Quebec City on Sunday
Broadcast challenges also popped up during Sunday’s preseason Senators game in Quebec City, where fans had no access to English TV or radio coverage. With TSN’s Sunday lineup packed with big events — the Ryder Cup, NFL football, and baseball pennant races — the Senators’ preseason tilt against the New Jersey Devils’ split squad didn’t quite make the cut.
So that's what happened with the English TV coverage.
As for radio, because neither team had an English TV crew on site, TSN 1200’s radio broadcasters — who no longer travel for road games — had no easy access to a video feed to call the game back home in Ottawa.
That left the Senators and the station trying to set up their own video feed, a plan that never came together.
"We faced a lot of glitches. Our on-site team and the technical team back at TSN 1200 probably spent the better part of six hours trying to figure out a solution on Sunday. Without getting into all the boring technical stuff, I will simply say we could not provide TSN 1200 with a feed they felt comfortable with having Dean and Gord call the game from back in Ottawa."
More potential trouble ahead Thursday in St. Louis
And the broadcast problems this week may not be over. On Thursday, the Senators play the Blues in St. Louis — and that game also isn’t being broadcast by TSN or any TV network. And in Ottawa, no video feed also means no English radio feed. But they're on it. So please do not adjust your set.
"We’ll try and find a solution that works, but please know we’re trying our best behind the scenes on this stuff," Mendes said.
With the Enterprise Center being a full NHL arena equipped with proven broadcast technology, maybe there’s hope that the hookup will be smoother than it was on Sunday.
If they can set up a clean video feed, fans could get an English radio call on TSN 1200 and possibly simulcast with video on the Senators’ website, which would suit most fans just fine.
The Florida Panthers' “2025 Stanley Cup Championship Film,” which celebrates their repeat win, will premiere exclusively on ESPN on Thursday, Oct. 2 and Friday, Oct. 3.
The one-hour film debuts Oct. 2 on ESPN+ and Oct. 3 on ESPN2, and additional airings will include Sportsnet and Prime Video in Canada. The NHL’s YouTube channel will display the film in the coming weeks.
The film will allow Panthers fans and NHL fans to relive the Panthers' glory as they went on to win their second Stanley Cup.
Produced by NHL Productions, the film unveils the emotional roller coaster, major in-season acquisitions and thrilling on-ice competition on the Panthers’ journey to becoming the seventh team in NHL history to win consecutive titles. Panthers head coach Paul Maurice gets the star treatment as he leads his team through the drama and intensity of a second straight Stanley Cup Final series against the Edmonton Oilers. With exclusive, behind-the-scenes footage, mic’d up moments throughout the rivalry and sit-down interviews with powerhouse players Seth Jones, Brad Marchand, Evan Rodrigues, Sam Reinhart and more, the show gives fans a firsthand look at the back-to-back Stanley Cup Champions.
The Panthers embark on chasing the coveted third consecutive Stanley Cup this season, with their regular season set to begin on Oct. 7 against the Chicago Blackhawks. The Panthers will start the season without Aleksander Barkov and Matthew Tkachuk, their top two forwards, which makes the challenge of repeating much harder.
SAN FRANCISCO — Buster Posey will search for a fresh managerial voice to guide the San Francisco Giants, someone with an “obsessive” work ethic and attention to detail.
Manager Bob Melvin was fired after the club missed the playoffs for a fourth straight season.
Posey, San Francisco’s President of Baseball Operations, announced the decision. He had shown his confidence in Melvin by exercising the veteran manager’s contract option for the 2026 season on July 1.
“Just looking to find a different voice that can take us in a different direction,” Posey said.
Melvin said after a 4-0 victory against Colorado to conclude his second season that he had received no assurances about managing in 2026.
“It is what it is,” he said, “we’ll see what the next day brings.”
The Giants finished 81-81 for one more victory than in Melvin’s first year. They haven’t reached the postseason since winning the NL West with a franchise-record 107 victories to edge the rival Dodgers by one game in 2021 under then-skipper Gabe Kapler.
Now, another change.
“It’s definitely not ideal but unfortunately we talked about it a lot what the standards are for the Giants and we have high standards,” Posey said. “And I hold myself to those same standards. I understand fully the position that I’m in now. My job and the team’s success is evaluated accordingly as well. You without a doubt hope that there can be consistency in these leadership positions. We’ve got to get back to a place where we’re getting in the playoffs, we’re making runs in playoffs. That’s what our fan base deserves, that’s what the city deserves.”
As Posey begins finalizing his list of candidates, one familiar name has come up as a possibility: the catcher’s former manager, Bruce Bochy. He has wrapped up his three-year contract with Texas but Posey noted, “I don’t know what his status is yet so I can’t speak on that.”
The 70-year-old Bochy managed the Giants for 13 seasons from 2007-2019, a run that featured every-other-year World Series titles in 2010, ‘12 and ’14.
Posey said there’s no timetable for making a hire — “I want to make sure we get it right” — nor suggested whether he would seek someone with prior managerial experience.
Players offered support for Melvin as the season ended.
“You know how I feel about BoMel, I loved him. He’s been my manager for I guess seven years,” said third baseman Matt Chapman, who also played for Melvin with Oakland. “I feel extremely grateful that I get to play for him and he’s the same guy every day. He’s been steady for us, he’s always honest with the players, he has our back. He’s done the best with what we’ve given him. The players, a lot of us didn’t play to probably our capabilities.”
The 63-year-old Melvin left the San Diego Padres to return home to the Bay Area and manage the Giants last year for the job he always dreamed of doing as a former catcher with the organization. This is his 22nd year as a major league manager.
Melvin has a 1,678-1,588 career regular-season managerial record. A three-time Manager of the Year who has won the award in both leagues, he has eight postseason appearances while guiding Arizona, Seattle, Oakland, San Diego and the Giants.
San Francisco finished 80-82 in Melvin’s first season last year after he replaced Kapler, who was fired with three days remaining in the 2023 season.
Melvin is a native of nearby Palo Alto, California. He attended the University of California-Berkeley and played for his hometown Giants from 1986-88.
This has been his dream job, one he thought about in each visit to Oracle Park as a visiting manager.
“It wasn’t enjoyable. I knew how much this job meant to Bob,” Posey said of their conversation.
The players certainly realized their skipper’s passion for being in a place that means so much to him.
While several Giants — including All-Star Logan Webb — said they don’t expect Posey to be satisfied with this disappointing year, that didn’t necessarily mean they expected a managerial change.
“He’s done a great job,” Webb said after his start. “I know I said some things last time that I think got misconstrued. It had nothing to do with BoMel. He’s amazing at what he does. I think at the end of the day, it comes down to us being able to play better as players, and I think everyone in here will say the exact same thing. BoMel’s a great leader of men. It’s been amazing. I think BoMel is great.”
The NHL saw several players get placed on waivers on Sep. 29, and one of them is a former New Jersey Devils forward.
According to PuckPedia, the New York Rangers have placed former Devils forward Justin Dowling on waivers.
Dowling's time with the Devils officially ended this off-season when he signed a two-year contract with the Rangers in free agency. Now, assuming he clears waivers, he should start the season down in the American Hockey League (AHL) with the Hartford Wolf Pack.
Dowling played in 52 games this past season with the Devils, where he recorded two goals, five assists, seven points, 51 hits, and a minus-6 rating. This was after he scored one goal in two games with the Devils during the 2023-24 season.
In 152 career NHL games over seven seasons split between the Dallas Stars, Vancouver Canucks, and Devils, Dowling has posted nine goals, 17 assists, and 26 points.
In what is shaping up to be a race to the bottom in the battle for a roster spot on defense, injured Philadelphia Flyers prospect Oliver Bonk is, unfortunately, missing out on a big opportunity.
Players like Helge Grans and Noah Juulsen, two favorites for a roster spot due to their right-handedness, have largely flattered to deceive or played poorly outright in training camp and the preseason thus far.
Egor Zamula appears to have plateaued, and Emil Andrae has only appeared in one preseason game to this point; he'll play against Boston on Monday night.
An underwhelming roster battle has left the Flyers in a precarious position with only a few preseason games left on the schedule, and you have to wonder what a healthy Bonk could have done for himself going against this group.
Bonk, 20, was deemed day-to-day by the Flyers with an upper-body injury on Thursday, along with forwards Lane Pederson and Karsen Dorwart, and has technically been day-to-day since the Flyers' first announcement on Sept. 18.
The 2023 first-round pick was meant to play in the rookie series games against the New York Rangers, too, only to be held out of those before training camp started.
Considering Bonk was also left off the ice during development camp in July to recover from a long season, he's quietly missed a decent amount of on-ice development with NHL coaches and NHL-caliber players this year.
The timing of it all has been awful, frankly, as Rasmus Ristolainen is expected to miss time well into the start of the season (potentially as late as November as of now)
Given that Ristolainen will inevitably return at some point, this would have been an easy opportunity to see Bonk play a month or so's worth of NHL games and how he holds up doing so.
The same premise applied to Grans, in a way, where the 23-year-old is no longer waivers-exempt. If the Flyers want to get a real good look at Grans, there was no better time to do so than while Ristolainen can't play.
By all accounts, it would seem that Bonk is destined to start his 2025-26 campaign - his first as a professional player - in the AHL with the Lehigh Valley Phantoms.
Most likely, he would've spent most of the season there anyway, but you can't help but feel a healthy Bonk makes this Flyers team out of training camp to glean some valuable experience while Ristolainen is on the shelf.
The Dodgers pursuit of back-to-back World Series titles starts Tuesday at Chavez Ravine when they open their Wild Card series against the Cincinnati Reds.
For the bulk of the regular season, the Dodgers (93-69) appeared disinterested. That said, all seems in order to start the postseason as LA won its final five games of the regular season, outscoring their opponents 27-10. The Reds (83-79) won seven of their final ten games to outrace the Mets to the finish line and claim the final Wild Card berth in the National League.
Hunter Greene (7-4, 2.76 ERA) gets the start in Game 1 for the Reds. The right hander has been quite good over his last two starts allowing just two runs on six hits in 15 innings. LA has yet to officially announce their hurler for the series opener but a good bet is Blake Snell (5-4, 2.35 ERA). The Cy Young winner has been excellent of late giving up just one run in his last three starts (19 innings) with 27 strikeouts.
Lets dive into Game 1 of 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 Reds at Dodgers
Date: Tuesday, September 30, 2025
Time: 9:08PM EST
Site: Dodger Stadium
City: Los Angeles, CA
Network/Streaming: ESPN
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 Reds at the Dodgers
The latest odds as of Monday courtesy of DraftKings:
Moneyline: Cincinnati Reds (+167), Los Angeles Dodgers (-206)
Spread: Dodgers -1.5 (+109)
Total: 7.0 runs
Probable starting pitchers for Reds at Dodgers
Pitching matchup for September 30, 2025:
Reds: Hunter Greene (7-4, 2.76 ERA) Over his last two starts (15 innings), Greene has struck out 16 hitters while walking just 3
Dodgers: Blake Snell (5-4, 2.35 ERA) Snell made just 11 starts this season but appears to be healthy now throwing 401 pitches over his last 4 starts
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 Reds at Dodgers
The Dodgers have won 7 of their last 9 home games against the Reds
The Under is 67-34-10 in Reds' games against National League opponents this season
The Dodgers have covered in 4 of their last 5 games showing a profit of 2.36 units
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 Tuesday’s game between the Reds and the Dodgers
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 Tuesday's game between the Reds and the Dodgers:
Moneyline: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the Los Angeles Dodgers on the Moneyline.
Spread: NBC Sports Bet is leaning towards a play ATS on the Cincinnati Reds at +1.5.
Total: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the over on the Game Total of 7.0.
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Seven teams placed a combined 22 players on NHL waivers Monday.
The Vancouver Canucks placed Jiri Patera, MacKenzie MacEachern, Joe Labate and Jimmy Schuldt on waivers.
The New York Rangers' four are Anton Blidh, Justin Dowling, Trey Fix-Wolansky and Derrick Pouliot.
The Minnesota Wild waived Nicolas Aube-Kubel, Ben Gleason, Ben Jones and Matt Kiersted.
In Nashville, the Predators waived Kevin Gravel, Jake Lucchini, Matt Murray, Navrin Mutter and Jordan Oesterle.
The Hurricanes have Skyler Brind'Amour and Ronan Seeley on waivers as well, while the Philadelphia Flyers waived Helge Grans. The Winnipeg Jets round out the waiver action with Phillip Di Giuseppe and Mason Shaw.
For each player, the other 31 NHL teams can put in a claim for them in the next 24 hours, by 2 p.m. ET on Tuesday.
Patera, 26, was claimed off waivers twice last year. After signing a two-year contract worth $775,000 annually with the Canucks on July 1, 2024, the Boston Bruins claimed the goaltender in early October while they awaited a new contract for starter Jeremy Swayman. Five days later, the Canucks claimed him back.
Dowling, 34, has played 152 career NHL games, including 52 last season with the New Jersey Devils. The center put up seven points with them and 26 in his career.
Aube-Kubel, 29, is a Stanley Cup champion, playing 14 playoff games for the Avalanche when they won in 2022. The right winger has played 304 career NHL games, putting up 32 goals and 48 assists for 80 points. Last season, he played 22 games split between the Buffalo Sabres and Rangers, recording two points.
Gravel, 33, is in his fourth season with the Predators organization. The defenseman played 61 AHL games last year and six NHL contests, recording one point in the top level. He's been in 139 career NHL games, recording a goal and 15 points.
Brind'Amour, a 26-year-old center, played most of last season for the AHL's Chicago Wolves, scoring 24 points in 68 games. The son of Hurricanes coach Rod Brind'Amour played his first two NHL games at the end of the regular season, scoring once.
Grans, 23, played his first six NHL games in 2024-25, recording an assist. The defenseman was a second-round pick in 2020 for the Los Angeles Kings, which traded him to Philadelphia in 2023.
Di Giuseppe, 31, played the last three seasons with the Canucks organization before signing a one-year, $775,000 contract with the Jets this summer. He has 28 goals and 53 assists for 81 points in 302 career NHL games, including a goal and six points in 20 games last year.
All 23 players who were placed on waivers on Sunday cleared, making them eligible to be sent to the minors. They include Montreal Canadiens prospect Sean Farrell, Columbus Blue Jackets veterans Hudson Fasching and Brendan Gaunce and Dallas Stars bubble defenseman Kyle Capobianco.
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The Vancouver Canucks have placed four players on waivers in order to send them down to the Abbotsford Canucks. The four players are goaltender Jiří Patera, defenceman Jimmy Schuldt, as well as forwards Joseph LaBate and MacKenzie MacEachern. In total, 22 players were placed on waivers across the NHL, including former Canucks forward Phillip Di Giuseppe, who was signed this off-season by the Winnipeg Jets.
LaBate, MacEachern and Schuldt were all signed by Vancouver this past off-season. As for Patera, he joined the organization during the 2024 off-season. All four players were projected to be sent to the AHL and should play big roles for Abbotsford this season.
Sending these four players down on Monday also ensures that they will be ready for the AHL Canucks' Training Camp. This year, Abbotsford will hold practices at the Abbotsford Centre from October 1 to 3, while a scrimmage will be played at the Chilliwack Coliseum on October 4. According to the Canucks, all Abbotsford Training Camp events will be open to the public.
As for the NHL club, Vancouver has two more pre-season games before they kick off the 2025-26 season on October 9. The Canucks will take on the Calgary Flames on October 1 before playing their final pre-season game against the Edmonton Oilers on October 3. Game time for Wednesday is scheduled for 6:00 pm PT from the Scotiabank Saddledome.
Make sure you bookmark THN's Vancouver Canucks site and add us to your favourites on Google News for the latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more. Also, don't forget to leave a comment at the bottom of the page and engage with other passionate fans through our forum. This article originally appeared on The Hockey News.
Guessing what's gonna happen in the NHL is a precarious business but we do it every year because it's fan-type fun.
What makes it even more fun is when we're in a position to compare last year's genius picks with the ones our heavily-admired pollsters say this time around.
Here's what The Hockey News Yearbook forecasters wrote about our Met Area teams at this time last year.
The Devils would finish on top of the Met Division with the Rangers right behind. The Islanders were tabbed for fourth in the Met.
The Panthers were tabbed to lead the Atlantic Division but not to win the 2025 Stanley Cup.
Edmonton and Dallas got the nods in the Pacific and Central Divisions. And The Hockey News projected a New Jersey-Dallas Final with a Stars Cup win.
Nice try all around, guys, and now we go to this season: Of the trio of Met teams, The Devils are placed second, Rangers fourth and Islanders – Yikes! – seventh! Florida gets top billing again in the Atlantic while the Canes lead the Met.
On the other side, Dallas is slotted first in the Central Division with Edmonton rulers of the Pacific.
The Hockey News Yearbook has Vegas defeating Carolina in the Cup Final. The Maven's Off-The-Wall Predictions Come In The Adjoining Column: (Hint: You may not like all of them; neither do I!)
Grans was one of the Flyers' prospects looking to earn a spot on the NHL roster out of training camp. However, now that Grans has been put on waivers, the rest of the league has the opportunity to claim him if they wish to.
If Grans clears waivers, the Flyers will be able to assign him to their American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Lehigh Valley Phantoms. However, with Grans being a big and still young right-shot defenseman, it is fair to wonder if another team could claim him.
Grans played in his first six NHL games this past season with the Flyers, where he recorded one assist and two penalty minutes. In 66 games during the 2024-25 season with the Phantoms, he recorded eight goals, 15 assists, 23 points, and 42 penalty minutes.
Wide receiver Monshun Sales (Indianapolis, Indiana/ Lawrence North High School) was officially honored as a 2026 Navy All-American by America’s Navy and NBC Sports representatives during a live jersey presentation as part of the Road to the Dome tour.
The postseason is upon us, and while a Mets-Dodgers Wild Card series would have been a great way to kick it off, especially bookended against the Yankees-Red Sox matchup, this still figures to be a wild October.
That is, it feels like anybody could win it all after a season in which no team won 100 games, and the expected super-team Dodgers have to fight their way through a Wild Card series.
With that in mind, here are nine bold playoff predictions:
Brewers can't get it done
It’s a nice story, the small-market Brewers posting the best record in baseball this season, with 97 wins, but their history of failure in the postseason in recent years puts a lot of pressure on them going into October, and I think it will be more of the same.
They’re the ultimate grind-it-out team, putting the ball in play, out-hustling teams on a daily basis. But talent usually wins in the postseason, and the San Diego Padres, after defeating the Chicago Cubs in the Wild Card round, will simply out-talent them.
Garrett Crochet sets the tone
Crochet had a Cy Young-worthy season coming over to Boston, and he dominated the Yankees along the way, going 3-0 with a 3.29 ERA in four starts against them. The Yanks scored five runs in one of his starts but only five combined in the other three, including a seven-inning gem in the Bronx in August.
As such, I think he sets the tone for the Wild Card series by winning Game 1 at Yankee Stadium, outpitching Max Fried and dominating through seven innings.
Judge had his moments against the Red Sox this season, with five home runs and a 1.008 OPS in 13 games against them, but he also struck out 22 times in 56 plate appearances as Boston pitchers attacked him inside. And Crochet was especially tough on him, so I think the Yankees’ captain will have to wait a little longer for his breakout October.
And as well as the Yanks finished the season, it’s hard to forget how poorly they played against good teams for most of the season, or that the Red Sox were especially tough on them, winning nine of 13 games -- including five of seven in the Bronx.
New York Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge (99) waits on deck during the third inning against the New York Mets at Citi Field. / Brad Penner-Imagn Images
It should be an entertaining series, likely going three games, but I think the Yankees’ bullpen will cost them at least one game, and it’s hard not to like Alex Cora over Aaron Boone in such a short series.
It’s Cal Raleigh’s year
It’s very close, but I’d give the MVP to Judge, who had another historic season, with a combination of high batting average and power that should be rewarded. Yet I think Raleigh will stamp this as his year with a big October, building on those 60 home runs he hit in the regular season.
Raleigh was clutch all season for the Mariners, slugging over .600 with an OPS over 1.000 hitting with runners in scoring position, with two outs and RISP, and high-leverage situations as well, as defined by Baseball Reference. So I’m saying he hits some big home runs that makes this a memorable October for him.
Dodger blues
The Los Angeles Dodgers were supposed to be unbeatable this season, after spending another gazillion dollars in the offseason, yet they won only 91 games, third-best among NL division winners, meaning they have to play a Wild Card series against the Cincinnati Reds.
As an aside, it’s a shame the Mets aren’t part of this. It would have made for great fun if they had done their part to earn the third Wild Card spot and give them a shot at knocking out the Dodgers in a rematch after last year’s NLCS.
I don’t give the Reds much of a chance, despite their strong starting pitching. The Dodgers should advance, setting up a big-stage NLDS against the Phillies. And while LA’s high-powered starting pitching is the healthiest it has been all season, it’s the bullpen -- their Achilles heel all season -- that will cost them a shot at repeating as champs.
The Dodgers’ pen had a 4.27 ERA this season, ranking 21st in the majors, with 26 blown saves. Tanner Scott, the most sought-after free agent reliever last winter, has been a bust, and there have been plenty of other culprits. As a result, LA may use starter Tyler Glasnow out of the 'pen, at least in the Wild Card series, as well as fellow starters Emmett Sheehan and Roki Sasaki, who was injured for most of the season.
Shohei Ohtani shines
It won’t be enough to save the Dodgers from a disappointing October, but Ohtani will stamp himself as the most remarkable player in baseball history, as he takes his two-way talents into the postseason.
To a large extent, Ohtani has already done that, hitting 55 home runs this season while returning to the mound from elbow surgery in the second half, pitching to a 2.87 ERA over 47 innings.
Aug 23, 2024; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani (17) rounds the bases on a walk-off grand slam home run for his 40th of the season in the ninth inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Dodger Stadium. / Jayne Kamin-Oncea - USA TODAY Sports
Now he’s expected to line up as the Dodgers’ No. 3 starter in the postseason, behind Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Blake Snell. He seems built for the biggest moments, famously striking out Mike Trout to win the World Baseball Classic for Japan in 2023, and he’s a good bet to make this a memorable October, at least on a personal level.
Jhoan Duran the difference-maker
Phillies GM Dave Dombrowski rather famously has a win-now mentality as a GM, more willing than most these days to give up top prospects in pursuit of a championship. And the case in point this year was his trade deadline deal to get Duran from the Minnesota Twins.
That deal, along with the late-season signing of David Robertson, were just what the Phillies needed for a bullpen that has cost them in postseasons past. The Mets likely could have had Duran if they’d been willing to trade better prospects than they gave up for Ryan Helsley and Tyler Rogers, and it’s fair to say that decision was a big part of why they fell short of the postseason.
Duran hasn’t been perfect for the Phillies, but he’s been mostly dominant, pitching to a 2.18 ERA with 16 saves in his two months since the trade. And I think he’ll be big reason the Phillies win what should be a heavyweight NLDS against the Dodgers.
Kyle Schwarber steps up
Schwarber had regular a spectacular season, hitting 56 home runs and totaling 132 RBI, and his knack for delivering in the clutch (1.252 OPS with two outs and RISP) fees like it could put the Phillies over the top in the NL and get them to the World Series.
It would be quite a feat, considering they lost ace Zack Wheeler to a season-ending shoulder injury, but the Phillies have the depth in the rotation to overcome it, and they have a team of October-tested veterans that should thrive in this postseason.
So I have them knocking off both the Dodgers and Padres to get to the World Series, with Schwarber leading the way and setting himself up for a huge payday as a free agent this winter.
The Mariners? Yep, the Mariners
Why not? This might be the most wide-open postseason ever in baseball, with no super powers in sight, so in that sense it would be fitting for the Seattle Mariners to finally break through.
They’ve been underachievers for much of their existence, going all the way back to 2001, when they set the modern major league record by winning 116 games during the season, only to lose meekly to the Yankees in the ALCS in five games.
Since then they had only reached the postseason once before this season -- in 2022 -- and promptly got swept by the Houston Astros. But this year feels different. They went on a 17-1 roll in September to lock up the AL West title, sweeping the Astros in Houston last week to win the division.
With Raleigh leading the way, their offense is dangerous, and their strong starting pitching is mostly healthy after dealing with injuries during the season. But if Bryan Woo’s pectoral strain keeps him out of the rotation, that could hurt the Mariners’ chances.
All in all, it feels like anybody’s year. And nobody personifies anybody quite like the Mariners.
Michael Keane put Everton ahead, but Jarrod Bowen’s equaliser, West Ham’s first goal under Nuno Espírito Santo, earned them his first point
Seeing as Michael Keane is playing, here’s one of my favourite goals of recent times.
West Ham, meanwhile, will look to play off Fullkrug, with Bowen coming off the flank in support while, down the left, Summerville keeps the width and behind, Paquetá prompts. I don’t think they’re anywhere near as bad as their league position suggests, but i do worry about the centre of their defence – which is why is makes sense to bring Magassa in for Ward-Prowse.