Muskegon Lumberjacks score Stanley Cup Champion as new Assistant Coach


On August 15th, the Muskegon Lumberjacks announced the addition of three-time Stanley Cup Champion Patrick Maroon to their coaching staff. Maroon retired from the NHL this past March, where he ended his career with the Blackhawks after winning three consecutive Stanley Cups from 2019 to 2021.

Drafted in 2007 by the Philadelphia Flyers, Maroon played a long tenured career of 14 years before starting his new coaching journey in Muskegon.

The NHL veteran finished his playing career with 323 total points on 126/197 splits. Nicknamed “The Big Rig”, Maroon jumped between a couple different teams before he won his first championship with his hometown team, the St. Louis Blues. After his season at home, the Blues decided not to offer Maroon a contract to re-sign with the team, so he decided to take his talents to Tampa Bay on a one year deal in 2020. The 2020 and 2021 seasons both concluded with the Lightning taking home the Stanley Cup, giving Maroon his second and third Stanley Cup title.

Maroon is excited to begin a new chapter in his hockey career, stating “I'm really looking forward to working with a winning organization and learning from the coaches, players, and management.”

The staff at Muskegon is also extremely excited about the new addition. Head Coach Colten St. Clair said “Bringing Pat Maroon into our organization is a game-changing move… Pat knows what it takes to win, and his influence will elevate our locker room, our culture, and our pursuit of excellence."

You can catch the first game of the Lumberjacks’ season on September 17th as they take on the Waterloo Black Hawks in the DICK’S Sporting Goods USHL Fall Classic.

24 Nashville Predators in 24 days: Michael Bunting

Is it October yet? 

Unfortunately, no, but we're here to help pass the time. From Aug. 8 to Sept. 1, The Hockey News Nashville Predators will be counting down 24 players in 24 days, profiling every current or potentially rostered player. 

Today's player profile is forward Michael Bunting. 

24 Nashville Predators in 24 days series 

Adam Wilsby

Jordan Oesterle

Andreas Engulund

Cole Smith

Michael McCarron

Justin Barron

Zachary L’Heureux

Matthew Wood

Nick Blankenburg

Brady Martin

As an NHL prospect 

Bunting spent just one season in the OHL before he was drafted as he had been passed over in prior OHL Drafts. He was eventually selected 160th overall in the OHL's Priority Draft. 

He joined the Sault St. Marie Greyhounds for the 2013-14 season, scoring 42 points in 48 games and recording six points in nine playoff games. In the 2014 NHL Draft, he was selected 117th overall by the Arizona Coyotes. 

Bunting returned to Soo for the 2014-15 season, scoring 74 points in 57 games and was third in scoring on the team that year.

In the playoffs, Bunting scored 14 points in 14 games in the Greyhounds' run to the OHL Western Conference Finals, falling to Connor McDavid and the Erie Otters. 

In July 2015, Bunting signed a three-year entry-level contract to officially join the Coyotes organization. 

Professional career 

Oct 25, 2021; Raleigh, North Carolina, USA; Toronto Maple Leafs left wing Michael Bunting (58) skates up the ice with the puck against the Carolina Hurricanes during the first period at PNC Arena. Mandatory Credit: James Guillory-Imagn Images

Bunting started his professional career with the Springfield Falcons, scoring 25 points in 63 games and logging 41 penalty minutes. He made a brief trip to the Rapid City Rush, playing in seven games and scoring two points before returning to Springfield. 

He'd spend the next two seasons full-time with the Tucson Roadrunners, playing in 134 games and scoring 71 points. During the 2017-18 season, the Roadrunners did make the Calder Cup Playoffs, where Bunting scored four points in nine games. 

Bunting made his NHL debut during the 2018-19 season, playing five games with the Coyotes and scoring one point, which was his first career goal against the Boston Bruins. In Tucson, he played 58 games, scoring 49 points. 

The following season, Bunting spent the entire year in Tucson, scoring 49 points in 58 games, but then split time between the Coyotes and Roadrunners for the 2020-21 season. He had 13 points in 21 games with the Coyotes

That offseason, he signed with the Toronto Maple Leafs as a free agent, earning a full-time roster spot. 

As his game count in the NHL began to rise, so did his penalty minutes. In his first season as a Maple Leaf, Bunting had a career-high 63 points in 79 games and logged 80 penalty minutes.

During the 2022-23 season, he played all 82 games, scoring 49 points and recording 103 penalty minutes, the first time he had surpassed 100+ penalty minutes in his career.

Bunting entered the 2023 offseason as a free agent and signed a three-year deal with the Carolina Hurricanes, but only spent a season with the team. He scored a sound 36 points in 60 games before he was traded to the Pittsburgh Penguins at the deadline. 

Bunting was in Pittsburgh for a season and a half, scoring 48 points in 79 games before he was traded to Nashville at the deadline for Tommy Novak and Luke Schenn. He played the ladder end of the season, scoring nine points in 18 games. 

He is entering the final year of the 3-year, $13.5 million contract he signed with the Hurricanes. 

What role will he play this season?

Mar 25, 2025; Raleigh, North Carolina, USA; Nashville Predators left wing Michael Bunting (58) celebrates his goal against the Carolina Hurricanes during the first period at Lenovo Center. Mandatory Credit: James Guillory-Imagn Images

Bunting has the potential to be a decent player in this lineup. 

He found success being a physical player in Toronto, but realized that the penalty minutes were becoming an issue, especially after the scoring had slowed down.  

This is a player who has a good balance of offensive production and defensive effectiveness. He can score and he can shove other players around if need be. The question is, can he harness that and be a force for the Predators?

With a lack of depth at center, having a veteran presence at wing and someone who can average 30, 40, or 50 points in the bottom six would be huge. Depending on how well the youth works on the second line, Bunting could work his way up to there. 

Again, this is a player who has scored over 50 points in an NHL season before. He knows how to be productive, but just needs the right people around him.

If Erik Haula and Bunting can establish some sort of chemistry on the third line, that'd be a gigantic gain for the Predators. 

THIS DATE IN BLUES HISTORY (Aug. 19, 1994): Guy Carbonneau Was Acquired … For Jim Montgomery

St. Louis Blues coach Jim Montgomery (top), was once traded by the franchise 31 years ago on this date to the Montreal Canadiens. (James Carey Lauder-Imagn Images)  

ST. LOUIS -- Jim Montgomery is back in his familiar stomping grounds, coaching the St. Louis Blues after being hired on Nov. 25, 2025, the same Blues that signed Montgomery out of the University of Maine in 1993.

But did you know that on this date, Aug. 19, exactly 31 years ago, that the Blues traded their current coach to the Montreal Canadiens in exchange for Guy Carbonneau, who was a popular player with the Canadiens and spent the first 13 seasons of his NHL career there?

Montgomery, a Montreal native who played in 67 games with the Blues (20 points; six goals, 14 assists) in 1993-94, didn't last long with the Canadiens; he played just five games there (zero points) before being claimed off waivers by the Philadelphia Flyers and played in just a combined 13 games in Philadelphia the remainder of the 1994-95 and 95-96 seasons.

Montgomery, who would close out his NHL career with one season with the San Jose Sharks (2000-01) and Dallas Stars (2001-03), played in 122 NHL games (34 points; nine goals, 25 assists).

Carbonneau spent just the one season (1994-95) with the Blues and played in just 42 games, collecting 16 points (five goals, 11 assists) and another three points (one goal, two assists) in seven playoff games before signing as a free agent with the Stars, finishing out his career there playing five more seasons.

As the current Blues coach, are you glad to see Montgomery guiding the franchise through its current retool and do you feel like he can get them back to where it was was not long ago?

5 Burning Questions Facing the LA Kings in the 2025–26 NHL Season

© Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

The Kings have reached the playoffs four years in a row but have not gotten past the first round.

With depth and talent, they've fallen behind Pacific division rivals like Edmonton and Vegas.

This season is a crossroads — roster changes, new GM, contracts, and a new mix of youth/veterans leave the Kings with giant questions that will decide if they finally make that next step.

Same Old Kings, or a New Chapter?

The Kings enter 2025–26 with a mix of optimism and skepticism. Kopitar's guidance is steady, Doughty continues to patrol the blue line, and the lineup has been strengthened with veterans who know how to win in the playoffs. 

Many experts and fans believe it’s time for the Kings to move on from Kopitar and Doughty, given their age and ability don’t align with their current depth chart positions. At this point, Kopitar is a low-end 2C in his career, and Doughty is just a solid second-pairing guy at this point in his career. 

In contrast, giant questions — depth scoring, balance on the blue line, goaltender stability, young player development, and coaching adjustment — hover over the team.

If the Kings can answer yes to even a handful of these questions, they have the pieces to make a deep playoff push. Otherwise, they risk being the NHL version of déjà vu: good enough to get in, but never good enough to get out.

Can Jim Hiller Push the Right Buttons?

Behind the bench, head coach Jim Hiller has his proving ground. The Kings have been criticized the last couple of years for failing to make in-game adjustments, particularly in playoff series when the same issues — neutral zone breakdowns, stagnant power play — plagued them again.

It was especially ugly this last postseason when the Kings had a 2-0 series lead and blew multiple leads in the third period, when they were leading for most of the game until it came down to the clutch. 

Special teams, particularly, need to be worked on. The Kings' last season was at the bottom of the league in power-play efficiency, but they struggled at generating zone entries against organized defenses. The penalty kill, a one-time strength, is now middle-of-the-pack.

For the Kings to advance, Hiller will have to figure out how to draw the best out of his team's mix of older vets and youthful speed, as well as out-coach their opponents in X’s and O’s. 

Can the Kings Finally Put Their Scoring Problems to Rest?

The Kings' offense has been defined by structure and possession — and not explosiveness. They finished last season in the top 10  in the NHL overall and were unable to generate high-danger scoring chances against elite defensive units.

In the playoffs, the issue worsened. The Kings managed a paltry 2.4 goals per game in the series against Edmonton as stars Kevin Fiala and Adrian Kempe were unable to break through consistently.

This offseason, the Kings brought in Corey Perry and Joel Armia, postseason veterans with scoring depth, to augment the offense. Alex Laferriere, who inked a three-year, $12.3 million deal, is expected to step into a top-six position.

The question is whether this team can muster enough secondary scoring to support Kopitar, Kempe, and Fiala. Without that, the Kings' ceiling on offense remains limited. 

Is the Defense Built to Last?

The blue line has been anchored for years by Drew Doughty, but he's now 35 and entering the back half of his career. While still sound, the Kings have depended on him for first-pair minutes heavily, often leaving depth liabilities bare.

To address this, LA signed Brian Dumoulin and Cody Ceci in free agency — stoic, stay-home defensemen who can play minutes and bring playoff acumen. Neither is a true game-breaker, though, so the question remains as to whether the Kings have enough mobility and puck-movement on the back end to keep up with high-scoring attacks like Edmonton or Colorado.

The highlight will also be on Brandt Clarke, the 22-year-old former first-round pick, who should be an even more significant contributor. 

If Clarke can be a reliable top-four defenseman, it has the potential to transform the appearance of LA's defense entirely. If not, the group may still lag behind the West's elite.

Will the Youth Break Through?

For some time, the Kings have boasted one of the league's stronger crops of prospects. Now, it's time for those prospects to deliver.

Alex Laferriere is the most glaring case in point. A one-time dark horse, he linked a lucrative extension over the summer after showing top-six potential. The Kings will need him to mature from a complementary player into one who can be a feared scorer.

On the blue line, Brandt Clarke needs to leap, and Samuel Helenius will be watched closely at camp as a bottom-six center with size and penalty killing.

If these guys can evolve into larger roles, the Kings will possess the young strength needed to complement their veteran core. If not, the club is at risk of depending too heavily on veterans who can no longer carry the load throughout an 82-game season.

Milan Lucic Could Increase The Number Of Visor-less NHL Players

Milan Lucic is attempting an NHL comeback by joining the St. Louis Blues on a professional tryout.

The Blues announced the PTO signing Tuesday morning, adding that the NHL reinstated Lucic.

The 37-year-old last played on Oct. 21, 2023, with the Boston Bruins. After that, he took a leave of absence from the team and later joined the NHL and NHLPA Player Assistance Program.

Lucic was reportedly charged with domestic violence around the time he took his leave, but the case was later dismissed.

Brittany Lucic, his partner, posted a photo of the two smiling together on Instagram in July. She reposted it on her Instagram story on Tuesday.

"Some people would rather see you broken than see you heal," she wrote in the caption. "They question your strength and recovery like it’s not real. But healing is real… and it’s exactly what this world needs more of." 

If Lucic signs an NHL contract, he has a chance at reaching 1,200 career NHL games and 600 points in his 18th season. He's currently at 1,177 matches played and 586 points, so he'd need to play in 23 contests and record 14 points to reach those milestones.

Before Lucic recorded two assists in four games with the Bruins in 2023-24, he played 77 games with the Calgary Flames in 2022-23, putting up seven goals and 12 assists for 19 points. He also recorded 168 hits that season.

Milan Lucic (Winslow Townson-Imagn Images)

Lucic could also increase the number of active NHL players who don't wear a visor.

Right now, that small group consists of four players under contract: Jamie Benn, Ryan O'Reilly, Zach Bogosian and Ryan Reaves. Lucic hasn't regularly worn a visor during his NHL career, either.

All those players were NHL regulars by the time the league introduced a rule in 2013-14 that made any skater who had played fewer than 25 games by that point wear a visor.

When the rule was introduced, Lucic had already played 405 games, recording 97 goals, 142 assists, 239 points, 600 penalty minutes and 1,091 hits. He also had 84 playoff games under his belt, with 22 goals, 54 points and a Stanley Cup championship with the Bruins in 2010-11. His career playoff totals are 136 games, 29 goals and 48 assists for 77 points.

The Final Four NHL Skaters Who Play Without VisorsThe Final Four NHL Skaters Who Play Without VisorsOnly four players who don't wear visors remain under an NHL contract.

Lucic played eight seasons with the Bruins before joining the Los Angeles Kings for one year, then spent three campaigns with the Edmonton Oilers and four in Calgary before rejoining Boston.

The soonest game action Lucic could appear in for the Blues is Saturday, Sept. 20, when they take on the Dallas Stars, whose captain is the visor-less Benn, in a pre-season contest at 7 p.m. ET.

Get the latest news and trending stories by following The Hockey News on Google News and by subscribing to The Hockey News newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com.

Nolan McLean rides high, Mets starting to ride right? | The Mets Pod

On the latest episode of The Mets Pod presented by Tri-State Cadillac, Connor Rogers and Joe DeMayo stay on the roller coaster with the Mets -- a mix of wins, losses, and a Cowboy riding into town.

First up, Connor and Joe cover the big league debut of the Artist formerly known as Cowboy Ohtani, as Nolan McLean dazzled on the Citi Field mound to help the Mets to victory.

The guys also review the state of the starters, the shaky relievers, and the offense showing signs of breaking out.

The show goes Down on the Farm to see how things are going in the early Triple-A days of top prospects Jonah Tong and Jett Williams, then dives into the Mailbag to answer questions about possible September call ups and more.

There’s also a big announcement: The Mets Pod will be live at Citi Field on Tuesday August 26th at 5 p.m., right by the Home Run Apple near the Rotunda. Stop by and say hello!

Be sure to subscribe to The Mets Pod at Apple PodcastsSpotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.

Giancarlo Stanton is back in the Yankees’ lineup while Aaron Judge’s status remains unchanged

TAMPA, Fla. — Giancarlo Stanton is returning to the New York Yankees’ lineup after missing three games with what the team described as general soreness, manager Aaron Boone told radio station WFAN.

Stanton will play right field in one of the two games against the Tampa Bay Rays, but Aaron Judge is not expected to appear in the outfield in either.

There is no set timetable for Judge’s return to the field. He was scheduled to test his right elbow with long toss.

“I don’t know yet,” Boone said. “What I’ve said is I’m waiting on the trainers to say, ‘thumbs up.’ He’s expected to long toss again today, so I don’t expect it here in Tampa. Could it be Boston? Maybe. I just don’t know yet.”

Boone added that Judge may not regain full throwing strength this season.

“I don’t think we’re going to see him throwing like he normally does at any point this year, but that’s OK,” Boone said. “We’ve got to feel like he can go out there and protect himself.”

The Yankees are coming off a three-game sweep of the St. Louis Cardinals and hold a three-game lead for the final American League wild-card spot. Offensively, they will be satisfied if Judge simply can remain productive at the plate. Since being activated from the injured list on Aug. 5, Judge has been limited to designated hitter duties. He entered the week batting .333 with 39 home runs, 91 RBIs and a 1.134 OPS, all among the league leaders. His latest home run was his first extra-base hit since returning.

Judge’s inability to play the field has reduced the team’s flexibility. Stanton is batting .299 with 12 home runs, 34 RBIs and a .953 OPS this season, but his long injury history makes any outfield assignment a risk. He did not debut until mid-June because of tendinitis in both elbows. After playing three straight games in the outfield, he missed three consecutive games with soreness. He has declined to specify where the discomfort occurred.

Kings Should Check-In on Bruins’ Fabian Lysell

The Los Angeles Kings are hoping they can make a deep run into the playoffs next season, and while some fans questioned their moves this offseason, they seem confident in their ability to finally get past the first round.

There has been some speculation recently that the Boston Bruins could be looking to trade Fabian Lysell, and the Kings could be a strong fit.

I wouldn’t be surprised if the Bruins would be willing to move him after he has failed to break into the NHL, but they may be looking for a steep return.

Lysell, who is 22 years old, has 3 points in just 12 NHL games in his career. Last season in the American Hockey League (AHL) with the Providence Bruins, he scored 11 goals and added 23 assists for 34 points through 52 games. 

He is a strong offensive player, and having been a first-round pick back in 2021, Bruins fans were hoping he could’ve broken into the big leagues by now, but that hasn’t happened.

The Kings could flip a couple of future mid-round picks for Lysell, but realistically, it may cost them a conditional second-round pick to get the deal even close to coming to fruition. 

He could step into a depth role with the Kings as a bottom-six forward as soon as next season, and if he gels well with a new team, he could move his way up the lineup fast.  

PGA Tour ends decade-long absence from Trump-owned courses with Doral return in 2026

  • PGA Tour adds Miami Championship at Trump Doral

  • First Tour event at Trump venue since 2016 split

  • Event part of crowded spring with majors, big purses

The PGA Tour will return to Donald Trump’s Blue Monster course in Miami next spring, ending a decade-long absence from Trump-owned venues.

The Miami Championship, a $20m Signature Event scheduled for the first weekend in May 2026, will mark the 56th time the Tour has played at Trump National Doral but the first since 2016, the year Trump won his first US presidential election. That year, the WGC-Cadillac Championship was pulled from the resort and relocated to Mexico City after Cadillac ended its sponsorship.

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Flyers: Expectations for Matvei Michkov Should Be Tempered in Year 2

(Photo: Kyle Ross, Imagn Images)

Matvei Michkov had an excellent rookie year for the Philadelphia Flyers last season, but don't expect him to reach his full potential overnight.

Michkov, 20, quietly led all NHL rookies in goals last season with 26, and ultimately finished joint-second amongst all rookies in scoring, tying Macklin Celebrini with 63 points and narrowly trailing Lane Hutson's 66.

A big step forward is in the cards for the Flyers' Russian sensation, but a step forward and a leap are different.

Semantics, yes, but let's just say Michkov should be allowed at least another season to really come into his own for the Flyers at the NHL level.

Aside from the offseason trade for Trevor Zegras, who has to find his own way as well, the Flyers did very little to further assist Michkov on the ice--literally and figuratively--otherwise.

Flyers' Matvei Michkov Reveals One Important Goal for 2025-26 SeasonFlyers' Matvei Michkov Reveals One Important Goal for 2025-26 SeasonWhile star Philadelphia Flyers forward Matvei Michkov has been careful about speaking about his individual goals and aspirations, one target for the 2025-26 season should make everyone excited despite being vague in nature.

Defensemen Noah Juulsen and Dennis Gilbert will end up as forgettable signings as fringe journeymen defensemen added to fill a temporary need, 

The same is likely true for forward Christian Dvorak, who will probably never share the ice with Michkov barring an unforeseen rash of injuries or struggles with performance from other centers higher in the lineup.

All three free agents, as well as Zegras, are under contract for one more season only.

They are temporary complements to a Flyers roster centered around Michkov, who will have to find his next step on his own accord.

Defensive awareness and skating are the two obvious areas in need of improvement from the 20-year-old, but less defense can sometimes lead to more offense, as we've already seen time and time again.

It would not be unrealistic to dream up a 70- or 80-point season from Michkov, especially if Zegras can turn back the clock to just two seasons ago.

There's also a point to be made for positive regression for other Flyers players, such as Travis Konecny.

Ex-Flyers Prospect Backs Matvei Michkov to Become Face of the FranchiseEx-Flyers Prospect Backs Matvei Michkov to Become Face of the FranchiseStar Philadelphia Flyers forward Matvei Michkov doesn't lack supporters in and around the NHL these days, but he's just received even more big praise.

Konecny ended his season with just seven goals in his final 44 games, and two in his final 25.

Considering how much he and Michkov played together at times under John Tortorella, there's arguably 10 points Konecny left on the table for his Russian counterpart over that second-half slump.

That alone is enough to boost Michkov into the 70-point threshold, flirting with 80 points.

There's also the dreaded specter that is the Flyers' power play.

As a team, the Flyers had the third-worst power play percentage in the NHL last year at 15%, and they were one of four teams (Florida, Tampa Bay, Boston) to allow 10 or more short-handed goals.

Michkov (8), Konecny (8), and Tyson Foerster (6) combined for 22 of the Flyers' 32 power play goals last season; no other Flyers forward managed more than two.

If, say, Sean Couturier added five power play goals to the one he scored last season, he'd have reached 20 goals and 50 points. Would the conversation around the Flyers captain be different? Probably.

But, this is all to say that Michkov can't do it all on his own. He has his own work to do, and his Flyers teammates have theirs.

Michkov won't enter his Nikita Kucherov era overnight, but he's well on his way.

Padres’ Xander Bogaerts loses homer on fan interference call, manager Mike Shildt ejected in 4-3 loss

SAN DIEGO — Xander Bogaerts of the San Diego Padres had a home run overturned due to fan interference, and manager Mike Shildt was ejected for coming out of the dugout to talk to the umpires in the second inning of the game against the San Francisco Giants.

The call turned out to be critical because the Padres lost 4-3.

Bogaerts hit a flyball to left field that appeared to bounce out of Heliot Ramos’ glove and over the fence as two fans, including one in a Giants shirt, reached for it. The ball might have clipped one of the fans’ arms and, after a lengthy review, the home run call was overturned and Bogaerts was called out. Shildt was ejected immediately when he came out of the dugout.

Fans booed the rest of the inning.

“No contact. It was a big run. Huge,” Shildt said. “Listen, I don’t bark at the league a lot, but the definition that we got from replay was that it was clear that there was some impediment that took place. Clearly, he didn’t touch the baseball. ... And if it’s so clear, how come it takes 2 minutes, 40 seconds to figure it out? What are you looking for? If it’s so clear, overturn it early and if it’s not, it’s a home run.

“That’s just really disappointing to go that long and have to come up with a conclusion that’s not conclusive to overturn a home run. It cost us an opportunity to win a baseball game. ... I had a lot of time on my hands and if you can find an angle where the fan touched the baseball, I’d like to see it.”

Ramos wasn’t surprised the call was overturned.

“I did think I had it easier than that, but whenever I was about to catch it, I saw his arm was over me, kind of him, so I’m guessing it hit the arm or something. I saw the replay and it only shows the guy on the bottom, it doesn’t show the guy on the top, but he was like literally over me and his whole body was across the wall. It just clipped the finger a little bit. Before the ball got to my glove, he was already with his hands up.”

Ramos said the fan blocked his view “a little bit because I saw his shadow coming on top of me so I was kind of confused about it.”

Giants manager Bob Melvin said it appeared the fan “reached over. I think it just nicked him. Regardless, if your hand’s over it could affect his vision, too. You don’t see that call often but I think it was the right one.”

Ramos hit a leadoff homer against Nestor Cortes, one of three homers within the first five batters that gave the Giants a 4-0 lead.

Rockies were once in danger of breaking MLB mark for losses. Now, they’re piling up wins

DENVER — This was a cool moment for Warming Bernabel — being doused with an icy bucket of water.

Not that long ago, winning moments like this were few and far between for the Colorado Rockies. That winning feeling, though, has returned a little more often in the second half of the season. The Rockies rallied to beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 4-3 courtesy of Bernabel’s walk-off single in the ninth inning.

With that, the Rockies snapped a 10-game skid against the Dodgers. They also tied their season-high winning streak of four games.

Even more, they’re 14-15 since the All-Star break, while the NL West-leading Dodgers are 13-15. Colorado still trails the defending World Series champions by 35 games in the standings.

No longer are the Rockies in imminent danger of setting a modern-era major league mark for losses, though. At 36-89, Colorado needs to win six of its final 37 games to steer clear of the dubious record set by the 2024 Chicago White Sox, who finished 41-121.

“We’re at this stage right now where we’re trying to get better as a team,” All-Star catcher Hunter Goodman said. “We’re trying to play the game the right way and do things to put us in a position in the future to get to the spot that some of these teams we’re playing against are in.”

Colorado has won five series since the All-Star break. That after winning just two series before the break.

“You definitely see flashes,” Goodman said. “We’re a super-young team. But getting that learning experience and figuring out how to win at this level and how to do it together as a team has been pretty cool to watch the last month or so.”

The last time Colorado beat the Dodgers was Sept. 21. It’s been a little longer since the Rockies last beat Los Angeles at Coors Field — June 19, 2024, to be precise.

“It’s good to get a win. We’re playing good baseball right now,” Goodman said. “It’s just going out and playing clean baseball and playing the way we’ve been playing.”

The Dodgers entered the four-game series in the Mile High City fresh off a sweep of rival San Diego. Los Angeles manager Dave Roberts insisted his team wouldn’t overlook the Rockies.

“We’re going to get their best. We’re prepared for that,” Roberts said before the game. “But yeah, absolutely, teams try to kind of use us as a marker. We see that.”

In the ninth inning, the Dodgers were playing their outfielders deep to prevent a double. It ended up costing them one.

Ezequiel Tovar started a one-out rally with a bloop double that a charging Teoscar Hernández couldn’t haul in.

“It’s a big outfield,” Hernández explained. “I tried to make a play. I didn’t.”

Bernabel followed by sending a pitch from Justin Wrobleski (4-5) up the middle to bring home Tovar.

“There’s no cooler way to win a game in baseball than a walk-off,” Goodman said. “It’s always fun when that happens.”

Former No. 1 pick, five-time All-Star John Wall announces his retirement from basketball

One of the fastest and most electrifying players with the ball in his hands the league has seen, John Wall officially announced his retirement after 11 NBA seasons.

Wall was the No. 1 pick of the Washington Wizards in 2010 out of Kentucky. He Dougied his way to 16.4 points and 8.3 assists a game as a rookie, making First Team All-Rookie (he was second in Rookie of the Year voting to Blake Griffin).

Wall played nine seasons for the Wizards and is a franchise legend, a lightning-fast player end-to-end with the ball in his hands but able to play under control at that speed. He averaged 19 points and 9.2 assists a game in that stretch for Washington, making five All-Star teams, one All-Defensive team, and he was All-NBA in his peak season of 2017 when he averaged 23.1 points a game.

In 2019, Wall suffered a torn Achilles and was never the same after that. He missed a full season, then came back with stints with the Rockets (he was traded to them for Russell Westbrook) and Clippers, and in Los Angeles, he played well off the bench when healthy (but he only played 34 games for them). However, his impact was never quite the same after the injury.

The Wall game I most remember came during the lockout in 2011, when a number of NBA players got together at The Pyramid on the Campus of Long Beach State (about a nice 3-iron shot from my front door) for an exhibition game. In that free-flowing, pickup-style game, the speed and athleticism of Wall overshadowed everyone else on the court. He was dynamic and one of the most entertaining players the league has ever seen.

Blue Jays star Vladimir Guerrero Jr. to have MRI on hamstring after leaving game

PITTSBURGH — Toronto Blue Jays first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. left a 5-2 loss to Pittsburgh in the fifth inning with hamstring tightness following a pair of stellar defensive plays.

Guerrero did the splits twice at first to snag tosses from teammates, the last a pretty pick off a long throw by shortstop Bo Bichette to retire Jared Triolo to end the third. Guerrero returned to play the field in the fourth before being replaced by Ty France when his turn in the batting order came around in the top of the fifth.

Blue Jays manager John Schneider said Guerrero was doing “all right,” but that an MRI was scheduled to get a clearer look at things.

“It was after that stretch, obviously,” Schneider said. “At this time of year, everyone is kind of grinding a little bit, and that just irritated his hammy. It’s just tightness.”

Schneider said Guerrero wanted to go out for the fourth inning to get a feel on how hurt he might be. Rather than risk aggravating it, he was pulled in the fifth.

“I trust him, and he knows himself really well,” Schneider said. “We can’t afford to lose him for an extended period of time, so it was partially precautionary, too. Hopefully, he’s good to go in the next day or two. He’s obviously really important to our lineup.”

Guerrero is hitting .298 with 21 home runs and 69 RBIs this season for first-place Toronto.