Yankees news: Players push for new uniforms

MESA, ARIZONA - MARCH 23: Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees arrives to the spring training game against the Chicago Cubs at Sloan Park on March 23, 2026 in Mesa, Arizona. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Athletic | Brendan Kuty: ($) Yankees players are lobbying their organization to let them wear their batting practice jerseys as an alternate road jersey, a move which would break with the team’s tradition of utilizing only one home and one road jersey. No reason has yet been given publicly for the request, which would likely need to be approved by owner Hal Steinbrenner. The BP jerseys in question feature “New York” across the chest in gray letters and numbers with white trim alongside the ubiquitous Starr Insurance sleeve patch.

MLB.com | Bryan Hoch: Congratulations are in order for the Weathers family, after Thayer, the wife of Ryan, gave birth to their son Paul David on Wednesday. The new father landed on the paternity list in advance of Wednesday’s game, with reliever Jake Bird called up from Triple-A to take his place on the active roster. Weathers, who announced with his wife that they were expecting a child in December, had his best outing as a Yankee his last time out, going 7.1 scoreless innings to earn his first victory with the team. Bird broke camp with the Yankees but was demoted after posting a 7.71 ERA through eight appearances.

MLB.com | Max Ralph: A couple of big names are slated to arrive in Fishkill this week. Carlos Rodón will commence his rehab assignment with the High-A Hudson Valley Renegades on Friday, a day after Gerrit Cole is scheduled to make his second rehab start. Rodón last threw batting practice on Saturday and is stretched out to 60 pitches. For his part, Cole threw 44 pitches in 4.1 innings during his last start with Double-A Somerset.

NJ.com | Randy Miller: Giancarlo Stanton was the hero Tuesday, knocking in three to snap a 1-for-21 skid. He attributed the outburst, at least in part, to playing at Fenway Park, where he’s hit .316 over his career. In other housekeeping news, Anthony Volpe played in his third rehab game Tuesday, notching two hits, including a 378-foot home run. With his return on the horizon and Jasson Domínguez hitting .333 in 19 games at Triple-A, Randal Grichuk’s roster spot could soon be imperiled.

College basketball transfer portal team rankings: Which school has best class so far?

The deadline for men's college basketball players to enter the transfer portal has come and gone (April 21). And while five of USA TODAY's top-six ranked portal entrants remain available, many players have already found new homes.

Which schools have done the best business so far this offseason? We're glad you asked. Here are USA TODAY Sports' portal class team rankings so far (as of 10 p.m., Wednesday, April 22).

These rankings take into account just incoming players, not players who are leaving.

1. Indiana

  • C Aiden Sherrell (Alabama)
  • C Samet Yigitoglu (SMU)
  • PG Markus Burton (Notre Dame)
  • SG Bryce Lindsay (Villanova)
  • SF Darren Harris (Duke)
  • SG Jaeden Mustaf (Georgia Tech)

Incoming by the numbers: 66.3 ppg, 24.1 rpg, 11.3 apg, 47.7% FG, 34.9% 3FG, 245 career starts

Indiana is going hard in the transfer portal — because it has to. Darian DeVries' first season was a complete waste as the Hoosiers missed the NCAA Tournament yet again, and DeVries was left having to rebuild nearly an entire roster again (only freshman Trent Sisley is coming back). His bosses are figuring out spending big in the portal is probably cheaper than more coach buyouts. Ryan Carr arrived from the Pacers front office to help build this roster, and so far the results are encouraging. This group includes something of everything: a point guard, multiple bigs, wing depth and perhaps most important — players with multiple years of eligibility so Indiana doesn't have to do this all over again next year. Sherrell (No. 13), Burton (No. 21) and Yigitoglu (No. 39) all land inside the top 40 of USA TODAY's portal player rankings.

2. Tennessee

  • SF Jalen Haralson (Notre Dame)
  • PG Dai Dai Ames (Cal)
  • SG Tyler Lundblade (Belmont)
  • SG Terrence Hill Jr. (VCU)
  • PF Miles Rubin (Loyola Chicago)

Incoming by the numbers: 75 ppg, 18.5 rpg, 11.7 apg, 48.6% FG, 38% 3FG, 256 career starts

It's a total reboot in Knoxville for Rick Barnes, who has to replace his top six scorers from this past season, assuming freshman standout Nate Ament (16.7 ppg) declares for the NBA Draft. J.P. Estrella's transfer to Michigan hurts, and Bishop Boswell's decision to head to Maryland removes another starter. But the Vols have done some good work in the portal. There's no star in this group, though all five of their additions averaged at least 11.3 ppg last season and bring substantial starting experience (except Hill, who was VCU's microwave off the bench). Haralson is a do-everything small forward (except hit 3s), with room to grow. Rubin is your Estrella replacement, but with a defensive edge (2.3 blocks per game). Ames, a third-team All-ACC pick, will run the point, while Lundblade, the MVC Player of the Year, and Hill, the A-10 Sixth Man of the Year, provide the shooting. It's a strong class, that likely isn't done yet.

3. Louisville

  • C Flory Bidunga (Kansas)
  • PG Jackson Shelstad (Oregon)
  • SF Karter Knox (Arkansas)
  • PF Alvaro Folgueiras (Iowa)

Incoming by the numbers: 45.4 ppg, 20 rpg, 9.8 apg, 52.3% FG, 33.5% 3FG, 200 career starts

Bidunga, USA TODAY's No. 2 ranked player in the portal, was one of the biggest gets of the entire offseason. He's still raw offensively, but his defense changes games. The Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year averaged 2.6 blocks per game, fourth-most in the NCAA last season. Shelstad, No. 15 in USA TODAY's portal rankings, had his season cut short after just 12 games, but was a double-digit scorer in each of his three seasons in Eugene and was making nearly three 3-pointers a game before his injury. Knox hasn't quite lived up to his recruiting hype and was limited with injuries last season, but the talent is there. Folgueiras started just one game for Iowa last season, but he broke out in March Madness. His last-second 3 knocked Florida out of the tournament and he averaged 14.7 points per game in Iowa's three NCAA Tournament wins. Even if Folgueiras doesn't start for the Cardinals, having a scoring forward off the bench who can spread the floor will be of great value to Pat Kelsey.

4. Duke

  • SG John Blackwell (Wisconsin)
  • PF Drew Scharnowski (Belmont)

Incoming by the numbers: 29.8 ppg, 11.1 rpg, 4.9 apg, 50.3% FG, 38.5% 3FG, 98 career starts

It's just a two-person class so far, but it's more about fits and quality than quantity. Blackwell was arguably one of the biggest fish in the portal after the former Wisconsin guard averaged 19.1 points with 5.1 rebounds and 2.3 assists per game last season, earning third team All-Big Ten honors. Blackwell, the No. 8 player in USA TODAY's portal rankings, will fit in seamlessly if Isaiah Evans enters the NBA Draft. Scharnowski is a big pickup in the frontcourt to offset the loss of do-everything Cameron Boozer and Maliq Brown. The 6-9 Scharnowski was a first team All-Missouri Valley Conference pick, averaging 10.7 points (68.1% FG), 6.0 rebounds and 2.6 assists during his sophomore season at Belmont.

5. Texas

  • PF David Punch (TCU)
  • PG Isaiah Johnson (Colorado)
  • SF Elyjah Freeman (Auburn)
  • SG Amari Evans (Tennessee)

Incoming by the numbers: 44.3 ppg, 18.1 rpg, 7 apg, 47.3% FG, 32.7% 3FG, 99 career starts

Start with Punch and Johnson, who both earned Big 12 honorable mention last season. Punch is the 10th-ranked player in USA TODAY's portal player rankings, while Johnson landed at No. 17. Johnson averaged 16.9 points for the Buffaloes, while Punch provided 14.1 ppg, 6.8 rebounds and 1.9 blocks per game for the Horned Frogs. Freeman averaged 9.2 points and 5.2 rebounds in his lone season at Auburn after transferring in from Division II. Evans played 14.4 minutes a game as a true freshman for Tennessee and his addition, along with Johnson, will be key to replacing Dailyn Swain's production.

6. North Carolina

  • SG Neoklis Avdalas (Virginia Tech)
  • SG Matt Able (NC State)
  • SG Terrence Brown (Utah)
  • PF Maxim Logue (Florida Atlantic)

Incoming by the numbers: 45.6 ppg, 12 rpg, 9.3 apg, 44.3% FG, 32.9% 3FG, 111 career starts

Three of Michael Malone's first four transfer additions landed inside USA TODAY's top 40 portal player rankings: Avdalas, No. 11; Brown, No. 29; Able, No. 35. Brown, Able and Avdalas are all combo guards and perhaps offer a glimpse into the style Malone will bring to Chapel Hill. Brown was All-Big 12 honorable mention, averaging 19.9 ppg for Utah after arriving from Farleigh Dickinson. Avdalas and Able had decent freshman seasons in the ACC last year, but Avdalas will need to improve his 38.6 FG% and 2.2 turnovers per game.

7. Houston

  • PG Dedan Thomas Jr. (LSU)
  • SG Corey Hadnot (Purdue Fort Wayne)
  • PF Delrecco Gillespie (Kent State)
  • PF Braden East (Lamar)

Incoming by the numbers: 66.2 ppg, 27.1 rpg, 12.4 apg, 50.9% FG, 32.7% 3FG, 192 career starts

Houston had plenty of holes to fill, primarily in the backcourt with Kingston Flemings headed to the NBA and Milos Uzan and Emanuel Sharp out of eligibility. Thomas , the No. 16 player in USA TODAY's portal rankings, will slot into the point guard role. He was averaging 15.3 ppg and 6.5 apg before a foot injury ended his season in January. A first-team All-Horizon League pick, Hadnot exploded last season improving his scoring from 9.0 ppg as a sophomore to 20.4 as a junior. Gillespie was a do-everything for Kent State, averaging a double-double (17.1 ppg, 11.3 rpg) and East nearly averaged a double-double at Lamar (12.8 ppg, 9.1 rpg). Except for Thomas, the Big 12 will be a major step up in competition for this transfer class, but Kelvin Sampson should be able to coach them up.

8. Providence

  • SG Ryan Sabol (Buffalo)
  • SG Devin Vanterpool (Florida Atlantic)
  • SG Miles Byrd (San Diego State)
  • PG Malik Mack (Georgetown)
  • PF Arrinten Page (Northwestern)
  • PG Gavin Hightower (South Florida)
  • C Samson Aletan (Yale)

Incoming by the numbers: 80.7 ppg, 29.2 rpg, 17.1 apg, 44.5% FG, 34.3% 3FG, 344 career starts.

Bryan Hodgson is getting the financial backing Providence promised when he chose the Friars job over interest from Syracuse. Five of the seven incoming transfers averaged at least 10.2 ppg last season, and all but one (Hightower, the lone USF player to follow Hodgson) were starters at their previous school. Vanterpool was the American Conference's Most Improved Player, and Hodgson knows the scouting report on the third-team all-league pick. Sabol is one of the best shooters in the country, his 3.8 made 3s per game were third-most in the country last season. Mack (13.6 ppg, 4.1 apg) will run the point, with 90 career starts under his belt. Byrd was the Mountain West Defensive Player of the Year, averaging 2.2 steals and 1.5 blocks per game. The 6-11 Page will be on his fourth team in four years, but had his best season last year, averaging 10.2 ppg and 4.5 rpg for Northwestern.

9. Iowa State

  • PG Jaquan Johnson (Bradley)
  • SG Ryan Prather Jr. (Robert Morris)
  • PF Tre Singleton (Northwestern)
  • SF Leon Bond (Northern Iowa)
  • PF Taj Manning (Kansas State)

Incoming by the numbers: 56.3 ppg, 22.4 rpg, 11.1 apg, 45.1% FG, 34.3% 3FG, 185 career starts

The Cyclones are losing their top scorer (Milan Momcilovic, portal), top rebounder (Joshua Jefferson, graduation) and top guard (Tamin Lipsey, graduation). So it's no surprise T.J. Otzelberger has been busy in the portal. This is a class built on depth and less on star quality. Johnson, a first-team all-MVC pick and the conference's Most Improved Player, will try to fill Lipsey's shoes. He was the MVC's No. 2 leading scorer (16.9 ppg), while also earning the league's Defensive Player of the Year. Bond joined Johnson on the MVC All-Defensive team in keeping with Otzelberger's rugged style. Singleton started 31 of 34 games as a true freshman at Northwestern and has plenty of room for growth in his game after averaging 7.6 ppg and 4.8 rpg last season. Prather was a second-team All-Horizon League selection after averaging 15.7 ppg last season with 84 made 3s.

10. Cincinnati

  • C Riley Allenspach (George Mason)
  • SF Tyler Tejada (Towson)
  • SG Myles Colvin (Wake Forest)
  • PG Tylen Riley (Tulsa)
  • G Trevian Carson (North Dakota State)
  • SF Eric Mahaffey (Akron)
  • PG Elijah Perryman (Utah State)
  • PF Adlan Elamin (Utah State)
  • C David Iweze (Utah State)

Incoming by the numbers: 88.7 ppg, 36.7 rpg, 17.3 apg, 46.8% FG, 32.8% 3FG, 275 career starts

New Bearcats coach Jerrod Calhoun brought three Utah State players with him from Logan who will help teach his impressive offense to the rest of the roster, which is basically a complete reset. In addition to the incoming former Aggies, Cincinnati's haul includes plenty of mid-major all-conference picks. Riley was a second-team All-American Conference selection at Tulsa and will likely be the Bearcats' primary ball-handler. The 6-11 Allenspach will help anchor the post. He earned second-team All-Atlantic 10 honors averaging 13.6 points and 6.1 rebounds per game. Tejada was sixth in the CAA in scoring (17.7) and a third-team all-conference pick. Carson did a bit of everything at NDSU and was a first-team All-Summit League and All-Defensive team pick, while Mahaffey was MAC All-Freshman. Colvin is an explosive athlete, who averaged 11.6 ppg in his lone season at Wake Forest after two seasons at Purdue.

Honorable mention: Pitt, Xavier, DePaul, Creighton

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: College basketball transfer portal team rankings, best classes, signings

Mammoth and Golden Knights tied 1-1 heading to game 3

Vegas Golden Knights (39-26-17, in the Pacific Division) vs. Utah Mammoth (43-33-6, in the Central Division)

Salt Lake City; Friday, 9:30 p.m. EDT

LINE: Golden Knights -111, Mammoth -108; over/under is 6

NHL PLAYOFFS FIRST ROUND: Series tied 1-1

BOTTOM LINE: The Utah Mammoth and the Vegas Golden Knights are in a 1-1 series tie in the first round of the NHL Playoffs. The teams meet Tuesday for the sixth time this season. The Mammoth won 3-2 in the last meeting.

Utah has a 43-33-6 record overall and a 22-16-3 record in home games. The Mammoth are 20-10-1 in games they convert at least one power play.

Vegas has a 39-26-17 record overall and a 19-14-8 record in road games. The Golden Knights have given up 242 goals while scoring 264 for a +22 scoring differential.

TOP PERFORMERS: Nick Schmaltz has 33 goals and 40 assists for the Mammoth. Logan Cooley has six goals and six assists over the past 10 games.

Jack Eichel has 27 goals and 63 assists for the Golden Knights. Mark Stone has scored seven goals and added four assists over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Mammoth: 6-4-0, averaging 3.8 goals, 6.4 assists, 3.9 penalties and 8.1 penalty minutes while giving up 3.1 goals per game.

Golden Knights: 8-1-1, averaging 3.9 goals, 6.6 assists, 3.2 penalties and 6.7 penalty minutes while giving up two goals per game.

INJURIES: Mammoth: Barrett Hayton: out (upper-body).

Golden Knights: William Karlsson: out (lower body).

___

The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Mark Vientos goes from goat to big hero in ending Mets’ brutal skid

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Mark Vientos hits the go-ahead single in the eighth inning of the Mets' 3-2 win over the Twins on April 22, 2026 at Citi Field

Mark Vientos went from goat to hero in a matter of two innings in the Mets’ 3-2 win over the Twins on Wednesday night that ended a 12-game losing streak.

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First, Vientos made an eye-popping baserunning mistake, running through third base coach Tim Leiper’s stop sign on a Marcus Semien double to the gap in the sixth inning of a tie game.

He was thrown out by a considerable margin to end the inning.

But in the bottom of the eighth, Vientos delivered the go-ahead single, a flare to right that scored Brett Baty.

“I’m glad he got that hit,’’ Carlos Mendoza said with a smile.

Vientos made no apologies for his gaffe on the bases.

“My instinct was once the ball was off the wall, I was gonna score,’’ Vientos said.

Vientos, part of a lineup that has floundered for much of the season, said he saw Leiper put up the stop sign but ignored it.

Mark Vientos hits the go-ahead single in the eighth inning of the Mets’ 3-2 win over the Twins on April 22, 2026 at Citi Field. rad Penner-Imagn Images

“We want to make the right play, but I’m always gonna be aggressive,’’ Vientos said. “I’m not gonna play passive on the field. I’d rather make a mistake aggressively than [passively].’’


After flopping as the closer for the Yankees a year ago, Devin Williams looks to be doing the same thing on the other side of town this season.

But even after a three-appearance stretch in which he allowed seven runs, four walks and six hits in just 1 ¹/₃ innings while blowing a save and taking the loss in another, Mendoza said Wednesday he is not considering pulling Williams from the role.

“I know he’s going through it right now, but as I’m sitting here, we haven’t had that discussion,’’ Mendoza said prior to the Mets win.

Williams, who had pitched twice in three days, was unavailable Wednesday, so Luke Weaver got the final four outs.

Asked why he remains confident that Williams — who was pulled from the ninth-inning job in late April with the Yankees and then again in August — can overcome his current struggles, Mendoza said, “He’s done it before.”

Still, after Williams was yanked as closer in the second half of last season and had some success in a setup role, he didn’t get it back.

But Mendoza hasn’t given up on Williams, who signed a three-year, $51 million deal in the offseason even after his rough showing in The Bronx.

“It’s the nature of the business,’’ Mendoza said of Williams’ recent poor results. “You’re gonna go through stretches when it’s hard and you find a way to get back on track. There’s gonna be adversity, [there’s] gonna be stretches you’re not at your best and he’s done that before a few times. That’s what gives me confidence he’ll get there again.”


A.J. Minter continued his rehab assignment Wednesday with his first appearance with Triple-A Syracuse, as the lefty comes back from lat surgery that cost him most of 2025.

He allowed three hits and a run in his one inning and didn’t strike out or walk any batters.

Mendoza said Tuesday that the 32-year-old would likely need two more weeks of rehab games to get accustomed to pitching on back-to-back days again.


Austin Warren was still stunned Wednesday about the odd reaction he got from the small number of fans that remained at Citi Field in the ninth inning of Tuesday night’s loss, when the right-hander replaced Williams with the bases loaded and left them stranded by striking out the next three batters.

The crowd repeatedly chanted “MVP” as Warren piled up the strikeouts and kept it a two-run game.

“I was absolutely [surprised],’’ Warren said. “I’m sure everyone heard all the boos and I’m glad I could go in there and flip the switch a little bit and keep them on our side.”

The cheers began as soon as the threw a strike to Royce Lewis.

“I was like, ‘What’s going on?’’ Warren said. “I’m glad it went well and I could strand runners for Devin.”

The 30-year-old right-hander is in his second year with the Mets after being claimed off waivers from the Giants prior to last season.

“I feel I proved some people wrong with that kind of game,’’ Warren said. “I’ve always been an up-and-down [to the minors] guy since my debut. It sucks losing, but it feels good to do that.”

Utah vs Vegas Turns Personal as Mammoth Launch Jersey Exchange for Fans

A playoff series has turned into a full-on identity battle in Salt Lake City—and Utah is making its pitch loud and visible.

When the Utah Mammoth dropped the puck on their inaugural season in 2024, the Vegas Golden Knights already had a foothold in the region, having spent years cultivating a fanbase across Utah. Now, with the two clubs meeting in the Stanley Cup Playoffs for the first time, Utah isn’t just trying to win games—it’s trying to win people over.

On Friday, the Mammoth will stage their first-ever jersey exchange outside Delta Center, inviting fans to trade in Golden Knights sweaters for a clean, logo-only Mammoth home jersey. The offer is simple: first come, first served, no cost attached—just a symbolic reset of allegiance, while supplies last.

“It’s been incredible to see the way Utah has embraced this team from day one,” owners Ryan Smith and Ashley Smith said in a joint statement.

The timing isn’t accidental. The exchange begins at noon local time, just hours before Utah hosts its first-ever home playoff game. The series itself is already simmering, tied 1–1 after the Mammoth stole Game 2 in Vegas with a 3–2 win Tuesday night.

Utah Makes Its Move for the Market

Long before Utah had a franchise to call its own, Salt Lake City existed in a kind of hockey gray area—one the Golden Knights were quick to claim.

From their inception in 2017, Vegas—backed by owner Bill Foley—aggressively pursued a broader regional identity, branding themselves as a team not just for Nevada, but for the entire Mountain West. Broadcast reach through AT&T Sports Network helped extend that footprint, and Utah became a natural extension of their audience.

That strategy paid off. For years, Golden Knights jerseys dotted crowds in Salt Lake City, a visual reminder of a market without its own team.

A Subtle Shift in Allegiance

That dynamic began to change in 2024, when Smith Entertainment Group secured an NHL franchise in the wake of the Arizona Coyotes relocation. Suddenly, Utah wasn’t a secondary market—it was center stage.

Foley, for his part, downplayed the shift at the time.

“We give up Salt Lake City as a secondary territory, but we get Arizona, so we’re OK,” he told KLAS-TV. “We still have our sphere of influence. But we love Salt Lake. We have a lot of fans there.”

That may still be true—but the Mammoth are clearly intent on shrinking that number, one jersey at a time.

Friday’s exchange won’t officially change anyone’s loyalty. But visually, at least, it’s a bold attempt to redraw the map—and in the middle of a playoff series, it adds another layer to an already charged matchup.

Image

White Sox 7, Diamondbacks 11: Slogging to even the series

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - APRIL 22: Ildemaro Vargas #6 of the Arizona Diamondbacks high-fives teammate Jose Fernandez #11 after hitting a three-run home run against the Chicago White Sox during the second inning at Chase Field on April 22, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images

This season, outside of a couple hiccups, has gotten off to an excellent start for the D-Backs. After a three-game sweep at the hands of the Dodgers to open season, the team has reeled off a 13-7 record and lost consecutive games just once to the major league leading Atlanta Braves. But these last two games have been pretty ugly – particularly on the pitching side as they allowed 21 runs and the starters pitched less than five innings total while allowing 16 runs. Even for an offense that has shown an ability to score runs in bunches with a joyful dynamism, that kind of run differential is difficult to overcome. It’s also forced the team’s bullpen to cover an absurd number of innings as a result. So the D-Backs were hoping to reverse both of those trends against a (nominally) weaker opponent in the White Sox, but instead the pitching continued to struggle to contain a surprisingly feisty Chicago offense and instead had to be bailed out by an excellent offensive output.


Eduardo Rodriguez has been a particular bright spot in a pitching staff that has been surprisingly resilient so far. Of course, the bar to clear for the veteran is essentially underground given his combined 5.02 ERA and 1.534 WHIP since signing as a free agent before the 2024 season. But ever since his excellent World Baseball Classic run with Team Venezuela, Rodriguez has been on another level, working to a 1.96 ERA and 1.217 WHIP through his first four starts. There were definitely some worrying signs underneath those surface numbers – including a 4.22 FIP and 4.19 expected ERA – but I was willing to overlook them as long as he limited the baserunners and home runs. Unfortunately, neither of those results were meant to be on Wednesday evening as he walked three batters and gave up two home runs, limiting his outing to just five innings and looking much more like the pitcher who struggled through the last two seasons than the one who dominated in the WBC.

In fairness, it was not a banner day for any of the pitchers on the field today. The two offenses combined to score 18 runs on 28 hits, secured 11 walks, and struck out just 13 times for the game. In the entire game, there was exactly one half inning (the visiting half of the second) that didn’t feature at least one baserunner. So it shouldn’t come as a surprise that tonight’s matchup was the team’s second game of the season to stretch over three hours in duration and it felt like it. Every time one of the fanbases might have internally asked for a clean inning, they were quickly thwarted with any of the extra base hits that seemed to be falling for everyone in both lineups. There were just three starters on each team respectively that failed to secure at least one hit in the game.

Thankfully for Rodriguez and the pitching staff, the Arizona bats did not come to play around today. After Rodriguez’s rough first inning, the D-Backs quickly built a rally off a leadoff walk to Jose Fernandez, a Nolan Arenado single, and Ildemaro Vargas’ second three-run homer in as many nights. It was the first of three straight innings when the home team would score, eventually building a lead out to 8-4 going into the sixth inning. Those RBIs included another Vargas home run for two runs and a run-scoring single for Nolan Arenado – part of an incredible four-hit day with three RBIs.

Even after Rodriguez left the game, the White Sox consistently showed an impressive level of working counts and find ways to take good pitches either into the stands or for soft contact that extended the innings. There was little relaxation to be had as both Taylor Clarke and Ryan Thompson failed to keep the South Siders off the board and keep the game from becoming a laugher. Michael Soroka has been the (nearly) undisputed ace of the staff so far this year and should have an excellent opportunity to pick up his fifth victory on the young season.

Ex-Mets outfielder Vince Coleman helped broker truce between Michael Jordan, Charles Barkley

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Phoenix Suns forward Charles Barkley (34) laughs at a foul call with Chicago Bulls guard Michael Jordan (23) in the first half 28 January 1996 at the United Center in Chicago, Image 2 shows Former Major Leaguer Vince Coleman #41 reacts hbcu at T-Mobile Park on July 07, 2023 in Seattle, Washington
Barkley, Jordan, Coleman

A former Met helped play the role of peacemaker between Charles Barkley and Michael Jordan, Sir Charles said during a radio appearance Wednesday on a Chicago sports talk station. 

Vince Coleman, who played three seasons from 1991 to 1993 in Queens, brokered the truce when he randomly called Barkley while with Jordan, putting the two on the phone together. 

Ironically, Barkley told this story while appearing on ESPN Chicago’s “Waddle & Silvy” show, the very same radio program on which he made his critical comments about Jordan’s ownership of the then-Charlotte Bobcats. 

Charles Barkley laughs at a foul call with Bulls guard Michael Jordan during the first half of the Bulls’ win over the Suns on Jan. 28, 1996 at the United Center in Chicago. AFP via Getty Images

“It’s interesting,” Barkley said on the show Wednesday, according to The Athletic. “I was just chillin’ at the house last week, and one of my good friends is Vince Coleman, the great baseball player. When we answer the phone, we (jokingly) say some unkind words to each other … he says, ‘Yo, I’m down here at The Grove. I’m sick of you and MJ’s BS. He’s right here. Y’all need to talk.’ And we had a conversation, but Vince Coleman’s the person who’s responsible. We [Barkley and Jordan] talked for a couple minutes. He said, ‘Man, let’s get together and play golf.

“And as soon as I get a break, we’re gonna fly down there and spend a couple days playing golf.’”

Former Major Leaguer Vince Coleman reacts at T-Mobile Park on July 7, 2023 in Seattle. Getty Images

The comments Barkley made in 2012 fractured his friendship with Jordan when he said on the show that he loves Jordan, “but he has not done a good job” when discussing the NBA legends’ ownership of the Bobcats. 

Barkley recently revealed on Chris Russo’s Mad Dog Unleashed on SiriusXM on Friday that he and Jordan had talked and that they’re going to play golf after the NBA season. 

The NBA commentator added on Wednesday that “we’ll be fine.” 

“I tell people it’s not like we’re Prince Harry and Prince William, who hate each other. Honestly, I think we both missed each other, because we’ve had this conversation with other friends, and we’re both too stubborn to pick up the phone, to be honest with you. But I think both parties missed each other a great deal,” he said.

Jim Montgomery Will Finally Get His Say On Assistant Coaches

ST. LOUIS -- Jim Montgomery has had three stops as a head coach in the NHL and there's been one common theme to all three.

In each stop, including those with the Dallas Stars, Boston Bruins and now St. Louis Blues, assistant coaches were not selected by Montgomery himself, including some of the names that were in those stops included Rick Bowness, John Stevens, Jeff Reese and Stu Barnes in Dallas, and Joe Sacco, Chris Kelly, Jay Leach and Bob Essensa. 

And when he was hired by the Blues on Nov. 24, 2024, Steve Ott, Claude Julien, Mike Weber and David Alexander were in place.

Ott has since been moved to be the head coach of Springfield of the American Hockey League, and with the Blues not renewing the contracts of Julien and Weber, Montgomery will will get a chance to finally give his input on the kind of coaches he would like to work with. Alexander has worked out well as the Blues' goalie coach and will remain.

"I think the plan right now is to hire three," Montgomery said last Saturday at the exit meetings inside Enterprise Center. "It might just be two. It really depends on the makeup of the people that we’re able to bring into the fold. There’s certain people that have the capability of doing more than one task. That might mean we can so less than three coaches, but that all will depend on who we’re able to talk to and who’s available."

It's been said that Montgomery is really fond of Stevens, but the father of former Blues fifth-round pick in the 2016 NHL Draft Nolan Stevens, is currently an assistant with the Vegas Golden Knights and has been there the past four seasons. 

An ideal candidate would be David Carle, who was Montgomery's assistant coach when he was the head coach at the University of Denver, but there's no chance Carle, who replaced Montgomery when he was hired in Dallas in 2018, is leaving Denver for the NHL unless it was for a head coaching position, and he's turned down multiple opportunities to do that. 

So instead of guessing who Montgomery might have his eye on, he was asked what kind of coach he's interested in. After all, the Blues have finished in the bottom third of both ends of the special teams in each of the past three seasons.

"I think that with hiring a couple of assistant coaches, there’s going to be a blend of what we need," Montgomery said. "For sure we need someone that’s really good at PK, we need someone that has a history of doing well on the PP. Our special teams the last two years were not good enough. You’ve got to be at 100 (percent) combined PK, PP. It’s not the assistant coaches that are no longer (their) fault. It’s the players, myself and everyone’s plan together. That’s the way we look at it. It’s a “we” thing. That has to be significantly better, so that’s going to be really important.

"We’re going to need someone that has high energy, we’re going to need someone that’s a cerebral thinker, but the most important thing is that they’re intelligent and they teach, they know how to teach. You know how to teach defensemen how to pivot the right way, stick on puck. You look at Florida’s teams the last two years, they have a stick on every puck. How do we get someone to implement that? And that’s what I’m going to be looking for is some specialties in coaches that are going to be able to come in and make our players individually better and understand the team concept in those things that they do and why it’s important to get them to habitually do it."

Montgomery will sit down with general manager Doug Armstrong and incoming GM Alexander Steen and compile the best names available and work from there, according to Armstrong.

"My exercise in what I do, I put all the attributes on one side and I put all the names on the top and I just go down and whoever’s got the most check marks, we hire," Armstrong said. "What I want to do is I want to sit and I want to take what I believe is a good staff and then I want to sit with Alex and get his beliefs, and 'Monty' and then marinate that together and then we put the names up and then we go to work. 'Monty’s obviously going to have a ton of say in these hires, but it has to be vetted, and my decisions, my thought process, I need them to vet and I hope they respect me vetting theirs and we’ll come up with the criteria that’s needed before the names.

"What I don’t want to do is just start throwing out names. I want to find out what we want and then what names fit that more than just putting a guy in here just because he’s got a name and hope it works out."

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Devin Booker calls officiating “bad for the integrity of the sport”

Apr 22, 2026; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA; Phoenix Suns guard Devin Booker (1) reacts after receiving a technical after a play against the Oklahoma City Thunder in the second half during game two of the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Paycom Center. Mandatory Credit: Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images | Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images

It was a competitive, physical Game 2 between the Phoenix Suns and the Oklahoma City Thunder, as most postseason battles are. And when you get two teams with a reputation for an aggressive style of play, the officials sometimes jump the gun on attempting to regulate it. We witnessed this early on Wednesday night when Dillon Brooks and Lu Dort were given double technical fouls during a box out on a made free throw.

Yeah. There wasn’t much there. But this wasn’t an isolated occurrence. There were multiple calls throughout the game that felt off, confusing in the moment and even more confusing after the explanation. It got to the point where Devin Booker addressed it postgame. He called out the officiating crew, knowing what comes with that. A fine is coming. He said it anyway. The official at the center of it was James Williams.

The first play he referenced was the technical foul assessed to Booker with 2:05 left in the third quarter. Booker was driving left above the break toward the corner when Jaylen Williams bumped him off his path. Booker was headed out of bounds and flipped the ball back in, trying to save the possession. It hit Williams. After a crowd formed around the official, a technical was called.

When asked if he had received an explanation of the play, Booker responded, “I still haven’t got one.”

“It’s definitely something that has to be looked into,” he continued. “I heard Caruso tell him to call the tech and, you know, he ended up doing it.”

Then there was the earlier offensive foul assessed at the 2:31 mark of the second. Booker rose for a jumper with Alex Caruso on him. It looked like a normal shooting motion, but his elbow made slight contact with Caruso’s face. Caruso went down, the whistle came, offensive foul. Jordan Ott challenged it. The call stood. It felt like marginal contact, the kind you see on jump shots all the time, with no change in motion and no added force.

That added to the frustration.

“[The officials] said ‘unnatural shooting motion’ that hit Caruso, ” Booker said of the play. “But Caruso is moving forward on that. And if that’s unnatural shooting motion compared to what guys are doing to get fouls nowadays, like you can play them side by side. And you know, I’ll let you guys be the judge. Like, pull the clips, run it back. I’m surprised this is happening on national TV in playoff games.”

Oklahoma City plays aggressive defense. That is their identity. They press, they bump, they hold on the perimeter, and they live in that gray area where you dare officials to call everything. Most nights, they do not. That style works when the whistle stays quiet.

“In my 11 years, I haven’t called a ref out by name, but James [Williams] was terrible tonight,” Booker stated. “Through and through. It’s bad for the sport, bad for the integrity of the sport. People are going to start viewing this as a WWE, you know, if they’re not held responsible.”

In this game, a few of those moments stood out more than usual. They were noticeable. And it raises the question that always comes up in these spots. Who holds the officials accountable? What happens after a call that feels clearly wrong in the moment and does not get corrected?

“It just feels disrespectful. I haven’t won a championship in this league, but you know, I have been in it for 11 years now. So to get to this point, to be treated like that, for me to even be saying something out loud. It’s bad.”

“It’s my first time in 11 years,” he added. “But it’s needed. Like I said, whatever I get fined for, everybody can pull the clips and see where the frustration comes from.”

Booker will likely be fined. The series will move forward. The playoffs will keep rolling. But the conversation does not go away. The integrity of the game, as Booker pointed out, continues to sit under a microscope when moments like this pass without clarity.


The art of selecting an NBA Draft Lottery representative

May 12, 2025; Chicago, Illinois, US; of the Dallas Mavericks reacts after winning the the first pick during the 2025 NBA Draft Lottery at McCormick Place. Mandatory Credit: David Banks-Imagn Images | David Banks-Imagn Images

The NBA Draft Lottery is a wonderful event. Using the latest in retirement home bingo technology, the wealthiest and most advanced basketball association in the world leaves the order of the upcoming draft up to chance. For some invitees, this is the event of the season — the singular moment where they learn if their year of self-sabotage and anguish has finally reached its merciful end, or if Adam Silver sees his shadow and promises another season of competitive purgatory.

The lottery is a beacon to the flies and gnats that survive on the pitiful crumbs of Oklahoma City’s dinner table. The most broken and destitute organizations in all of North American professional basketball hitchhike their way to the podium, where they are privileged to watch helplessly as their future is decided.

14 franchises hold back tears and stiffen their upper lip as they receive an answer to the question they dare not ask: Will I walk away with the jackpot, or is my ticket hardly worth the paper it’s printed on?

For some participants, the lottery will become a milestone in their history. The moment they knew that the next surefire superstar was theirs. For others, an unfortunate draw will be remembered as another grain of sand dropped in an endless desert of failure.

You can’t control how the lottery will shake out — you can tank for greater odds, but even then, luck has to be on your side. There is one thing that every team has 100% control over, however, and that is who your team sends as a representative.

Ah, yes, the lottery representative. Every team goes about selecting the face of their franchise for this historic night in their own unique ways. Some teams opt to trot out their most recent lottery pick as a symbol of the team’s future. Others place a coach or a member of the front office behind the podium as a steady, stable figure to accept the news with grace. You’ll see a team dig up a historic legend or Hall of Fame inductee on occasion. And quite commonly, you’ll see completely random and hardly-connected representatives appear on the stage.

No matter who is representing your organization, the individual you choose makes a statement. For the Utah Jazz, approaching what the front office anticipates to be their last lottery appearance for the foreseeable future, they have an opportunity to go out in a blaze of glory. With this in mind, these are the candidates I would select, and the message I hope their appearance would deliver.


The best candidates to represent the Utah Jazz at the NBA Draft Lottery

Ace Bailey

SALT LAKE CITY, UT – APRIL 10: Ace Bailey #19 of the Utah Jazz laughs during warmups before their game against the Memphis Grizzlies at the Delta Center on April 10, 2026 in Salt Lake City, Utah. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement.(Photo by Chris Gardner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Ace is the optimistic choice. He’s the bright, smiling face you want out there as a physical manifestation of Utah’s successful tank. Despite falling from the first odds down to the fifth overall pick, the Jazz still managed to come away with one of the most exciting young players in the draft class. Ace represents resilience and strong drafting return, but he is also a manifestation of how poorly the draft lottery has treated Utah, a franchise that has never moved up in the order.

Most importantly, Bailey is the ideal candidate to vouch for Utah — both the team and the location. A player who the media heavily portrayed as a disgruntled draftee, unhappy with his new home, and who would rather suit up for a bigger market organization. The media was wrong, and Ace Bailey is the future for the Utah Jazz.

This is the good karma pick.

Derrick Favors

Sep 26, 2022; Oklahoma City, OK, USA; Oklahoma City Thunder center Derrick Favors (15) poses for a photo during media day at Paycom Center. Mandatory Credit: Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images

…but good karma is boring.

The man who started it all. The reason why the Jazz had to tank for one final season. The reason why winning the coin toss with Sacramento was monumental. The reason why Utah’s first-round pick was top-8 protected in 2026. As one final “screw you” to Oklahoma City, Utah is represented by the player whom the Jazz paired with their protected first in a trade to the Thunder all those years ago.

In an effort to dump the lifelong Jazzman’s contract back in 2021, Utah stapled a protected first-round pick to Favors in return for cash and a 2027 second-rounder courtesy of the Oklahoma City Thunder. OKC has more than enough picks — they even have LAC’s lottery pick this season — so the Jazz may as well rub it in that the Thunder will never get to use that draft pick, because this was the final season it could have conveyed.

Sweet victory.

One of Ryan Smith’s five children (or all five, whatever)

SANDY, UT – MARCH 23: Team owner Ryan Smith of the Utah Jazz shoots during warmups before a game against the Toronto Raptors at the Delta Center on March 23, 2026 in Salt Lake City, Utah. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Chris Gardner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Last year, the Utah Jazz were represented by owner Ryan Smith’s wife, Ashley. It didn’t work out too well. Now, there are two potential avenues to take. The Jazz could: A) avoid going the family route altogether after one failed attempt, or B) double down and send in the children.

A quick Google search will tell you that Smith has five children, any of whom would be a fantastic option to represent the Jazz. Hey, NBA! Do you really want to make a child cry? Is that what you like to do? Because if you don’t give Utah the number-one pick, you’re going to bring out the waterworks. Send one, two, or even all five of the kids — whatever would pressure the NBA into tilting the odds most into Utah’s favor.

The Zammoth

SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH – APRIL 7: Utah Mammoth mascot Tusky and fans ride on the "Zammoth" during the first intermission of a game between the Utah Mammoth and the Edmonton Oilers at Delta Center on April 7, 2026 in Salt Lake City, Utah. (Photo by Eli Rehmer/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

The team formerly known as the Utah Hockey Club has benefitted from a remarkable amount of success in just its second season in Salt Lake City. Perhaps some of that good juju could grace the Utah Jazz if the representative is the behemoth Zamboni that has captured the admiration of the hockey world?

Bonus points if it’s being ridden by Clayton Keller or the Mammoth mascot, Tusky. Or better yet, Clayton Keller dressed as Tusky.


BONUS ROUND: NAME THAT LOTTERY REPRESENTATIVE!

Do you remember when I mentioned how some teams will send complete unknowns to their podium on lottery night? Well, it’s a much more common occurrence than you might think. With this in mind, I want to play a little game with you.

I’ve dug through the recent history of the NBA Draft Lottery and picked out some of the strangest lottery representatives I could find. Your task is simple: using only a picture, you will tell me who they are. You’ll have four rounds to name these individuals, with each round increasing in difficulty (you can find the answers at the bottom of the article).

Round 1: Easy

An NBA MVP, Hall of Famer, and champion, this player led the Houston Rockets through their golden age and represented his team at the 2025 lottery.

CHICAGO, IL – MAY 12: [NAME REDACTED] represents the Houston Rockets during 2025 NBA Draft Lottery on May 12, 2025 in Chicago, Illinois at McCormick Convention Center. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Jeff Haynes/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Round 2: Medium

Representing the Philadelphia 76ers in 2025, this promising recent draftee would be traded for practically nothing to the best team in the NBA later that same season.

CHICAGO, IL – MAY 12: [NAME REDACTED] the Philadelphia 76ers looks on during 2025 NBA Draft Lottery on May 12, 2025 in Chicago, Illinois at McCormick Convention Center. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Jeff Haynes/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Round 3: Hard

The face of evil, as the Dallas Mavericks unjustly won the lottery behind impossible odds, on the heels of the increasingly horrible Luka Doncic trade that sparked countless conspiracy theories. This individual is a former player who spent the majority of his career in Dallas.

CHICAGO, IL – MAY 12: [NAME REDACTED] of the Dallas Mavericks during the 2025 Draft Lottery on May 12, 2025 at McCormick Place in Chicago, Illinois. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE(Photo by Melissa Tamez/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Level 4: Impossible

This individual is the Governor of the Boston Celtics, and I know literally nothing else about him.

NEW YORK, NY – MAY 16: [NAME REDACTED] of the Boston Celtics looks on during the 2017 NBA Draft Lottery at the New York Hilton in New York, New York. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2017 NBAE (Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

(Answers: Hakeem Olajuwon, Jared McCain, Rolando Blackman, Wyc Grousbeck)


Calvin Barrett is a writer, editor, and prolific Mario Kart racer located in Tokyo, Japan. He has covered the NBA and College Sports since 2024.

Lakers take 2-0 lead into game 3 against the Rockets

Los Angeles Lakers (53-29, fourth in the Western Conference) vs. Houston Rockets (52-30, fifth in the Western Conference)

Houston; Friday, 8 p.m. EDT

LINE: Rockets -9.5; over/under is 205.5

WESTERN CONFERENCE FIRST ROUND: Lakers lead series 2-0

BOTTOM LINE: The Los Angeles Lakers visit the Houston Rockets in the Western Conference first round with a 2-0 lead in the series. The Lakers won the last matchup 101-94 on Wednesday, led by 28 points from LeBron James. Kevin Durant led the Rockets with 23.

The Rockets have gone 29-23 against Western Conference opponents. Houston is 23-8 when it has fewer turnovers than its opponents and averages 14.4 turnovers per game.

The Lakers are 33-19 against Western Conference opponents. Los Angeles is 8-3 in games decided by 3 points or fewer.

The Rockets are shooting 47.9% from the field this season, 0.4 percentage points lower than the 48.3% the Lakers allow to opponents. The Lakers are shooting 50.2% from the field, 4.2% higher than the 46.0% the Rockets' opponents have shot this season.

TOP PERFORMERS: Durant is scoring 26.0 points per game with 5.5 rebounds and 4.8 assists for the Rockets. Amen Thompson is averaging 18.9 points and 6.0 rebounds while shooting 59.5% over the past 10 games.

James is averaging 20.9 points, 6.1 rebounds and 7.2 assists for the Lakers. Rui Hachimura is averaging 1.9 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Rockets: 7-3, averaging 117.5 points, 46.1 rebounds, 27.1 assists, 8.0 steals and 5.1 blocks per game while shooting 48.3% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 108.1 points per game.

Lakers: 7-3, averaging 111.7 points, 39.9 rebounds, 28.8 assists, 9.8 steals and 4.5 blocks per game while shooting 52.2% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 108.5 points.

INJURIES: Rockets: Fred VanVleet: out for season (acl), Steven Adams: out for season (ankle).

Lakers: Austin Reaves: out (oblique), Jake LaRavia: day to day (leg), Luka Doncic: out (hamstring).

___

The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Celtics, 76ers tied 1-1 heading into game 3

Boston Celtics (56-26, second in the Eastern Conference) vs. Philadelphia 76ers (45-37, seventh in the Eastern Conference)

Philadelphia; Friday, 7 p.m. EDT

LINE: Celtics -7.5; over/under is 215.5

EASTERN CONFERENCE FIRST ROUND: Series tied 1-1

BOTTOM LINE: The Philadelphia 76ers and the Boston Celtics are in a 1-1 series tie in the Eastern Conference first round. The 76ers defeated the Celtics 111-97 in the last matchup on Tuesday. VJ Edgecombe led the 76ers with 30 points, and Jaylen Brown led the Celtics with 36.

The 76ers are 9-7 against the rest of their division. Philadelphia ranks eighth in the Eastern Conference with 50.1 points per game in the paint led by Tyrese Maxey averaging 14.0.

The Celtics are 10-6 against the rest of the division. Boston ranks third in the league averaging 15.5 made 3-pointers per game while shooting 36.7% from deep. Derrick White leads the team averaging 2.7 makes while shooting 32.7% from 3-point range.

The 76ers make 46.2% of their shots from the field this season, which is 2.0 percentage points higher than the Celtics have allowed to their opponents (44.2%). The Celtics are shooting 46.7% from the field, which equals what the 76ers' opponents have shot this season.

TOP PERFORMERS: Maxey is scoring 28.3 points per game with 4.1 rebounds and 6.6 assists for the 76ers. Paul George is averaging 19.2 points and 4.6 rebounds while shooting 47.5% over the past 10 games.

Brown is averaging 28.7 points, 6.9 rebounds and 5.1 assists for the Celtics. Sam Hauser is averaging 2.7 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: 76ers: 5-5, averaging 110.7 points, 44.9 rebounds, 22.8 assists, 7.9 steals and 4.1 blocks per game while shooting 46.0% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 111.7 points per game.

Celtics: 7-3, averaging 119.3 points, 45.8 rebounds, 26.9 assists, 6.7 steals and 4.3 blocks per game while shooting 49.0% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 108.5 points.

INJURIES: 76ers: Joel Embiid: day to day (abdomen).

Celtics: None listed.

___

The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Mets' continued trust that players will turn misfortune around pays off in streak-busting win

Mark Vientos saw the stop sign. He admitted as much later, though, to hear him discuss the sixth-inning play on which he was thrown out at home by several feet in a tie game, the fact that he saw third base coach Tim Leiper hold his hands up did not strike Vientos as an admission at all.

“I was just following my instincts. Once I saw [Marcus Semien’s double] was hit off the wall, I was like, I’m gonna go score on that,” Vientos said. “Leip gave me the stop sign, but I followed my instincts and went home.”

As it happened, Vientos’ instincts did not doom the Mets, in large part because with runners on first and second and two out in the eighth, he wrestled an inside pitch into short right field to score Brett Baty with the eventual winning run.

“I’m glad he got that hit and redeemed himself,” Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said with a chuckle that felt appropriately nervous, given that Vientos made clear he would probably make the same choice again.

“Obviously, depending on the situation, we want to make the right play. But I’m always going to be aggressive. I’m not going to play passive on the baseball field,” Vientos said. “I’d rather make a mistake aggressive than passive.”

In some ways, the 2026 New York Mets are an example of that same philosophy: If the 2025 team sputtered out with the same old names, David Stearns was determined not to replicate last year’s failures this year. What the Mets must discern – now that their shoulders are free of that unfathomable losing streak -- is what parts of their current roster might eventually look like aggressive mistakes.

Wednesday night’s win did not happen because the Mets made drastic changes. Juan Soto’s return certainly helped, though it was quickly undermined by the departure of Francisco Lindor, who appeared to suffer nearly the same injury that sidelined Soto while scoring in the fourth.

It happened because the Mets, led by their manager, emphasized the need to trust track records as the present spiraled.

“You feel like you’re doing the right things. You evaluate things. You look around. People are doing what you should be doing,” Clay Holmes said after throwing seven strong innings. “You kind of really want to reach for something to do, but you’re already doing those things. Sometimes, that can be a little harder. You have to double down on the belief in yourself.”

Holmes, for example, tripled down on his sinker Wednesday, using it 73 percent of the time – almost as he might have in his days as a reliever. The righty is pitching to a 2.10 ERA in five starts this season.

But no one has been more stubborn than the Mets lineup, which has changed in terms of personnel even as it has committed to being aggressive through its slump. Mendoza said Wednesday that even though his lineup compiled the lowest on-base percentage in baseball, he was not clamoring for patience.

“It’s hard to get behind in counts here,” Mendoza said. “You have to be able to stay on the attack with good pitches in the strike zone.”

Quite obviously, little has changed because the Mets won Wednesday’s game 3-2. They still have the worst on-base percentage in baseball. Only two teams are swinging more frequently than they are. Only three are swinging at a higher percentage of pitches out of the zone. But last year’s team was baseball’s fifth-most patient and look where that got them. This year’s team will not make the same mistake.

Exactly what mistakes it will make now, after the baseball gods finally permitted them a win, remains to be seen. If Lindor is out for a significant period – and it is important to remember that Soto received what was considered a best-case diagnosis for a calf-related injury and still missed nearly three weeks – the Mets will have to wait even longer to see what the intended version of their lineup can produce.

But in the meantime, they will cross their fingers that Bichette can swing his way into a hot streak, that Vientos can turn a bloop into an offensive blaze, that two walks from Baty on Wednesday mean he is seeing the ball better…that everyone keeps doing what they would normally be doing in the hopes that better results must somehow follow.

“You have to stay positive. You can’t come to the ballpark expecting the worst, even if you’re going through a very rough stretch,” Mendoza said. “You come to the ballpark expecting good things to happen. And yes, it doesn’t matter how hard it is and how things are unfolding. Your mindset has to be expect something good to happen for us.”

No one should expect anything less than good things from the Mets, in whom Steve Cohen invested roughly $380 million this year. But when he chatted with reporters this week, he was careful to describe himself as “calm but concerned” in the only on-the-record comments he would offer, wary not to seem too worried nor too relaxed.

His roster is set. This team is in place. If a 12-game losing streak in April would be interpreted by some as a stop sign for championship dreams, the Mets seem resigned to ignore it. They are trusting their instincts, and those instincts are telling veteran members of their clubhouse that they are better than they have shown -- or at least, that if they are not as good as some believed, their best chance is to run past the red flags anyway.

Giants introduce Shohei Ohtani to Cainings

Patrick Bailey flipping his bat after a home run.
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 22: Patrick Bailey #14 of the San Francisco Giants lets go of his bat after he hit a three-run home run against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the seventh inning at Oracle Park on April 22, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images) | Getty Images

On Tuesday, we talked about Cainings. The San Francisco Giants introduced Los Angeles Dodgers ace and international superstar Yoshinobu Yamamoto to the concept, with the most common type of Caining in existence. Call it the Standard Caining. In the Standard Caining, a pitcher has a very good game, but their offense doesn’t do enough. Because they had merely a very good game, rather than a great one, they’re rudely handed a loss when their incompetent offense fails to do their job.

Matt Cain, to pick a random name to use as an example, received a losing decision on 26 different occasions in which he pitched at least six innings while allowing two or fewer earned runs. Yamamoto’s impersonation was quite admirable, as the reigning World Series MVP pitched seven mostly-dominant innings but, thanks to a three-run first and a lifeless offense, received a notch in the L column.

Today, we talk about a less common variant of the Caining, one that the Giants introduced to Dodgers ace and international superstar Shohei Ohtani. Let’s call it an Advanced Caining. In the Advanced Caining, a pitcher goes above and beyond with not just a good game, but a great one. But the offense is, once again, inept. And eventually, the pitcher is forced to leave the game, leaving a bullpen to wear the blame when the magic runs out.

Matt Cain, to once again pick a random and arbitrary name to use as an example, had 17 different instances in which he pitched six or more innings, gave up zero or one runs, handed the bullpen a tie or a lead, and then watched, arms dangled over the railing, as the bullpen lost the game, and the offense did nothing to keep that outcome from occurring.

Ohtani now is intimately acquainted with an Advanced Caining which, admittedly, has an added flair to it when the pitcher getting Advanced Cained is also the designated hitter anchoring the offense doing the Advanced Caining. It’s a vicious cycle being both the Cainer and the Cainee. You’re not sure whether to feel victimized or guilty.

The two-way sensation had a game that, Giants fans will be loathe to admit, lived up to the hype. He struck out the side in the first inning, albeit working around two singles. He set down the side in order in the second, and then again in the third, and then once more for old time’s sake in the fourth. He cruised through the fifth.

It wasn’t until the sixth inning that Ohtani appeared to be in any sort of danger, and even then he dismissed of it easily. The Giants waited until there were two outs to try any sort of shenanigans, with Matt Chapman reaching on an infield single, and Rafael Devers smacking a double, his second hit of the day.

But Ohtani, still hitting triple digits even as his night neared an end, overpowered Casey Schmitt and ended the inning with emphasis.

It was his seventh strikeout of the game, which paired well with his zero walks. He’d thrown 23 pitches in excess of 99 mph. He’d given up just five hits. He hadn’t allowed a runner to score, earned or otherwise.

And none of it mattered. Because the Dodgers bullpen couldn’t maintain what he had accomplished. Because the Dodgers offense couldn’t match what he had thrown.

Because Tyler Mahle pitched better than Shohei Ohtani.

Because Patrick Bailey hit better than Shohei Ohtani.

A Caining requires a worthy adversary on the mound, and the Giants — despite what you would think entering the series — have provided that worthy adversary, first in the form of Landen Roupp, and next in the form of Mahle.

Mahle was excellent on Wednesday. He was beyond excellent. He was so good that someone in the comment section will be mad at me for mentioning Ohtani’s name five times before ever getting to Mahle’s, and that person will be right.

The veteran, whose debut season with the Giants had been a debacle prior to this game, not only matched Ohtani, but surpassed him. He threw the same number of pitches (91) as his opponent, but made it through seven innings, instead of six. He gave up the same number of baserunners (five), but none of them were extra-base hits. He faced a runner in scoring position in just two innings, and one was because Drew Gilbert took a truly atrocious route to a routine fly ball and instead let it fall for a single.

He had his help, mind you: Devers, Willy Adames, and Luis Arráez in particular had some standout defensive plays to keep the outs coming. But all great performances require a supporting cast, and Mahle’s showing was exactly that: greatness, with a fantastic supporting cast. And when you do that against the Dodgers, you earn some fans.

See, here’s Adames proving my point:

And here’s Arráez proving my point:

And ahh, what the hell, here’s Devers proving my point:

Pretty, ain’t it?

And so, as Mahle walked off the mound for the final time, as fans stretched and sang, we had been treated to two of the three components of the Advanced Caining: a great performance by a pitcher (Ohtani), and a great performance by an opposing pitcher (Mahle) in response.

All that was left was the third and final component: an offense eager to face anyone other than the star pitcher, and a bullpen prepared to waste a great start. And if it wasn’t clear to you until now, that offense was the Giants’, and that bullpen was the Dodgers’.

Southpaw Jack Dreyer replaced Ohtani, taking the mound for the bottom of the seventh inning in a scoreless game.

After two pitches, Jung Hoo Lee — who is not just heating up, but quietly starting to look a lot better against lefties — had started a rally with a leadoff single.

After two more pitches, Heliot Ramos — who, it seems, is fully back — knocked his second single of the day, putting runners at first and second with no outs.

Gilbert came to bat, and Bailey came onto the on-deck circle. As the camera cut to Bailey in-between pitches, you could see him look back at the dugout. You imagined he was wondering if his game would continue or not.

With Daniel Susac on the Injured List, pinch-hitting for Bailey is less straightforward, but I assumed the situation was simple: should Gilbert advance the runners, Bailey — who, despite being mired in the slump of all slumps, is reliably putting the ball in play and not striking out — would hit. Should Gilbert leave the runners where they are, Jerar Encarnación, with his high power but higher strikeouts, would enter the game.

Thankfully for Bailey, Gilbert did his part, laying down a smooth bunt that easily advanced Ramos to second and Lee to third. And with that, Bailey stepped to the plate, needing to just put the ball relatively halfway deep into the outfield to give the Giants the lead.

He took a first pitch slider for a strike, then watched as Dreyer spiked one in the dirt. A slider found the plate, and Bailey fouled it off. A second slider found the plate, and Bailey again fouled it off.

A third slider found the plate, and Bailey launched it into the bleachers.

It was a healing swing of the bat for someone who entered the game with zero extra-base hits, one run batted in, and three million calls to KNBR complaining about his lack of offense. A swing of the bat that reminded himself, his teammates, and his fans that he’s a better hitter than what we’ve seen over the first month of the season.

With a lead secured, the only thing left to do to complete the Advance Caining was to have the winning bullpen learn from the losing bullpen’s failures. And so Caleb Kilian took the mound for the eighth inning and worked around a leadoff single, retiring Ohtani, Kyle Tucker, and Will Smith. And Ryan Walker jogged out for the ninth, looking for his second dramatic save in as many days.

Walker got Freddie Freeman to fly the ball lazily to left for the first out. He got Teoscar Hernández to lift one to center, where it fell into Gilbert’s glove for the second out. He walked Max Muncy on four pitches, because why not.

And then, always with a love of theatrics and style points, Walker induced a weak chopper from Andy Pages, and played his own defensive hero for the third — and 27th — out.

Despite what the media may lead you to believe, Shohei Ohtani is not the only baseball player on the planet. There are other players, you know. Numerous others, if you can believe it. Players like Tyler Mahle. Players like Patrick Bailey. Players like Ryan Walker.

And those players won, 3-0.

Offense brings the boom, pitching brings the bust as White Sox fall 11-7 to the Diamondbacks

Apr 22, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Chicago White Sox third baseman Munetaka Murakami (5) gets ready to hit against the Arizona Diamondbacks in the first inning at Chase Field. Mandatory Credit: Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images
Munetaka Murakami stays locked in at the plate, continuing his historic tear. | (Rick Scuteri/Imagn Images)

Plenty of power. Not nearly enough pitching. That’s the story.

The White Sox jumped out exactly how you’d want them to do. Back-to-back singles from Chase Meidroth and Miguel Vargas in the top of the first set the tone, and even after Munetaka Murakami went down looking, the pressure didn’t let up. Everson Pereira and Edgar Quero worked consecutive walks to push across the first run, and Colson Montgomery followed with a productive at-bat. It wasn’t a hit thanks to a stellar play by Ketel Marte, but it plated Vargas for his 17th RBI of the season. Two runs without a ball leaving the yard. Sox up 2-0.

Montgomery flashed the glove in the bottom half, too, making a clean play on a Lourdes Gurriel Jr. grounder to strand a Geraldo Perdomo triple and keep Anthony Kay out of immediate trouble. It was a reminder of just how steady he’s been defensively, already sitting near the top of the league in Outs Above Average amongst shortstops alongside names like Bobby Witt Jr. and Masyn Winn.

That was about where the control ended.

Kay never really found the zone, and the second inning unraveled quickly. A leadoff walk followed by a single set the table, and after another deep count, Arizona pounced. Ildemaro Vargas turned a 2-0 pitch into a three-run homer, flipping the game in one swing. The damage didn’t stop there, with a double, an RBI single from Corbin Carroll, and a run-scoring bunt by Perdomo stretched the lead and completely sucked the air out of Chicago’s early momentum.

To their credit, though, the bats kept swinging. Our Vargas continued his power surge in the third, launching a 428-foot homer for his third straight game, going deep.

But every answer the Sox had, the Diamondbacks matched and exceeded. Another blast from Arizona pushed the lead right back out, and while Eduardo Rodríguez had his moments of vulnerability, the Sox couldn’t fully capitalize.

Montgomery did his part, though. The shortstop stayed scorching hot in the fourth, crushing a 423-foot homer to right-center. It was his fourth straight game leaving the yard as he cut the deficit to 6-4, briefly making it feel like a game again.

Then came more pitching problems. Kay’s night effectively ended in the bottom of the fourth after a sequence that summed up his outing: a single, chaos on the bases from Carroll, and a balk that brought home a run. Jordan Hicks didn’t stop the bleeding, walking José Fernández and surrendering an RBI knock to Nolan Arenado to make it 8-4.

The Sox had chances, but they just couldn’t string enough together. Back-to-back singles from Murakami and Pereira in the fifth went nowhere. A manufactured run in the sixth, sparked by a Tristian Peters pinch-hit triple, and an Andrew Benintendi ground out, chipped into the lead slightly. But the South Side hurlers immediately gave back every inch gained.

Lucas Sims entered in the sixth and promptly allowed a two-run homer to Arenado. Sean Newcomb followed in the seventh and gave up back-to-back triples to Carroll and Perdomo.

The highlight, though, was another ridiculous showing from Murakami. The rookie crushed a 451-foot two-run homer in the seventh — his fifth straight game going deep, tying a franchise record — and later added a single in the ninth. He now sits at 10 home runs on the season and looks every bit like the real deal. Extend him NOW!

Unfortunately, in the end, it didn’t matter.

Down multiple runs all night, the Sox never fully threatened late. A small flicker in the ninth with Murakami reaching and Quero walking, bringing Montgomery to the plate with a chance to make it interesting. Instead, a 368-foot flyout to the warning track ended it.

The offense showed up. The power is real. There’s legitimate life in this lineup right now.

The pitching? That’s a different conversation entirely, and until it changes, games like this are going to keep slipping away.