Reinhardt's 2nd goal leads Panthers past the Rangers 3-2, spoils Jonathan Quick's last game in net

SUNRISE, Fla. (AP) — Cole Reinhardt scored his second goal of the game with 1:50 remaining and spoiled New York goaltender Jonathan Quick's final NHL game as the Florida Panthers beat the Rangers 3-2 on Monday night.

Quick, a three-time Stanley Cup champion, announced his retirement before Monday’s game after 19 seasons. He won the Cup twice in 16 seasons with the Los Angeles Kings, and was part of the Vegas Golden Knights’ 2023 championship team.

Reinhardt broke a 2-all tie on Florida’s fourth shot of the third period, beating Quick on the glove side.

The Rangers, who have lost three straight, never led.

Florida goalie Daniil Tarasov made 24 saves — including all 14 he faced in the third with the Rangers putting on a strong push to try and get Quick one final victory.

Matthew Robertson and Gabe Perreault scored for New York, which has lost three straight.

Florida scored twice in the opening period on goals by Reinhardt and Mackie Samoskevich for an early 2-0 lead.

Reinhardt, who has four goals in his three-game goal streak, opened the scoring by following up a rebound off a shot from defenseman Tobias Bjornfot.

Samoskevich made it 2-0 at 11:21 off the breakaway.

The Rangers cut into the Florida lead at 15:19 of the opening period when Robertson scored off a shot from the point.

Perreault was struck by a rebound off a shot from defenseman Adam Fox with 2:40 remaining in the second period, tying the score at 2.

Quick had 14 saves in the loss.

Up next

Rangers: At Tampa Bay on Wednesday.

Panthers: Host the Detroit Red Wings on Wednesday.

___

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Cubs Clobbered, Cris Conquers: Phillies 13, Cubs 7

Apr 13, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Cristopher Sánchez (61) throws a pitch against the Chicago Cubs during the second inning at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images | Eric Hartline-Imagn Images

“Javier Assad has faced 51 batters without allowing a single barreled ball”. So said the helpful auto-generated commentary in the MLB app’s Gameday feature after Trea Turner grounded out to start the bottom of the first. The next play read “Kyle Schwarber homers (5) on a fly ball to center field”.

Well. Can an AI create a jinx? If a billy goat can, probably (then again, goats may be stronger than robots, since they eat tin cans). At any rate, the Phillies had a 1-0 lead against the visitors from the Senior Circuit’s Chicago club.

It was a battle between sinkerballers: Javier Assad and Cristopher Sánchez. Both got off to a bit of a rocky start: Assad with his inability to reach 52 batters without a barrel, and Sánchez with his putting two on (via liner hit and walk) to open the second. It got worse for Cris when another single loaded the bases, with just one away. What’s a sinker specialist to do when he gets that sinking feeling? Well, rely on ol’ faithful. A trio of low and inside sinkers produced a trio of whiffs for Pete Crow-Armstrong. Sánchez showed one more sinker to Matt Shaw, decided four in a row was enough, and got out number three by inducing a weak grounder on a changeup.

In the second inning, Brandon Marsh got on base with a worm burner through the right side. He stole second, then scored when the Cubbies lost a fly ball from J.T. Realmuto, allowing it to land harmlessly on the grass (well, harmlessly for the ball, less so for the visitors). A bad break for the baby bears, but they got a better one in the bottom of the third, when Turner smacked a ball that went just to the wrong side of the foul pole; a crew chief review confirmed that the Phillies would have to wait for the next ringing of the roundtripper bell.

Not much longer, though. Turner singled to left, and Assad gave Schwarber a two-seamer that hung up in the middle of the zone, and in turn Schwarber ripped open a few more seams on it. The ill-fated sinker went sailing into center, and the Phillies were up 4-0.

They were cruising. Then the robots chimed in. Not the ABS robot (which helpfully confirmed a fourth ball for Brandon Marsh in the bottom third). Rather, it was the Gameday AI, which noted that “Sánchez’s slider is dropping more vs. last season” after Carson Kelly singled. The good news for the Phillies was that the AI didn’t really jinx Sánchez; it wasn’t his slider that cause him trouble. It was his sinker, as Dansby Swanson swatted one over the right field fence to narrow the Philadelphia lead to two in the fourth.

Sánchez faced more trouble in the top of the fifth, as an error by Turner and a walk to Seiya Suzuki put two on with one away. Fortunately, though, a sinker specialist is especially well equipped to navigate that situation: a sinker low and inside to J.A. Happ induced a weak ground ball, as the pitch is designed to do, and the inning ended without further damage.

Sanchez’ sibling in sinkerhood would not be so fortunate. Assad walked Schwarber to start the bottom of the fifth (Gameday AI noted that Schwarber’s bat speed is down nearly 2 MPH from last year, and that one is actually interesting, thank you robots), then allowed singles to Bryce Harper and Adolis García to load the bases with none away. Marsh hit one to center to score two, and Bohm produced a sacrifice fly to score another. Marsh scored soon, since Stott swiftly smacked a subpar sinker to center for a swell single, successfully stretching to second subsequently. Stott himself scored when J.T. Realmuto joined the hit parade, and Assad’s night was done. In the duel of the sinkers, Sánchez emerged as the decisive victor.

Things didn’t get much better for the Cubbies in the sixth. Reliever Charlie Barnes plunked Schwarber, walked Harper, and allowed an RBI double to García before recording an out. Bohm scored Harper with a productive groundout, Realmuto scored García with a single, and the Phillies had a dozen runs.

As the seventh dawned, Sánchez’ day ended, with a 6 hit, 8 K, 2 ER line. Seth Johnson replaced him, and navigated through the inning without allowing a run. The same could not be said of the Cubs. Sorely missing the Friendly Confines, they looked all around for some sign of comfort. But it was BOGO hot dog night, and the Cubs were in the land of the Phillies Frank, not Vienna Beef. Perhaps shaken by the lack of celery salt and sport peppers on the dogs, they allowed a 13th run on a throwing error from Swanson.

They must’ve found a lucky piece of Wrigley ivy in a pocket after the seventh, as Johnson and his fielders struggled mightily in the top of the eighth. The first six runners reached base and four runs scored before an out was recorded, aided by errors from Marsh and Bohm. Johnson got two outs, but allowed another run on a Suzuki single, and was pulled. Orion Kerkering subbed in, offered Happ a trio of sweepers on the outer edge, watched him take all of them for called strikes, and the inning ended. So did the game, after Kerkering’s quick work (leadoff double, then three consecutive outs) in the ninth.


The Phillies are 8-8. They’ll return to action against the Cubs tomorrow at 6:40, with Aaron Nola and Colin Rea scheduled to duel.

Gerrit Cole, Carlos Rodon nearing next steps toward Yankees returns

New York Yankees pitchers Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodón walking on a field at spring training.
Yankees pitcher Gerrit Cole #45, (left) and New York Yankees pitcher Carlos Rodón #55, throwing on a back field as pitchers and catchers reported to Spring Training.

Although the next steps have not been officially decided, Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodón appear to be nearing rehab assignments.

Cole threw 42 pitches over three approximated innings during a simulated game Sunday in Hudson Valley. Rodón completed three “innings” over 50 pitches during a live batting practice in The Bronx on Monday.

Both are expected to pitch again in five days, manager Aaron Boone said Monday, though the club had not decided whether that meant another simulated session or whether they would be ready to begin their climbs through the minors.

Yankees’ Gerrit Cole in the dugout. Jason Szenes / New York Post

Cole, who underwent Tommy John surgery in March 2025, has been checking off boxes and seems just about ready to begin stretching out.

“Stamina was good,” Cole said of his simulated game before the Yankees hosted the Angels. “Pitches are fine right now. They’re good — being a little nitpicky. But everything’s good.”

Rodón also “looks good,” Boone said. Rodón had been on the verge of a rehab assignment before feeling tightness in a hamstring two weeks ago, which prompted the Yankees to pause his progression. After Monday’s session, Rodón ran sprints in the outfield.

Yankees pitcher Gerrit Cole #45, (left) and New York Yankees pitcher Carlos Rodón #55, throwing on a back field as pitchers and catchers reported to Spring Training. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

Presuming continued health with Cole and Rodón, the Yankees would have rotation decisions to make if both return in May or June. Luis Gil began his year in the minors and probably needs to pitch his way to a more permanent spot, while Will Warren has been mostly dependable, though might not have the ceiling that Ryan Weathers possesses.

The group — down two front-of-the-rotation arms plus Clarke Schmidt — has been excellent.

“I thought we’ve got off to a great start,” Cole said. “A lot of attacking the strike zone. When we haven’t, we’ve paid the price a little bit. But we’ve been able to minimize. We’ve kept ourselves in the ballgame so far every game this year. … A lot of encouraging signs.”

Joyous Thoughts about the Spurs and my Over/Under predictions at the End of the Regular Season

Apr 10, 2026; San Antonio, Texas, USA; San Antonio Spurs hype squad celebrate after a victory over the Dallas Mavericks at Frost Bank Center. Mandatory Credit: Scott Wachter-Imagn Images | Scott Wachter-Imagn Images

After the 2024 Paris Olympics concluded, I wrote a piece entitled “Age does not defeat joy, even in sports“.  I talked about how some of the “senior members” of the USA Olympic basketball teams, and in particular, Steph Curry and LeBron James, had conquered the world joyfully.

For me, that same word “joy” describes the 2025-26 regular season for the Spurs.  Regardless of how the playoffs end, Spurs fans should remember the joy we all experienced watching our team this season, game after game after joyful game.  

At the start of the season, we dreamed of the Spurs getting back into the playoff hunt, if everything went well. We hoped to be one of “those teams” — the lower seeded team that no one wants to play.  Indeed, last September, a Pounding the Rock writer wrote this:

“While the 2025-26 Spurs cannot realistically expect to challenge the top five from last year, they can set their sights on the next three, along with Play-In losers Mavs and Kings.

“Let’s aim for that 6-spot. And maybe face the Clippers in Round One. Does that sound about right?”

That guy’s hopeful outlook seems ridiculous now. The Spurs both challenged and exceeded the top five from last year, even going 4-1 against the mighty Thunder. 62 wins!!  I am sure glad I was not the guy who wrote that the Spurs would be happy with a sixth place finish and a first-round match-up with the third place Clippers.  

Oh, wait.  That guy was me. I have only one excuse.  The article was entitled: “The Spurs got better this summer, but so did most of the Western Conference. Wait, did all the good Western Conference teams get better?”

I must have decided my conclusion should match the title. 

However, I did much better on another preseason prediction.  I wrote:

“The basketball universe unanimously approved the Spurs’ selection on Dylan Harper as the clear second best player in the 2025 NBA draft. The only concern I have heard is that Harper’s skills overlap with those of the anticipated starting backcourt of De’Aaron Fox and Stephon Castle.

“Having coached a bit, I know that having three good guards for the two backcourt spots is a good thing, not a bad one. The reason is simple: players don’t play all 48 minutes. Indeed, the Spurs’ best player last year (you know his name) averaged just 33 minutes per game. In 17 games with the Spurs, Fox averaged 34 minutes while Castle averaged 27. If Fox and Castle play the same amount this season, they will play a total of 61 minutes out of the 96 minutes available. That leaves 35 minutes for Harper or others — for instance if Devin Vassell splits his time between the 2 and the 3. Harper will be not be 20 years old until March 2026 — and 20 is probably about the right number of minutes for such a young player in his rookie season.  There probably won’t be enough playing time for Harper to win the Spurs’ third consecutive Rookie of the Year award, but with that other rookie in Dallas starting for the Mavs, Harper probably won’t win the award anyway.”

I absolutely nailed that one. The Spurs’ three top guards were great, and sharing those 96 minutes was not an issue at all.  Fox and Castle combined to average 61 minutes per game, exactly the number I predicted, while young Harper averaged 22 minutes – and those 22 minutes were fabulous.  While I correctly stated that he would not win Rookie of the Year, Harper will almost certainly be on the First Team All-Rookie Team. And he brought Spurs fans much joy throughout the season.  

As did Castle and Fox, Keldon Johnson, who thrived as Sixth Man (of the Year?), our shooting wings (Devin Vassell and undrafted and therefore very Spursian Julian Champagnie), the back-up center (and sometimes starter) Luke Kornet (also undrafted), unheralded rookie Carter Bryant (who plays with a joyful abandon, enthusiasm and skill), Harrison Barnes (who adjusted well to coming off the bench for the first time ever), and the coaching staff — also essentially rookies. 

After a Spurs win in Miami, one of the more joyous recent games to watch, our Frenchman said this, which we could all see as we watched the team compete:

“It’s unselfishness,” said Wemby postgame. “We get along super well on and off the court, and we see the results.”

KJ, who recently had a group of reporters visit his ranch, just had a piece published in The Player’s Tribune about his time with the Spurs and how much of a home San Antonio has become, had this to say:

The best way I can describe our group is like a rodeo. Everybody on the team has their own unique vibe and personality, and when it all comes together it’s just wild. And we thrive off that. We thrive off that chaotic energy of yelling and screaming, and laughing and joking 24/7. And on the floor, that turns into something special. 

They say it is the journey, not the destination.  For this regular season, I can’t imagine a more joyful journey, without even knowing the ultimate destination.  Perhaps I should I have entitled this piece “Youth and inexperience do not defeat joy, they enhance it.”

Speaking of journeys and destinations, I intended this post to be a look back at my preseason over/under predictions for the Western Conference. Unlike prior seasons, I am very joyous about how my preseason predictions this time.  Most importantly, I got the Spurs right.  My preseason prediction for the Spurs:  

 “Vegas has projected the Spurs to improve more in 2025-26 than every other team except one . . . Who am I to disagree? I am also contractually obligated to say OVER, and I know better than to breach my contract before ‘the powers that be’ decide on my Christmas bonus. OVER, OVER, OVER”

Of course, even though Vegas projected the Spurs to increase from 34 wins to 43.5, Vegas was wildly pessimistic.  My “OVER, OVER, OVER” did so much better than Vegas.

I also went “UNDER, UNDER, UNDER” on the Clippers, who Vegas pegged for 48.5 wins.  Wrong!  Clips won only 42 games, so I beat Vegas again.

The Spurs’ loss to the Nuggets Sunday put Denver’s win total at 54, just over the 53.5 Vegas prediction — and I had the Nuggets as an Over.  That brought my overall record this season to a remarkable 11-4. I would much rather the Spurs won, which would have put me at 10-5, but I would accept that in a heartbeat rather than having to beat both Denver and OKC to get to the NBA Finals.

Unfortunately, losing that last game means that the Spurs will likely need to go through both Denver and OKC to get to the NBA Finals.  But let’s not focus on that right now.  If I would have predicted before the season that as of the start of the Play-In Round,  the Spurs would have finished 62-20 (62 wins!!), second place in the tough Western Conference, with home court for the first two rounds of the playoffs (and the NBA Finals if they get there), and dominate the defending champs in their regular season match-ups, everyone would have understandably called me crazy. 

But now?  Call me joyous.

Buffalo Sabres Promising Prospect Is Heating Up

Buffalo Sabres prospect Anton Wahlberg is a promising young forward in the team's system. The Sabres are hoping that he can become a solid part of their roster in the future, as he has good upside. It is why the Sabres selected him with the 39th overall pick of the 2023 NHL Entry Draft. 

Wahlberg has certainly been having a nice finish to the 2025-26 season with the Amerks, as he has been heating up offensively down the stretch. Wahlberg is currently on a six-game point streak, where he has two goals and four assists over that span. With this, the young forward is undoubtedly feeling it right now for Rochester. 

Due to his hot streak, Wahlberg now has nine goals and has set new career highs with 27 assists and 36 points in 65 games this season with the Amerks. This is after he had 11 goals and 30 points in 63 games with Rochester during the 2024-25 season.

The Sabres will now be hoping that Wahlberg can continue to show promise down in the AHL with Rochester. If the 20-year-old keeps this kind of play up, it could open the door for him to make his NHL debut next season. 

Dodgers’ Kyle Tucker says he isn’t pressing, offers different reason for slow start

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Los Angeles Dodgers right fielder Kyle Tucker at bat, Image 2 shows Los Angeles Dodgers player Kyle Tucker celebrates after hitting a single

Kyle Tucker insists he hasn’t been pressing in the opening weeks of his debut Dodgers season.

His slow start to the year, he told The California Post on Monday, has simply been because his swing is a little off.

“I’ve missed some pitches that I feel the at-bat should have been over with,” Tucker said. “Then you just get deeper into counts. And then whatever happens after that, happens.”

Los Angeles Dodgers right fielder Kyle Tucker at bat against the Washington Nationals. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Such was the simple explanation the four-time All-Star cited to explain some early uncharacteristic numbers.

Entering Monday, Tucker was batting just .246 through the season’s first 15 games, second-lowest on the club among hitters with at least 50 plate appearances. He had just one home run, nine RBIs and a below-league-average .659 OPS despite still reaching base more than one-third of the time.

More surprising were Tucker’s strikeout and swing-and-miss totals, both of which have been noticeably higher than his career-long averages.

With 16 strikeouts in 67 trips to the plate, Tucker has a K-rate of nearly 24%. Over his previous five seasons, it has never been higher than 16%.

Tucker’s plate discipline metrics are also atypical. He is swinging more often (53.6% this year, compared to 41.2% for his career), chasing out of the zone more frequently (24.2% this year, compared to a 17.6% rate the past two seasons combined), and whiffing at an above-league-average rate (27.1%, compared to his 20.4% career rate) –– all of which run counter to his reputation as a contact-minded, selective-swinging, on-base machine.

Because of all that, manager Dave Roberts was asked Sunday whether he felt the team’s new $240 million signing was pressing.

He didn’t exactly say no.

“I think there’s a little bit to that,” Roberts said. “That’s kind of what I see. Typically when guys chase, they’re trying to do a little bit too much.”

Kyle Tucker of the Los Angeles Dodgers reacts to his strikeout. Getty Images

Tucker, however, offered a different theory behind the numbers –– which, admittedly, have come in a minuscule 2 ½ week sample size.

Because his swing has been a little off, he feels like he has missed more hitable pitches than usual, leading to more foul balls and deeper pitchers’ counts.

Indeed, Tucker’s foul ball rate is slightly up this year (43% now, compared to 40% last year). His 60 foul balls are also the ninth-most in the majors.

As a result, he said, he has found himself behind in more of his at-bats, forcing him to expand the strike zone and chase pitches –– especially below the strike zone –– he’d probably lay off more easily otherwise.

“I mean, if I did what I wanted to do from the first swing, putting it in play, I don’t think I’d be swinging as much,” he said. “When you’re swinging at strikes and putting a barrel on the ball and staying through the ball well, better outcomes happen. But I kind of cut my swing off a little bit, don’t really stay through it great, and then you start fouling pitches off and chasing some later in some counts. That’s where a lot of the extra swings come from.”

Kyle Tucker of the Los Angeles Dodgers celebrates after hitting a single. Getty Images

Thus, Tucker is focused on one priority at the plate right now: Trying to hit the ball to center more often, and find a feel that will get his non-traditional swing back in sync.

“It’s just trying to make sure your hands and everything are staying through the ball, rather than cutting across and over,” he said. “That’s when you start getting more foul balls and you start top-spinning balls to right, or getting more ground balls. But if you’re able to stay inside and through the ball a lot better, it starts getting better backspin and you drive the balls to the outfield a lot better.”

In other words, Tucker believes his underwhelming start has been more mechanical than mental –– downplaying the pressure that has come with playing for the two-time defending champion Dodgers, and under the spotlight that accompanied his record-setting contract this winter.

“I play the same regardless of whatever is happening around me,” he said. “The fans make coming to the field a lot of fun. The guys make coming to the field every single day a lot of fun. So it’s been great.”

Los Angeles Dodgers right fielder Kyle Tucker lines out to left. Carlin Stiehl for CA Post

So too, he said, has been hitting in the Dodgers lineup, where he plays the important role of protecting leadoff man Shohei Ohtani from the No. 2 spot.

“Even if we’re not hitting great that day,” he said, “we always have the potential to put up a big inning.”

The Dodgers have a similar hope with their newest superstar, confident that even though he’s not hitting great now, he’ll inevitably break out at the plate soon.

ESPN’s Shams Charania fires back at Doc Rivers’ ‘inaccurate’ rip job over Bucks drama coverage

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Doc Rivers shouting and gesturing during a basketball game, Image 2 shows Shams Charnia speaking with a cityscape in the background

Shams Charania fired back at now-former Bucks coach Doc Rivers while appearing on “The Pat McAfee Show on Monday, dropping the gauntlet down that he just documents “the news and the truth can hurt sometimes.” 

The NBA insider was discussing where the Bucks will go after a disastrous season concluded on Sunday with a loss to the 76ers, when Charania pushed back at those who have questioned his reporting.

“The reality of everything in Milwaukee is this, if they spent as much time dealing with their own internal dynamics and problems as they do responding to accurate reports, they wouldn’t be in the mess that they’re in right now,” he said. 

Former Bucks coach Doc Rivers. AP

“I got one more for you. I’ve been watching documentaries from time to time, I saw one on Fyre Festival, and so the part we’re at right now is everyone wants to run and you’re doing the cover-up,” Charania added. “Again, it’s totally fine, I’m just here to document and cover it the right way. I feel like we’ve done an unbelievable job tracking everything. At the end of the day, the last month and a half we’ve seen it.” 

Charania reported earlier this month on the internal issues going on during the season in Milwaukee, which included the persistent speculation around star Giannis Antetokounmpo. 

It also detailed a March 1 team meeting where Rivers challenged his players and told them to look up his résumé.

Rivers had taken shots at Charania during an appearance on “Run It Back” on FanDuel Sports Network – a show Charania had been a part of in the past – on Friday. 

“Shams wrote an article that was so inaccurate that I don’t have enough time to go into it,” River said. “He talked about a locker room thing and I was laughing like, ‘yeah, we had a tough locker room day.’ We lost to the Chicago Bulls with a 20-point lead. I showed clips the next day of guys who were screwing up. That’s what happens in a locker room. The first thing I thought was, ‘Where’s Woj? I miss [Adrian Wojnarowski] so much.'”

Shams Charnia appears on “The Pat McAfee Show.” @PatMcAfeeShow/X

Rivers also questioned Charania’s sourcing in the story and appeared to allege that the insider had written the story as payback for a joke the coach made about him during NBA All-Star Weekend. Rivers said Antetokounmpo should have traded him from his celebrity team, a quip the team’s social media department ran with, much to Charania’s reported dismay.

“I just report the news,” Charania said on Monday. “I just document the news and the truth can hurt sometimes 100 percent. I stand by my reporting to the 10th degree, like 100 percent.” 

Mets vs. Dodgers: Lineups, broadcast info, and open thread, 4/13/26

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 05: David Peterson #23 of the New York Mets throws against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the second inning at Dodger Stadium on June 05, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Mets lineup

  1. Francisco Lindor – SS
  2. Luis Robert – CF
  3. Mark Vientos – 1B
  4. Bo Bichette – 3B
  5. Jorge Polanco – DH
  6. Francisco Alvarez – C
  7. Tommy Pham – LF
  8. Marcus Semien – 2B
  9. Tyrone Taylor – RF

David Peterson – LHP

Dodgers lineup

  1. Shohei Ohtani – DH
  2. Kyle Tucker – RF
  3. Will Smith – C
  4. Teoscar Hernández – LF
  5. Freddie Freeman – 1B
  6. Andy Pages – CF
  7. Max Muncy – 3B
  8. Santiago Espinal – 2B
  9. Miguel Rojas – SS

Justin Wrobleski – LHP

Broadcast info

First pitch: 10:10pm EDT
TV: SNY
Radio: Audacy Mets Radio WHSQ 880AM, Audacy App, 92.3 HD2

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Orioles manager Craig Albernaz struck in face by foul ball in dugout

First-year Baltimore Orioles manager Craig Albernaz was struck in the face by a foul ball off the bat of his second baseman, Jeremiah Jackson, in the fifth inning of the team's 9-7 win over the Arizona Diamondbacks on Monday, April 13 at Camden Yards.

Albernaz, 43, was positioned in his usual spot in Baltimore's first-base dugout when Jackson looped a line drive measured at 70.6 mph off his bat. It struck Albernaz in the side of the face and he was immediately escorted down the tunnel to the Orioles' clubhouse by coaches and players.

The ball came up on Albernaz quickly, leaving him virtually helpless to avoid the baseball, though he turned his head and perhaps absorbed a more glancing blow.

Albernaz, the Orioles said, was evaluated on site by the team's medical personnel and returned to the dugout some 45 minutes later. Meanwhile, his team battled back from a six-run deficit to claim the victory.

He did not meet with the media following the game, but bench coach Donnie Ecker told reporters that Albernaz is expected to get a scan but is doing well.

Jackson hit a grand slam one inning after his foul ball struck Albernaz, and the Orioles pulled ahead of the Diamondbacks 8-7 on Pete Alonso's two-run homer in the seventh. Jackson hit his second home run in the eighth.

"It really speaks to what Alby means here and the culture he wants to create," Ecker told reporters. "If it were up to him, he'd be sitting right here. Not surprised to see him (return to the dugout)."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Orioles manager struck in face by foul ball in game vs. Diamondbacks

Tommy Pham, at 38, ready to leave ‘everything on the table’ in return to Mets

Even after waiting all offseason to find a new club, Tommy Pham didn’t consider hanging up the spikes. 

It took him right up until a couple of hours before first pitch on Opening Day, but Pham did finally land himself a deal, rejoining the Mets on a minor league pact.

He spent the past couple of weeks building himself up in the lower levels of the system, but was called upon on Monday to help spark the struggling club. 

“Happy to be back, happy to be up here,” Pham said before Monday’s game in Los Angeles. “Still some familiar faces here, lot of smiles on the faces today, so I’m happy that I could provide some sunshine.”

The Mets are hoping that Pham can provide more than just smiles, though. 

He’s already been inserted directly into the starting lineup, batting seventh and playing left field, and Carlos Mendoza has heard nothing but good things about his new veteran. 

“Competitor, a pro, he goes about his business the right way,” the skipper said Monday. “When word got out, I got a couple of texts from ex-coaches of his telling me how much you’re going to love this guy -- he knows what it takes to play in New York and wants to be a part of it.”

Mendoza expects to mainly use Pham against lefty pitching, but thinks he still feels has a lot to offers this team as a right-handed bat off the bench. 

Heading into his 13th MLB season, the 38-year-old certainly agrees.

“Body-wise, I’m in better shape than a lot of guys in the league,” Pham said. “That’s just because of how I work in the offseason -- I signed two weeks ago so I still feel there’s a bit left that I need to handle, but for the most part I’m great.

“I show up. I prepare. I’m just a pro. I know how to play the game, I love the game, that’s what you’re going to get -- one thing I told myself this year is I’m going to go harder because I was thinking I want to leave everything on the table.”

Astros not-so-scary-anymore, Seattle Mariners mop AL West rival

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - APRIL 13: Josh Naylor #12 of the Seattle Mariners reacts after scoring a two-run home run during the third inning against the Houston Astros at T-Mobile Park on April 13, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Maddy Grassy/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Coming out of the All-Star Break in 2025, the Seattle Mariners had some juice. They’d faltered from their scalding April-May surge, ceding the division lead to the Houston Astros at the start of June with a brutal 4-13 stretch from May 24-June 11th featuring multiple losses to Houston and dismal sweeps. A crucial, prescient drubbing of the Detroit Tigers to close the first half set the club on better footing, and with increased health from their rotation the club took two of three from Houston to start the back half. Dropping the third game in an 11-3 drubbing was a disappointment, a presumed pitcher’s duel that got away from Hunter Brown and Bryan Woo but remained uncorralled by the M’s bullpen on July 20th, 2025.

Today’s 6-2 M’s victory ensures that that date will remain the most recent time Seattle lost to Houston until at least mid-May. It buries the Astros where the Mariners found themselves at the outset of this four game series: last place in all of MLB. It solidifies what Three Nights in Houston dared us to believe: the center of gravity in the American League West is rooted in the Pacific Northwest.

Houston got their best start of the series from young righty Mike Burrows, whose line belies a reasonable enough performance given his task. Hell or high water, which at least three Astros pitchers are on the injured list with I believe, Burrows would be working deep into this afternoon’s game to save a beleaguered bullpen further indignity. 11 hits, six runs, all but one of which came on beautiful, Canadian moonshots. This was a tactical retreat of a ballgame from the start by the injury-riddled Astros, and while that’s no source of joy, the wins count the same.

That’s especially true for three stars of tonight’s game, which will not account for three of the five Mariners to secure multiple hits on the afternoon. Brendan Donovan, Cal Raleigh, and Julio Rodríguez each notched a pair of knocks, looked good doing it, and boded well for the Vedder Cup to come. Raleigh even gets an honorable mention for the most Lastros moment of the evening, an infield single where nobody decided to get him out. You can almost see the deflated spirit of this bedraggled, dying empire in this resigned miscommunication.

But they take standing positions on this train to the honored, seated standouts: Josh Naylor, George Kirby, and Luke Raley.

Raley’s day was lizard-brain simple. Hit ball, line drive. Hit ball, line drive. Hit ball, hmm, let me consider the panoply of optio-just kidding obviously it’s line drive. The absence of Raley in 2025 was muted by Randy Arozarena’s early fireworks and Dominic Canzone’s late emergence, but this has been an excellent baseball player when healthy, and right now he’s just that. That the game capped with two deep fly balls in the park’s most treacherous gap, where Raley came up just short of a Yordan Alvarez robbery over the weekend, was an added bonus.

For Kirby, things progressed as close to perfection as imaginable against a still-potent offense. The efficiency the 28 year old carved through Houston’s order with allowed him to work 7.2 frames, yielding two runs in one inning that might’ve been mitigated with a bolder backstop to challenge his two-strike breaking ball to Taylor Trammell, reversing what became a leadoff single into a strikeout. As it was, Kirby hounded and pounded Houston with sliders, forcing the aggressive offense into the ground on pitch after pitch. For a pitcher who still worked the upper half of the zone prominently, it was a third straight performance reminiscent of Logan Webb or prime Marcus Stroman more than the fly-ball dependent walk-avoider we – and the league – have come to expect.

The moment of the game for Kirby was, in many ways, one that went poorly. With two outs and a runner on in the 8th, manager Dan Wilson strolled to the mound, apparently to a call from J.P. Crawford to let Kirby remain in. After counseling Kirby, Wilson allowed Kirby, at 94 pitches, one more hitter. It sadly was a four-pitch walk to Alvarez, yielding to Matt Brash to tidy the mess with an Isaac Paredes lineout. The message was well-received postgame, however, with Kirby lamenting his poor command at the end but effusive in his praise and gratitude for the willingness of his manager to hear and adapt to the feedback from his players in the moment. Might it have been adjudicated differently without a four-run lead? Perhaps, but with the stakes slightly lower than the typical M’s-Stros matchup at that stage, the opportunity to give the bullpen extra rest in an off-day-free marathon was taken by Wilson, and unpunished by Houston.

Like his fellow sluggers in the heart of Seattle’s order, Josh Naylor was seeking results to match increasingly encouraging processes. Through the first two weeks of the year, he has made his usual rash of intriguing swing decisions, as well as scalding and just missing several big flies and big hits. With a soft single and a scorched double ahead of him by Cal and Julio, Naylor’s missed connection was found, with help from an added mechanical tweak:

Incredibly, upon his next plate appearance, Burrows offered him an encore, a belt-high heater with no buffs or damage reduction. This big day has been on the horizon for the pride of Mississauga, but Mariners and Astros should know better than anyone that chasing the horizon isn’t a surefire avenue to imminent success. Monday, it was enough to lift Seattle’s ships and send Houston scurrying deeper into the cellar, far from the light of the stars they once knew.

Game # 16, Athletics vs. Rangers Game Thread

Athletics pitcher Luis Severino gets his first home start of the 2026 season tonight against the Texas Rangers. | Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

Fresh off a three-game sweep of the inter-league rival New York Mets, the A’s return home today for a division series matchup with the Texas Rangers. Not only are the two teams tied for the lead in the American League West, but they are tied for the second-best record in the American League, period!

Tonight, Luis Severino returns to the Sutter Health Park mound for the first time in 2026. He’s made three road starts and has a 0-1 record with a 5.40 ERA. He’s struck out seventeen batters in 13.1 innings. His challenges at home last season were well documented. In nearly an identical number of innings his splits were dramatic; a 3.02 away ERA compared to a 6.01 home ERA, and a 2-9 home record compared to a 6-2 road record. He’ll go up against 36-year-old righty Nathan Eovaldi for the Rangers. Eovaldi is 1-2 with a 7.98 ERA so far in this young season.

Eovaldi will face this lineup for the A’s in West Sac tonight:

Severino will match up against this batting order for the Rangers:

Follow the Game:
Watch:
Athletics – NBCSCA+

Listen:
Athletics – Talk 650 KSTE, KVMX 92.1/105.5, A’s Cast

Game 16 Game Day Thread – Texas Rangers @ West Sacramento Athletics

Apr 5, 2026; West Sacramento, California, USA; Fans filtering in to the grass berm in center field before the start of the game between the Houston Astros against the Athletics at Sutter Health Park. Mandatory Credit: Neville E. Guard-Imagn Images | Neville E. Guard-Imagn Images

Texas Rangers @ Athletics

Monday, April 13, 2026, 8:40 PM CDT (105.3 The Fan / Rangers Sports Network)

Sutter Health Park

RHP Nathan Eovaldi vs. RHP Luis Severino

Today’s Lineups

RANGERSATHLETICS
Brandon Nimmo – RFLawrence Butler – RF
Evan Carter – CFNick Kurtz – 1B
Corey Seager – SSShea Langeliers – C
Jake Burger – 1BTyler Soderstrom – LF
Joc Pederson – DHJacob Wilson – SS
Kyle Higashioka – CJeff McNeil – 2B
Josh Smith – 2BMax Muncy – 3B
Josh Jung – 3BCarlos Cortes – DH
Ezequiel Duran – LFDenzel Clarke – CF
Nathan Eovaldi – RHPLuis Severino – RHP

Go Rangers!

Open Thread: Colorado Avalanche vs. Edmonton Oilers (7:30 p.m.)

Fans in Edmonton will get one last regular-season glimpse at McDavid vs. MacKinnon tonight at Rogers Place before the NHL playoffs begin this weekend.

Both clubs have secured playoff berths, but the Oilers are on the cusp of winning the pillow fight in the Pacific Division and will be desperate for a victory as they sit just one point (90) behind the Vegas Golden Knights (91), with both teams having two games remaining.

Will Edmonton pass the test and position themselves as home-icers in the first two rounds of the playoffs, or will Colorado play spoiler?

Colorado Avalanche: 52-16-11

The Opponent: Edmonton Oilers (40-30-10)

Time: 7:30 p.m. MT

Watch: Altitude, Altitude+, ESPN+

Listen: Altitude Sports Radio, 92.5 FM

Colorado Avalanche

I’m not sure who spilled the salt at team dinner, but Colorado has been hit with an injury wave that has even extended to their head coach, Jared Bednar.

The puck he took to the face against Vegas has him still recovering from facial fractures and an abrasion in Colorado.

Maybe the view from the vantage of a fan can offer some insight, but I imagine Bedsy has his ways of influencing the group even from afar.

Now, as far as skaters go, I doubt we see Cale Makar, Josh Manson, or Nazem Kadri tonight or for the rest of the regular season.

Josh Manson left the Vegas game with an upper-body injury and did not return.

As mentioned in the intro, without any opportunity for advancement, there’s no reason not to shut these guys down until the playoffs.

Projected Lineup:

Artturi LehkonenNathan MacKinnonGabriel Landeskog
Valeri NichushkinBrock NelsonMartin Necas
Ross ColtonNicolas RoyJoel Kiviranta
Parker KellyJack DruryLogan O’Connor

Devon ToewsSam Malinski
Brett KulakBrent Burns
Nick BlankenburgJack Achan

Scott Wedgewood
MacKenzie Blackwood

Edmonton Oilers

The Oilers have been without Leon Draisaitl for quite some time, but still run with McDavid and have been a team that can’t consistently find their stride, but appear and often prove plenty capable.

Interestingly, if the Oilers and Avalanche meet later in the playoffs as both sides intend, the Oilers will have won two playoff rounds, and any doubts will dissipate, as that would mark their 3rd Western Conference Final in a row.

The question marks in Edmonton still largely revolve around netminding, with the Skinner for Jarry deal not really panning out early on.

For now, I’d say it’s Ingram’s net.

Projected Lineup:

Vasily PodkolzinConnor McDavidMatthew Savoie
Max JonesRyan Nugent-HopkinsKasperi Kapanen
Colton DachJosh SamanskiTrent Frederic
Curtis LazarAdam HenriqueJack Roslovic

Mattias EkholmEvan Bouchard
Darnell NurseConnor Murphy
Jake WalmanTy Emberson

Connor Ingram
Tristan Jarry