Knicks Bulletin: ‘Last time we played the Knicks, it felt like MSG East’

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - APRIL 30: Mitchell Robinson #23 of the New York Knicks and Jalen Johnson #1 of the Atlanta Hawks fight during the second quarter in Game Six of the First Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs at State Farm Arena on April 30, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. 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 Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Could it get any better?

I bet it couldn’t.

New York Knicks. Philadelphia Numbers. Bring it on.

Mike Brown

On the Game 6 scuffle and his glasses:

“When I got in the middle of it, [those thoughts] all went out the window for some reason. And the only thing I could think of was [the fact that] all I had was one pair of glasses.

“I cannot — I can’t see anything. Like, I can’t even see if you’re smiling at me or not. I’m blind as a bat. So I was like, ‘My glasses! My glasses!’ Because I didn’t have another pair with me, and it was too long, too much of game left for me to coach blind. So [the altercation] helped me because now I will carry a second pair of glasses in my backpack.”

On Robinson’s fine and playoff physicality:

“The playoffs are a lot more physical than the regular season. Stuff happens. Everybody is human, we just have to keep making sure that for us we don’t do anything that costs us the rest of that game or the next game. I applaud all of our guys, our security guys . . . and then our players because again everybody is human and sometimes things happen and to get help from everybody else is huge. Then, even our assistants. When I went and turned and looked at the bench, I don’t know what Atlanta’s bench was but I know our entire bench was on the sidelines. It’s extremely important in that situation to not have anything result in a future suspension or anything like this.”

On the double-big lineup:

“They helped us get better. We had to continue trying to think of different ways to help put our players in the best possible position to win, and part of that is how can we try to throw the double-big out there — because both Mitch and KAT are starters on any team out there. And it’s — how can you try to get those guys on the floor? Because it makes us unique with the size. How can we get them out on the floor together? And as the series went along, we started to figure it out — and based on your opponent, it may change, I don’t know. But we do feel like Atlanta helped us get better, and we’re in a better spot now because of them.”

On the need for improving no matter the opponent:

“Well, you can always get better. It’s about us. And a lot of times, it’s about us even if we know who we’re playing. There’s plenty that you can work on without knowing who your opponent is because you’re trying to get better, or sharper, in the areas that make you who you are.”

On comparing this group to past Finals teams:

“The first thing is they’re resilient because in the playoffs you’re going to have a lot of highs and a lot of lows, which means you’re going to face some adversity, so when [that happens], can you stay connected? And this group can. So the connectedness that this group has is similar. The sacrifice that this group has is similar, the competitive spirit that this group has is similar and then the belief is similar as well.”

On Brunson’s screening being on par with some elite’s:

“Steph is good, but there’s one other person. John Stockton. He was good. Especially for a little guy, John.”

Jalen Brunson

On blocking out noise:

“I haven’t heard of it. And I don’t care.”

On potentially having home-court advantage through the ECF:

“I haven’t really thought about it. It’s one of those things where you can’t really worry about. You have to control what you can control. Focus on one day at a time and focus on the task at hand. Those things you try not to think about, because you just can’t control those things.”

On using the iPad during games:

“It’s reminding myself of technique stuff, for me. Small things can make a big difference when it comes to shooting or reads. Just being able to see things and learn from them quickly.”

On playing off-ball more:

“We had done it before. The frequency we were doing it, obviously, it was asked to do more of. Knowing if I get a good hit on somebody’s defender, it puts my defender in the position to switch. They were trying to keep bodies on bodies and not switch off me, and a good screen puts them in position to have to make a decision.”

On Robinson’s importance:

“He’s more important than I think we realize, hence why we had coaches and security and players doing whatever we could to try and stop him from doing any more damage than he did in Game 6. He’s very important to what we do on both sides of the ball. He’s way more important than I think a lot of people realize.”

Karl-Anthony Towns

On Robinson’s value to the Knicks:

“I forgot he wrote that on his ankle tape. I mean, Mitch is a big part of our locker room. What he does on the court, obviously I know he impacts winning, and he does a lot of things that sometimes don’t end up on the stat sheet but makes us come out with a W. So, Mitch is very vital for our locker room, for our team, and we’re always going to support him. We’re always going to stand behind him when he wants to, I guess, quote unquote ‘Stand on business.’”

On the need for resetting before Round 2:

“Just resetting. Understanding that we got to get ourselves ready for the next series. Obviously, today we don’t know, so we watch tonight, like all of us. But just making sure that we get ourselves ready to be the best version of ourselves first.”

On blocking out the East-best talk:

“Nah, we not listening to no noise. At the end of the day, we just got to continue to work on being the best version of ourselves. When we step on that court and give ourselves a chance to win every night, the only thing we got to do is in our locker room, continue to believe in each other.”

“No, no. I know you really want me to say yes, but unfortunately for you, it’s a no.”

On his day off after the Game 6 win:

“[The off day is] not as exciting as I think fans think. Yesterday was a great day to just rejuvenate the soul and mental. I just spent the whole day with my family. I took my niece to the mall in Jersey and took her to the park, took them on a pizza day, my niece and nephew. So kinda really just spending time with the family. I didn’t really do anything that people would think is exciting or anything, but to me it was the greatest day. It was the greatest thing to do on a day off, especially after a big win. I would love to celebrate it with no other people than my family, my niece and nephew.”

On his cameo in The Devil Wears Prada 2:

“It was an honor. It was an honor and it was awesome to just see the masses of work at work in the acting world, and to be able to see them just do what they do at the highest level, it was such an honor.”

Nick Nurse

On facing the Knicks:

“Listen, I think they’re very good. I think their starting lineup’s incredible, I think they continue to bolster their bench… I think they’re very, very good. I think it’s going to be a tremendous challenge.”

Joel Embiid

On Knicks fans in Philadelphia:

“I just have a message for our fans. Last time we played the Knicks, it felt like [Xfinity Mobile Arena] was Madison Square Garden East. So, we’re going to need the support. Don’t sell your tickets. This is bigger than you. We need you guys. The atmosphere that we’ve had the last couple games in Philly, especially the last one, pushing it to Game 7. We need all of it. If you need money, I got you.

“Knicks fans, they travel. They’re going to buy the tickets and there’s going to be some people that need the money and are probably going to sell tickets. But don’t do it. We need you guys. We got a pretty good chance. We’re going to need our support. We’re going to need them to be extremely loud.”

On beating Boston once and for all:

“It feels good to win. Obviously we got a bigger goal in mind. But finally beating these guys feels pretty good.”

On his knee health after the Game 7 injury scare:

“I felt great, I feel amazing. I was faking it.”

On his team’s mindset:

“We have a lot that we want to accomplish. We have a lot of work to do. No shades to the guys that have played here, but this is different. The fight is just there. I’ve been a part of some of these teams, and this team is different.”

V. J. Edgecombe

On the Knicks:

“The Knicks are a really great team. A really great team. Obviously, they’ve played together for a minute. They have a lot of great chemistry. They have one of the best starting five groups in the league and they play really hard.”

On his thoughts on MSG:

“I’ve played at the Garden. I love the Garden.”

Tyrese Maxey

On the Sixers’ confidence:

“We’ve had this weird swag about us all year. We’ve had this confidence in that we know who we can be. And, we know who we are. We have never wavered. This group has always believed in each other. This group really likes each other, and we want to see each other succeed.”

Game #34 GameThread: Jays @ Twins

MINNEAPOLIS, MN - APRIL 03: Fans of the Minnesota Twins look out over Target Field prior to the game between the Houston Astros and the Minnesota Twins on Thursday, April 3, 2025 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Photo by Matt Krohn/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Game four of four. A win would mean a series win. And a win would bring us back to .500 for the first time since April 4th. They are 6-2 over the last 8 games.

And it is a Trey Yesavage start. 5.1 shutout innings in his first start.

The Jays made some minor league news:

  • Nolan Perry moves from Dunedin to Vancouver.
  • Austin Cates moves from Vancouver to New Hampshire.
  • Arjun Nimmala moves from Vancouver to New Hampshire.

The Jays tell us that George Springer didn’t re-break his toe yesterday. He’s not in the lineup today, but they say it was a planned day off. I would think he’ll have a couple of days off, but that’s just guessing.

The lineup looks a little different today. Lips leads off and Okamoto bats second. Pinango is batting .500 in his first 10 at bats.

Today’s Lineups

BLUE JAYSTWINS
Yohendrick Pinango – LFByron Buxton – DH
Kazuma Okamoto – 3BTrevor Larnach – LF
Vladimir Guerrero – DHAustin Martin – CF
Jesus Sanchez – RFVictor Caratini – C
Lenyn Sosa – 1BLuke Keaschall – 2B
Daulton Varsho – CFKody Clemens – 1B
Ernie Clement – 2BRoyce Lewis – 3B
Andres Gimenez – SSMatt Wallner – RF
Tyler Heineman – CBrooks Lee – SS
Trey Yesavage – RHPJoe Ryan – RHP

Go Jays Go.

Aaron Boone: Yankees still weighing Anthony Volpe-Jose Caballero shortstop decision

The Yankees have an importantAnthony Volpe decision to make on Sunday, but manager Aaron Boone didn’t give any clues ahead of Sunday’s game against the Baltimore Orioles. 

Sunday marks Volpe’s 20th day on his rehab assignment, the maximum allowed by Major League Baseball. The Yankees must either activate Volpe, or option him to Triple-A Scranton Wilkes/Barre.

“We’ll get through today and talk through that,” Boone said. “Just wanting to do what’s best for the team, for Anthony, so we’ll have those conversations.”

Complicating matters for the Yankees is the fact that Jose Caballero, the primary starter while Volpe has been sidelined while recovering from offseason shoulder surgery, has filled in more than adequately. 

In 32 games this season, Caballero has a .719 OPS with four home runs, 12 RBI, and 14 runs scored, playing solid defensively as well.

"Well, one, Caballero's playing the heck out of the position and playing really well, so that complicates it,” Boone said, “Just deciding, what's the role that exists right away? Those are things we've got to continue to work through."

Boone said he does “love the idea” of Caballero playing a “kind of super-utility role because he's so good at it,” but reiterated that Caballero has played a great shortstop, and the manager must do what’s best for the ballclub.

“You also can't ignore that he's played so well defensively at shortstop, been a real spark for us offensively, especially after kind of getting off to a slow start probably the first 10 days, two weeks of the season,” Boone said. “He's really picked that up and been in the middle of us winning games.

“At the end of the day, we're going to try and do what's best for our team and then individual players that we care about too and know that are going to be important contributors to our team. We weigh all that."

McKinstry goes deep in Toledo debut

Columbus Clippers 5, Toledo Mud Hens 3 (box)

Zach McKinstry hit a home run in his Triple-A debut on Saturday, but Toledo’s offense didn’t do much else in a 5-3 loss to Columbus.

McKinstry hit his bomb in the fourth with Max Burt on base. It was the only extra-base hit of the day, but the Mud Hens still notched six other hits. Most of them came without any follow-up. Toledo strung something together in the second, too, with Andrew Navigato driving in Eduardo Valencia with a sacrifice fly.

Max Clark’s lone hit of the day came in that frame, a base hit to shortstop that turned into a throwing error that moved everyone up a base.

Bryan Sammons got the start for the Mud Hens. He gave up three runs (two earned) on six hits and two walks over 4 2/3 innings. Most of the damage came in the second, when the Clippers notched three of their eight total hits. Maick Collado doubled off Sammons to tie the game up at one run apiece, and Juan Benamin gave Columbus the lead with an RBI single.

It wasn’t Sammons’ best outing, but his final line looks just fine. His fastball velocity was down a bit, and whiffs were under 20% overall. Still, he left the game tied after giving up a homer in the fifth. Konnor Pilkington was first out of the bullpen in relief. He took the loss after allowing the go-ahead run in the sixth — a sacrifice fly from Collado.

Tyler Mattison gave up a run on a homer in the seventh, and Tanner Rainey worked around a leadoff walk in the eighth.

It wasn’t a very exciting day in Triple-A, but it’s good to see McKinstry doing things at the plate and on the field, especially with injuries mounting in Detroit.

Clark: 1-5, K

McKinstry: 1-4, HR (1), R, 2 RBI, K

Short: 2-4, BB, K

Sammons: 4.2 IP, 6 H, 3 R, 2 ER, 2 BB, 4 K

Coming Up Next: The Hens take a 3-2 lead in the series into a 1:05 p.m. ET matchup on Sunday.

Erie SeaWolves 5, Chesapeake Baysox 4 (box)

John Peck didn’t play today, so the home run-watch is on hold for now. Instead, it was Andrew Jenkins and Brett Callahan with the big flies for Erie in Saturday’s 5-4 win over the Chesapeake Baysox.

The SeaWolves led for most of the game, scoring a run in each of the first four innings. They were practically handed a run in the first after Chesapeake starter Juan Rojas walked the bases loaded and threw a wild pitch with just one out.

Joe Miller gave up a three-spot in the second inning, giving up back-to-back doubles and a single with no outs to set up a fielder’s choice and a sacrifice bunt. It was a short outing for Miller, who allowed seven baserunners to reach over three innings. On the bright side, Miller struck out five.

Jenkins’ homer came in the second, and Callahan’s came in the third — both of the leadoff variety.

E.J. Exposito, Seth Stephenson and Peyton Graham all singled in the fourth to give Erie the lead for good. Jenkins had the only other Erie hit of the day in the eighth, a single that moved Chris Meyers over to third base. Exposito drove in the insurance run with a fielder’s choice right after.

The bullpen was very good for Erie. Dariel Fregio took over in the fourth and gave three innings of scoreless relief. He faced the minimum in each inning, getting some help from Thayron Liranzo, who caught a runner stealing to end the fifth and sixth.

John Stankiewicz went 1-2-3 in the seventh, Tanner Kohlhepp stranded a pair in the eighth, striking out two batters, and Woo-Suk Go closed things despite some drama. Frederick Bencosme homered to open the ninth, but Go struck out the side after that.

Jenkins: 2-4, HR (4), R, RBI, K

Callahan: 1-3, HR (4), R, RBI, BB

Fregio (W, 1-1): 3.0 IP, H, 0 R, BB, 2 K

Coming Up Next: It’s a 1:35 p.m. ET start in Erie on Sunday with the SeaWolves up 4-1 in the series.

Cedar Rapids Kernels 11, West Michigan Whitecaps 6 (box)

West Michigan’s losing streak hit seven games on Saturday despite the Whitecaps putting up six runs.

This loss is the result of a disastrous nine-run seventh inning, but West Michigan briefly led before that after scoring five runs in the fifth.

The Whitecaps didn’t get a baserunner until the fourth, though, when Ricardo Hurtado walked. He moved to third on an error and scored on a groundout later in the inning. Cristian Santana broke up the no-hitter in the fifth with a one-out single. Juan Hernandez tripled him in right after.

A two-out rally led to four more runs crossing. Andrew Sojka singled, Hurtado doubled, Garrett Pennington was hit by a pitch and Bryce Rainer reached on an error before Kernels starter Nick Trabacchi left the game with the score at 4-1.

Samuel Gil drove in Hurtado and Pennington with a single for runs No. 5 and 6. Rainer and Gil executed a double steal, but both were left in scoring position.

Troy Watson got the start for West Michigan. Things went well for him, allowing just one run on two hits and a walk with four strikeouts. Both of those hits came in the second, when the Kernels scored the first run of the game.

Gabriel Reyes relieved him in the fifth. Cedar Rapids got to Reyes for a run on a couple of singles and a walk, and he got through the sixth without giving anything up. Then came the big inning.

Cedar Rapids went single, two-run homer, single, single, flyout, single, walk to make it 6-5, and Reyes left the game responsible for the tying and go-ahead run. Both of those runners scored as soon as Ethan Sloan took over on a single and a passed ball. Lovely. A wild-pitch ball four made it 8-6, and a three-run homer brought us to the 11-6 final.

Jalen Evans worked around two hits in the eighth, while the offense did diddly-squat.

Rainer: 0-4, RBI, 2 K

Gil: 1-4, 2 RBI

Hurtado: 1-4, 2B (4), 2 R, RBI, BB, K

Watson: 4.0 IP, 2 H, R, ER, BB, 4 K

Coming Up Next: It’s a 2:05 p.m. ET start on Sunday as the Whitecaps try to avoid a sweep.

Bradenton Marauders 13, Lakeland Flying Tigers 4 (box)

Lakeland gave up a crooked number to Bradenton in four of eight innings on Saturday as the Marauders clinched a series win, 13-4.

Things started okay. Beau Ankeney singled in Jordan Yost to give Lakeland an early lead, but Max Alba gave up a two-run homer in the bottom half of the first.

Alba was fine after that, working around four hits over the next 2 1/3 innings. He left with two men on base in the fourth, but Jose Guzman struck out the first batter he faced, and the defense came up with a 2-6-2 out to get the runner breaking for home.

That jump-started the offense going into the fifth. The Flying Tigers scored three runs, starting on a Jesus Pinto triple and a Yost RBI single. Max Anderson walked, and he and Yost executed a double steal that turned into a run thanks to a bad throw by the catcher. Beau Ankeney singled in Anderson right after.

That’s when the bullpen started to melt down. Caleb Leys got the sixth and promptly allowed a game-tying, two-run homer. Leys gave up the lead in the sixth on a leadoff triple and one-out single. A botched throwing error, walk and balk made it 6-4. One more walk forced Lakeland to make another pitching change.

Jan Caraballo intentionally walked the first batter he faced (or didn’t face?), gave up a run on a sacrifice fly, and allowed another run to cross on a double. Rough four-inning frame to break the tie and crush any hopes of a Flying Tigers win. Lakeland struck out three times in the next half inning.

Caraballo gave up a leadoff home run in the seventh, and Andrew Pogue gave up four runs trying to get the last three outs of the eighth—absolutely brutal stuff.

Yost: 1-5, 2 R, RBI, 2 K

Pinto: 2-4, 3B (2), R, BB, K

Ankeney: 2-4, 2 RBI, K

Alba: 3.1 IP, 6 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 0 BB, 3 K

Coming Up Next: It’s a noon ET start on Sunday with Bradenton leading the series 4-1.

FCL Yankees 10, FCL Tigers 6 (box)

Cris Rodriguez: 2-5, 2 R, 3B, K

Steven Madero: 3-4, R, RBI, 2B, BB

Ronald Ramirez: 2-3, BB, K, 2 SB

Owen Hall: 2.2 IP, ER, H, 2 BB, 4 K

Where to watch Baltimore Orioles vs. New York Yankees: Live stream, TV channel, odds for Sunday, May 3

The Baltimore Orioles (15-18) face the AL East-leading New York Yankees (22-11). The Yankees won the series’ first two games by a combined score of 16-6. Scheduled starting pitchers are Trey Gibson for Baltimore, making his MLB debut, and Max Fried for New York, with a 2.09 ERA.

  • Baltimore Orioles: 15-18 (No. 4 in AL East)

  • New York Yankees: 22-11 (No. 1 in AL East)

  • Spread: New York Yankees -1.5

  • Moneyline: New York Yankees -230 (66.7%) / Baltimore Orioles +188 (33.3%)

  • Over/Under: 8.5

Baltimore Orioles: Trey Gibson
New York Yankees: Max Fried (4-1, ERA: 2.09, K: 37, WHIP: 0.80)

Weather: 55°F at first pitch

Ballpark: Capacity: 47,309 | Roof: Open | Surface: Grass

An unexpected journey: The Celtics’ raised expectations and back again

Apr 30, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Boston Celtics guard Payton Pritchard (11) looks on during the fourth quarter against the Philadelphia 76ers at Xfinity Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images | Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

Oof.

I need a minute to unfold myself and get some air back in my bruised lungs. That one hurt.

I think the reason it hurt so much is because it was so unexpected. I predicted a sweep for the Celtics. I dismissed the Sixers as first round fodder. I did not expect MVP Joel Embiid to show up. I did not expect Playoff P to show up. I was fully expecting Maxey to play the way he did, but everything else was shocking. Hats off to Philly that became the fully actualized version of themselves before our eyes.

As for the Celtics, I don’t know exactly what went wrong. I’m sure that smarter basketball minds (on this blog and elsewhere) will break down the film and let us know what worked and what didn’t. All I know is that the scrappy, overachieving team that we had come to know and love throughout the year, faltered under the bright lights. I would love to chalk this up to the younger players getting exposed to the crucible of the playoffs. However, I’m haunted of memories from the previous year. It is easy to discount the Knicks series because of the Tatum injury, but the defending champs were well on their way to losing that series before his injury made it official.

It boggles my mind that the core of a championship team is still in place, the roster that the Executive of the Year put together is still in place, and the presumed Coaching Staff of the Year is in place, and yet we’re sitting here after an epic collapse — the first series loss in history after being up 3 games to 1.

So much of this feeling of loss and frustration is tied to expectations. By now you know the story and you could write the rest of this paragraph verbatim. The Celtics headed into this year with zero expectations. Gap year. Develop the kids. Give Jaylen Brown a chance to be the main guy. See what happens with Tatum’s injury but don’t rush him back. Then everything started falling into place. The team achieved way above expectations. Just about everything that could have gone right went very right. The rest of the East looked entirely beatable. Tatum returned and looked so much better than anyone could have hoped. Everything was lining up and suddenly the Celtics were seen as one of the favorites (if not THE favorite) to win the East.

For 3 of the first 4 games of the series, everything seemed to be continuing down that road. But something happened along the way and here we are. Lamenting the missed opportunity and wondering what exactly happened. Those raised expectations make this all so much worse. We let ourselves believe. Mind you, there’s nothing wrong with that. Belief is healthy and good. I couldn’t be a fan without that belief. I know that many media folks say that at some point they leave their fandom behind and treat their subject like a job. I could never.

So, what now? Well, I guess we do what we always do. Take a minute to reflect and process, then start thinking about the next journey. What does the team do next? What are the needs on this roster? Are there bigger moves the team needs to consider? Who stays and who goes? Who’s available to add? What skills do players need to work on in the offseason. We’ll cover all of that and much, much more in the long months ahead.

However, as painful as the ending was, I’m going to look back fondly on this regular season. We learned so much about so many of the characters. Like any good story, there were ups and downs, trials overcome and adversaries vanquished. The team bonded together over board games and nicknames and a lunatic coach. It was tremendous fun to watch and the season was a joy.

The ending was abrupt and painful. I just hope that the next installment of the series provides us with a triumphant return to glory. Because belief is good, and its what we do. Go Celtics.

The Hockey News Sunday Recap: Columbus Blue Jackets

NEWS & NOTES

2025-26 Player Review: Charlie Coyle2025-26 Player Review: Charlie CoyleCoyle was drafted 28th overall in the 2010 draft by the San Jose Sharks.

Contract Status - Unrestricted Free Agent on July 1. 

Games Played - 82 - Played all 82 games for the 5th time in his career. 

Goals - 20 - He scored 20 goals in a season for only the third time in his career (25 in 2023-24 with Boston & 21 in 2015-16 with Minnesota). He had 7 power play goals which tied his career high. 

Assists - 38 - He tied his career high in assists that he set in 2017. 

Points - 58 - Finished just two points shy of his career high set in 22-23 with Boston. Up from 35 in 2024-25. 

2025-26 Player Review: Mathieu Olivier2025-26 Player Review: Mathieu OlivierOlivier was undrafted out of Biloxi, Mississippi.

Contract Status - Going into year two of a 6-year contract signed in 2025. 

Games Played - 61- Down from 82 the previous season. He had two stretches where he was injured, including the final eight games after breaking his hand in a fight. 

Goals - 15 - Was on a 20 goal pace, but due to missed games, he finished three shy of his career high. 

Assists - 11 - Would've set a career high with 15 assists if not for the missed games. 

Points - 26 - Olivier was on pace to hit 35 points. 

2025-26 Player Review: Denton Mateychuk2025-26 Player Review: Denton MateychukMateychuk was drafted 12th overall in 2022.

Contract Status - Going into year 3 of his ELC. He'll be an RFA at the end of the 26-27 season.  

Games Played - 75 - He played 45 in his rookie season after being called up mid-way through the year. 

Goals - 13 - Mateychuk scored lots of good, timely goals, and didn't waste any opportunities. He scored one power play goal. 

Assists - 18 - Something tells me Mateychuk is going to be an assist machine in his career. He had two power play assists. 

Points - 31 - Finished on a 34 point pace. He and Zach Werenski could easily put up 150 points between the two of them.  

2025-26 Player Review: Ivan Provorov 2025-26 Player Review: Ivan Provorov Provorov was acquired by the Blue Jackets on June 6, 2023.

Contract Status - Going into year 2 of a 7-year contract signed in the summer of 2025. 

Games Played - 82 - He played 82 games for the 4th straight season, and 7th time in his career. In three seasons with the CBJ, he's never missed a game. 

Goals - 9 - His 9 goals were tied for the 3rd highest of his career.

Assists - 22 - His 22 assists are the third highest of his CBJ career, and 5th highest of his career. 

Points - 31 - 5th highest points total of his career, and third highest in his CBJ tenure.  

2025-26 Player Review: Dmitri Voronkov2025-26 Player Review: Dmitri VoronkovVoronkov was the 114th pick in the 2019 NHL Draft.

Contract Status - Going into year two of a two-year deal signed in July of 2025 at $4,175,000 per season. 

Games Played - 63 - Down from 73 the year before. 

Goals - 17 - Down from 23 the year before. He had 7 power play goals and one GWG. 

Assists - 15 - Down from 24 the previous season. 

Points - 32 - Down from 47 in 2024-25. 

Four Former Blue Jackets Could Play For Switzerland At 2026 IIHF World ChampionshipsFour Former Blue Jackets Could Play For Switzerland At 2026 IIHF World ChampionshipsThe slew of current and former Blue Jackets could be making the trip to Switzerland this year.

Forwards Grégory Hofmann and Calvin Thürkauf will most likely end up playing in the tournament. 

Hofmann played 24 games for Columbus back in 2021-22 and had 7 points. He currently plays for EV Zug of the Swiss National League. He did not play in the 2026 Winter Olympics. 

Former Blue Jackets Forward Is On Fire Right NowFormer Blue Jackets Forward Is On Fire Right NowThis former Blue Jackets forward is playing some excellent hockey for the Stars.

While the series between the Stars and Wild is currently tied up, Duchene is doing all he can to help Dallas. In four games so far this postseason for the Stars, Duchene has recorded two goals, five assists, and seven points. With this, there is no question that the former Blue Jackets forward is on fire right now.

Ex-Blue Jackets Forward Is Ice-Cold So Far This PostseasonEx-Blue Jackets Forward Is Ice-Cold So Far This PostseasonThis former Blue Jackets forward has had a slow start to the playoffs.

In five games for the Penguins so far this postseason, Chinakhov has zero points and a minus-4 rating. He has also had zero shots in each of his last two games. 

Ex-Blue Jackets Forward Has Big Playoff Moment For Canadiens Ex-Blue Jackets Forward Has Big Playoff Moment For Canadiens This former Blue Jackets forward had a clutch moment with the Canadiens

At the 1:06 mark of the third period, Texier scored the Canadiens' game-winning goal. It was a nice goal for the former Blue Jackets forward, too, as he beat Lightning goalie Andrei Vasilevskiy on the rush with an excellent snapshot.

REPORT: Blue Jackets Defensive Prospect To Return To EuropeREPORT: Blue Jackets Defensive Prospect To Return To EuropeAccording to Elite Prospects European Scout Honza Zoufal,&nbsp;Stanislav Svozil, who was drafted 69th overall in the 2021 NHL Draft, is in talks with HC Kometa Brno, which plays in the&nbsp;<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Czech_Extraliga">Czech Extraliga</a>. Svozil's contract will expire at the end of the season, making him a restricted free agent.&nbsp;

According to Elite Prospects European Scout Honza Zoufal, Stanislav Svozil, who was drafted 69th overall in the 2021 NHL Draft, is in talks with HC Kometa Brno, which plays in the Czech Extraliga. Svozil's contract will expire at the end of the season, making him a restricted free agent.   

OPINION: Re-Sign Corson Ceulemans And Promote Him To The NHLOPINION: Re-Sign Corson Ceulemans And Promote Him To The NHLCorson Ceulemans was drafted 25th overall in 2021.

Ceulemans was drafted 25th overall in 2021 by former GM Jarmo Kekäläinen. The thought when he was drafted was that after college and a year or two in the AHL, he would be ready to go. Unfortunately, Ceulemans ended up being a victim of Kekäläinen's swing for the fence trades of Ivan Provorov and Damon Severson, more specifically, Severson. 

Blue Jackets Must Target Sabres Star Forward This SummerBlue Jackets Must Target Sabres Star Forward This SummerThe Blue Jackets would be wise to target Sabres forward Alex Tuch if he hits the market this off-season.

One specific area that the Blue Jackets could look to improve is their top six. When looking at their roster, one specific need they have is another high-impact winger.

Due to this, if Alex Tuch ends up testing the free-agent market instead of re-signing with the Buffalo Sabres this off-season, the Blue Jackets should strongly consider making a push for him. 


Next Up For Columbus: The NHL Draft Lottery on May 5, 2025, where the CBJ will most likely pick 14 or 15.

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Magic vs Pistons Computer Picks: Our Best Player Prop Projections for Game 7

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The Detroit Pistons will look to complete the 3-1 comeback over the Orlando Magic this afternoon.

We have a plethora of NBA player prop projections for you to use when making your NBA picks.

We also have complete Magic vs. Pistons predictions for May 3.

Magic vs Pistons computer picks for Game 7

Magic MagicPistons Pistons
Cain o5.5 points
-130
Duren o12.5 points
-105
Black o11.5 points
+100
Thompson o9.5 points
-105
Suggs o13.5 points
+100
Harris u17.5 points
+105

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Magic Game 7 computer picks

Jamal Cain Over 5.5 points (-130)

Projection: 7.96 points

Jamal Cain made a name for himself after putting Duren on a poster, and he's played 20+ minutes in three straight for the Orlando Magic

A total of 5.5 is very obtainable, especially when playing that many minutes.

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Anthony Black Over 10.5 points (+100)

Projection: 13.35 points

Anthony Black has had a rough series against the Pistons, but Orlando will need him to score with Detroit putting all the pressure on Banchero.

Black posted 9 points in Game 5, and our model sees a similar game from Black this afternoon.

span style="font-size: 14px;"🔥/span spanBet black Now at bet365!/span

Jalen Suggs Over 12.5 points (+100)

Projection: 14.69 points

Jalen Suggs cleared this line in three of the first five games of this series, but he — along with everyone else — has failed to score often since.

Our projections expect the guard to return to form in this do-or-die game.

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Pistons Game 7 computer picks

Jalen Duren Over 12.5 points (-105)

Projection: 16.27 points

Our player prop projections indicate Jalen Duren will go Over today's point line with relative ease. The big man hasn't been himself this series, but he'll step up when the Detroit Pistons need him most.

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Ausar Thompson Over 9.5 points (-105)

Projection: 11.62 points

Ausar Thompson has played heavy minutes for the Pistons over the last three games, resulting in positive outcomes for the team. His rebounding ability makes him a necessity, and he'll get plenty of floor time to pass this number.

span style="font-size: 14px;"🔥/span spanBet thompson Now at bet365!/span

Harris Under 18.5 points (+105)

Projection: 16.51 points

Tobias Harris has been a stud for the Pistons this series, but our model calls for regression. The vet only averaged 13.3 points per game in the regular season, and he's playing over his head.

span style="font-size: 14px;"🔥/span spanBet harris Now at bet365!/span

How to watch Magic vs Pistons Game 7

LocationLittle Caesars Arena, Detroit, MI
DateSunday, May 3, 2026
Tip-off3:30 p.m. ET
TVABC

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Mets to call up Vidal Bruján to replace Ronny Mauricio

Vidal Bruján prepares to swing in a Mets blue top/white pants spring training uniform
Vidal Bruján | (Photo by Peter Joneleit/Getty Images)

The Mets are set to call up infielder Vidal Bruján to replace Ronny Mauricio on their active roster, according to Mike Puma. Mauricio is heading to the injured list with a left thumb fracture that he suffered in the Mets’ loss to the Angels last night.

Mauricio himself was called up on April 23 to replace Francisco Lindor on the Mets’ active roster, as Lindor suffered a calf injury that doesn’t yet have a specific timetable for return. In 32 plate appearances in the big leagues this year, Mauricio has hit .219/.219/.313 with a 46 wRC+, and he’s had a rather absurd 53.6 percent chase rate.

Bruján was a consensus top-100 prospect in the sport in ahead of the 2019 through 2022 seasons as he worked his way up through the Rays’ minor league system. But that promise has never really materialized, as he’s hit just .199/.267/.276 and been worth -2.0 fWAR in 262 major league games. He’s been claimed on waivers four times since last summer: by the Orioles from the Cubs, the Braves from the Orioles, the Twins from the Braves, and the Mets from the Twins.

We’ll see whether the Mets give Bruján significant playing time at shortstop, the position where he’s spent the vast majority of both the 2026 season with Syracuse and his professional career. The team could opt to play Bo Bichette at short, Brett Baty at third, and Mark Vientos at first on an everyday basis instead while keeping Bruján on the roster as a defensive replacement.

Dodgers on Deck: Monday, May 4 at Astros

HOUSTON, TEXAS - JULY 28: Shohei Ohtani #17 of the Los Angeles Dodgers steals second as Jose Altuve #27 of the Houston Astros fields the throw in the ninth inning at Minute Maid Park on July 28, 2024 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Dodgers continue their road trip on Monday night against the Houston Astros at Daikin Park.

Yoshinobu Yamamoto is coming off his shortest start of the season, with five innings and four runs (three earned) allowed against the Miami Marlins at Dodger Stadium. He lasted at least six innings in his previous eight straight starts and 15 out of 17 dating back to 2025.

The Dodgers’ last trip to Houston was in 2024, when they lost two of three games from July 26-28. They were also swept by the Astros at Dodger Stadium last July 4-6, and have lost six of their last seven games against Houston, dating back to 2023.

Los Angeles is 4-3 on the road against the Astros dating back to 2020.

Monday game info
  • Teams: Dodgers at Astros
  • Ballpark: Daikin Park, Houston
  • Time: 5:10 p.m. PT
  • TV: SportsNet LA
  • Radio: AM 570 (English), KTNQ 1020 AM (Spanish)

Braves lose Ronald Acuña Jr. to IL, but welcome back Spencer Strider

The Atlanta Braves' charmed ride to start the 2026 season - their 24-10 record is the best in the major leagues - finally hit a pothole as they placed All-Star outfielder Ronald Acuña Jr. on the injured list Sunday, May 3, with a strained left hamstring.

Yet the club also got positive injury news, as right-hander Spencer Strider was activated from the IL and will make his season debut against the Colorado Rockies on Sunday after missing the first five weeks with a left oblique strain.

Acuña was injured Saturday running out a grounder in the second inning at Coors Field and was removed from the game. The five-time All-Star has been dogged by injuries the past five seasons, as he tore the ACL in his right and left knees in that span. He was off to a decent start this season, with a .252/.362/.378 line and two home runs.

The majority of his plate appearances figure to be consumed by outfielders Eli White and Mike Yastrzemski, while Mauricio Dubón will get more reps in left field, leaving shortstop duties to Jorge Mateo before the return of the injured Ha Seong Kim.

Ronald Acuña Jr. has been a key part of the Braves' early-season success, but he's lost to the injured list with a hamstring strain.

Strider posted a 4.45 ERA last season in his return from a second Tommy John surgery. The Braves rotation has performed admirably despite a litany of injuries to stars like Strider and Spencer Schwellenbach, posting a 3.08 ERA - third in the major leagues - without them.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Braves' Ronald Acuña out with hamstring strain, Spencer Strider back

Hanner making key contributions so far in Triple-A ’pen

LAKELAND, FL - MARCH 12: Bradley Hanner #93 of the New York Yankees pitches during the spring training game against the Detroit Tigers at Publix Field at Joker Marchant Stadium on March 12, 2026 in Lakeland, Florida. The Yankees defeated the Tigers 4-3. (Photo by Mark Cunningham/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

One of the strengths of the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders this season is their bullpen.

Entering Saturday, the Yankees’ Triple-A club ranked second in the International League in bullpen ERA at 3.40 and paced Triple-A in fewest walks with 57. Thanks to the bullpen’s efforts, the RailRiders have nine wins in games where they were trailing at some point.

“The bullpen’s done great, we’ve relied on each other,” reliever Bradley Hanner said. “We’re a tight-knit group down there. It’s been fun to kind of piggy-back off each other. One guy does good, you want to keep the train moving. It’s been great so far and hopefully we can keep doing that.”

Hanner has been one of the key contributors. In his last six outings, covering 9.1 innings, the 27-year-old right-hander from Virginia has not allowed a run with six hits, one walk and 12 strikeouts. His most recent appearance Thursday against the Buffalo Bisons, he threw 2.2 perfect innings with four strikeouts. Overall, Hanner is 1-0 with a 1.26 ERA in nine games. He has allowed three runs (two earned) on 10 hits with six walks and 18 strikeouts in 14.1 innings. 

One reason for Hanner’s success so far this season has been the work he has done on his four-seamer. 

“Coming in with the Yankees, that was one of the bigger things – to kind of clean up to orientation of the four-seam,” Hanner said. “So far we’ve kind of nailed it. It’s been good. I don’t know the numbers and stuff to back it up, but I think they’re all in the positive. Everything is trending with the four-seam, I feel more and more comfortable with it as we go on. That’s been the biggest key.”

Drafted by the Minnesota Twins in the 21st round in 2019, he spent three seasons in that organization before before being claimed off waivers by the Cleveland Guardians organization in December 2022. 

Hanner spent the 2023 campaign in Double-A with the Akron Rubber Ducks. He split time in 2024 with Akron and the Triple-A Columbus Clippers. Last season with Columbus, Hanner appeared in 42 games in relief and was 4-4 with two saves, three holds, a 4.74 ERA and 62 strikeouts in 49.1 innings. The Yankees signed him as a free agent in December.

Coming to the RailRiders, Hanner had a familiar face with bullpen coach Pete Larson. “I had him in Low-A when I was with the Twins,” Hanner said. “It’s been fun to reunite with him.”

Other than Larson and fellow reliever Brent Headrick, Hanner didn’t know many players here. Still, he said it has been a smooth transition coming to the Yankees organization.

“Everybody’s been really welcoming, accommodating. Everything you need, they’ve got everything you could ever imagine to help you get better,” Hanner said. “It’s been great.”

All that remains is for Hanner to one day get that call to the major league. He admits he thinks about it at times, but knows it is out of his control.

“All I can do is show up every day, work hard and pitch to the best of my abilities,” he said. “I’d be lying if I said I haven’t thought about it at times. But I’m not losing sleep over getting the call. If it happens, it happens and I’ll be super-grateful for that. Obviously it’s what everybody dreams of.”

If and when that call comes, Hanner believes he is ready.

“I feel very good about where I’m at right now. I don’t know what else I would need to do,” Hanner said. “Keep putting up zeroes, keep pounding the zone. I don’t think that there’s an outlier that I need. I don’t think it’s anything like that. I think it’s just time and place and pitching well. Not getting lucky, just right-man, right-spot situation.”

Where to watch Minnesota Wild vs. Colorado Avalanche Game 1 NHL playoffs: Live stream, start time, TV channel, odds for Sunday, May 3

The Minnesota Wild and Colorado Avalanche open their second-round NHL playoff series on Sunday. The Wild beat the Dallas Stars 4-2 in the first round while the Avalanche swept the Los Angeles Kings. The Colorado Avalanche are favored with a -194 moneyline compared to the Minnesota Wild's +161. The over/under for the matchup is set at 5.5 goals.

  • Date: Sunday, May 3

  • Time: 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT

  • Where: Ball Arena, Denver, CO

  • TV Channels: TNT, truT, HBO, CBC

  • Live Stream:ESPN+ | Follow on Yahoo Sports

  • Spread: Colorado Avalanche -1.5

  • Moneyline: Colorado Avalanche -194 (63.3%) / Minnesota Wild +161 (36.7%)

  • Over/Under: 5.5

Where to watch Montreal Canadiens vs. Tampa Bay Lightning Game 7 NHL playoffs: Live stream, start time, TV channel, odds for Sunday, May 3

The Montreal Canadiens and Tampa Bay Lightning face off in Game 7 to determine the winner of their first-round playoff series. The Lightning forced Game 7 with a 1-0 victory in OT on Friday. The combined score of the previous six games is 14-14 and all of the six games were decided by a single goal. The Lightning are favored with a -161 moneyline compared to the Montreal Canadiens' +135.

  • Date: Sunday, May 3

  • Time: 6 p.m. ET / 3 p.m. PT

  • Where: Benchmark International Arena, Tampa, FL

  • TV Channels: TNT, truT, HBO, CBC

  • Live Stream:ESPN+ | Follow on Yahoo Sports

  • Spread: Tampa Bay Lightning -1.5

  • Moneyline: Tampa Bay Lightning -161 (59.2%) / Montreal Canadiens +135 (40.8%)

  • Over/Under: 5.5

Best NBA Player Props Today for May 3: Mitchell Makin Money

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We’ve got two more Eastern Conference Game 7 matchups on tap, and there are plenty of big names at the heart of the action to target for player props.

I’m looking at stars like Cade Cunningham, Paolo Banchero, and Donovan Mitchell to make their mark in these critical games.

Read on to see how I’m backing each of these players in my free NBA picks for Sunday, May 3.

Best NBA player props today

PlayerPickbet365
HornetsCade CunninhgamOver 44.5 points + rebounds + assists-115
HornetsPaolo BancheroOver 5.5 assists-105
HornetsDonovan MitchellOver 4.5 rebounds+120

Prop #1: Cade Cunningham Over 44.5 points + rebounds + assists

-115 at bet365

Cade Cunningham has played beyond his regular-season numbers in this series, averaging 32.5 points, 6.5 rebounds, and 6.3 assists per game on 44.9% shooting.

Cunningham has mostly acted as a primary scorer but has also served as a primary playmaker when he’s needed to, as he’s put up nine or more dimes twice in the series. Overall, Cunningham is putting up 45.3 PRA per game in this series.

And while that might seem unsustainable given his regular season output (39.4 PRA), we have to consider he’s logging serious minutes, being on the court for 40.5 minutes per game in this series compared to 33.9 during the season. 

The Detroit Pistons aren’t going away from Cunningham in Game 7.

  • Time: 3:30 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: ABC

Prop #2: Paolo Banchero Over 5.5 assists

-105 at bet365

If the Orlando Magic are going to score an upset in Game 7, it will come on the back of Paolo Banchero.

The 23-year-old forward had an inconsistent season — which led to some discourse about how good he really is — and that has shown up again in this series, where a 45-point explosion in Game 5 was followed by a 4-for-20 shooting performance in Game 6.

One area where Banchero has remained relatively consistent is his ability to get the ball to his teammates. He’s averaging 6.3 assists per game in this series and has dished out six or more assists in four of the past five games.

Whether or not Banchero gets his shooting touch back in Game 7 (and maybe especially if he doesn’t), he should be able to distribute the ball to his teammates the same way he has throughout this series, which makes the Over on his assists total a smart play.

  • Time: 3:30 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: ABC

Prop #3: Donovan Mitchell Over 4.5 rebounds

+120 at bet365

There are a lot of ways we could approach tonight’s Game 7 between the Cleveland Cavaliers and Toronto Raptors, and even Donovan Mitchell himself has a lot of enticing props on the board.

But with the odds available, I’m being drawn to his rebounding total, which is offering plus money at a reasonably low number.

Mitchell has averaged 5.2 rebounds in this series after grabbing 4.5 boards per game in the regular season. In each of the last five games, he’s picked up at least five rebounds.

That continues a trend that started late in the regular season, as he finished strong with 6.3 rebounds per game in April.

Toronto isn’t a particularly effective team on the boards — ranking 16th in the NBA in rebounding rate this year at 49.5% — and Mitchell has had a big edge on the defensive glass when battling with the less physical Ja’Kobe Walter. 

  • Time: 7:30 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: Peacock/NBC

These props are available now at bet365, one of our best betting sites.

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