Giants' rotation continues to look like glaring need after ugly loss to Braves

Giants' rotation continues to look like glaring need after ugly loss to Braves originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — There is never a good time to lose six consecutive games, but within the clubhouse, players know that one stretch of the year sticks out more than any other to front offices. 

Buster Posey was on the 2019 Giants team that caught fire for a stretch in July and convinced then-lead executive Farhan Zaidi to stand pat at the deadline instead of trading some big names. Last year, Posey watched closely as Zaidi held Blake Snell and others, a decision that was made in part because a few days worth of dominant starting pitching convinced the front office that an MLB playoff run could be made. While the Giants do not often sell, Posey has seen plenty of other teams in the division and league quickly go from buy to sell because of a stretch of lackluster play in late July.

Things can change in a hurry this time of year, and it’s now up to Posey to decide how the front office will react to a six-game losing streak. On Monday, his manager hinted at what the clubhouse might be forcing. 

“It’s not a good look, what we’re doing right now,” Bob Melvin told reporters in Atlanta. “It’s not timely at all. They know that.”

When Posey picked up Melvin’s contract option a few weeks ago, he forcefully said that better play had to come from within the clubhouse. Things briefly got better, but over their last six games, the Giants haven’t looked like a playoff team. They have not done much of anything to encourage Posey to follow the Rafael Devers trade with additional moves, but if the former catcher does want to keep pushing chips into the center of the table, it’s easy to see what he’ll need. 

Even before Monday’s game, there were serious questions about the rotation. Hayden Birdsong had a start skipped at the end of the first half and Justin Verlander kicked off the second half with a clunker, dropping to 0-8 with a 4.99 ERA. After Monday’s 9-5 loss, the Giants have a potential rotation hole to deal with. 

Birdsong was supposed to grow into a foundational piece, but he was lost Monday, walking four and hitting one while failing to record an out. He threw 25 pitches and just six were strikes, and while the performance was difficult to watch, the main culprit also was not new. 

Birdsong has 25 walks in 27 2/3 innings over his last seven starts. Over that span, he has an 8.13 ERA. 

“Every single time I have struggles [with my command] I try to find it,” Birdsong told reporters in Atlanta. “I haven’t found it yet. We’ll keep working.”

The Giants did not offer much Monday in terms of what’s next for Birdsong, but it’s hard to imagine he’ll start against the New York Mets on “Sunday Night Baseball.” Melvin noted the outing was “back to square one with him” in terms of lack of command, and when that happens to a young pitcher, the solution often is to take extreme measures. Given how important Birdsong is to their future, the Giants could opt for a full reboot, allowing him to work on any mechanical issues in a series of bullpen sessions and then ease himself into the Triple-A rotation in search of answers. 

If a roster move is made, it’ll need to come Tuesday, because the rest of the pitching staff desperately needs fresh arms. The Giants threw 188 pitches in eight innings, including 53 from Spencer Bivens, who had pitched 1 1/3 innings Sunday. Tristan Beck threw 4 1/3 on Friday and came back Monday for another 1 1/3 innings. New lefty reliever Matt Gage threw a career-high 41 pitches, and Ryan Walker pitched two innings. 

The Giants realistically could use two fresh bullpen arms for the final two games of this series. That’s a short-term concern. Long-term, it’s clear that the rotation will need a boost if they are to reach the postseason, which brings this all back to Posey.

Does the president of baseball operations still believe in this group? If he does, he’ll need to find a starter, and they don’t come cheap in July. The Giants don’t want to add much payroll after taking on the rest of the Devers contract, and they’re a bit short on desirable assets after dealing Kyle Harrison and their 2024 first-round pick in that deal, but they’ll need to find a way to add somebody.

The best options in Triple-A are Carson Seymour and Carson Whisenhunt, but relying on unproven starters can be dangerous in the second half, a lesson the Giants are seeing first hand. There’s enough reliever depth to get by with a few full bullpen games in the next couple weeks, but that would ultimately weaken the group that has kept the rest of the roster afloat. 

The bullpen had to wear it Monday in what ended up being the ugliest all-around game of the year. The Giants made multiple errors, let Ronald Acuña Jr. score from first on a single, and gave up another run on a misplayed fly ball to left-center. Melvin said the Acuña sequence looked “terrible.”

“It was just another instance today that was not a good look for us,” he said.  

There’s been a lot of that recently, and the timing couldn’t be worse.

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Hockey Canada Includes Ottawa Connections In Monday's Olympic Announcement

Hockey Canada has announced its coaching and support staff for the 2026 Winter Olympics and there's some love for Ottawa in the mix.

The Senators will be represented by John Forget, their Head Equipment Manager, and Dom Nicoletta, their Head Athletic Therapist. They'll both join Team Canada in their pursuit of this country's first Olympic men's hockey gold in 11 years.

Forget and Nicoletta are no strangers to international competition. Forget will be on his seventh assignment with Team Canada, including five appearances at the IIHF Men's World Championship. He’s earned two gold medals and one silver during those tournaments.

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Nicoletta has donned the red leaf on four occasions, including three Worlds. He's the guy who's sometimes known to Sens fans as the bearer of bad news. When a Sens player goes down the tunnel with injury, the TV cameras frequently catch Nicoletta coming out from the room and whispering news about the player's status/diagnosis into the coach's ear.

He and Forget helped Canada claim gold in 2021 and secure a silver medal in 2019. Most recently, the pair were part of the off-ice crew that helped Canada win the 4 Nations Face-Off this past February.

But this will be the first Olympic Games for both Forget and Nicoletta, giving them a shot at not only adding an Olympic medal, but also a chance to enjoy all the things that make the games special – the Olympic Village, the other sports, and of course, the opening and closing ceremonies.

They're not likely to be joined in Italy by any of the Sens' Canadian players, but they will be joined at the Games by Senators forwards Brady Tkachuk and Tim Stützle, who are set to represent the U.S. and Germany, respectively. All countries unveiled the first six players for their preliminary rosters last month, and both players made the top six. The other players will be named later this year.

Other Senators who might make their way to the Olympics include Jake Sanderson (USA), Nik Matinpalo and Leevi Merilainen (FIN), Linus Ullmark (SWE) and Lars Eller (DEN).

Basically, Hockey Canada declared on Monday they're sticking with what's working because not a lot has in recent years. They did win at the 4 Nations Face-off in February, so they're running it back with the same coaching and support staff this coming February.

From Hockey Canada:

Assistant coaches Bruce Cassidy (Ottawa, ON / Vegas, NHL), Peter DeBoer (Dunnville, ON) and Rick Tocchet (Scarborough, ON / Philadelphia, NHL), assistant coach and eye-in-the-sky Misha Donskov (London, ON), consultant David Alexander (Moncton, NB / St. Louis, NHL), director of performance analysis James Emery (Calgary, AB) and video coordinator Elliott Mondou (Grand-Mère, QC/St. Louis, NHL) have been named to the coaching staff alongside Jon Cooper (Prince George, BC / Tampa Bay, NHL), who was named head coach for the 2026 Olympics last June.

The coaching staff was selected by Cooper, general manager Doug Armstrong (Sarnia, ON / St. Louis, NHL), assistant general managers Julien BriseBois (Greenfield Park, QC / Tampa Bay, NHL), Jim Nill (Hanna, AB / Dallas, NHL) and Don Sweeney (St. Stephen, NB / Boston, NHL), and director of player personnel Kyle Dubas (Sault Ste. Marie, ON / Pittsburgh, NHL).

There are plenty of Ottawa 67's ties as well. Cassidy starred for the 67's back in the 80's. Donskov is a former 67's associate coach. And the club's current Head of Athlete Performance & Strength and Conditioning, Sean Young, was also named to Canada's staff.

Here's the full list of Canada's support staff from Hockey Canada:

  • Sport physiotherapist Kent Kobelka (Revelstoke, BC/Calgary, NHL)
  • Athletic therapist Domenic Nicoletta (Sault Ste. Marie, ON/Ottawa, NHL)
  • Massage therapists Marcin Goszczynski (Calgary, AB) and Andy Hüppi (Schmerikon, SUI)
  • Team physician Dr. Ian Auld (Victoria, BC/Calgary, NHL)
  • Equipment managers John Forget (Oshawa, ON/Ottawa, NHL) and Darren Granger (Brandon, MB/Los Angeles, NHL)
  • Strength and conditioning coach Sean Young (Ennismore, ON/Ottawa, OHL)
  • Mental performance consultant Dr. Ryan Hamilton (Fredericton, NB/Tampa Bay, NHL)
  • Hockey operations managers Mitchell Furlotte (Bathurst, NB) and Kurt Keats (Winnipeg, MB)
  • Hockey operations coordinator Miah Armitage (Creston, BC)
  • Media relations vice-president Sean Kelso (Vancouver, BC/Calgary, NHL)
  • Media relations manager Spencer Sharkey (Hamilton, ON)

By Steve Warne
The Hockey News Ottawa
Image Credit: Brian Fluharty-Imagn Images

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Francisco Alvarez on returning to Mets following Triple-A stint: 'I figured out who I am as a player'

Francisco Alvarez is back in the big leagues.

Following a 19-game stint with Triple-A Syracuse in which the 23-year-old backstop belted 11 home runs, Alvarez was recalled ahead of Monday’s series-opener against the Los Angeles Angels.

Speaking in the Mets' clubhouse on Monday afternoon, Alvarez, who is starting and hitting eighth in the order, said that he “learned a lot” from his time back in the minors.

“I think being down in Triple-A, what helped me was I learned how to be patient,” Alvarez said, via a translator. “I continued to work hard, continued to do what I needed to do, and just put in the time to eventually get back to the big leagues.”

“I figured out who I am as a player, who I am as a person, and I think that’s going to help me going forward,” he later added.

Alvarez, who emerged as one of the top prospects in baseball as he rose through the Mets’ farm system, burst onto the scene in 2023, when he hit 25 home runs and drove in 63 runs in 123 games.

But that tantalizing power took a step back in 2024, when he hit just 11 home runs in 100 games, and then again at the start of this season, as he hit only three home runs and posted a .652 OPS in 35 games before being sent down.

According to manager Carlos Mendoza, though, Alvarez's impressive run at Syracuse was about more than pure production.

"Since day one, when he went back down there, in talking to the manager and some of the coaches, how impressed they were with his work ethic," Mendoza said. "He got down there, not an easy situation after being here at the big league level at such a young age, and then just kind of like a wake-up call. ‘Hey, you’ve got to go back to the minor leagues,’ and for him to go down there, and like I said from day one saying ‘What do I have to do to get back up there?’ And he did that since day one.

"We saw the results. It seems like for the last week he hit a home run every day, but just how engaged he was with the pitching staff, everything from the defensive side, whether it was the receiving, the blocking, the throwing, the game-planning, the game-calling, everything. Open to feedback, it was just pretty impressive. And we’re all proud of him, because it’s not easy to do."

Alvarez looked much more like his 2023 self for Syracuse, hitting .299 with 11 home runs in 19 games. Now that he’s back in Queens, the goal is to stick in the majors for years to come.

“It’s real important for me,” Alvarez said about sticking in the big leagues. “It’s like when you stumble on a rock, you don’t want to stumble there again. So it’s just continue to move forward and avoid that rock so you don’t stumble again.”

“I feel really balanced right now,” he added. “I don’t feel like I’m too high, I don’t feel like I’m too low. So I feel really balanced right now, and I feel like I’m exactly where I need to be.”

Former Predators Captain Inducted Into Tennessee Sports Hall Of Fame

Jan 16, 2025; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Former Nashville Predators players defenseman Shea Weber, goalie Pekka Rivne (35) and General Manager David Poiledo a ceremonial puck drop with Nashville Predators defenseman Roman Josi (59) and Chicago Blackhawks defenseman Seth Jones (4) as part of the Gold Jacket presentation , at Bridgestone Arena. Mandatory Credit: Steve Roberts-Imagn Images

Shea Weber spent 11 seasons with the Nashville Predators during his NHL career, and one would be hard-pressed to come up with enough adjectives to describe his accomplishments.

The accolades he has received recently certainly speak for themselves. After being inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame last November, the former Preds captain was inducted into the inaugural class of the Predators Golden Hall.

Over the weekend, Weber received his third entry into a Hall this past year after being officially inducted as a member of the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame in Nashville. He was one of 20 members inducted into this year’s class after an official announcement was made back in April.

Mike Maguire, a longtime friend of Weber was in attendance at the ceremony and accepted the honor on Weber’s behalf.

“Shea Weber exemplifies the grit, leadership, and dedication that define a true champion," Brad Willis, Executive Director of the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame, said in a statement. “From his years as the backbone of the Nashville Predators to his impact on the sport of hockey as a whole, Shea has left a lasting legacy in Tennessee. We are honored to welcome him to the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame Class of 2025.”

Weber joins former Predators teammates Pekka Rinne, Mike Fisher and David Legwand as TSHF members, along with former GM David Poile and team broadcaster Terry Crisp.

In 20 NHL seasons, Weber played in 1,038 regular-season games, totaling 589 points (224-365-589). In 97 playoff contests, he recorded 42 points (18-24-42).

Weber spent six of his 11 seasons with the Predators as their captain, and quickly established himself as an elite right-shot two-way defenseman. In 2016, he captured the Mark Messier Leadership Award and finished twice as the runner-up for the Norris Memorial Trophy as the NHL’s top blueliner.

Weber’s reputation as a hard shooter was well-earned. He took home NHL Hardest Shot Competition honors four times, including three consecutive years from 2015-17. One topped out at 108.5 miles an hour.

The seven-time NHL All-Star also won gold twice with Team Canada at the 2010 and 2014 Winter Olympics.

Weber was taken as the 49th overall pick by the Predators in the 2003 NHL Draft. It was fitting that the draft was held in Nashville that year. After 11 seasons with the Predators, Weber was traded to the Montreal Canadiens in late June of 2016 for P.K. Subban.

Norwegian Former Flames, Stars Prospect Signs In Sweden

Norwegian forward Mathias Emilio Pettersen, 25, has signed a two-year contract with Djurgården IF, the Stockholm-based SHL club announced on Monday.

“I’m super excited to play the next two years with Djurgården,” Pettersen is quoted in the club’s announcement. “I’m incredibly excited to play in front of a packed Hovet (the team’s home rink) and the best fans in all of hockey.”

For Pettersen, this marks a return to Europe after playing overseas since 2014.

“He has come a long way in North America with college hockey and a number of years in the AHL,” said Djurgården GM Niklas Wikegård. “Emilio is already very talented, but we believe we can make him even better.”

Pettersen was born in Manglerud, Norway but at the age of 14, went overseas to play youth hockey in Connecticut. He then spent two seasons in the USHL and was drafted by the Calgary Flames in the sixth round, 167th overall, in 2018. That was followed by two years at the University of Denver.

Report: Anton Frondell Will Sign With Blackhawks This Week; Won’t Attend Training CampReport: Anton Frondell Will Sign With Blackhawks This Week; Won’t Attend Training Camp Swedish center Anton Frondell will sign an entry-level contract this upcoming week with the Chicago Blackhawks, the team that took him third overall at this year’s NHL Entry Draft, according to Swedish journalist Gunnar Nordström.

Between 2020 and 2025, the 5-foot-10, 178-pound Pettersen played 322 AHL regular-season and playoff games for the Stockton Heat, Calgary Wranglers and Texas Stars, recording 164 points and 144 penalty minutes. In 2024, he was traded by the Flames to the Dallas Stars for Riley Damiani, but the only NHL games he played for either organization were in the preseason.

Internationally, Pettersen has represented Norway at two IIHF U-18 World Championships and one World Junior Championship – all at the Division I Group A level – and at two senior-elite-level World Championships. 

Pettersen joins a Djurgården team that was just promoted to the SHL from the second-tier HockeyAllsvenskan but is trying to build a competitive roster. The team will notably feature two 18-year-old forwards who were chosen in the first round of this year’s NHL Entry Draft – Victor Eklund and Anton Frondell.

In addition to Pettersen, Eklund and Frondell, Djurgården’s lineup for the upcoming season will also include veteran center Marcus Krüger, who was a two-time Stanley Cup champion with the Chicago BlackhawksFinnish right winger Jesse YlönenSwedish defenseman Gustav Lindström, and Swedish goaltender Magnus Hellberg.

Photo © Bob Frid-Imagn Images.

Islanders Sign Victor Eklund But He’s Probably Returning To Sweden TooIslanders Sign Victor Eklund But He’s Probably Returning To Sweden Too Swedish winger Victor Eklund, 18, has signed a three-year entry-level contract with the New York Islanders, the team that drafted him 16th overall at the recent NHL Entry Draft, the club announced on Monday.

Projecting Sabres Trade Cost – Mason Marchment

The Buffalo Sabres should be in the market for an impact top-six forward after dealing winger JJ Peterka to the Utah Mammoth for defenseman Michael Kesselring and winger Josh Doan, but the opening weeks of free agency did not provide GM Kevyn Adams with an opportunity to replace Peterka’s production, and with the two-year deal signed last week with defenseman Bowen Byram, Adams will have to try to acquire a scoring forward with younger players, prospects, and/or draft picks. 

Mason Marchment’s name was being floated out in trade rumor land before July 1, as the Dallas Stars were looking to move the big winger to clear cap space and re-sign Matt Duchene and Jamie Benn. The Stars found him a home, sending the veteran forward to the Seattle Kraken for a 2026 third round pick and a 2025 fourth rounder, but his stay in the Pacific Northwest may not be lengthy, since he is in the last year of a four-year contract. 

The 30-year-old was an undrafted free agent signing of the Toronto Maple Leafs, who won a Calder Cup in 2018 in Toronto, but never got a chance to show his talents with the Leafs, as he was traded to Florida just before the league COVID shutdown in 2020. After an 18-goal season with the Panthers in 2022, Marchment signed with Dallas as an unrestricted free agent and has scored 56 goals over three seasons.      

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Marchment a has 10-team modified no-trade list in the final year of his deal, something that is always a big hurdle for the Sabres, but he is from Uxbridge, ON (NE of Toronto), which could make him more willing to accept a trade to the Sabres. 

What Would It Cost?

The Kraken are in a transitional phase from a team that added veterans in expansion and signed free agents for a playoff pursuit to a group centered around younger core players like Calder Trophy winner Matty Beniers, and center Shane Wright. Former Sabres GM Jason Botterill has four veterans (Marchment, Jordan Eberle, Jaden Schwartz, and Jamie Oleksiak) on expiring contracts, which makes the Kraken a potential big player early in the season or before the trade deadline in the seller’s market if they start slow. 

The Kraken are flush with draft capital and are likely to be looking for young NHL-ready players if they choose to move a forward like Marchment early next season. As it gets closer to the deadline, Botterill may be willing to deal the big winger to at least recoup the draft picks he gave up in June. The Sabres already gave up their 2026 second round pick in the Josh Norris deal, so they would have to be willing to give up picks in 2027 or 2028 if they want to add some offensive punch to their forward group. 

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Sharpshooter Doug McDermott reportedly returning to Kings on one-year contract

Doug McDermott is returning to Sacramento next season on a one-year, veteran minimum contract, a move his agent has confirmed to Shams Charania of ESPN, and which has since been confirmed by other sources.

The contract is for $3.6 million, and with it the Kings remain over the salary cap but below the luxury tax line and have filled their 15 roster spots (it is not yet known if McDermott's contract is fully guaranteed).

McDermott, a former lottery pick, enters his 12th NBA season. He played a limited role for the Kings last season, getting into just 42 games and averaging just more than eight minutes in those games, while averaging 3.5 points a night. His value comes as a shooter, as he hit 43.6% of his 3-pointers last season.

McDermott, a 6'6" wing, will again be deep on a Kings depth chart that includes Zach LaVine, DeMar DeRozan, Keegan Murray, just-drafted Nique Clifford, Keon Ellis, and Isaac Jones. We will see how coach Doug Christie juggles that depth, and how many of those players remain with Sacramento past the trade deadline.

NHL Prospect Pool Overview ’25-26: Minnesota Wild Have Quality Talent Nearly Everywhere

The Minnesota Wild are the latest focus of our NHL prospect pool overview series.

Tony Ferrari digs into the Wild’s strengths and weaknesses, latest draft class, positional depth chart, next player in line for an NHL opportunity and more. A player who no longer holds rookie eligibility in the NHL is considered graduated and no longer a prospect for these exercises, with few exceptions.

Initial Thoughts

The Minnesota braintrust has had plenty of success at the draft.

Judd Brackett, the director of amateur scouting for the Minnesota Wild, has an impressive track record of finding top talent, dating back to his days in Vancouver. Along with the rest of the scouting staff in Minnesota, he’s built the Wild’s pipeline with high-end talent and solid positional depth.

Some Wild youngsters could play bigger roles in the NHL this upcoming season, including Liam Ohgren. While he is no longer Calder-eligible because he just surpassed the 25-game limit, this might be the 21-year-old’s quasi-rookie season, where he enters the Minnesota lineup full-time. The Swedish left winger is physical with a high motor and excellent finishing ability. On the forecheck, Ohgren disrupts defenders and forces them into making poor decisions. Ohgren could step into a middle-six role and make an immediate impact as a depth scorer and a hard-to-play-against depth piece.

Speaking of middle-six forwards, Danila Yurov finished his KHL obligations and signed his entry-level contract at the end of this past season, which gives the 2022 first-round pick the chance to come to North America and put his game on display. He will likely step into the NHL lineup right away. He’s a center at heart with the intelligence and two-way acumen to jump into a pivot position as well. Yurov, 21, doesn’t drive play, but he does all the little things that allow his linemates to shine. He’s a bit of an unsung hero in that sense.

Charlie Stramel has had a somewhat rocky ride since being drafted. His freshman season at the University of Wisconsin was his draft year, and he scored at a decent clip for one of the youngest players in college hockey. His physical tools, flashes of skill and nifty passing attracted teams, but his total package was a bit raw, and his skating was a concern. After a sizeable step back as a sophomore, Stramel transferred to Michigan State University, where he improved significantly this past season. He is still a project and will likely need some AHL time after college, but the size, physicality and playmaking are all interesting bets. 

Hunter Haight had a very solid rookie season in the AHL, putting up 20 goals and 34 points over 67 games. He finished second in goal-scoring on the team and fifth in points. Haight is a very skilled and tactical player who hasn’t ever been an elite scorer, but he’s always found a way to make himself a more than capable depth scorer. The biggest question is whether he can find a way to mesh his tools and see the same kind of success at the pro level on a consistent basis. 

Ryder Ritchie must also find a way to blend all of his skills and tools together. The former Medicine Hat Tiger is headed to Boston University, which is an excellent place for the crafty puckhandler and dual-threat scorer to hone his craft. Ritchie flashes high-end potential in the offensive zone and in transition. Hopefully for him, college will help him turn those flashes into consistency. 

While the forward corps is loaded, the same can be said about the defense. 

Zeev Buium is one of the most exciting young defenders in hockey. Over two seasons at the University of Denver, he helped lead the team to one national championship and another final appearance, earning first-team all-American honors both years. He led the nation in scoring by a defenseman both years as well. 

Buium is a true difference-maker who can control the game at both ends of the ice. He calms play defensively and drives chances offensively. Buium isn’t quite as dynamic as Lane Hutson, but he is more well-rounded and could impact the Wild lineup in a similar fashion to Hutson’s impact on the Montreal Canadiens this past season. 

David Jiricek isn’t a rookie anymore because of the NHL games he’s played between the Columbus Blue Jackets and the Wild. That said, Jiricek has yet to establish himself as an NHLer, but the potential that remains in his game is incredible. Jiricek enjoys the physical side of the game and also has some intriguing offensive skills. If Jiricek can be a bit more fluid on his feet, he could become an effective top-four defender. 

Carson Lambos is also set to challenge for a roster spot in training camp. The 22-year-old is a very capable two-way blueliner who has grown so much defensively that it may be his strength. Lambos is fluid on his feet and strong in the tough areas. He has some impressive passing and a big shot. He can do a bit of everything, and if he can continue that trend at the NHL level, he could very well be a key piece. 

Aron Kiviharju’s stock fell dramatically after coming into his draft year as one of the top defenseman in the class. Injuries, inconsistencies and lack of physical development were among the reasons. Kiviharju is still one of the most impressive passers among defenders in the draft over the last few years. His feet don’t always keep up, and that’s affected his ability to excel at both ends of the ice. Kiviharju’s upside remains intriguing, but he may ultimately prove to be a very good European pro player. 

David Spacek took a big step in the AHL. He’s become a fixture on the Czech men’s team over the past couple of years as well. Spacek is a solid rush defender who keeps good gaps and understands how to read incoming attackers. He isn’t a flashy player, but he knows how to maneuver the puck around the ice. Spacek could be a solid depth defender. 

One of the best goalie prospects in the world, Jesper Wallstedt, will finally get his shot in the NHL now that Marc-Andre Fleury has retired and opened a full-time spot. Wallstedt is one of the most technically sound netminders we’ve seen come through the draft in years. He understands how to track the puck in open ice and identifies where he needs to be to cut down the angle. Filip Gustavsson is the starter in Minnesota coming into the season, but it wouldn’t be a complete shock to see Wallstedt earn his way into split starts by season’s end. 

U-23 Players Likely to Play NHL Games This Season

Zeev Buium (D), Danila Yurov (C/W), Carson Lambos (D), David Jiricek (D), Liam Ohgren (LW)

Lirim Amidovski (Logan Taylor-OHL Images)

2025 NHL Draft Class

Round 2, 52nd overall - Theodor Hallquisth, D, Orebro Jr. (Swe.)

Round 4, 102nd overall - Adam Benak, C, Youngstown (USHL)

Round 4, 121st overall - Lirim Amidovski, RW, North Bay (OHL)

Round 4, 123rd overall - Carter Klippenstein, C, Brandon (WHL)

Round 5, 141st overall - Justin Kipkie, D, Victoria (WHL)

It was a bit surprising when the Wild took Theodor Hallquisth in the second round, but the bet on the tools finding a way to work makes some sense. Hallquisth’s mobility has always been an issue to a degree, especially in his own zone. If he can improve his skating, his strengths will only be enhanced. 

Hallquisth has some very nice passing in transition and starts the breakout as well as anyone outside of the top group of defenders. He appears to understand how to evade pressure at a lower speed and with limited agility. If he can improve those areas, he could be a very valuable player as a transitional defender. 

With their first of three picks in the fourth round, the Wild took undersized center Adam Benak. Coming into the year, there were comparisons to Cole Caufield or Logan Stankoven due to their size, but Benak is different from both of those players. He’s more of a playmaker with some of the most dynamic passing and puckhandling of anyone in the draft class. His shot is certainly a weapon, but he isn’t a pure goal-scorer the way Caufield is, and he doesn’t quite have the relentless motor of Stankoven. 

Benak brings other special aspects to the game, and he could be one of the best picks of the draft thanks to his cerebral offensive drive. He attacks the middle of the ice as a passer, looking to get the goalie moving laterally. Benak is a big swing, but he might be the best swing any team could have made outside of the top 100. 

Lirim Amidovski played for a North Bay squad that barely made the playoffs and finished well below .500, so some felt like there may be more offensive ability there than meets the eye. He has the raw physical tools you want to see from a player with his profile. He skates well, throws his weight around and even has a good shot. His issue is that he’s not much of a puck carrier, and he doesn’t always show the skill to evade pressure with the puck. As an off-puck threat, Amidovski could develop into something interesting. 

Physical 6-foot-3 center Carter Klippenstein works his tail off, attacks defenders head-on when forechecking and consistently looks to wreak havoc. His on-puck tools and skating must improve, but he has the base of a sturdy bottom-six forward at the next level. There’s just a lot to work on to get there. 

Capping off their draft in the fifth round, the Wild took overage defender Justin Kipkie, who left the WHL to head to Arizona State in the NCAA. He was originally drafted by the Arizona Coyotes in 2023, but they opted not to sign him, likely because he isn’t a very mobile defender. That said, he can fire passes around the ice and use his size from time to time. Kipkie put up 52 and 62 points over the past two seasons, and developing in college should do wonders for him. 

Strengths

The Wild have a deep prospect pool with talent at just about every position. The depth and variety are the strengths.

They have forwards with skill, and they have forwards with size. If you want a larger, physical player, you can turn to Stramel. If you want skill and speed, Benak is your guy.

They have shifty puck-movers on the back end and defensively stout defenseman.

Buium is a stud on the blueline, but after him, Lambos, Jiricek and Kiviharju all bring various tools and skills that could make them effective players.

The Wild also have an elite goalie in the system with Wallstedt, and they have other young netminders with some promise.

Since the Wild have a bit of everything, they have plenty of time to develop and allow players to find their niche at the pro level.

Weaknesses

The Wild have are weak down the middle. They have a few players who are listed as centers and wingers, but the reality is that one of their most promising true center prospects is the 5-foot-7 Benak. He may ultimately get pushed to the wing simply because of his height.

Hidden Gem: Riley Heidt, LW/C

Heidt is a feisty and fearless forward who brings as much skill and offensive playmaking ability as he does relentless effort. Heidt jumps to pro hockey after eclipsing 200 points over the last two years in the WHL. Heidt isn’t the largest, but he seems to understand he will have success when he establishes the inside position and even invites contact at times. Heidt possesses some of the elements that make Haight and Ritchie successful, with a higher level of skill and a more intense style of play overall. His first AHL season will be fun to watch. 

Zeev Buium (Matt Blewett-Imagn Images)

Next Men Up: Jesper Wallstedt, G, And Zeev Buium, D

The Wild could have an influx of young talent joining the roster this upcoming season, but Wallstedt and Buium are virtual locks.

Wallstedt will start as a backup goalie who could get a larger share of the games by the end of the season. His upside is tremendous. 

Buium is the most impressive rookie the Wild may have this season. His two-way impact and ability to create scoring chances from the back end are spectacular. Buium can be a difference-maker in Game 1. 

Ohgren and Yurov could fill two spots on the third line, bringing a youthful energy and impressive work ethic at both ends of the ice. Lambos and Jiricek will likely also play games in the NHL this season, bringing some physicality and puck movement to the defense group.

Prospect Depth Chart Notables

LW: Liam Ohgren, Riley Heidt, Rasmus Kumpulainen, Rieger Lorenz, Michael Milne

C: Adam Benak, Caedan Bankier, Carter Klippenstein

RW: Danila Yurov, Ryder Ritchie, Charlie Stramel, Hunter Haight

LD: Zeev Buium, Aron Kiviharju, Carson Lambos, Jack Peart, Aaron Pionk, Stevie Leskovar

RD: David Jiricek, David Spacek, Theodor Hallquisth, Sebastian Soini, Kyle Masters 

G: Jesper Wallstedt, Riley Mercer, Chase Wutzke, Samuel Hlavaj

For a deeper dive into the prospect pool with player rankings, check out the Yearbook and Future Watch editions of The Hockey News in print.

Tanner Houck shut down indefinitely after injury setback

Tanner Houck shut down indefinitely after injury setback originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Red Sox won’t have Tanner Houck back in the mix any time soon.

Before Monday’s game against the Philadelphia Phillies, Red Sox manager Alex Cora revealed that Houck has been shut down from throwing due to a reoccurence of flexor soreness. The right-hander felt arm soreness after his rehab start at Triple-A Worcester on July 9 and was pulled off his rehab assignment on Friday.

“He’s going to stay on the IL,” Cora said, via MassLive.com’s Chris Cotillo. “They checked on him. There’s no surgery needed. Just rest. Reset him now, get treatment and see where we’re headed after that.”

Houck initially was placed on the injured list with a right flexor pronator strain on May 13. After earning his first career All-Star nod in 2024, the 29-year-old posted an 8.04 ERA across 43.2 innings pitched with Boston in 2025. He didn’t fare much better in his five rehab appearances for Double-A Portland and Triple-A Worcester, recording a 5.74 ERA in 15.2 innings.

It’s unclear when Houck could return to the mound this season, if at all.

“I can’t give you an answer right now,” Cora added. “This happened during the week. He felt it in his last one. He saw the doctors and all that stuff. We’ve got to go to step one, I guess.”

Houck’s setback further emphasizes the Red Sox’ need to find rotation help before the July 31 trade deadline. They will also be without Hunter Dobbins (torn ACL) and Kutter Crawford (wrist) for the rest of the season

What we learned as Hayden Birdsong's command issues doom Giants early vs. Braves

What we learned as Hayden Birdsong's command issues doom Giants early vs. Braves originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — The Giants gave up a run Monday when they let Ronald Acuña Jr. score from first on a single to center. They allowed another run when a high fly ball to left-center dropped between Heliot Ramos and Jung Hoo Lee. They repeatedly let Atlanta Braves starter Bryce Elder off the hook as they tried to make a comeback. 

But in a 9-5 loss, they had a much bigger problem than any of those mistakes. 

Young starter Hayden Birdsong didn’t record an out in his first appearance in two weeks, walking four and hitting one in the first inning of a disastrous performance. Birdsong threw 25 pitches and just six were strikes, which put the Giants in an early hole and led to a marathon night for a bullpen that has been worked hard through the first four games of the second half. 

Giants pitchers threw 188 pitches, a season-high for a game that did not go extra innings. There will surely be at least one fresh arm for the bullpen Tuesday, and the staff now needs to make a decision with Birdsong after a jarring outing. 

From start to finish, this might have been San Francisco’s ugliest performance of the 2025 MLB season. It also was a sixth consecutive loss, which dropped the Giants to just three games above .500. 

The Wrong Kind of Zero

Birdsong’s pitching line was one the franchise has never seen before. He became the first Giant to walk four, give up five earned runs and fail to record an out, and just the 10th MLB pitcher to do it. The last was Boston Red Sox pitcher Darwinzon Hernandez in 2022. Birdsong also became just the third big league starter — and first since 1996 — to walk four, hit one and fail to record an out. 

It was a shocking inning, although Birdsong has been dealing with command issues for a while. He walked at least four in his final three starts of the first half, which led to the Giants skipping his final turn and giving him a two-week break. Maybe that added some rust Monday, but in general, this has been a major issue for a couple of months, one that might lead to the Giants taking a real step back with the talented 23-year-old to try and figure out what’s going on. 

If the Giants make a move, Carson Whisenhunt and Carson Seymour are next up in Triple-A. They also could go with a bullpen game or two — with Spencer Bivens or Tristan Beck pitching bulk innings — as they try and figure out what they can add before the July 31 MLB trade deadline

Right Into the Fire

Lefty Matt Gage, added to the roster on Friday, had made 23 previous big league appearances — but none had come before the third inning. Gage had to get loose in a hurry Monday, and he did a nice job of hustling in for Birdsong and keeping the Giants within shouting distance. 

Gage came in with the bases loaded and no outs in the first and struck out the first two Braves he faced. When Nick Allen hit a chopper to the left side it looked like he would completely limit the damage, but the ball took an odd hop off the dirt and got away from Matt Chapman, making it a 5-1 game. 

Gage struck out Acuña in a scoreless second inning before handing the baton to long man Bivens. The two-inning outing tied a career-high, and Gage’s 41 pitches were a career-high. 

Adames, Again

There’s not a whole lot going right for the Giants, but Willy Adames at least looks like his old self. The shortstop hit a no-doubter in the seventh, his third of the trip and 15th of the year. If you take out Rafael Devers, who hit 15 of his 17 in Boston, Adames leads the roster in home runs. 

Adames also had two doubles and a single, and his OPS is up to a season-high .717, which is short of where he was last year but is in line with his 2023 season, when he hit 24 homers for the Milwaukee Brewers. He entered the month at .645, but he has six homers in July. 

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Chris Paul reportedly agrees to return to Clippers on one-year contract

Chris Paul was looking for a couple of things in a new team for the upcoming season. First, and most importantly, to be close to his family in Los Angeles (something he was missing last season in San Antonio). Second, to be on a team that will be playing meaningful games this season and be a playoff threat.

Paul found all that in agreeing to a one-year contract with the Los Angeles Clippers, a story broken by Shams Charania of ESPN. This is a one-year, veteran minimum contract, Chris Haynes confirmed.

Paul, 40, had interest from multiple teams such as Milwaukee, Charlotte and Dallas, but because of his desire to be closer to his family it has long been assumed a reunion with the Clippers or Suns was the most likely outcome.

Paul played six seasons with the Clippers, leading the Lob City team with Blake Griffin, DeAndre Jordan, Jamal Crawford, and others, a team that was considered a contender in the West but was held back by injuries some years and painful playoff collapses in others. In his first five years with the Clippers, CP3 never finished lower than seventh in MVP voting, and was an All-Star, All-NBA, and All-Defense each of those five years. With the Clippers he averaged 18.8 points and 9.8 assists a game.

Paul's role with the Clippers will be different this time around, and it will be different from last season with the Spurs, where he started all 82 games. He likely will come off the bench behind a starting backcourt of James Harden and either Bradley Beal (for his offense) or Kris Dunn (for his defense).

This is a Clippers roster that looks good on paper but is older with players such as Paul (40), Brook Lopez (37), Nicolas Batum (36), James Harden (35), Kawhi Leonard (34) and Bogdan Bogdanovic (33 before training camp opens). Health and monitoring minutes will be a primary task for coach Tyronn Lue. The Clippers chose to get older and better this summer, with a chance to pivot and reshape this roster coming by 2027.

Age concerns aside, getting a solid point guard and floor general in CP3 on a one-year contract is a good signing for the Clippers.