The Kalen DeBoer bandwagon has emptied out. It’s been left to rust, and if you're left holding stock in DeBoer, it's trading at a 52-week low.
Clippers deny claims star forward Kawhi Leonard was paid $28m for job that didn’t exist
The Los Angeles Clippers and their owner, Steve Ballmer, have denied allegations the team’s star forward, Kawhi Leonard, was paid $28m for a job that doesn’t exist.
Journalist Pablo Torre laid out the allegations in his podcast on Wednesday. Torre, citing legal documents, claims Ballmer employed Leonard for a non-existent role in one of his companies to circumvent the NBA salary cap, which punishes teams for spending too much on player salaries.
Torre claims that Ballmer partially funded a now defunct tree-planting company called Aspiration. That company then allegedly entered into a $28m agreement with KL2 Aspire, LLC, a company owned by Leonard.
Torre says he could find no evidence that Leonard had ever performed any work for Aspiration, and there was a clause in the contract between KL2 Aspire and Aspiration effectively allowed Leonard to be paid even if he did no work. Another clause said the deal would be voided if Leonard left the Clippers. One former employee of Aspiration told Torre he had heard the deal with Leonard had been set up to “circumvent the salary cap.”
The Clippers and Ballmer denied the allegations in a statement released to Torre. “Neither Mr Ballmer nor the Clippers circumvented the salary cap or engaged in any misconduct related to Aspiration,” the statement said. “Any contrary assertion is provably false.”
The NBA investigated Leonard’s advisor, Dennis Robertson, in 2019 and found the Clippers had not granted the player any impermissible benefits when they pursued him in free agency. Leonard, a six-time All-Star, joined the Clippers in July 2019 after leading the Toronto Raptors to the NBA title.
The NBA is yet to comment on Torre’s story, but has said in the past it would reopen the investigation into Robertson if new evidence emerged.
Under the terms of the NBA collective bargaining agreement, the Clippers could be fined up to $4.5m for a first offense if they attempted to circumvent the salary cap. They could also be docked a first-round draft pick.
Rangers Add 100th Anniversary Logo To Centre Ice At Madison Square Garden
In honor of their 100th season, the New York Rangers have added a 100th anniversary logo to centre ice at Madison Square Garden.
This logo features a 100 in the Rangers’ familiar red-with-white-shadow sweater number style, set above the Rangers’ shield logo.
Throughout the course of the 2025-26 season, there expected to be different events to celebrate this unique milestone.
“The New York Rangers are one of the premier franchises, not just in the National Hockey League, but in all of professional sports,” Rangers President and General Manager Chris Drury said when the centennial mark was first revealed in March 2025. “As we approach our Centennial year, we are proud and excited about the opportunity to honour our legacy with our fans.”
The 2025-26 campaign is set to start for the Rangers on Oct. 7, against the Pittsburgh Penguins at Madison Square Garden.
It's About Time The NHL Closed Its LTIR Loophole
The loophole that helped the Florida Panthers, Tampa Bay Lightning and the Vegas Golden Knights earn a competitive advantage and win multiple Stanley Cups is finally closed.
No, we're not talking about removing the tax breaks for teams that play in states with no income tax.
But the NHL and NHLPA's reported decision to immediately implement several new changes to the collective bargaining agreement, including a playoff salary cap, could be just as instrumental.
It's about time. Some would argue, this move took way too long.
After all, how many championships have been won and lost because of a salary cap loophole?
Going back a decade, when Chicago's Patrick Kane broke his collarbone a week before the 2015 trade deadline and then remained out until the start of the playoffs, teams have put an injured player on long-term injured reserve, and they have only returned to action in the post-season so the team could add a player and avoid exceeding its cap space during the regular season.
It was a smart move. It was also not in the spirit of the CBA, which aims to provide a level playing field for all 32 teams. Of course, all rules are meant to be broken, or at the very least manipulated. And it didn't take long for teams to realize that being cap compliant only applied to the regular season. If you had a player who was injured, there was nothing stopping a team from waiting until the playoffs to re-activate him from injury, as many teams took advantage of.
In 2020-21, the Tampa Bay Lightning won back-to-back championships while being $18 million over the cap after Nikita Kucherov returned for the playoffs after sitting out for the entire regular season while recovering from surgery. Kucherov, who later trolled critics for his well-timed return, led the playoffs with 32 points.
Two years later, the Golden Knights exploited the same loophole when Mark Stone took until Game 1 of the playoffs before finally returning from back surgery. The NHL investigated Vegas, which was able to acquire Ivan Barbashev, Teddy Blueger and Jonathan Quick, but found no wrongdoing. A year later, Stone remained out again, allowing the Golden Knights to acquire Noah Hanifin, Anthony Mantha and Tomas Hertl at the trade deadline.
This past season, Matthew Tkachuk curiously also remained out until the very start of the playoffs following an injury at the 4 Nations Face-Off. His long-term absence allowed the Panthers to acquire Brad Marchand at the deadline.
None of that can happen again.
Under the new CBA rules, teams must be under the cap limit of $95.5 million for the playoffs. Previously, the salary cap only applied to the regular season, allowing teams to activate injured players once the post-season began. Now, teams will have to submit a playoff roster, where the aggregate cap hit of all active
players cannot exceed the upper salary cap limit.
Which means, if you had suspicions that Vegas would activate Alex Pietrangelo for Game 1 of the playoffs after having already announcing it's unlikely his body will recover to the standard required to play NHL-level hockey — think again.
Those days are over.
Then again, with one loophole closing, chances are another will open. Just give it time.
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Matt Chapman suspended one game, fined for Kyle Freeland shove in Giants-Rockies
Matt Chapman suspended one game, fined for Kyle Freeland shove in Giants-Rockies originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
The Giants received some bad news on Matt Chapman before their series finale against the Colorado Rockies on Wednesday at Coors Field.
San Francisco’s third baseman has been suspended one game and fined an undisclosed amount for his role in Tuesday night’s first-inning scuffle, MLB announced Wednesday afternoon, noting Chapman’s punishment comes as a result of “pushing” Rockies pitcher Kyle Freeland.
Additionally, Willy Adames, Rafael Devers and Freeland all have been issued fines for their “inappropriate actions” during the incident, MLB added.
Chapman, Adames and Freeland all were ejected in the first inning of the Giants’ 7-4 win over the Rockies on Tuesday for their part in an on-field incident following a booming Devers home run. Freeland took issue with how long Devers took to get to first base, and chaos ensued.
Chapman’s suspension was scheduled to begin Wednesday, but per MLB, the Giants infielder has elected to appeal the decision and will not be disciplined until that process is complete.
Canadiens: Surprising Ranking For Hutson In Top Under-23 Players List
Once again this year, The Athletic’s Corey Pronman has released his rankings of under-23 players that are either in the NHL or on the cusp of it. This time around, the Montreal Canadiens have seven players in the 173-player list. To be eligible, a player must be 22 years old or younger as of September 15, 2025.
The young Habs included in the rankings are Juraj Slafkovsky, Ivan Demidov, Lane Hutson, David Reinbacher, Zack Bolduc, Michael Hage, and Oliver Kapanen. Pronman’s rankings are divided into six tiers; the first one is for elite NHL players, tier two for NHL All-Stars, tier three for bubble NHL All-Stars and top of the lineup players, tier four for Top of the lineup players, tier five for bubble top and middle of the lineup players, and tier six for middle of the lineup players. Let’s have a look at where each Hab stands.
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Slafkovsky gets the seventh spot in the ranking and is considered in the second tier. Pronman deems his skating average, his puck skills above average, just like his hockey sense, and his compete high-end. The journalist praises the youngster’s use of his big frame and concedes that even if he never reaches the highest of tiers in points total, he could be a star because of the special role he plays.
I’m surprised to see the power forward come so high in the ranking and receive a high-end rating for his compete. Personally, I believe this is what Slafkovsky could eventually be rather than what he is at the moment. It’s been written time and time again that the youngster knows what to do to be successful, but he has yet to manage to do it consistently. I do not doubt that it’s coming, but it’s not there yet. Last year, he was 15th on the list.
The second Canadiens player in the ranking is Demidov, who lands in the second tier as well, in 10th place. Pronman rates his skating as below average, his puck skills as elite, his hockey sense, compete, and shot as above average. Unsurprisingly, it’s the winger skating that makes him go down in the ranking, and anyone who’s watched Demidov play last season knows what the writer means when he mentions his “awkward/knock-kneed skating stride. However, this is one of the areas on which the young Russian has focused this summer in Brossard, and while at times he reverts to that particular style, it’s on the verge of being a thing of the past.
It's tough to argue with the rest of Pronman’s assessment, however, and if I were a betting woman, I’d wager that Demidov will be climbing up those rankings next season, and it’s worth remembering that he is still only 19 years old. Regardless of how you look at it, Demidov should be a diamond in the rough at his age, but he’s not that rough and shows a lot of promise. Last season, he was in 17th position and in the third tier, just like Slafkovsky.
The third Hab to feature in the list is Calder Trophy-winning blueliner Lane Hutson, who lands in 34th place and in the fourth tier. This one is puzzling. Pronman rates his skating as above average, just like his puck skills and compete, while he deems his hockey sense high-end. What makes him slip all the way to 34 then? His defensive play.
The Athletic’s journalist argues that he’s a minor defenseman without high-end feet or physicality, which makes him ill-suited to defend against the top players in the league. I disagree with this statement. I can’t deny that Hutson’s offensive game is better than his defensive game, but he can still defend against the best players. To me, his mobility and compete make up for his lack of physicality, and those who have seen him skate in 82 games last season and five playoff games will agree. Last year, Pronman had him as a tier seven player in 87th place, so that’s a healthy jump. However, expect him to move up in next September’s edition of those rankings; he’ll be 22 by then and in his last year of eligibility.
The next Hab is in tier five and comes in 44th place: David Reinbacher. The article describes his skating and puck skills as average, while his hockey sense and competitiveness are above-average. This is probably Pronman’s most accurate assessment, as he explains that the right-shot defenseman won’t be the best in any category, but is a good all-around defenseman.
This is precisely what the youngster showed last season in the playoffs with the Laval Rocket, and I’m looking forward to seeing how he does at training camp. Given that he was injured in the previous preseason, he may be a bit behind schedule, but defensemen typically take longer to develop, so that’s not an issue. Last year, he was in 69th place in the rankings.
The next Canadiens on the list are all the way down at spot 100, in tier six. Pronman clearly sees the Habs' new acquisition as average, that’s how he evaluates his skating, puck skills, hockey sense, and compete, but does add that his shot is high-end. Last year, he didn’t even make the ranking.
For Pronman, the deficiencies in Bolduc’s game are without the puck; if that’s the case, he landed in the right place. The winger has a good hockey sense, and under Martin St-Louis, he will be given every opportunity to learn how to make the right reads to improve his play without the puck. We won’t see where he lands in these rankings next season, as this is his last year of eligibility.
Next up is Michael Hage, who has dropped from 118th to 131st place in the sixth tier. Pronman considers his skating and hockey sense to be average, his puck skills above average, his compete level below average, and his shot above average.
Despite conceding that Hage has had an impressive freshman season, the journalist notes that the youngster has a history of inconsistency and streakiness, and that playing too much on the outside could hinder his chances of success in the NHL. If this comes to be, the Canadiens’ need for a legitimate number two center will be even greater.
I had noticed that Hage does pick points in bunches, but he’s still very young and has time to turn things around. Furthermore, the culture being developed in Montreal should also enhance the competitive level. When numerous leaders go all in at all times, it’s challenging for a young player to dip his toe in the water.
Finally, Kapanen comes in at number 139 in tier six. His skating is deemed below average, while his puck skills, compete, and shots are above average, and his hockey sense is average. In a nutshell, it’s his footspeed that drags him down the ranking.
Although Pronman believes Kapanen made significant progress last season as a key player with Timra IK, he thinks the youngster's lower foot speed could be a drawback and might lead to him being shifted to the wing. This is Finn’s first appearance in the rankings, and if he improves on his training camp showing from last season, he could make the team and stick around this year.
Having seven players in this ranking and four in the top 100 is quite an impressive feat; some teams do not even have a single player who cracked the top 100, like the New York Rangers, for instance, and it goes to show just how good a job the Canadiens are doing with their rebuild.
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The Flyers' Jett Luchanko Conundrum: Too Good for Juniors, Not Quite Ready for the NHL
The Philadelphia Flyers knew exactly what they were getting when they selected Jett Luchanko in the first round of the 2024 NHL Draft: a remarkably poised, intelligent, and versatile player who was far ahead of his age curve.
What they may not have expected, at least not so soon, is how quickly he’d force them into a developmental riddle with no perfect answer.
At just over 18 years old, Luchanko already turned heads last fall when he made the Flyers’ opening-night roster out of training camp. For four games, fans got a glimpse of what made him such a tantalizing prospect: the smooth skating stride, the vision that makes him look like he’s processing plays in slow motion, and the sheer maturity of his decisions with the puck. He didn’t look overwhelmed. He didn’t look like a kid clinging to a roster spot. He looked like he belonged—or at least, he would belong in short order.
But hockey development rules are nothing if not cruel. The Flyers made the prudent choice to return Luchanko to the OHL’s Guelph Storm before burning the first year of his entry-level contract. It was ultimately the smart move, but anyone who followed him throughout the 2024–25 season could see the problem looming: he was simply too good for junior hockey. On a Storm team that has struggled in recent seasons, Luchanko stood out like a beacon in a fog—his skillset was already past the level of many of his peers. He wasn’t just surviving; he was controlling games.
That leaves the Flyers with a conundrum this fall: what’s the right next step for a player who’s too polished for one level but not quite polished enough for the one above it?
The AHL Problem
In an ideal world, this wouldn’t be an issue at all. The AHL exists precisely for players in Luchanko’s position: a league full of grown men, some still clawing toward NHL careers, others carving out professional lives as reliable minor leaguers. It’s faster, more physical, and tactically closer to the NHL than junior hockey, but still provides space to learn and grow without the spotlight of being in the show.
But, having just turned 19 years old in August, that’s not an option for Luchanko. Players drafted out of the CHL cannot join the AHL until they turn 20 (with very few exceptions). There was a glimmer of hope when reports surfaced earlier this week that a loaning system for 19-year-olds would be coming to the AHL but, ultimately, those reports were untrue (at least right now).
According to a league source, the AHL loan for one 19-year-old player per team is NOT one of the CBA changes that is effective immediately. Therefore, for the #Flyers and Jett Luchanko, it looks like it will either be the NHL or CHL.
— Jackie Spiegel (@jackiespiegel93) September 2, 2025
For Luchanko, it means he’s stuck between two extremes: NHL or OHL.
And that’s where the Flyers have to be delicate. Push him into the NHL before he’s truly ready, and they risk stunting his growth against stronger, smarter competition where mistakes are punished mercilessly. Send him back to the OHL, and they risk wasting another season of his development in games that may not challenge him the way he needs.
What Does “Ready” Really Mean?
One of the fascinating wrinkles with Luchanko is that he already checks many of the boxes teams typically look for when determining NHL readiness. His defensive instincts are mature beyond his years; he backchecks with purpose and reads lanes as if he’s played hundreds of pro games already. His skating is not just good, it’s a real separator—smooth, explosive, and efficient. And his hockey IQ? That’s been his calling card since scouts first started raving about him.
Jett Luchanko has 3 primary assists after just one period against the London Knights (feat. fellow #LetsGoFlyers prospects Denver Barkey and Oliver Bonk). Barkey said during training camp that he and Bonk had been trying to get Luchanko on the Knights (but didn’t get very far).
— Siobhan Nolan (@SGNolan) November 10, 2024
But there are still the physical and experiential gaps. He’s still only a teenager, still filling out his frame, and the grind of an 82-game season against the biggest, strongest, and most relentless players in the world is a different beast. Where he might’ve dominated time and space in the OHL, he’ll find that NHL defenders close gaps faster and punish mistakes harder.
That’s why NHL teams typically want that “bridge” step in the AHL. And it’s why the Flyers face such a tricky balance: acknowledging how advanced he is without putting him in a situation where he’s overexposed.
The Flyers’ Development Playbook
For the Flyers, this isn’t uncharted territory. They’ve had to walk this line with young players before—guys like Matvei Michkov (albeit under very different circumstances), Tyson Foerster, or even former Flyer Morgan Frost when he was caught in the limbo of not quite being NHL-caliber but too good for the minors. What Rick Tocchet and Danny Brière will need to decide is whether Luchanko is better off playing limited NHL minutes and learning on the fly, or dominating in the OHL once again while continuing to refine his strengths.
There’s a case for each.
The NHL case: Even in sheltered minutes, practicing every day with NHL players, learning from NHL coaches, and adapting to NHL systems can accelerate development. He doesn’t need to play 20 minutes a night in the big league to benefit; 10–12 thoughtful, situational minutes could expose him to just enough challenge to keep growing.
The OHL case: Sometimes, even if a player looks “too good” for junior, there’s value in confidence, in running the show (Luchanko was named Guelph's captain last season), in having the puck on your stick every night. The Ontario native could benefit from being “the guy” one more year, further building his offensive creativity and continuing to round out his game before the inevitable jump.
What Should the Flyers Do?
The best path forward may lie in a hybrid approach of sorts. Give Luchanko another long look in camp. If he forces their hand—if he looks NHL-ready in more than just flashes—don’t be afraid to keep him in Philadelphia, even if it means managing his usage carefully. Surround him with veterans, give him sheltered matchups, and let him learn.
If he’s close but not quite there, another year in Guelph doesn’t have to be wasted. The Flyers can work closely with the Storm to tailor his development, setting benchmarks for what they want him to accomplish. Dominate offensively. Kill penalties. Drive matchups against top lines. Add strength. In short: make sure it’s not just a “repeat” year but a targeted step in the process.
The Flyers should also explore opportunities for him to spend time with the Phantoms when his OHL season ends. Even a handful of AHL games in the spring could provide that crucial “bridge” experience the CHL–NHL gap often denies.
The Bottom Line
The Flyers drafted Jett Luchanko because he’s the kind of player you build around: smart, versatile, and fearless, with the work ethic to back it all up. But the road to the NHL can have a few potholes (this is Philadelphia, after all), and in his case, the challenge is navigating a system that doesn’t quite fit his timeline.
The Flyers can’t treat him like just another prospect, because he isn’t. He’s already ahead of schedule. But they also can’t treat him like a savior ready to carry NHL minutes when he's barely 19. The margin between those two extremes will define his next season—and possibly the shape of his career.
One thing is certain: this is a good problem to have. Players like Luchanko are real gems to have in the pipeline, and while the Flyers may be wrestling with how to handle him, they’ll take that problem every time. Because whether it’s in Philadelphia, Lehigh Valley (eventually), or one last year in Guelph, Jett Luchanko’s trajectory is pointed exactly where the Flyers want it to go: straight up.
NHL Rumor Roundup: Are More Moves Coming For The Red Wings And Blackhawks?
Detroit Red Wings GM Steve Yzerman made several moves during the off-season to bolster his roster for the coming season.
Yzerman's most notable deal was acquiring goaltender John Gibson from the Anaheim Ducks. He also shed the remaining year of Vladimir Tarasenko's contract, shipping him and his $4.75 million average annual value to the Minnesota Wild.
The Wings GM also re-signed right winger Patrick Kane and turned to the UFA market for veteran depth, signing James van Riemsdyk, Travis Hamonic, Mason Appleton, Ian Mitchell and Jacob Bernard-Docker.
However, a significant move to add a top-four defenseman or a top-six forward failed to materialize.
Max Bultman of The Athletic was asked if Yzerman might address one or both needs before the regular season begins. He suggested that Pittsburgh Penguins defenseman Erik Karlsson and a Penguins winger, such as Bryan Rust or Rickard Rakell, might be the best options.
Karlsson, Rust and Rakell regularly surfaced in this summer's trade rumors. However, Bultman's not expecting any of them to don the Winged Wheel jersey, citing Karlsson's expensive contract and the Penguins' asking price of a first-round pick for Rust or Rakell.
Earlier this summer, the Red Wings were linked to Ducks center Mason McTavish in the rumor mill. Some observers suggested the close ties between Yzerman and Ducks GM Pat Verbeek could make Detroit a landing spot for the 22-year-old RFA center, but Bultman doubted Verbeek would part with McTavish.
Bultman also suggested that the Wings monitor high-scoring winger Kyle Connor's contract status with the Winnipeg Jets. The 28-year-old Michigan native is UFA-eligible next summer. Bultman doubted the Jets would move him this early in the season if he remains unsigned, but suggested the Wings should be ready to inquire just in case.
Turning to the Chicago Blackhawks, Frank Seravalli of Bleacher Report noted they still haven't signed RFA defenseman Wyatt Kaiser.
Seravalli indicated that the Blackhawks have nine or 10 young NHL-ready defensemen on their blueline. They could end up shopping one of them, but he doesn't anticipate Kaiser will be a trade candidate.
Four of the Blackhawks' young rearguards – Artyom Levshunov, Kevin Korchinski, Sam Linzel and Nolan Allen – are waiver-exempt, so they could demote one or two if necessary. They could also attempt to trade Connor Murphy, who is UFA-eligible next July, though that move would take away their most experienced blueliner.
For action-packed issues, access to the entire magazine archive and a free issue, subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/free. Get the latest news and trending stories by subscribing to our newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com.
US Open tennis 2025: Anisimova shocks Swiatek, Auger-Aliassime beats De Minaur on day 11 – live
Felix Auger-Aliassime saw off Alex de Minaur and Amanda Anisimova avenged her Wimbledon thrashing by Iga Swiatek, to reach the semi-finals
Now an easy hold for Demon, and though it’s possible one of these takes three tight sets, the sense is that we’re settling in for a good few hours. Let’s hope so: we’ve had too many one-sided matches these last 10 days and we’re due a classic. That said, I really enjoyed the beating Osaka put on Gauff, with Muchova v Kostyuk probably my most enjoyed match so far. Meantime, Felix nails an ace for 40-30, then spanks a forehand into the corner. But De Minaur hoists a moon-ball of a lob and the overhead goes into the net; at 1-1 deuce, here comes pressure … quickly alleviated with a monstrous serve and follow-up overhead. That’s a really good sign, given what happened in the previous point, and when the Demon nets, he leads 2-1 in the first, on serve.
Auger-Aliassime holds to 15, looking pretty good while doing it. He’s into the match and looks good and businesslike. And for extra points, he’s got Daffy Duck on his shirt.
Continue reading...Roman Anthony headed to IL, likely to miss remainder of regular season
Roman Anthony headed to IL, likely to miss remainder of regular season originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston
Roman Anthony is hitting the injured list.
Red Sox manager Alex Cora announced that news Wednesday on WEEI Afternoons and said the rookie is potentially looking at a recovery timetable of four to six weeks.
“Yeah, he’s going to the IL. He has an oblique strain,” Cora said on WEEI.
Cora added the Red Sox “don’t know” the exact recovery timeline but “it usually takes from four to six weeks.”
Four weeks from Tuesday is Sept. 30, which is the first day of the postseason, with the Wild Card series running through Oct. 2. Six weeks from Tuesday is Oct. 14, which will be after the completion of the ALDS.
“He’s one of our best offensive players,” Cora said. “It sounds harsh, but we have to move on. We’ve got to put that uniform on today and try to win a game. And we’ve been through this before, right? [Triston] Casas and we traded [Rafael Devers]. There’s been a lot of stuff with this team, and we’ve been able to keep going. So I expect the group to do the same thing.”
The rookie outfielder left Tuesday night’s game vs. Cleveland due to oblique tightness and was sent for an MRI on Wednesday.
The 21-year-old Anthony has been exceptional since earning his call-up to the majors in early June.
In 71 games, he’s batted .292 with an .859 OPS, recording 18 doubles, a triple and eight home runs while driving in 32 runs. After being moved into the leadoff spot of Boston’s lineup, Anthony has in late July, he has hit .320 and reached base at a .411 clip, posting a .931 OPS.
While Anthony alone hasn’t been responsible, his call-up represents a pretty stark turnaround for the Red Sox. They were 32-35 when Anthony was elevated from Triple-A Worcester, and they’ve gone 46-27 since he made his debut.
The Red Sox recalled utility man Nick Sogard from Worcester on Wednesday to fill their open roster spot.
'Want to see that edge.' How Dodgers hope Teoscar Hernández turns around difficult season
It was not quite a benching. But it served as a reminder nonetheless.
Last year, in many ways, Teoscar Hernández was the heart and soul of the Dodgers. Not their best player. Nor their biggest star. But someone who provided effervescent vibes in the clubhouse, veteran leadership in the dugout and clutch hits in several of the season’s biggest moments at the plate.
"Teo is a guy that we counted on a lot last year,” manager Dave Roberts said. “He's a guy that I really admire, because he can balance the fun part of baseball but also have that edge.”
This year, however, frustration has doused much of the fun. Struggles have dulled his usual edge.
Read more:'We’ve got to find ways to win.' Inconsistency haunts Dodgers again in loss to Pirates
Between injuries, slumps, defensive miscues and mechanical swing flaws, Hernández has endured one of his worst career seasons. He is batting just .247, his lowest since 2019. He has a .734 OPS, the lowest of his career and just a smidge above league-average. His limited range in right field has led to a flurry of dropped balls and some of the poorest defensive metrics of any big leaguer at the position. And going back to the last week of June, no other Dodger player (not even Michael Conforto) has been worth fewer wins above replacement than Hernández’s negative-0.5 mark, according to Fangraphs.
“For me, not being the same as last year is a little frustrating,” Hernández said. “I don't want to be like that. I want to be better than last year. But it's baseball. It's life. You just have to keep working, keep trusting in yourself and the things that you can do to help the team."
Last weekend, however, Roberts had a different idea. In the midst of Hernández’s latest cold spell, the outfielder was unexpectedly benched for Sunday’s series finale against the Arizona Diamondbacks.
“He's an every-day guy,” Roberts said that day. “But I do think that where we're at, you've got to perform, too, to warrant being out there every single day.”
The move wasn’t punitive, with Roberts also accounting for Monday’s off day in hopes “a two-day reset could help” the two-time All-Star.
But still, with the stretch run of the season nearing, the manager was dropping a hint to his star slugger as well.
“I think we've lost a little bit of that edge over the last couple months,” Roberts said Tuesday of Hernández, having had “numerous conversations” to communicate the same message with him personally.
“For me, I want to see that edge, that fight, that fire, and I'll bet on any result. I just want to see that. We're past the mechanical part of [his struggles with his swing]. Let's just get into the fight. I've seen it. And I believe that's what's to come in the next month and beyond."
This is not the position the Dodgers expected to be in when they re-signed Hernández to a three-year, $66 million contract this offseason — a move Roberts described as a “no-brainer” at the time after pushing for the front office to bring the free-agent back to Los Angeles.
He trusted Hernández’s bat, which mashed 33 home runs and 99 RBIs in his debut Dodgers season in 2024. He appreciated Hernández’s heartbeat, and how he delivered one of the season’s biggest swings in the fifth inning of Game 5 of the World Series.
In bringing Hernández back, the Dodgers hoped that his mere presence would elevate the rest of the roster for this year’s championship defense.
Read more:What's behind Clayton Kershaw's pitching revival in his 18th season? 'The bowl'
“He knows his value for our ballclub,” Roberts said. “He knows my expectations of him individually.”
Only, to this point, Hernández has struggled to replicate that same intangible magic.
After a blistering start to the season (.315 average, nine home runs, and an MLB-most 34 RBIs through his first 33 games), the outfielder suffered a groin/adductor strain while stretching for a line drive in Miami, landing him on the injured list for two weeks. When he returned, he looked far from 100%, struggling to rediscover his swing or cover much ground in right. Before long, a slump took hold. And as it stretched on through the summer — compounded by foot contusion on a foul ball he suffered in July — frustration began to mount.
“It's tough when you feel good and then something happens and you have to miss … whatever the amount of games might be,” Hernández said. “It was one of those for me this year. I got injured, then I came back. I fouled it off my foot and then missed games [again].”
He later added: “For me, being hurt is more frustrating than having a bad year. I'd rather be on the field having a bad year, than not being on the field and just fighting back and forth.”
Staying on the field, of course, hasn’t alleviated Hernández’s problems. After the All-Star break, he said his body finally started feeling better. On Tuesday, he proclaimed his groin and foot to be back to full health.
And yet, over his previous eight games, he had batted only three-for-27 leading up to Sunday’s removal from the lineup. Worse than that, he had fallen back into a habit of chasing too much, leading to non-competitive at-bats at a time Roberts had been trying to emphasize the opposite.
“[I want to see] Teo getting back to having that edge,” Roberts reiterated.
In Hernández’s return to the lineup Tuesday, some positive signs finally presented themselves. He fought off a pair of two-strike pitches before lining a second-inning single. He did the same thing in the third inning to drive in a run. Defensively, there was another awkward moment, when Hernández failed to make a sliding catch on a shallow fly ball down the right-field line in the Pittsburgh Pirates’ four-run first inning. But even on that play, Roberts argued postgame, Hernández got a good jump and covered a lot of ground — breaking into the kind of hard-charging sprint that hadn’t always been there earlier this season.
“If I see a good jump getting off the ball, good effort, I’ve got no problem with it,” Roberts said.
Read more:Will Smith's walk-off home run rescues Dodgers from the clutches of an Arizona sweep
Really, that’s all Roberts is hoping for from Hernández moving forward now.
To have the kind of consistent intensity level that has wavered at times this season. To rekindle that balance of having fun and playing with an edge down the stretch run of the season.
“We're going to see that,” Roberts said. “I have no doubt.”
“You just leave everything on the field,” Hernández echoed. “I'm going to keep working, keep doing my routine, keep doing the stuff that I normally do to get back on track. And hopefully I get the results that I want to help the team."
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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
Bowl projections: Ohio State jumps to No. 1 seed in College Football Playoff
Astros’ Framber Valdez denies deliberately hitting own catcher after giving up grand slam
Houston starter Framber Valdez said he apologized to his catcher César Salazar after hitting him in the chest with a pitch on Tuesday night, but he insisted that he didn’t hit his teammate on purpose.
Salazar appeared to ask Valdez to step off the mound when the bases were loaded in the fifth inning of the Astros’ loss to the New York Yankees. But Valdez declined to do so, and then gave up a grand slam to Trent Grisham in a game Houston lost 7-1. Two pitches later, Valdez hit Salazar in the chest. Salazar appeared surprised by the pitch and started hard at Valdez, who quickly turned his back on his teammate. That led to speculation the Valdez was upset with his catcher about Grisham’s at bat.
Related: A Mets-Yankees-Red Sox super division sounds crazy. Until you think about it ...
“What happened with us, we just got crossed up,” Valdez said. “I called for that pitch, I threw it and we got crossed up. We went down to the dugout and I excused myself with him and I said sorry to him and I take full responsibility for that.”
Valdez was then asked directly if he hit Salazar on purpose. “No,” he said. “It was not intentional.”
There’s speculation that Astros pitcher Framber Valdez purposely crossed up his catcher Cesar Salazar and hit him with this pitch after Salazar told him to step off before allowing a grand slam pic.twitter.com/ds3c9MzQV6
— Jomboy Media (@JomboyMedia) September 3, 2025
Valdez and Salazar were talking when reporters entered the clubhouse after the game and Valdez said they had resolved the issues between themselves.
“We were able to talk through it,” he said. “We spoke after the game … at his locker and everything’s good between us. It’s just stuff that happens in baseball. But yeah, we talked through it and we’re good.”
Salazar was asked about what happened on the pitch where he was hit. “The stadium was loud,” he said. “I thought I pressed the button, but I pressed the wrong button. I was expecting another pitch, but it wasn’t it.”
Salazar said Valdez didn’t hit him on purpose. “No, me and Framber we actually have a really good relationship,” he said.
Imane Khelif ‘has right to appeal’ over gender tests but will miss world championships
Olympic boxing body stands firm over new testing rules
Gold medalist has appealed to Cas over eligibility bar
Imane Khelif has the right to appeal against World Boxing’s decision barring her from events unless she undergoes genetic sex testing but the Algerian has not entered the world championships in Liverpool, the World Boxing president, Boris van der Vorst, has said.
World Boxing, which will oversee the tournaments at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, introduced mandatory sex testing for all boxers in its competitions in May, less than a year after Khelif and Taiwan’s Lin Yu-ting won gold in Paris amid a gender-eligibility row.
Continue reading...Mets at Tigers: How to watch on SNY on Sept. 3, 2025
The Mets conclude a three-game series against the Tigers in Detroit on Wednesday at 1:10 p.m. on SNY.
Here's what to know about the game and how to watch...
Mets Notes
- Juan Soto is hitting .303/.466/.730 with 12 home runs, 28 RBI, 29 runs scored, and 10 stolen bases in 118 plate appearances over his last 25 games dating back to Aug. 6
- Ryne Stanekhas tossed four consecutive scoreless outings
- Clay Holmes allowed four runs (two earned) on five hits while walking one and striking out two in 5.0 innings during his last start
METS | TIGERS |
|---|---|
| Francisco Lindor, SS | Colt Keith, 3B |
| Juan Soto, RF | Gleyber Torres, 2B |
| Pete Alonso, 1B | Kerry Carpenter, DH |
| Brandon Nimmo, LF | Riley Greene, LF |
| Mark Vientos, 3B | Spencer Torkelson, 1B |
| Jeff McNeil, CF | Wenceel Perez, RF |
| Starling Marte, DH | Zach McKinstry, SS |
| Brett Baty, 2B | Javier Baez, CF |
| Hayden Senger, C | Jake Rogers, C |
What channel is SNY?
Check your TV or streaming provider's website or channel finder to find your local listings.
How can I stream the game?
The new way to stream SNY games is via the MLB App or MLB.tv. Streaming on the SNY App has been discontinued.
In order to stream games in SNY’s regional territory, you will need to have SNY as part of your TV package (cable or streaming), or you can now purchase an in-market SNY subscription package. Both ways will allow fans to watch the Mets on their computer, tablet or mobile phone.
How can I watch the game on my computer via MLB?
To get started on your computer, click here and then follow these steps:
- Log in using your provider credentials. If you are unsure of your provider credentials, please contact your provider.
- Link your provider credentials with a new or existing MLB.com account.
- Log in using your MLB.com credentials to watch Mets games on SNY.
- Select the SNY Mets game you wish to view from the Multimedia Center.
How can I watch the game on the MLB App?
MLB App access is included for FREE with SNY. To access SNY on your favorite supported Apple or Android mobile device, please follow the steps below.
- Download the free MLB App.
- Open “MLB” and tap on “Subscriber Login” for Apple Devices or “Sign in with MLB.com” for Android Devices.
- Type in your MLB.com credentials and tap “Log In.”
- To access live or on-demand content, tap on the "Watch" tab from the bottom navigation bar. Select the "Games" sub-tab to see a listing of available games. You can scroll to previous dates using the left and right arrows. Tap on a game to select from the game feeds available.
For more information on how to stream Mets games on SNY, please click here.