Nebraska Baseball Weekend Preview: Minnesota

Series Preview

#24 Nebraska Cornhuskers (38-14, 20-7 B1G) at Minnesota Golden Gophers (30-20, 11-16 B1G)

Location: Siebert Field, Minneapolis, MN

Dates: May 14th-16th

Times (all CDT): Thursday **time change**@ 2pm, Friday @ 5pm, Saturday @ 1pm

Coaches: Will Bolt (7th season, 208-140-1) & Ty McDevitt (2nd season, 54-48)

TV/Stream: Thursday and Friday on BTN, All games on B1G+

Radio: All Nebraska games on Huskers Radio Network, Huskers.com, Huskers App

It’s the final weekend of the regular season, so time to think about the Big Ten Tournament. The Huskers are currently residing 2nd in the standings behind 26-1 UCLA who is locked into the top spot. With USC and Oregon being in 3rd and 4th and playing each other, it would be nearly impossible for Nebraska to fall out of the 4 teams that make the 2nd half of the tournament. But there is still something to play for, as the top 2 seeds will play teams that come out of the losers bracket and with that, those team will have played an extra game, and used more pitchers.

In case you were wondering, Purdue sits tied for 4th with Oregon and one game behind 3rd place USC. If Oregon wins 2 of 3 against USC this weekend, and Purdue beats Iowa 2 to 1, there would be a 3 way ties for 3rd, with Oregon owning both tiebreakers, and USC owning the tiebreaker against Purdue. A Purdue sweep of Iowa could potentially vault them into the 3rd spot. And being the final week of the season, chaos due to the tarp is always in play. #NeverForget

Minnesota on the other hand is battling to not get left out of the 12 team tournament. They are currently in a 4 way tie for 10th place in the Big Ten, with Rutgers, Washington, and Michigan State. Odds are that one of those 4 teams will join Penn State, Maryland, Indiana, and Northwestern watching at home. (Boy, who had those first three missing Omaha at the beginning of the season??) Also, Wisconsin is still too scared and un-American to field a team.

Pitching Preview

Game 1: RHP Carson Jasa (9-2, 3.31 ERA) vs. RHP Isaac Morton (4-2, 3.43 ERA)

Game 2: RHP Ty Horn (2-2, 3.97 ERA) vs. RHP Marcus Kruzan (4-3, 3.24 ERA)

Game 3: RHP Gavin Blachowicz (4-2, 3.18 ERA) vs. RHP Cole Selvig (5-4, 5.40 ERA)

FINALLY, Carson Jasa is your reigning Big Ten Pitcher of the Week. He has locked down the Nebraska Friday night starting slot that has been a glaring issue for a majority of the season. Jasa was dominant in Nebraska’s run rule victory, striking out 9 Hawkeyes in 7 shutout innings. He only allowed 2 hits, both singles, and 2 walks to a team that was leading the conference in batting average coming into the series.

Ty Horn had a very solid return to the starting rotation. He put in a quality start, allowing 2 earned runs over 6 innings, an striking out 6. As has been the case most of the season on his starts, the bullpen gave up the lead and despite the team getting a win, he did not qualify for one. That being said, his fastball looked a lot more alive and he was much better at hitting the bottom of the zone and piling up strikes, despite a notoriously challenging umpire.

For only the second time all season, Gavin Blachowicz has given up multiple earned runs in back to back outings. He didn’t quite have the location of his pitches on point in the Iowa series finale, and with the series already locked up, Nebraska wanted to get some innings in for some pitchers they hadn’t seen in a while too. Blachowicz seems to turn it up a notch on the road since conference play started, so look for a rebound this weekend.

After spending the first two seasons at Texas A&M and doing very well in limited innings, Isaac Morton returned to his home state to pitch for the Gophers. He’s pitched at different slots on the weekend, but has done well enough to be moved up to the top spot. Morton is tied for the team lead with 56 batters struck out in 57.2 innings, but also leads the team with 24 walks. He doesn’t go super deep into games for a Friday guy, having pitched under 85 pitches for the last 7 outings.

Saturday starter Marcus Kruzan is a transfer from St Thomas who has started most of the season. He has struck out 49 batters in 50 innings. He is another guy that generally goes only 3-5 innings and gets out before things go haywire. Former Friday starter Cole Selvig is pitching the Saturday game this week. He has also stuck out 56 batters and has pitched a team leading 63.1 innings. The Wisconsin native was a Texas Longhorn his freshman year before he returned to the north. He’s given up at least 3 runs in 6 of his last 8 outings, the only exceptions being the bottom feeding Northwestern and Penn State teams, hence the slight demotion.

Scouting Report

Minnesota has an aggressive offense. They have a couple assistants in charge of hitting that Husker fans should be familiar with. Connor Gandossy was the hitting coach and recruiting coordinator for Creighton for 7 seasons, and Sean Moore was the hitting coach at Iowa for 2024, and a volunteer assistant for Iowa in 2017-18, the Jake Adams era.

Minnesota leads the conference in steals with 102 on the year, next most being 89 by Iowa. They also have guys with a lot of power. Three gophers have over 10 home runsCatcher Weber Neels is the leader of the team. He has 196 career games and 182 career starts under his belt, so he’s seen everything. He’s batting a career and team best .337. He has 13 home runs and 53 RBIs. Add 23 walks and 16 hit-by-pitches, and he is on the basepaths a lot.

Another bug power bat is center fielder Easton Richter. After starting his career at Saint Louis, he really discovered his power in Minnesota. He had 12 home runs last year and has 14 this season, to go along with 16 doubles, 32 extra base hits in all. Add his 18 steals and he can be a real nightmare for opposing pitchers. Right fielder Charlie Sutherland is the other power bat, batting .322 with 11 home runs and 54 RBIs.

The Gophers have a good bullpen, and aren’t afraid to use them relatively early in games. Joe Sperry is the guy who will come in to put out the fires. He leads the team in appearances with 22, and leads the pen with both innings pitched and strikeouts with 41.2 and 49 respectively. He has a 2.81 ERA ion the year, best of the regulars.

.Grad transfer senior Brandon Jaenke is filling the closer role for the Gophers. He leads the team with 4 saves on the season. He has a 3.08 ERA and 26 strikeouts in 26.1 innings of work. Another late inning guy that will for sure take the mound is sophomore Adam Urban. He might have the best stuff on the team. He has thrown 28.2 innings in 19 appearances on the year. He has a 3.77 ERA and 40 strikeouts. While having that high of strikeout number, he has a .248 batting average against. So he has a tendency to lose his stuff over the middl of the plate.

Minnesota has an elite defense, right behind Iowa and Nebraska for 3rd in the Big Ten with a 98.2% fielding percentage.

Series History

Nebraska leads the all time series 41-34-1 over Minnesota. Nebraska took the series in Lincoln last season. Minnesota won in 10 innings on Friday night on Husker closer Luke Broderick. But Nebraska came back and won in game 2 thanks to a big performance, including a walk off single from Robby Bolin, before running away with game 3.

On Deck

  • Carson Jasa is 4 strikeouts from tying Phil Harrison for the 10th most in a season in program history with 98. He is 7 behind Brett Sears for 9th.
  • Dylan Carey is 3 hits from tying Scott Schreiber for 5th in Husker history, and 5 hits from reaching Darin Erstad in 4th.
  • Jett Buck has 7 sacrifice flys on the season, which puts him tied for the 6th best season in program history. One more and he will be tied for 2nd.
  • Last weekends 22,815 fans in attendance for a series were most in the Big Ten era for Nebraska, and third most in a conference series all time at Haymarket Park.

You know you can’t get enough of watching Iowa lose, so enjoy the cinematic recap!

Knicks-Sixers was different this time around, just not in the way people thought

PHILADELPHIA, PA - MAY 10: Jalen Brunson #11 of the New York Knicks celebrates during the game against the Philadelphia 76ers during Round Two Game Four of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on May 10, 2026 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

When the Philadelphia 76ers prevailed over the Boston Celtics in impressive fashion, coming back from a 3-1 series deficit, the consensus in the NBA universe was that this series was going to be much more competitive than what you would expect from a 3-vs-7 matchup. While the overall consensus had the Knicks prevailing, there was a loud minority who fully believed that this was finally the year for Philadelphia:

And why shouldn’t they believe that? After all, the Sixers were finally healthy and conquered their longstanding demons in the last round. A big sticking point for many Sixers fans and some national reporters was that the last time these two teams faced off in 2024, it was an instant classic of a series.

And they’re right about that. A six-game series full of hyper-competitive games, thrilling finishes, and heated moments between two regional rivals was fresh in everyone’s minds when this matchup was revealed, and they seemed to be fairly evenly matched on paper

But the thing about sports is that said paper can easily be ripped to shreds, similar to how the Sixers were in a devastating, historic four-game sweep that led to the axing of President of Basketball Operations Daryl Morey on Tuesday.

Whatever way you thought that these two teams were evenly matched, the Knicks showed that there were levels to this.

In 2024, Tyrese Maxey enjoyed his true breakout moment against the Knicks in the playoffs. In six games, he averaged 29.8 points and 6.8 assists on 48/40/89 shooting splits, headlined by a 46-point masterpiece to save Philly’s season in an improbable Game 5 comeback. After he had continued to improve in the two years since, there was no reason to believe that things would change, right?

Oh. Turns out the acquisition of Mikal Bridges, one of the league’s premier guard defenders, who has the speed to keep up with the dizzyingly fast Maxey around screens, made an impact.

That’s not all of how the Knicks boxed up one of the league’s best guards. They blitzed him 30 feet from the basket to speed up his decision-making, they showed everything, they refused to let him go over a screen and abuse drop coverage. There were fewer pull-up 3s attempted (4.6/game) than he did in 2024 (5.5/game) and he had less of his shot attempts register as “wide open” compared to just “open” and “covered”.

Joel Embiid averaged 30 a night in 2024, including a 50-piece in Game 3, on one knee and with Bell’s palsy. He’s healthier now and he grilled Mitchell Robinson during the season. How will the Knicks be able to stop him?

Well, the problem with ever predicting Embiid’s performance is that his health is never truly known. Sure, while he wasn’t playing on a torn meniscus or had anything truly major going on, he was very clearly hampered by knee, ankle, and hip soreness while recovering from an appendectomy. What you got in the end was an extremely immobile Embiid who was BBQ chicken on the defensive end and extremely reliant on pull-up jumpers on offense.

Was the Sixers supporting cast this year better than 2024? On paper, sure. Edgecombe and George are better than Tobias Harris and Kyle Lowry, but they suffer from inconsistency. As good as VJ is, he struggled at times, looking all the part of a rookie thrown into the spotlight. George shooting like prime Klay Thompson was never sustainable for that long anyway, either.

And thinking that the two biggest Sixers’ issues, the depth and the rebounding, wouldn’t rear their ugly head against a much deeper team that’s elite on the boards was always just foolish.

The Sixers were coached like Tom Thibodeau was on the sideline, going legitimately 6.5-deep on some nights with sixth-man Quentin Grimes struggling. It led to guys like Maxey looking gassed by the time crunch time comes around. In the games that they went down early and wound up being blown out, they didn’t have the second wind to go on a run.

Andre Drummond is the team’s only above-average rebounder, so it was no surprise when Josh Hart, Mitchell Robinson, and even OG Anunoby were bullying them on that end.

In the end, the Sixers were better than they were in 2024, but their level of improvement was microscopic compared to the overhaul in what the Knicks did, and the fact that people pretend like the Knicks didn’t have Donte DiVincenzo as their second option in that series was always incredibly disingenuous.

What the Knicks have figured out as of late is something truly different, something that makes them just as formidable as the vaunted OKC Thunder or even the upstart Spurs. As they wait to find their next opponents, Mike Brown knows that the formula he has used in this dominant, seven-game stretch has upgraded the Knicks from a regular No. 3 seed to a Terminator.

Why Michigan F Morez Johnson Jr. should stay in the 2026 NBA Draft

College Basketball: NCAA Finals: Michigan Morez Johnson (21) celebrates victory with the trophy following game vs UConn at Lucas Oil Stadium. Indianapolis, IN 4/6/2026 CREDIT: Erick W. Rasco (Photo by Erick W. Rasco/Sports Illustrated via Getty Images) (Set Number: X164879 TK1)

After the Michigan Wolverines won the National Championship, head coach Dusty May and his staff had to quickly get to work putting together the roster for next season. They knew a large chunk of their core team would be out of college eligibility, but they also had questions about some guys who declared for the NBA Draft while maintaining their college eligibility.

Aday Mara, Elliot Cadeau and Morez Johnson Jr. were among those in the latter group, and they were all in very different positions related to the draft process. Mara’s size and production made it seem like he was going to go pro if he received strong feedback from NBA scouts. Cadeau was the opposite, going to get feedback and advice to come out for the draft after next season. Johnson was the true wildcard.

The 6-foot-9 forward put together a strong sophomore season in Ann Arbor, averaging 13.1 points, 7.3 rebounds and 1.1 blocks while shooting 62.3 percent from the field. His offensive profile steadily expanded as well, as he knocked down 34.3 percent of his threes compared to not making any the season prior.

The uncertainty of Johnson’s future made it tough for May to round out his roster through the transfer portal. Nonetheless, he has enthusiastically supported his guys going through the process, hoping they receive information and advice that will put them on a path to success.

“We have one (open roster) spot — we’re just waiting and taking a wait-and-see approach with Morez and certainly anticipating him having a difficult decision because of how well he’s played in Chicago,” May told Andy Katz at the Combine. “But we’ll support him, and then if he does stay in, we’ll be prepared to pivot. We like our team regardless, but obviously, he raises our ceiling like (Yaxel Lendeborg) did last year.”

Johnson has been taking part in the NBA Combine this week, and the early reports are he has earned himself some money. He measured 6-foot-9 barefoot and 251 pounds, with a 7-foot-3 wingspan and 8-foot-11 standing reach. He had the highest maximum vertical (39 inches) among forwards and drilled 17-of-25 three-pointers during the star-shooting drill, a promising development after he took 35 threes this season at Michigan.

While it is a small sample size, Johnson has firmly placed himself in the Top-20 conversation, making it more likely he stays in the process.

In the latest round of NBA mock drafts, CBS Sports’ Adam Finkelstein, The Athletic’s Sam Vecenie and Yahoo Sports’ Kevin O’Connor all projected Johnson to go at No. 17 overall to the Oklahoma City Thunder. ESPN’s Jeremy Woo projected him at No. 20 to the San Antonio Spurs.

While May would love to have Johnson back, his skillset screams NBA player right now.

“Dusty (May) been very supportive,” Johnson told CBS Sports’ Isaac Trotter. “Not pressured me to come back at all. He wants me to attack this thing two feet in, until otherwise.”

Johnson is still weighing his future. However, with the week he has had at the NBA Combine and the fact he is creeping up draft boards, he should stay in the draft and take advantage of the opportunity. The deadline for players to withdraw from the draft and return to college is May 27 — if Johnson ultimately chooses to stay in the draft, he should hear his name called on June 23 at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York.

Braves Minor League Recap: Eric Hartman robs home run

TAMPA, FLORIDA - MARCH 21, 2026: Eric Hartman #64 of the Atlanta Braves bats during the second inning of a Spring Breakout game against the New York Yankees at George M. Steinbrenner Field on March 21, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

The breakout man of the 2026 season had another outstanding day for Rome, providing more with his glove this time than his bat. His early double did contribute an RBI for the Emperors, but it was him soaring to rob a three-run home run that ultimately led to the Emperors prevailing in a close matchup. Elsewhere Alex Lodise had a home run while Derek Vartanian continues to impress in his professional debut.

(25-16) Gwinnett Stripers 2, (16-25) Durham Bulls 7

Box Score

Statcast

  • Jim Jarvis, SS: 2-5, .314/.420/.445
  • Nacho Alvarez Jr., 3B: 2-5, .240/.329/.339
  • Victor Mederos, SP: 4.2 IP, 5 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 1 BB, 2 K, 2.53 ERA
  • Daysbel Hernandez, RP: 1 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 1 K, 3.72 ERA

It wasn’t a particularly good day for the Gwinnett Stripers, though a few flashes of good things came their way in an underwhelming loss. Victor Mederos pitched relatively well for the first time through the Durham order, but the second trip around combined with a dip in his velocity in late innings led to a poor ending. Running Mederos out for the fifth inning led to him getting hit extremely hard with two home runs, four three total runs, and three 100+ mph batted balls getting recorded against him. He was shuffled out of the game and the bullpen continued to struggle with four runs allowed over the next 2 1/3 innings, a deficit that would ultimately sink the Stripers in the game. For Daysbel Hernandez his inning of work was a nice milestone for his season as he averaged his highest fastball velocity in any outing of 2026 and pitched his fourth consecutive scoreless outing. Since a rough start to the season with diminished velocity he has turned back into more a semblance of his old self with one run allowed and nine strikeouts over his past 6 2/3 innings, though his velocity is still a tick down from where it’s been the past two seasons.

Offense was hard to come by for the Stripers in this game, as with no extra base hits and an 0-10 team performance with runners in scoring position it was no surprise that they struggled to score any runs. The two biggest contributions came from the two you would most want to hear good news from as both Nacho Alvarez and Jim Jarvis had solid performances. Alvarez’s two hits were both hard contact off of fastballs that he shot the other way, and Alvarez has thus far looked significantly more comfortable at the plate in May. He hasn’t been able to feed off of the two home runs he hit earlier in the month with no extra base hits since then, but his .395 OBP is more in line with what we’ve become used to seeing out of him and he’s hitting the ball hard more often. Jarvis also had a couple of hits and three total batted balls over 100 mph, though two of those contributed to his outs in the game. Jarvis smoked his hardest batted ball of the day in the third inning but sprayed it right at the first baseman for a lineout, and in the ninth inning sent a fly ball out to the wall in dead center field but just came up short of clearing the yard.

Swing and Misses

Victor Mederos – 6

Tayler Scott – 3

Daysbel Hernandez – 2

(17-17) Columbus Clingstones 9, (19-16) Knoxville Smokies 5

Box Score

  • Lizandro Espinoza, CF: 1-4, 3B, .284/.405/.559
  • Patrick Clohisy, RF: 1-3, 3B, 2 BB, .231/.300/.374
  • Jordan Groshans, 3B: 4-4, 2B, HR, BB, 5 RBI, .237/.302/.517
  • Jack Dashwood, SP: 3 IP, 5 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 2 BB, 5 K, 8.84 ERA
  • Luis Vargas, RP: 2.1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 4 K, 4.57 ERA

Jordan Groshans had a monster day at the plate, his four hits and five RBIs leading the offensive charge in a high-powered win over the Smokies. Groshans got off to a hot start with a double in the first inning that one-hopped the center field wall, capping off a three-run inning for Columbus that gave them their first lead of the game. While Knoxville did answer with a couple of runs to tie the game up, the Clingstones kept coming and were fortunate to have three triples in this game. One of those came from Drew Compton in the fourth inning after a deep fly ball to right center field took a wild hop off of the tiptop of the wall and skittered away from both defenders. Compton would then score on a sacrifice fly and Groshans padded the lead the next inning to ensure the Clingstones would never trail again. This time Groshans got every bit of the ball and crushed a two run home run into the bullpen, ballooning the lead from one to three in the blink of an eye and giving Columbus all of the runs they would need to withstand the Knoxville offensive push. Groshans capped his day off with a bases-loaded, check swing single that scored two runs, a funky way to end Groshans’s best day as a Clingstone. More on those triples, Lizandro Espinoza kept up his hot hitting in the first inning of this game and got Columbus on the board first. He laces a liner into the left field gap, and an ill-advised dive allowed the ball to roll to the fence and bring home Patrick Clohisy while also letting Espinoza motor in to third easily. Six of Espinoza’s eleven hits this month have gone for extra bases, and he is currently in the midst of an eight game on base streak.

Starting pitching was a struggle in this one for Columbus thanks to another poor start from Jack Dashwood, who has had a hard time of it over his past four appearances. In these four games he has allowed 14 earned runs while only covering 10 1/3 innings, and he was only able to give the Clingstones three innings this game. After his departure Samuel Strickland had some success, but got ran out for a third inning and allowed two runs to shrink a comfortable Columbus lead to just one run. With the tying run on second and two outs in the sixth inning Columbus turned to Luis Vargas, and that decision was one that was critical in lifting the team to a win. Vargas quickly got out of the sixth inning and then pitched two dominate innings on his own, striking out four batters and not allowing a single ball to leave the infield. This was a great bounceback for Vargas after his worst outing of the year, and though his command has been spotty his stuff looks sharp and he has allowed a contact rate of just 66.5% this season.

Swing and Misses

Jack Dashwood – 11

Luis Vargas – 8

(20-15) Rome Emperors 4, (8-26) Brooklyn Cyclones 3

Box Score

  • Isaiah Drake, DH: 1-3, BB, .294/.373/.507
  • John Gil, SS: 0-4, .288/.388/.480
  • Eric Hartman, LF: 1-4, 2B, RBI, .326/.408/.689
  • Colin Daniel, SP: 5.2 IP, 3 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 3 BB, 10 K, 5.34 ERA

The Rome Emperors went off in the first inning for four runs, and that was enough to seal the victory even with the offense in cruise control for the final seven innings. Who else but Eric Hartman got the game off to a quick start by hooking a liner into right field for an RBI double to score Isaiah Drake, and with two outs the runs started to pile up quickly. A Will Verdung double made it 3-0 in favor of Rome, and after chasing the starter from the game the Emperors got another on an RBI single from Mac Guscette. The bottom of the order did a great job of getting on base for the remainder of the game, but a combination of the top three not having their best day, lack of extra base hits, and unfortunate sequences led to the Emperors getting no more runs. Between Verdung, Keshawn Ogans, Guscette, and Jake Steels the bottom four produced six hits and three walk, but no extra base hits after the first inning and only one other runner even getting to third base. The Emperors were clearly the better team this game, but it would come down to a test of whether the Rome pitching staff could shut down Brooklyn for the rest of the game.

That last part isn’t exactly the toughest thing in the world to do. Brooklyn has the lowest team OPS in the South Atlantic League and no hitters in the lineup above an .800 OPS, so Colin Daniel and friends had their easiest matchup of the season facing them. Daniel has had a few games where his command has gotten inconsistent this season and that’s where trouble has arose for him, and today was a case where walks and poor location were something of a problem for him. His struggles were at their worst in the third inning when he allowed two walks, two hard hit singles, and a couple of runs, but Eric Hartman showed up with the glove and saved Daniel from disaster. Leadoff man Mitch Voit smoked a ball to left field with two runners on, and as the ball carried towards the wall Hartman chased it in a dead sprint. Hartman timed his jump and leaped at the wall and made a spectacular robbery, preserving the lead with the best defensive play of the prospect season thus far. Voit would bite Daniel with a tape measure shot two innings later, but this time with no runners on base Rome retained the lead by a single run. Daniel would likely have faced more trouble in this game if he wasn’t missing bats like crazy, racking up 10 strikeouts and 20 swing and misses, both season highs. The bullpen kept the energy high and retired every batter they faced, striking out six of those to close out the win.

Swing and Misses 

Colin Daniel – 20

Riley Frey – 6

Isaac Gallegos – 3

(19-16) Augusta GreenJackets 3, (16-17) Myrtle Beach Pelicans 1

Box Score

  • Tate Southisene, 2B: 1-4, BB, .273/.430/.508
  • Alex Lodise, SS: 2-5, HR, .252/.323/.4
  • Luis Guanipa, DH: 1-4, .302/.345/.527
  • Derek Vartanian, SP: 5.2 IP, 1 H, 1 R, 0 ER, 3 BB, 7 K, 3.66 ERA
  • Carter Lovasz, RP: 2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 4 K, 1.02 ERA

You can always count on Augusta to give you something to get excited over. The trio once again all had hits and made an impact in a winning effort, and this time Alex Lodise is the one who stepped up with the biggest play of the game. Lodise hit an opposite field home run late in this game for his second hit of the evening, and there have been some good aspects to this mostly disappointing month of May. His strikeouts are still hovering in concerning territory, though his contact rates thus far give some indication he may improve by simple regression. His contact rate is still below the league average which is a major red flag for a major D1 player at Single-A, but his strikeout rate is hovering at about 4 percentage points higher than should be expected. The biggest recent switch is his power as he has three home runs in his past six games. Lodise’s power numbers are by far the best part of his profile thus far, and he is hitting the ball hard enough to deserve the performance he has put up. He has a .163 ISO despite not having a non-HR extra base hit since April 22nd, and with a few more doubles mixed in his should see his numbers tick up a bit more even from here. After spending basically the entire Augusta recap yesterday ranting over Tate Southisene he responded with a poor game especially by his recent standards, striking out a couple of times and only getting in the hit column on an infield tapper in the ninth inning. He was also caught stealing and had an error in the field to round out what was unfortunately a tough day for him. To round out the recap of the group Luis Guanipa had a decent day at the plate with a line drive single in the first inning and a sharp line out in the second inning. Outside of the three strikeout performance last night Guanipa has just looked so consistently comfortable and explosive at the plate over the past couple of weeks, and his contact rate is quickly catching up to the norms of past seasons.

Derek Vartanian is steadily putting up impressive outings down in A ball, and though this wasn’t his best outing in regards to his command he was still able to hold the game together and put out one run over 5 2/3 innings. He had times where he struggled in this one to dial it in and keep his secondary pitches down in the strike zone, but he has shown consistently that his splitter is a pitch that hitters at this level aren’t equipped to handle. The pitch carries about a 15 mph gap to his fastball (arguably too much for higher level hitters) and he has made lefties at this level look foolish. Left handed hitters have no home runs, a strikeout rate of 32%, and an OPS of .599 against Vartanian and it comes down to his ability to get whiffs on that splitter. His fastball is good enough when his command is on, but the real question moving forward is how he and the Braves choose to develop his slider. Right now it’s a hard, short pitch that doesn’t have quite enough power or movement to get a ton of whiffs, and while that’s sufficient against A-ball competition he’ll really need a more effective breaking ball to crack into real prospect conversations. He’s had struggles against right handed batters and has had to rely on a fringe fastball to get outs against them. Still this is a guy who, despite being 22 and in Single-A, does not have a ton of high-level experience with only 43 innings between Campbell and Augusta after transferring from two years at the JuCo level. He’s going to need a bit of refinement and development but has loads of talent for a guy the Braves were able to land as an undrafted free agent. He has been in control of basically every start he has made so far and is scratching at getting some top 30 consideration.

Swing and Misses

Derek Vartanian – 13

Carter Lovasz – 7

Yankees Rivalry Roundup: Varsho’s slam secures dramatic win for Jays

TORONTO, CANADA - MAY 13: Myles Straw #3, Ernie Clement #22 and George Springer #4 of the Toronto Blue Jays embrace Daulton Varsho #5 after his walk-off grand slam in the tenth inning of their MLB game against the Tampa Bay Rays at Rogers Centre on May 13, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (Photo by Cole Burston/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Wednesday can comfortably be filed away in the “bad” drawer for the Yankees. They mustered just a single hit in a shutout loss to the Orioles, a game in which Max Fried departed early with ever-troubling elbow soreness. The loss keeps them in the hole in the American League East, as they eagerly look to return to the form they took in the first month of the season.

But alas, the world goes on elsewhere, so here is a look around some exciting AL action on Wednesday.

Toronto Blue Jays (19-24) 5, Tampa Bay Rays (28-14) 3 (10 innings)

After a dramatic extra inning affair on Tuesday, which the Rays won, the Blue Jays got their revenge in similar fashion on Wednesday.

Both Griffin Jax for Tampa Bay and Dylan Cease for Toronto had the good stuff in this one. Through six innings of baseball in Toronto, neither the Jays nor the Rays had mustered much of anything, as this one remained scoreless into the later innings. Griffin Jax tossed five innings of shutout ball, while Cease got through seven strong, eventually allowing just a single run while striking out nine batters.

In the seventh, the Rays scored their lone run against Cease with an RBI single from Richie Palacios in the seventh. An inning later, the Jays tied it back up thanks to Kazuma Okamoto’s sacrifice fly. Both bullpens were able to keep things in check after that pair of runs, before the real fun started after the ninth.

In extras, Ben Williamson immediately got things moving for Tampa Bay, as his single plated the bonus runner in the tenth to give the Rays the lead. Williamson immediately stole second base, and was promptly scored thanks to another knock from Yandy Díaz for the all-important insurance run. Now, with a two run lead in hand, the Rays turned to Aaron Crooks to shut it down in the tenth.

The Jays would have none of it, however, as walks to Vlad Guerrero Jr. and Okamoto had the bases juiced after a quick first out in the inning. With the winning run now on base, Daulton Varsho decided to put an end to the game the easy way: by depositing a walk-off grand slam over the wall in left field.

The dramatic victory was about as fun as it gets for the Jays, and the Rays’ loss helps the Yankees keep within striking distance as well, as they remain two games back in the East.

Other Games:

New York Mets (17-25) 3, Detroit Tigers (19-24) 2 (10 innings): Speaking of extra innings, the Tigers took a tough loss at the hands of the Mets on Wednesday. After Framber Valdez held things in check, allowing just two runs in 6.2 innings, the offense was unable to put much together despite two quick runs in the first inning for Detroit. A Bo Bichette single tied the game up at two for the Mets, before Carson Benge’s clutch single in the 10th walked it off for New York.

Boston Red Sox (18-24) 3, Philadelphia Phillies (20-23) 1: Sonny Gray was excellent for the Red Sox at home as he tossed six innings, allowing just one run on two hits while racking up six strikeouts. After Boston and Philly matched each other with solo homers early on, it was Ceddanne Rafaela’s two-run bomb in the sixth that decided this one, as Boston hopes to continue climbing out of their early season hole.

Cleveland Guardians (24-21) 4, Los Angeles Angels (16-28) 2: The Guardians took an early lead in the first inning, thanks in part to Angel Martínez’s solo homer, and never looked back. Although the Angels threatened at times, Cleveland was able to stay in the driver’s seat from wire-to-wire, as starter Parker Messick worked 6.2 quality innings, giving up a pair of runs and tallying seven Ks.

Houston Astros (17-27) 4, Seattle Mariners (21-23) 3 (10 innings): More extra innings on Wednesday, as Houston pulled out a late win over the M’s in ten innings. Solo homers did much of the heavy lifting, as round-trippers from J.P. Crawford, Luke Raley, and Christian Walker helped push this game through nine innings all tied up. It was a timely single from Zach Cole that sent Astros fans home happy.

Texas Rangers (21-22) 6, Arizona Diamondbacks (20-22) 5: If all of the late dramatics were not enough, the Rangers put on a performance of their own against Arizona. Down 3-2 in the ninth, the D-Backs rallied to go up 5-3 thanks to huge hits from Nolan Arenado and Ildemaro Vargas. The Rangers battled back in their half of the ninth, as hits from Ezequiel Duran and Jake Burger helped to tie things up, and Danny Jansen’s single walked things off for the Rangers.

Mariners News: Max Fried, Francisco Alvarez, and the MLB Draft

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - MAY 13: Max Fried #54 of the New York Yankees pitches in the first inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on May 13, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Greg Fiume/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good morning everyone! I hope you’re all having a great week so far.

The Mariners couldn’t hang on during a tough game against the Astros last night, falling 4-3. Though Cal Raleigh may have been injured during the contest (we’ll likely learn more today), it was a very encouraging return for Bryce Miller. What did you think of the right-hander’s first start of the season?

In Mariners news…

Around the league…

Edmonton Oilers fire coach Kris Knoblauch after first-round exit

The Edmonton Oilers have fired coach Kris Knoblauch after the team took a step back from consecutive trips to the Stanley Cup Final, according to multiple reports.

The move follows the Oilers' first round exit at the hands of the Anaheim Ducks this season. After the loss, captain Connor McDavid said that the Oilers "were an average team all year" and "just never found it."

Knoblauch had replaced Jay Woodcroft early in the 2023-24 season and led the Oilers to back-to-back 100-point seasons. They advanced to the Stanley Cup Final in each of Knoblauch's first two postseasons, reaching Game 7 in 2024. They lost to the Panthers both times.

The Oilers dropped to 93 points this past season, finishing second in the Pacific Division, and lost in six games to the Ducks.

A report emerged recently that the Oilers sought permission to talk to fired coach Bruce Cassidy, but the Vegas Golden Knights declined.

McDavid will begin a two-year contract extension next season, so it's imperative for the Oilers to show that they can be a Stanley Cup contender before his deal expires.

The Oilers' move follows the Toronto Maple Leafs' firing of Craig Berube on Wednesday, May 13. The Los Angeles Kings also also looking for a coach and said interim coach D.J. Smith would be in the mix.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Edmonton Oilers fire coach Kris Knoblauch after three seasons

Giants vs Dodgers Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today's MLB Game

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The four-game series between the San Francisco Giants and Los Angeles Dodgers comes to a close on Thursday night in Chavez Ravine.

Landen Roupp aims to continue his strong season on the mound as he duels with Emmet Sheehan.

My Giants vs. Dodgers predictions and MLB picks for May 14 see Roupp leading San Francisco to a victory.

Who will win Giants vs Dodgers today: Giants moneyline (+150)

Landen Roupp has performed at the level of a Top-10 starting pitcher, sporting a 2.52 xERA and 2.51 FIP. He’s suppressed hard contact expertly, allowing zero barrels and ranking in the 98th percentile in hard-hit rate

He gives the San Francisco Giants a starting pitching edge over Emmet Sheehan, who has lost a full tick on his fastball en route to a career-low 93 Stuff+.

The gap in hitting has narrowed lately. The Los Angeles Dodgers have plated three or fewer runs in 10 of their last 14 games, whereas the Giants have scored 5+ in five of their last eight. 

Covers COVERS INTEL: The Dodgers haven't been making quality contact lately, ranking 26th in hard-hit rate over the last 10 days.

Giants vs Dodgers Over/Under pick: Under 8.5 (-115)

Both starting pitchers have a strong track record against their rival. Roupp has limited L.A.’s projected starting lineup to a .167 AVG and .593 OPS in 48 at-bats, while Sheehan has held SF’s bats to a .088 AVG and .250 OPS across 34 at-bats.

Dave Roberts can turn to a bullpen that leads the majors in FIP (3.12). That’s a valuable card to play in a series where six of the last seven meetings have resulted in an Under.

San Francisco has hit the Under in 10 of its last 15 games and will rely on Roupp limiting a slumping Dodgers lineup in this series finale.

JD Yonke's 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets: 12-12, -3.84 units
  • Over/Under bets: 17-8, +8.64 units

Giants vs Dodgers odds

  • Moneyline: Giants +146 | Dodgers -174
  • Run line: Giants +1.5 | Dodgers -1.5
  • Over/Under: Over 8.5 | Under 8.5

Giants vs Dodgers trend

The Dodgers are 1-3 in Emmet Sheehan’s last four starts. Find more MLB betting trends for Giants vs. Dodgers.

How to watch Giants vs Dodgers and game info

LocationDodger Stadium, Los Angeles, CA
DateThursday, May 14, 2026
First pitch10:10 p.m. ET
TVNBC Sports Bay Area, SportsNet LA
Giants starting pitcherLanden Roupp
(5-3, 3.09 ERA)
Dodgers starting pitcherEmmet Sheehan
(2-1, 4.79 ERA)

Giants vs Dodgers latest injuries

Giants vs Dodgers weather

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

The young and hungry Washington Nationals are playing with emotion

WASHINGTON, DC - MAY 03: Richard Lovelady #55 of the Washington Nationals celebrates after a 3-2 victory against the Milwaukee Brewers at Nationals Park on May 03, 2026 in Washington, DC. (Photo by G Fiume/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Last night, the Washington Nationals showed just how exciting they can be. They erased a 5-0 first inning deficit, and came back to win 8-7 in extra innings. It was a crazy and emotional game where the boys rose to the occasion. They also wore their hearts on their sleeves, which I love to see, especially for a young team.

There were two instances of just raw emotion that I loved last night. The first one came in the 7th inning, when Richard Lovelady got out of a jam. Lovelady allowed a leadoff double to Elly De La Cruz and then Sal Stewart advanced him over to third on a ground out. The southpaw was in a tight spot, with the go ahead run 90 feet away with 1 out.

He walked the red hot JJ Bleday, and then induced a massive double play with Spencer Steer at the plate. Lovelady is always an expressive guy on the mound, but he went absolutely nuts after he got out of the inning. He was just yelling and screaming as he came off the mound. The only other time Lovelady was this fired up was after he got his first save against the Brewers.

Lovelady’s emotion on the mound is fun to watch, especially when you know his story. The lefty with the funny name has been the butt of jokes for a while, especially among Mets fans. He was the guy that David Stearns kept calling up and then DFA’ing. Lovelady was also not that great with the Mets. However, it is hard to perform when you keep bouncing around like that. Lovelady is just a 30 year old journeyman who is playing for his young son.

With that in mind, it is so awesome to see Lovelady go absolutely ballistic when he gets big outs. Since joining the Nats, Lovelady has a 0.84 ERA in 10 outings. He does not make it easy for himself most of the time, but so far, Lovelady is able to walk the tight rope and get out of the jams. When he does that, we get to see that primal emotion.

Richard Lovelady is always emotional, but Daylen Lile is not really someone I would have tabbed as a super expressive guy. Lile is not James Wood levels of stoic, but he usually is not the guy to flip the bat and make signals into the dugout.

Last night was different though, and a big part of why is due to family. Lile is from Louisville, Kentucky, which is close to Cincinnati. That means his family and friends are able to watch this series. With his loved ones watching on, Lile has been putting on a show. He already has 3 homers this series, including a massive go-ahead shot in the 10th inning last night.

After that homer, Lile pointed to the dugout and put his hand to his neck to signal the game was over. As the kids would say, Lile showed a lot of swag. With the Nats bullpen, the game over signal was a gamble from Lile, but he turned out to be right, his homer was the difference in the game.

I have never seen Lile that fired up before. We are seeing a different side of him in this series. Lile’s dad was also very fired up in the crowd, running down the stairs in pride when his boy hit that home run. Honestly, I would do the same thing if my hypothetical kid played in the big leagues and hit a homer in front of me.

Overall, this Nats team has been much more expressive on the field this year. Maybe there are times where it can go overboard, but for a young team, the emotion suits them well. Every time they win, this group is gaining more confidence. You can see the swagger building, whether it is Lile hitting a homer in extra innings, or CJ Abrams watching a grand slam fly.

I think Blake Butera’s culture allows for more emotion to be shown on the field. Davey Martinez did not prohibit celebrating, but he always preferred those celebrations to be in the dugout, and not on the field. He came from a different generation than Butera. I am not saying that one approach is better, it is just different.

For a veteran team, Martinez’s more old school approach may be a better fit. However, for a young team, I want them to feel free out there on the field. Maybe they are getting too loose sometimes on defense, but the emotion and excitement makes this team fun to watch.

This is the most fun I have had watching the Nats since that Kyle Schwarber led run in June of 2021. It just feels like this team is connected and having a ton of fun. In late 2023 and early 2024, we saw some of this, but it did not last in the end. Last season, it just did not look like the group was having fun.

That has changed this year. Of course the winning helps, but I think Blake Butera also has a part to play in this. Whether it is Richard Lovelady roaring after he gets a big zero, or Daylen Lile celebrating after hitting a huge homer in front of his family, the Nationals are expressing themselves. This team is having fun, and they are not afraid to show it.

Foden sparkles for City and Scottish title race goes to the wire | Football Weekly – video

Max Rushden is joined by Barry Glendenning, Jordan Jarrett-Bryan, Will Unwin and Ewan Murray to discuss the title races in England and Scotland

Subscribe to The Guardian Football Weekly ► https://www.youtube.com/@FootballWeeklyPodcast?sub_confirmation=1

On today’s podcast: Manchester City did what they had to do, beating Crystal Palace, and are now two points behind Arsenal with two games to play. Palace started brightly, but a couple of glorious assists, one from Phil Foden and one from Rayan Cherki helped Pep Guardiola and co to keep the pressure on.

The real drama, though, was in Scotland. Celtic won and scored a controversial penalty at the death at Motherwell as the title goes down to a final day showdown against Hearts, who beat Falkirk.

Plus, spygate, an FA Cup final preview and your questions answered.

Chapters:

00:00 - Coming up ...

00:44 - City keep up the chase

14:50 - Scotland and the worst VAR call of all?

29:35 - Southampton and spygate

41:12 - FA Cup preview

44:17 - Prem preview

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Down to their final out, San Diego forces rubber match

MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - MAY 13: Michael King #34 of the San Diego Padres pitches against the Milwaukee Brewers during the first inning at American Family Field on May 13, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by Patrick McDermott/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It was a pitcher’s duel until the end. In what has become a regular occurrence for the San Diego Padres, they won it on Gavin Sheets’ two-out, three-run homer. It was a great way to make up for the fact that the Friars hadn’t done a thing to back up starter Michael King’s gem.

The San Diego pitching staff only gave up one run (mostly due to some batted-ball luck) while Milwaukee Brewers starter Jacob Misiorowski went seven scoreless innings. He came out to pitch the eighth but exited because of an apparent injury sustained while warming up.

It was a win the Padres needed — which seems to be an oft-used saying lately — and it was one they got. They forced the rubber match and could take the series this afternoon if Griffin Canning can rebound from his last start.

Taking the mound

Kyle Harrison (MIL) v. Griffin Canning (SD)

Harrison has had a great start to the season, pitching to a 2.41 ERA across 33 2/3 innings. The young lefty has impressed after being traded from the Boston Red Sox for Caleb Durbin. He’s racked up 41 strikeouts in that time but has a high 1.22 WHIP.

The southpaw had two of his rougher outings lately against the Washington Nationals and the New York Yankees, giving up one run and two runs respectively. Those were still great outings, but Harrison showed some issues with command in his most recent start, walking four Yankees batters across as many innings.

Canning’s last start was tough. He surrendered six runs to the St. Louis Cardinals in 4 1/3 innings on May 8. But that was all due to a tough-luck fifth inning that forced Canning out of the game. But he had a great debut, pitching five innings of one-run ball.

That recent outing is hurting his stats a bit, raising his ERA to 6.75 and his WHIP to 1.61 across 9 1/3 innings. If he can rebound against Milwaukee today, it would be a move in the right direction for Canning’s San Diego tenure.

Batter up!

Skipper Craig Stammen has spent this series in Milwaukee prioritizing offense in his lineup. He’s started Nick Castellanos in right field, meaning Fernando Tatis Jr. plays second base. Miguel Andujar and Gavin Sheets have been in the lineup consistently as well. That is likely to continue.

  1. Jackson Merrill, CF
  2. Fernando Tatis Jr., 2B
  3. Manny Machado, 3B
  4. Miguel Andujar, DH
  5. Gavin Sheets, 1B
  6. Xander Bogaerts, SS
  7. Ramón Laureano, LF
  8. Nick Castellanos, RF
  9. Freddy Fermin, C

Bogaerts has been solid lately, and owns a .286 career average against Harrison. The same goes for Tatis whose career average is .444 with a 1.333 OPS.

But the real story is Castellanos, who owns a .600 average and 2.000 OPS against the southpaw. His bat could be a major addition to today’s series finale, but he may be out of the lineup instead given how much time he’s spent in right field lately.

Relief corps

Behind King’s great outing, Jeremiah Estrada, Jason Adam and Mason Miller locked down the final three-plus innings. They each pitched scoreless appearances, with Miller pitching his 13th save of the season, regaining the major-league lead.

That saved the majority of the ‘pen for today’s series finale, with Ron Marinaccio, Yuki Matsui, Adrian Morejon, Wandy Peralta and Bradgley Rodriguez available. Morejon and Rodriguez are the highest leverage options of the bunch. Should it be a close game when Canning departs, they’ll be the first two out.

Controversial no-call in final second incenses Pistons as Cavaliers rally to take series lead in stunner

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Jarrett Allen fouled during a basketball game, Image 2 shows Jarrett Allen and Ausar Thompson during a basketball game
Jarrett Allen foul

The Cavaliers got a bit of a favorable road whistle.

With three seconds remaining in the fourth quarter of a tied game Wednesday in Game 5, Cavaliers guard Donovan Mitchell was blocked by Pistons stud defender Ausar Thompson as he attempted a game-winning shot.

As the ball trickled toward the sideline, Thompson gave chase with roughly one second remaining, only for Jarrett Allen to come crashing in, appearing to step on Thompson’s leg and sending him to the ground while the ball scooted away and the clock expired.

Many believe that a loose-ball foul should have been assessed on Allen, which would have led to free throws for Thompson that could have potentially sealed the game for Detroit.

Instead, the Cavaliers used their fourth-quarter momentum to down Detroit in overtime, 117-113, to take a 3-2 series lead in the Eastern Conference semifinals.

The Pistons were furious with the no-call.

Jarrett Allen appears to step on Ausar Thompson’s leg during a loose ball.

“[Jarrett Allen] fouled Ausar,” Pistons coach J.B. Bickerstaff told reporters postgame. “It’s clear. He trips him when he’s going for a loose ball. End of game situation, that’s tough.”

“That’s a foul,” said star Cade Cunningham. “It’s been a foul the whole game — wasn’t a foul at that time.”

“We, the Pistons, we know it was a foul,” fill-in starter Daniss Jenkins added. “But we don’t expect that.”

Tony Brothers viewed the contact as incidental.

Crew chief Tony Brothers defended the decision to not blow the whistle.

“During live play, both players were going for the ball and there was incidental contact with the legs with no player having possession of the ball,” Brothers told a pool reporter.

The NBA league office will review the play and issue a report on whether a foul should have been assessed.

The Cavaliers’ favorable whistle isn’t isolated to this play — they have shot 100 free throws in the last three games — while the Pistons have shot just 54.

Cleveland has won these last three games and has an opportunity to close it out at home Friday, with the Knicks waiting in the Eastern Conference finals.

Jannik Sinner breaks Djokovic record with 32nd consecutive Masters victory

  • World No 1 into Rome semi-finals with stroll past Rublev

  • Can become first Italian winner of men’s event in 50 years

Jannik Sinner reached the semi-finals of the Italian Open on Thursday after seeing off Andrey Rublev and establishing a new record of consecutive wins in Masters 1000 tournaments.

Another straight-sets victory, this time 6-2, 6-4 over Rublev, moved Sinner up to 32 straight wins in the ATP’s top-ranked events, one more than the previous record established by Novak Djokovic in 2011.

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Knicks, Lakers, Celtics: Where Will Giannis Antetokounmpo Play Next?

Giannis
John Fisher / Getty Images
Giannis Antetokounmpo trade rumors are heating up, with the Bucks reportedly open to offers from teams across the NBA.

Let's be real for a second. Nobody saw this coming when Giannis Antetokounmpo was an 18-year-old kid from Athens who could barely speak English and was playing for a Bucks team that won 15 games. The Greek Freak era in Milwaukee was supposed to be the kind of story that only happens in movies — small market, generational talent, one championship, genuine loyalty.

It was a great run, but it's seemingly over. The Milwaukee Bucks are officially open for business. According to Shams Charania, the franchise is fielding trade calls and offers for their two-time MVP heading into the NBA Draft combine, with ownership and the front office expecting a robust market.

How did they get here? A combination of bad luck and bad timing. Antetokounmpo is still an elite player — he averaged 27.6 points, 9.8 rebounds, and 5.4 assists while shooting 62.4% from the field this season — but he played only 36 games. That's the problem in a nutshell. The body isn't cooperating the way it used to, and for a franchise betting its entire future on one player staying healthy, that's a terrifying proposition. The Bucks also didn't help themselves in the lottery, holding the 10th overall pick when they hoped to move up significantly to change the calculus of a post-Giannis rebuild.

So now comes the hard part, for both sides. The Celtics, Lakers, Knicks, Timberwolves, and Cavaliers all reportedly pursued Antetokounmpo at the trade deadline, and how those teams finish the playoffs will play a major role in how aggressively they come back this summer. Giannis turns 32 in December and is owed $58.5 million next season with a $62.8 million player option for 2027-28, so whoever lands him isn't just getting a player; they're making a statement about their championship window and writing a very large check to back it up.

For Milwaukee, this is the moment that defines the next decade. Get this trade right, and they have a path back. Get it wrong, and they're the next cautionary tale about what happens when a franchise doesn't maximize its superstar before the window closes.

The Greek Freak era was worth every minute. What comes next is the real question. So, let's cut through the noise. Here are eight teams that could actually make a move and what a deal could look like.

New York Knicks

This one has been brewing for years, and the pressure only grows if New York falls short of a title this postseason. The fit makes sense on paper — Madison Square Garden, the market, the moment. The complication is the return. A package centered around Karl-Anthony Towns and a surplus of future pick swaps has been floated, but Milwaukee needs a foundational young piece, and it's fair to wonder whether Towns — at his age and salary — qualifies as that. The Knicks can get this done. Whether they can get it done at Milwaukee's asking price is another conversation.

Boston Celtics

The Celtics just lost in the first round to the 76ers, and Jaylen Brown's postseason comments opened a door that many people in Boston didn't expect to see opened this soon. Boston could conceivably package Brown, Derrick White, and future picks to make the money work, and that might be the offer Milwaukee has the hardest time turning down. The risk for Boston is real, though. Giannis turns 32 in December and carries a massive contract, and counting on a player that size to maintain peak production deep into his 30s is a gamble that could age poorly in a hurry.

Los Angeles Lakers

The Lakers have made a habit of this. Superstar becomes available, Los Angeles finds a way to make the call. The Lakers were among the teams that pursued Antetokounmpo at the trade deadline, so the interest is established and the logic is straightforward, especially if LeBron James and the franchise go their separate ways this offseason and the front office needs a new centerpiece to sell. The sticking point is the return. A package built around Austin Reaves and draft picks is probably the ceiling of what Los Angeles can offer, and Milwaukee is going to want more than that. The Lakers have the brand; whether they have the assets is a different question entirely.

San Antonio Spurs

This is the one that nobody wants to say out loud because it sounds too good to be true. Giannis and Victor Wembanyama in the same frontcourt. The comparison to Tim Duncan and David Robinson has already been made, and it's not a stretch — only this time with modern spacing and athleticism that those teams could never have dreamed of. The vision is right there. The question is whether San Antonio is actually willing to blow up a young core that is ahead of schedule to get it done. Any realistic deal almost certainly involves Stephon Castle or Dylan Harper, and that's a steep price to pay for a player on the wrong side of 31 with a massive contract. But the fit is clean, the timeline is decent, and the ceiling with Wembanyama alongside him is genuinely terrifying. If San Antonio pulls the trigger on this one, the rest of the league should be very, very nervous.

Giannis
Patrick McDermott / Getty Images

Golden State Warriors

This one is about Stephen Curry's closing chapter, and everybody knows it. Golden State was among the teams linked to Antetokounmpo as a potential suitor, and the vision is obvious — pair the greatest shooter of all time with a two-time MVP for one last run at a title. It's a beautiful story. The problem is Milwaukee isn't in the business of beautiful stories right now. They want youth and picks, and the Warriors are running low on both. Unless Golden State gets creative in ways that aren't currently obvious, this one feels more like a dream scenario than a realistic deal.

Cleveland Cavaliers

Cleveland is still alive in the playoffs, so this one is TBD, but if the Cavaliers go out in an ugly fashion, expect personnel changes to follow. Evan Mobley is the name that matters here. He's exactly the type of young, switchable, two-way big that Milwaukee would want coming back in a deal, and pairing him with a Giannis asking price of picks makes Cleveland one of the more realistic suitors in this field. Keep an eye on how their postseason ends.

Houston Rockets

Houston made a big swing last offseason for Kevin Durant, and it didn't land the way they hoped. If they decide to make another move, they have genuine foundational pieces to offer — Alperen Sengun, Jabari Smith Jr., and Amen Thompson are all names that should be appealing to a Bucks front office that wants youth coming back. The question is whether Houston wants to blow up a young core that hasn't fully matured yet for a 32-year-old on a massive deal. Bold move. Not impossible.

Minnesota Timberwolves

An Antetokounmpo-Anthony Edwards pairing is the kind of thing that keeps opposing coaches up at night. Minnesota reportedly pursued Giannis at the trade deadline, and if they can't get past the Western Conference semifinals, expect them to come back harder this summer. They have movable contracts in Jaden McDaniels, Julius Randle, and Rudy Gobert to construct a package, and Edwards as the centerpiece of a new era alongside Giannis is a compelling vision. The fit is there. Now it's just about whether the assets are enough to get Milwaukee to say yes.

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Brandon Clarke cause of death: What we know about passing of Grizzlies player

Memphis Grizzlies power forward Brandon Clarke was found dead at a residence in the San Fernando Valley on May 11, and authorities are investigating the circumstances of his death.

Clarke was 29 and was in his seventh season in the NBA.

After starring at Gonzaga, Clarke was drafted by the Oklahoma City Thunder with the 21st pick in the 2019 Draft. He was traded to Memphis and earned All-Rookie team honors in 2020. Clarke only played two games for Memphis in the 2025-26 season due to various injuries.

He averaged 10.2 points and 5.6 rebounds in 309 games in his career.

Here's the latest information about Clarke's passing:

Brandon Clarke cause of death

According to the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner's Office, Clarke's body is ready for release, and the cause of death has been deferred.

Authorities have said that drug paraphernalia was found in the home where Clark was found and that "the incident is being investigated as a possible overdose."

What happened with Brandon Clarke's arrest?

Clarke was arrested on April 1, 2026, after a mile-long chase that reached speeds over 100 miles per hour in Arkansas.

Clarke was found with over 230 grams of kratom, per an arrest affidavit obtained by The Memphis Commercial Appeal. According to the Mayo Clinic, kratom has been deemed unsafe and ineffective as a supplement and a possible way to quit opioids.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has said that kratom is a drug of concern, and in Arkansas, it is classified as a Schedule 1 controlled substance.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Brandon Clarke cause of death: Latest on Grizzlies player death