Game Thread: White Sox (0-1) at Brewers (1-0)

Hoping to avoid another one of these. | hazlitt.net

One of the nice things about baseball is that even if you lose your season opener in a burst of record-setting ineptitude, you get to start Game 2 with the score 0-0.

Hoping to make it beyond the 1 2/3 innings Shane Smith lasted in the opener will be righty Sean Burke, who had a decent 2025 (4.22 ERA and 133 strikeouts in 134 1/3 innings) and performed about the same this spring (4.58 and 16 whiffs in 17 2/3).

On the mound for Milwaukee will be sophomore righty Chad Patrick, who had a solid 2025, with a 3.53 ERA and 127 K’s in 119 2/3 innings.Patrick’s cutter-heavy arsenal will be facing a White Sox lineup with Munetaka Murakami moved up to the cleanup spot after being one of the only bright spots on Opening Day, with a homer and two walks (and none of the team’s 20 Ks).

The White Sox are playing a whole lot of defensive musical chairs, even though defense wasn’t the problem in the opening debacle. Luisangel Acuña moves in from center to short, Colson Montgomery shifts over to third, Lenyn Sosa is in the DH slot, Andrew Benintendi goes from DH to left, Tristan Peters tries his hand in center, and newcomer (or at least new this time around) Reese McGuire is behind the plate.

Understandably, given the 14 runs they scored in the opener, the Brewers are going with pretty much the same lineup:

First pitch is scheduled for 6:10 p.m. Central, with temps in the low 40s, so the roof will be closed. Usual broadcast suspects.

New York Yankees @ San Francisco Giants: Will Warren vs. Tyler Mahle

TAMPA, FLORIDA - MARCH 22, 2026: Will Warren #98 of the New York Yankees prepares to pitch during the first inning of a spring training game against the Philadelphia Phillies at George M. Steinbrenner Field on March 22, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Leah King/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

After two consecutive shutout victories to start the season, the Yankees are on pace to go 162-0 with zero runs allowed. Will that happen? Probably not, but it is the first time in franchise history that they’ve blanked their opponents in the first 18 innings, and heading into the series finale tonight at Oracle Park, the Bombers are looking for a sweep on national television once again.

Will Warren will make his first start of the season after a very strong spring, where a new release point has allowed him to fly up the Stuff+ rankings. Now sporting No. 29 after wearing No. 98 to start his career, the 26-year-old is coming off a 9-8 season with a 4.44 ERA (91 ERA+) and 4.07 FIP in 162.1 innings, leading all rookies in starts, innings, and strikeouts. He had a 1.42 ERA in six spring starts across 25.1 innings and will look to avoid the fate of being the first Yankee to give up a run this season.

Tyler Mahle is on the bump for the home team and will make his Giants debut after signing a one-year, $10 million pact in the offseason. He was once a reliable starter for the Cincinnati Reds, who broke out in 2021 and built his value up enough to get traded at the 2022 deadline to the Twins for Spencer Steer and Christian Encarnacion-Strand, which did not age well for Minnesota.

Mahle’s career since then has completely derailed. In the next 2.5 seasons with the Twins and Rangers, he made 12 combined starts and threw just 54.2 total innings as he battled shoulder and elbow injuries. In 2025, he still missed several months with shoulder fatigue, but was highly effective when healthy, pitching to a 2.18 ERA (168 ERA+) and 3.37 FIP across 86.2 innings, even with the lowest strikeout rate of his career.

His stuff is a far cry from what it was five years ago, but the 31-year-old managed to be effective at limiting hard contact with refined location. Mahle has leaned hard on a low-90s four-seamer, backed up by a splitter, cutter, and slider. The most damage is done off the heater, but he still doesn’t generate many whiffs on his secondaries, relying more on soft contact.

After a platoon-heavy lineup on Friday, the Yankees are back to basics today. In fact, it’s the exact same lineup as Opening Day, when they scored seven runs off Logan Webb. For the Giants, Jung Hoo Lee will lead off for the first time, and Luis Arraez moves down to third in front of Rafael Devers. It’s the same nine batters that they used in each of the first two games, just in a different order.

How to watch

Location: Oracle Park — San Francisco, CA

First pitch: 7:15 pm ET

TV broadcast: FOX

Radio broadcast: KNBR 680, 1510 AM – KSFN (SF), WFAN 660/101.9 FM, WADO 1280 (NYY)

Online stream: N/A

For updates, follow us on BlueSky, Twitter, and Instagram, and like us on Facebook.

Join the conversation!

Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!

Duke vs UConn: 'Two of the biggest brands in college basketball going at it to make Final Four'

WASHINGTON – Things didn’t work quite as Dan Hurley hoped.

Earlier this week, the Connecticut coach implored fans of the Huskies and rival St. John’s to put aside the rivalry and root for each team to advance out of the East Region semifinals for the fourth matchup this season, this time in the Elite Eight.

The No. 2 Huskies took care of their end of the bargain, beating No. 3 Michigan State 67-63 thanks to the play of veterans Alex Karaban, Tarris Reed Jr. and Solo Ball. But the No. 5 Red Storm couldn’t get over the hump against No. 1 Duke, losing 80-75 in the most physical game of this year’s NCAA Tournament.

Instead of an all-Big East rematch, the Elite Eight will feature a rekindled rivalry between the Huskies and Blue Devils, who engaged in three similarly high-stakes tournament games in the 1990s culminating in a UConn win in 1999 for the first of the program’s six national championships.

“UConn and Duke have been the two best college basketball programs on the men's side in the last 30 years,” Hurley said. “So it's a pretty cool matchup.”

Duke, UConn have deep March Madness history

Like every previous pairing, the sixth tournament matchup in the rivalry’s history will decide who plays for and potentially wins the national championship.

Duke and UConn first met in the 1964 Elite Eight, with the Blue Devils rolling to a 101-54 rout before finishing as the national runner-up. In 1990, the Blue Devils pulled out a 79-78 win in the Elite Eight before again losing in the title game.

A year later, Duke topped UConn 81-67 in the Sweet 16 and then advanced for the program’s first national championship. The two faced off in the 1999 championship game, with the Huskies winning 77-74. The most recent matchup, in the 2004 national semifinals, ended with UConn winning 79-78 before going on to beat Georgia Tech for former coach Jim Calhoun’s second title.

“You have two of the biggest brands in college basketball going at it to make it to the Final Four,” Karaban said. “You've seen Duke. You've seen UConn throughout your entire life when you watch college basketball growing up. To be another piece of that story of those two programs going at it, I think it's awesome.”

UConn experience battles Duke young talent

This Elite Eight matchup features one immediate contrast: While Duke is again built around underclassmen, including star freshman forward Cameron Boozer, UConn is a veteran-driven team that has leaned on this experience to win challenging tournament games against No. 15 Furman, No. 7 UCLA and the Spartans.

But there’s a question of whether experience really matters at this stage of the season. While younger, Duke has been tested enough in this tournament — against the Red Storm and in the opening round against No. 16 Siena, which had a double-digit halftime lead — to potentially erase the Huskies’ edge.

“I think it's less about the age and more about the mindset, the competitiveness, their feel for the game,” said Duke coach Jon Scheyer. “I think that's really something important for me and this program. And the rest takes care of itself.”

Karaban may be the game’s biggest wild card. More of a complementary piece during the program’s back-to-back championships in 2023 and 2024, he’s averaging 20.3 points per game in this year’s tournament and has made 11 of his 25 attempts from 3-point range. He brings into Sunday night a remarkable 16-1 record in tournament play.

“At the end of the day also, he's just a competitor and a winner,” Boozer said. “He's a great player.”

On the Duke side, one key will be landing a similar impact from point guard Caleb Foster, who made an unexpected recovery from a fractured foot suffered earlier this month to contribute 11 points across 19 minutes of action against the Red Storm.

His availability brings the Blue Devils’ depth back to normal strength and sets up an intriguing backcourt matchup between Foster, freshman Cayden Boozer and Isaiah Evans against the Huskies’ main group of Ball, Silas Demary Jr. and Braylon Mullins.

For Duke, getting Foster back is “huge confidence builder for the people around him,” said Hurley.

Frontcourt, physicality are biggest Elite Eight factors

But a Final Four berth should be determined by two related factors.

The first is the battle in the frontcourt pitting Reed against Boozer and center Patrick Ngongba II. Reed has battled inconsistency in this tournament, sandwiching his game against the Spartans and some monster numbers against Furman with a 10-point performance against UCLA that saw him struggle to get position in the paint and shoot just 3 of 8 from the field.

Should UConn work to get him active, however, Reed’s variety of slippery post moves could force Cameron Boozer to overexert himself on the defensive end, especially with Ngongba still working his way back from a lingering foot injury.

“Obviously, Reed down low is a handful,” Scheyer said.

On the other hand, Boozer has continued to show why he’s a favorite for national player of the year and a strong contender for the first pick in the upcoming NBA Draft. He’s posted at least 19 points and 10 rebounds in his three tournament games and has been adept at getting to the line, making 26 of his 28 free-throw attempts.

Given how often the UConn offense runs through Reed in the halfcourt set, whether the senior can stay out of foul trouble after being whistled four times against MSU could determine the Huskies’ chances.

But the biggest question mark heading into the Elite Eight is whether the Blue Devils can carry over the physical play that helped them escape against St. John’s and coach Rick Pitino.

This ferocious style got the better of UConn twice during the regular season, including in the Red Storm’s dominant 72-52 win in the Big East tournament championship. The Huskies did wallop St. John’s once during the regular season, winning 72-40 on Feb. 25 after forcing 24 misses from the field in a row to end the game.

Which team shows up on Sunday — the one that pushed back on the Red Storm’s physicality or the one that wilted — will determine who advances to the Final Four.

“I think it's their character,” Scheyer said of his team. “I think it's about the fact of learning on the fly, realizing they can be that good. Then I think that belief has kicked in the second half of the year.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Duke, UConn to rekindle March Madness rivalry with Final Four at stake

Astros vs. Angels Game Thread. Game 3, 3/28/2026

he Houston Astros (0-2) continue their opening 4 game series against the Los Angeles Angels (2-0) tonight at Daikin Park.

RHP Cristian Javier will make his first start of the season for the Astros opposite RHP Reid Detmets and the Angels.

TONIGHT’S ASTROS STARTER: RHP Cristian Javier is returning to the rotation full time since the 2024 season. He had Tommy John surgery early in the season and did not return until August of 2025. He pitched in eight games to close out the season and finish 2-4 with a 4.52 ERA in 37.0 INN, He had 34 strikeouts and 15 walks in those innings.

Javier put up good numbers this Spring, making three starts and posting a 1.69 ERA (2ER/10.2 IP) while allowing a .219 opponent batting average with 10 strikeouts.

Reid Detmers: Detmers has been with the Angels since 2021. He has toggled between the rotation and the bullpen. His best season came in 2022 when he was 7-6 with a 3.77 ERA in 25 starts. Last season he was 5-3 with a 3,96 ERA pitching exclusively out of the pen.

This spring, Detmers was 0-1 with four starts. He had a 5.40 ERA in 11.2 INN. He had 11 strikeouts and eight walks.

VS. THE ANGELS: The Astros open this season with a divisional series against the Angels, who the Astros went 8-5 against in 13 games last season. The Astros are 138-84 all time against the Angels and have won the season series against them in every full season dating back to 2015.

Game Info

Game Date/Time: Saturday, March 28, 6:15 p.m. CST

Location: Daikin Park, Houston, TX

TV: Space City Sports

Streaming: Space City Sports

Radio: KBME 790 AM; TUDN 102.9 FM HD2

LAMBERT RE-SIGNED: The Astros have re-signed RHP Peter Lambert to a minor league contract and assigned him to Triple A Sugar Land…Lambert had a strong Spring Training as an Astros NRI, posting a 2.92 ERA (4ER/12.1IP) in five appearances before being granted his release on Tuesday.

TODAY’S MEDIA AVAILABILITY: The Astros clubhouse will be open to approved media at Daikin Park from 2-2:50 p.m. CT…Astros Manager Joe Espada will be made available in the Astros dugout at approx. 2:50 p.m.

Houston Astros Lineup

2B Jose Altuve

DH Yordan Alvarez

3B Isaac Parades

SS Carlos Correa

1B Christian Walker

RF Cam Smith

C Yainer Diaz

CF Jake Meyers

LF Brice Matthews

Los Angeles Angels Lineup

SS Zach Neto

CF Mike Trout

1B Nolan Schanuel

DH Jorge Soler

3B Yoan Moncada

RF Jo Adell

LF Josh Lowe

C Logan O’Hoppe

2B Oswald Peraza

Luka Doncic will serve one-game suspension for techs on Monday

Lakers guard Luka Doncix, left, throws up his hands as he reacts to a referee's call.
Lakers guard Luka Doncic reacts to a referee's call as Nets center Nic Claxton falls to the court. Doncic would be assessed a technical foul moments later after exchanging words with Nets forward Ziaire Williams (not pictured). (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

The NBA gave Luka Doncic one mulligan. The league wouldn’t grant the Lakers superstar a second.

Doncic will serve a one-game suspension because of technical foul accumulation, the NBA announced Saturday, sidelining him for Monday’s game against the Washington Wizards after he picked up his 16th technical foul of the season in the Lakers’ win over the Brooklyn Nets on Friday.

Doncic said he was trying to get away from Brooklyn’s Ziaire Williams when he pushed the Nets forward aside with 5:12 remaining in the third quarter. Doncic had just been called for an offensive foul while the Lakers were attempting to inbound the ball. Williams was shouting in Doncic’s direction. Doncic attempted to move past Williams and the 24-year-old from Lancaster then waved his arm behind him and slapped Doncic in the throat. Both were given technical fouls.

Doncic said referees told him his push was “exaggerated.”

“Which was obviously [not the case],” said Doncic, who scored 41 points with eight rebounds and three assists in the win.

This is the second time in a week that Doncic has faced the mandatory suspension after getting his 16th technical foul, but he avoided the fate after the NBA rescinded a technical he picked up against Orlando on March 21. The reversal kept Doncic available for the Lakers’ matchup with Eastern Conference-leading Detroit on March 23 in which Doncic scored 32 points, but missed the potential game-tying three at the buzzer of a tense 113-110 Lakers loss that ended a nine-game winning streak.

Read more:Lakers beat Nets, but Luka Doncic is facing suspension again after 16th technical

Monday’s game will likely not have the same drama.

The Wizards (17-56) have lost 17 of their last 18 games. The only win came against the Utah Jazz, another team that’s attempting to position itself for the lottery more than the playoffs. Washington will be without Trae Young (quad) and Anthony Davis (finger), the team’s two major midseason acquisitions.

With another bottom-feeding team coming to Crypto.com Arena, Doncic and the Lakers might actually benefit from resting the superstar. He played through left hamstring soreness Friday, and the Lakers (48-26) host the playoff-bound Cleveland Cavaliers on Tuesday. The days between Friday’s win and Monday’s game will be the Lakers’ first two-day break since the All-Star Game.

Doncic, the NBA’s leading scorer, has charged into the most valuable player conversation by helping lift the Lakers into third place in the Western Conference. He has scored 30 or more points in 12 consecutive games, the longest such streak for his career.

The Lakers have won 15 of their last 20 games with Doncic averaging 35.5 points per game during the span. With 102 steals on the season, including three against the Nets, Doncic also became the first Laker since Kobe Bryant in 2012-13 averaging 30 or more points per game with 100 or more total steals.

The Lakers could also be without guard Marcus Smart, who has missed the last three games because of a right ankle contusion. He also suffered a hip injury in a separate fall against Orlando, but he is showing improvement and remains day-to-day, Lakers coach JJ Redick said Friday.

Sign up for our weekly newsletter on all things Lakers.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Avalanche Return Home Eyeing Sweep of Jets in Crucial Homestand Opener

The Colorado Avalanche return home to Ball Arena to open a three-game homestand with a rematch against the Winnipeg Jets, aiming to tighten their grip on the top seed in the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

Colorado Avalanche (48-13-10)

Colorado enters tonight’s contest following a 3–2 victory over Winnipeg on Thursday at Canada Life Centre. It was the first time the Avalanche had scored a win against the Jets on the road in a regular season game in 330 days. After falling behind early on a goal from Mark Scheifele, the Avalanche responded with three unanswered goals—two from Nathan MacKinnon—to secure their first regular-season win in Manitoba since February 24, 2023.

The Hockey News talks about the Colorado Avalanche and Nazem Kadri at the trade deadline.

The game also marked the return of Artturi Lehkonen, who had missed 11 games due to injury. He played a key role in the game-winning goal, delivering a precise pass that MacKinnon redirected past Connor Hellebuyck early in the third period. Winnipeg challenged the play for goaltender interference, but the ruling on the ice stood. A late goal from Scheifele narrowed the margin, but Colorado held firm to complete a perfect road trip.

The win extended Colorado’s lead over the Dallas Stars to nine points in the Central Division, with a game in hand. With Dallas in action against Pittsburgh and the Minnesota Wild closing the gap, the pressure remains high as the regular season winds down.

Head coach Jared Bednar emphasized both the positives and areas for improvement following Thursday’s win:

“It was a good effort from our guys. We gave up a couple of goals on turnovers on the D-zone walls, so there’s a couple of things we want to improve on, but for the most part, I think, [at the] end of the road trip, we played hard; we were competitive. Special teams did a really nice job tonight, and from the goaltender out, I think we had everybody involved and were able to carve out a win against a really good team, a desperate hockey team.”

Despite their strong position, Bednar made it clear the team remains focused.

“We’re still fighting for first place,” he said, “so every win’s important until they put the mark beside our [name in the] standings, so we’ve had something to play for down the stretch run here. I think we’ve had a good year, but we’re not comfortable. We’re still just kind of fine-tuning our game before going into the playoffs […] but you’re playing hungry teams every night that are jockeying for position, trying to fight [their way] into the playoffs, trying to move up the standings, so there’s still lots to play for in the season, and lots of hockey, and we certainly don’t want [our] game deteriorating over the last month of the season before we get into the playoffs, so that’s our main focus.”

Mackenzie Blackwood made 22 saves in Thursday’s win, earning his third straight victory. If he starts again, he could tie his career high with 22 wins in a season. However, Bednar may opt to continue rotating with Scott Wedgewood, who has also found success against Winnipeg this year.

Bednar spoke highly of his goaltending tandem:

“[Blackwood] came out of the [Olympic] break playing really good, then he had a dip in a handful of his starts, and he’s gone to work, and I feel like his last handful of games here, he’s given us a great chance to win. He’s coming up with big saves when we need him, he’s been exceptional on the penalty kill, which always helps, so [I’m] pretty happy with the way both of those guys are playing in net right now.”

MacKinnon continues to lead the NHL in goals with 48, while sitting just four points behind Connor McDavid and Nikita Kucherov for the league scoring lead. Martin Nečas (34 goals) and Brock Nelson (32) provide strong secondary scoring, while Cale Makar sits one point shy of 500 career points. Nicolas Roy’s status remains uncertain after missing time since March 22.

Tonight marks the beginning of Colorado’s final extended homestand of the regular season.

Projected Lineup

Forwards

Gabriel Landeskog – Nathan MacKinnon – Martin Nečas

Ross Colton – Brock Nelson – Valeri Nichushkin

Artturi Lehkonen – Nazem Kadri – Logan O’Connor

Parker Kelly – Jack Drury – Joel Kiviranta

Defense

Brett Kulak – Cale Makar

Devon Toews – Sam Malinski

Josh Manson – Brent Burns

Goaltenders

Scott Wedgewood

Mackenzie Blackwood

Winnipeg Jets (30-30-12)

Winnipeg’s playoff hopes remain uncertain as they sit five points outside the final Western Conference wild card position with ten games remaining. Despite earlier wins over Colorado and St. Louis, the Jets have dropped four of their last six, including Thursday’s loss to the Avalanche.

Their remaining schedule includes critical matchups against fellow wild card contenders such as Seattle, San Jose, St. Louis, and Utah—games that will likely determine their postseason fate. While a win against Colorado would be valuable, consistency against direct competitors will be essential.

Scheifele continues to lead the Jets in all major offensive categories (34 goals, 54 assists, 88 points), followed closely by Kyle Connor (32 goals, 82 points). Josh Morrissey remains the top-producing defenseman with 49 points. Neal Pionk has returned from injury, while Vladislav Namestnikov remains out.

With the stakes high, Connor Hellebuyck is expected to make his third consecutive start—his 50th of the season—as Winnipeg begins its final extended road trip. By its conclusion, the Jets’ playoff outlook may be firmly decided.

Projected Lineup

Forwards

Kyle Connor – Mark Scheifele – Alex Iafallo

Cole Perfetti – Adam Lowry – Gabe Vilardi

Isak Rosén – Morgan Barron – Brad Lambert

Cole Koepke – Jonathan Toews – Gustav Nyquist

Defense

Josh Morrissey – Neal Pionk

Dylan Samberg – Elias Salomonsson

Haydn Fleury – Dylan DeMelo

Goaltenders

Connor Hellebuyck

Eric Comrie

How to Tune In

  • Matchup: Avalanche vs. Jets
  • Time: 5:00 PM MDT / 7:00 PM EDT
  • Location: Ball Arena
  • TV: ALT, ALT+, ESPN+, NHL Center Ice, SN+
  • Radio: Altitude Sports Radio 92.5 FM
Image

Open Thread: Winnipeg Jets @ Colorado Avalanche (5:00 P.M.)

WINNIPEG, CANADA - MARCH 26: Nathan MacKinnon #29 of the Colorado Avalanche celebrates after scoring a third period goal against the Winnipeg Jets at the Canada Life Centre on March 26, 2026 in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. (Photo by Jonathan Kozub/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Wins in Chicago, Washington, D.C., Pittsburgh, and Winnipeg have made flying the friendly skies a first class experience for the first place Colorado Avalanche after completing this most recent road trip.

Tonight, the NHL’s best team books a return fair against the recently-vanquished Winnipeg Jets as the Avs begin a three game home stand in pursuit of the top seed in the Stanley Cup Playoffs!

Colorado Avalanche (48-13-10)

The Opponent: Winnipeg Jets (30-30-12)

Time: 5:00 P.M. MDT/7:00 P.M. EDT

Watch: ALT, ALT+ (Avalanche Local Broadcast Area), ESPN+, NHL Center Ice (Outside Regional Broadcast Areas – US), SN+, NHL Centre Ice (Canadian Broadcast Areas)

Listen: Altitude Sports Radio KKSE-FM 92.5 FM

Colorado Avalanche

As mentioned previously, the Avalanche come into today’s game fresh off a 3-2 victory over these same Winnipeg Jets on Thursday evening at Canada Life Center. Despite trailing early after a goal by Jets franchise center Mark Scheifele, the Avs would turn the tables with three unanswered goals—two courtesy of Nathan MacKinnon—en route to their first regular season victory in Manitoba since February 24, 2023. This game saw the return of Artturi Lehkonen, who had missed the previous eleven games due to injury. He factored in on the eventual game-winning goal with a great seeing-eye pass that MacKinnon deflected past Winnipeg goaltender Connor Hellebuyck early in the third period. Winnipeg would unsuccessfully challenge the goal for goaltender interference, but the call on the ice withstood the challenge. A late goal by Scheifele made things interesting, but the Avalanche were able to stave off a Winnipeg push to complete the road trip sweep.

With this latest victory, the Avalanche increased their point lead over the Dallas Stars—who suffered a 2-1 regulation loss to the New York Islanders earlier Thursday evening—to nine points in the Central Division, and still hold a game in hand in their possession. They remain the undisputed leader across the Central Division, Western Conference, and League standings. Dallas will be in action against Pittsburgh today, and the Minnesota Wild, who have pulled within three points of Dallas, will face Boston. Dallas has a game in hand over Minnesota, but another regulation loss—a possible fourth loss in a row for Dallas—would open the door for Minnesota to pull within a single point of second place in the Central should they defeat the Bruins today.

The stakes in the standings are getting higher and higher, and the margin for error is growing thinner and thinner. The Avs control their own destiny, and completing the home and home series with Winnipeg with another victory will only tighten their grip on what’s been a near wire-to-wire run at the top of the standings.

Coach Jared Bednar said after Thursday’s game, “It was a good effort from our guys. We gave up a couple of goals on turnovers on the D-zone walls, so there’s a couple of things we want to improve on, but for the most part, I think, [at the] end of the road trip, we played hard; we were competitive. Special teams did a really nice job tonight, and from the goaltender out, I think we had everybody involved and were able to carve out a win against a really good team, a desperate hockey team.”

Bednar made it clear to say that, even with the Avs in control of their destiny as the regular season winds down, the remaining games still mean something. “We’re still fighting for first place,” he said, “so every win’s important until they put the mark beside our [name in the] standings, so we’ve had something to play for down the stretch run here. I think we’ve had a good year, but we’re not comfortable. We’re still just kind of fine-tuning our game before going into the playoffs […] but you’re playing hungry teams every night that are jockeying for position, trying to fight [their way] into the playoffs, trying to move up the standings, so there’s still lots to play for in the season, and lots of hockey, and we certainly don’t want [our] game deteriorating over the last month of the season before we get into the playoffs, so that’s our main focus.”

Mackenzie Blackwood stopped 22 of 24 shots for the victory in Winnipeg for his third straight win. Should Bednar turn to him again today, Blackwood could tie his single season career high in wins (22) with another stellar performance. However, if Bednar continues to alternate between starting him and Scott Wedgewood, then look for Wedgewood to return to the crease. Both goalies have victories over Winnipeg this season, so Bednar won’t be lacking in confidence in either option as the four game series comes to an end today.

Bednar said this of Blackwood’s recent play and his goaltending tandem as a whole: “[Blackwood] came out of the [Olympic] break playing really good, then he had a dip in a handful of his starts, and he’s gone to work, and I feel like his last handful of games here, he’s given us a great chance to win. He’s coming up with big saves when we need him, he’s been exceptional on the penalty kill, which always helps, so [I’m] pretty happy with the way both of those guys are playing in net right now.”

MacKinnon remains the NHL’s goal scoring leader (48), but remains four points behind both Edmonton’s Connor McDavid and Tampa’s Nikita Kucherov (both forwards have 114 points apiece at the time of this writing). Nečas now ranks second in team goal scoring (34), while Brock Nelson remains a close third (32). Cale Makar, who scored his 20th goal of the season against Dallas on March 18, needs only one point to reach 500 career points. It is currently unknown whether Nicolas Roy, who has not played since March 22 at Washington, will return to the lineup for today’s game.

Today’s game marks the first of a three game home stand at Ball Arena, the last extended stretch on home ice for the Avs this regular season.

Projected Lineup

Forwards:
Gabriel Landeskog – Nathan MacKinnon – Martin Nečas
Ross Colton – Brock Nelson – Valeri Nichushkin
Artturi Lehkonen – Nazem Kadri – Logan O’Connor
Parker Kelly – Jack Drury – Joel Kiviranta

Defense:
Brett Kulak – Cale Makar
Devon Toews – Sam Malinski
Josh Manson – Brent Burns

Between the Pipes:
Scott Wedgewood
Mackenzie Blackwood

Winnipeg Jets

When Winnipeg hosted Colorado at Canada Life Center two weeks ago, their playoff hopes were hanging in the balance. As mentioned in this space back then, a successful back to back weekend could prove to be the turning point in their bid to secure a postseason berth on the heels of last season’s historic run that saw them secure the top seed in the Stanley Cup Playoffs and the Presidents Trophy as the best team in the NHL. Although Winnipeg did defeat both Colorado and St. Louis in those back to back games, Winnipeg then proceeded to lose four of its next six games—including their most recent loss to Colorado on Thursday evening—and now remain five points outside the last wild card spot in the Western Conference, currently occupied (somehow) by the Nashville Predators.

With ten games remaining on their regular season schedule, Winnipeg has a lot of work ahead of them. Four of those games are against teams also chasing a wild card berth: Seattle (one point ahead of Winnipeg), San Jose and St. Louis (both one point behind Winnipeg), and Utah (currently eight points ahead of Winnipeg and holding the first wild card position in the Western Conference). While the term, “must-win” is thrown around a lot in sports, these four games are games that Winnipeg absolutely cannot afford to lose. A win today against Colorado would certainly help their cause, but games against Dallas, Vegas, and the surging Columbus Blue Jackets are also monumental hurdles for Winnipeg to clear in their desperate push to sneak into the postseason. It’s not an impossible task, but the odds are growing longer and longer, and as much as Winnipeg must focus on their own performance, they’ll also need to get some help to keep the teams they’re chasing close enough to pass.

With his pair of goals against Colorado on Thursday, Scheifele continues leading all Winnipeg skaters in goals (34), assists (54), and points (88). Kyle Connor is second in all three categories (32G/50A/82PTS). Defenseman Josh Morrissey still leads all Winnipeg defensemen in all three categories (12G/37A/49PTS). After missing the previous game against Colorado two weeks ago, defenseman Neal Pionk played in his fourth game on Thursday night since his return from injury on March 21. Former Avalanche forward Vladislav Namestnikov will remain out of the lineup due to injury. With so much riding on the line for Winnipeg, it’s almost a given that Hellebuyck will make his third consecutive start—his 50th of the season—today.

Today marks the first of a four game road trip for Winnipeg, its final extended road trip of the season. By the time this road trip is over, they may know if they’re cleared for a postseason takeoff, or if they’ve been grounded on the runway.

Projected Lineup

Forwards:
Kyle Connor – Mark Scheifele – Alex Iafallo
Cole Perfetti – Adam Lowry – Gabe Vilardi
Isak Rosén – Morgan Barron – Brad Lambert
Cole Koepke – Jonathan Toews – Gustav Nyquist

Defense:
Josh Morrissey – Neal Pionk
Dylan Samberg – Elias Salomonsson
Haydn Fleury – Dylan DeMelo

Between the Pipes:
Connor Hellebuyck
Eric Comrie

NHL Rumors: Blackhawks Named Potential Fit For Sabres Star

The Chicago Blackhawks will be an interesting team to watch during the offseason. They are in a position to upgrade their roster if they wish to, and one specific area that they could look to improve is their top six.

Now, they are being viewed as a potential match for the NHL's top pending unrestricted free agent (UFA).

In a recent article for Bleacher Report, Adam Gretz mentioned the Blackhawks as a potential fit for Buffalo Sabres star forward Alex Tuch if he ends up hitting the market this offseason.

"Chicago comes to mind, assuming he would want to join a team that is not quite a lock to contend right away," Gretz wrote about Tuch. 

The idea of the Blackhawks signing Tuch is certainly interesting. He would give them a proven top-six winger and a star to play with center Connor Bedard. Furthermore, due to his strong two-way play, he would fit on the Blackhawks' power play and penalty kill if signed. 

However, as good of a player as Tuch is, the Blackhawks also have several promising youngsters in their system who have good upside. Because of this, a long-term deal for Tuch could come with some risk for Chicago, even if he would be a strong fit on their roster in the short term. 

In 70 games this season for the Sabres, Tuch has recorded 29 goals, 39 assists, 59 points, 75 hits, 78 blocks, and a plus-20 rating. This is after he had 36 goals and 67 points in 82 games with the Sabres in 2024-25. 

Cubs 10, Nationals 2: Cade Horton and Miguel Amaya lead the way

The sun came out over Wrigley Field Saturday afternoon, though it was still quite chilly, 41 degrees at game time.

The Cubs followed the bright sunshine in pleasing the 34,834 in attendance by getting a strong outing from Cade Horton and home runs from Miguel Amaya and Ian Happ and crushed the visiting Nationals 10-2.

Horton breezed through the first thee innings, retiring nine Nats in a row, three by strikeout, and threw just 28 pitches in doing so.

Meanwhile, the Cubs were taking a 4-0 lead in the second on old nemesis Miles Mikolas, in part because the Nats simply could not deal with the sun and wind at Wrigley. Nico Hoerner and Dansby Swanson drew one-out walks. Moises Ballesteros sent a grounder the opposite way and Nats shortstop Nasim Nuñez had no play — about the only way Moises gets an infield hit. Matt Shaw drove in the first Cubs run with this sac fly [VIDEO].

Amaya then blooped a ball into right that Nats fielders surrounded but could not catch, making it 2-0 [VIDEO].

The next hitter, Michael Busch, sent a towering fly ball to left, and again, Nats fielders could not make the play. It fell for a two-base error and two runs scored [VIDEO].

Horton served up a home run to James Wood leading off the fourth to make it 4-1, but the Cubs got that run right back in the bottom of the inning on a homer by Amaya, the Cubs’ first long ball of 2026 [VIDEO].

Check out the launch angle on that one! [VIDEO]

More on Amaya’s blast from BCB’s JohnW53:

Miguel Amaya became the 108th different Cub since 1876 to hit the team’s first homer of the year. He is the 81st who has done it once.

His homer was the 51st of 150 first-of-year homers hit at home (the Cubs hit no homers in 1877). It was the 86th solo homer and the 28th of the solos that increased a lead.

The Nats got one more run off Horton in the fifth to make it 5-2, but the Cubs got that run back in the bottom of the inning as well. Pete Crow-Armstrong walked with one oiut and stole second, his second swipe of the afternoon. Nico’s double scored him [VIDEO].

The Cubs put the game away in the sixth. Shaw led off with a single and one out later Busch walked. After Wood made a nice grab on a line drive by Bregman for the second out, Nats manage Blake Butera decided he had to, just had to, bring in a left-hander to turn Ian Happ around to bat righthanded.

Here is the first pitch to Happ from left-hander Ken Waldichuk [VIDEO].

This managing thing isn’t as easy as it looks, Blake.

PCA then laid down a perfect bunt for a hit, the second game in a row he’s done that. I would like to see more of this from PCA; he’s capable of doing it and in the right situation, it gives his offensive game one more weapon. A walk drawn by Hoerner and Swanson reaching on a fielder’s choice loaded the bases. Craig Counsell sent Carson Kelly up to bat for Ballesteros. He drew a walk, forcing in the Cubs’ 10th run [VIDEO].

Horton was removed after allowing a one-out single in the seventh, after having thrown 75 pitches (53 strikes). He received a loud ovation. Here’s more on Horton’s outing [VIDEO].

That was an ace-like outing for Horton. The 75-pitch limit means they’re still being careful with him, which is fine this early in the season. Good stuff. Horton was helped by his defense. Check out this great stop and throw by Swanson in the sixth [VIDEO].

Credit to Busch for a nice grab on that play, too.

Phil Maton, Caleb Thielbar and Jacob Webb finished up with 2.2 scoreless innings, allowing no hits (although three walks). Here’s the double play that ended the game [VIDEO].

The Cubs had two ABS challenges in this game, both successful, both by hitters, one by Shaw and one by Bregman.

Last note on this game, regarding the four-run innings by the Cubs, from BCB’s JohnW53:

The Cubs scored at least four runs in 44 innings last year, including 22 with exactly four, as they had today. They had two four-run innings in one game, for a total of 21 different games.

They won 19. The only losses were by 9-7 at Miami and by 9-4 at home vs. the Royals. They were 8-1 at home and 10-1 on the road. 

With the good performances in this game, I believe it is an appropriate time for the first 2026 appearance of this photo:

The Cubs will go for the series win Sunday afternoon at Wrigley Field. Left-hander Shōta Imanaga will make his first 2026 start, and he’ll be opposed by Nationals right-hander Jake Irvin. Game time is again 1:20 p.m. CT, and we are assured it will be warmer (high of about 61). TV coverage will be via Marquee Sports Network.

How the Lakers hold the cards in LeBron James’ impending free agency

HOUSTON, TX - MARCH 18: LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers looks on during the game against the Houston Rockets on March 18, 2026 at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas. 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 Logan Riely/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

LeBron James sees and hears everything. Need proof?

“I mean, it sells papers a lot easier — and clippings and podcasts — if you say, ‘LeBron, the team is better off without him,'” James told reporters earlier this month after the Lakers beat the Miami Heat. “A lot of people will view it. So, I get it…They’re absolutely wrong.”

LeBron notably left out blogs, so let’s put his notion to the test.

The notion that the Lakers were better off without LeBron had been floating around this season, in large part due to some concerning on/off splits. As Sam Amick of The Athletic noted, lineups featuring LeBron, Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves had a minus-4.9 net rating in 238 combined minutes through Feb. 27 this season.

Since then, that trio has boasted a net rating of plus-21.1 in 287 minutes.

So, no, the Lakers are not better off without LeBron this season. Next season, though? That’s an entirely different question.

Why Reaves’ cap hold is the key

After last year’s trade deadline, we broke down why Austin Reaves was the key to the Lakers’ post-LeBron future. The TL;DR version: He’s going to be in a unique spot as a free agent—one which could greatly benefit the Lakers.

Reaves figures to sign a max or near-max contract this offseason once he inevitably turns down his $14.9 million player option for the 2026-27 season. However, since he’s not coming off a standard rookie-scale contract, he’ll count differently against the Lakers’ books than a former first-round pick would.

At $13.9 million this season, Reaves is earning more than the NBA’s average salary. Until the Lakers re-sign him or he signs elsewhere as a free agent, his cap hold will be 150% of his salary this year, or roughly $20.9 million.  

Based on the current $165 million projection for the 2026-27 salary cap, a max contract for someone with Reaves’ amount of NBA experience would start at $41.25 million. Reaves will count against the Lakers’ books as more than $20 million less than that at the start of free agency.

From there, it’s just order of operations. The Lakers figure to first spend their roughly $50 million in cap space — a figure which includes Reaves’ cap hold — before re-signing Reaves. Since they have full Bird rights on Reaves, they’re allowed to re-sign him to anything up to a max deal even if they’re over the salary cap.

The Philadelphia 76ers did this same trick with Tyrese Maxey during the 2024 offseason, which is what gave them enough cap space to sign Paul George in free agency. Maxey had a cap hold of only $13 million, but he wound up signing a max deal starting at $35.5 million after the Sixers spent the rest of their cap space. (In retrospect, they might have been better off not taking advantage of Maxey’s cheap cap hold.)

Much like the Sixers in 2024, Reaves’ below-market cap hold is a use-it-or-lose-it opportunity for the Lakers. Once he signs his next contract, he’ll be on the books for that amount moving forward. This offseason is their only chance to take advantage of the Reaves’ cap-hold maneuver.

That brings us back to LeBron.

How much less would LeBron take?

According to Spotrac’s Keith Smith, the Lakers, Chicago Bulls and Brooklyn Nets are the only three teams projected to have at least $40 million of cap space this offseason. The Atlanta Hawks and Detroit Pistons could each have at least $25 million, but there’s a chance both operate as over-the-cap teams instead.

So, barring a sign-and-trade, LeBron doesn’t have an obvious destination that can pay him anywhere close to a max contract this offseason. The Lakers could do so, but they shouldn’t.

If Reaves signs a max or near-max deal this offseason, he and Luka are going to gobble up more than 50% of the Lakers’ cap space each year moving forward. The Lakers will still have flexibility to retool around those two, but because of the Reaves cap-hold trick, this offseason is their best opportunity to either bring in a third star or land players on medium-sized contracts to round out their supporting cast.

The free-agent class has already begun to get picked clean by extensions, but plenty of starter-caliber players are still set to hit the market. They could throw big money at a restricted free agent such as Walker Kessler, Peyton Watson or Bennedict Mathurin, or they could go hunting for value among the unrestricted free agents. Either way, the opportunity to play alongside Luka and Reaves should make the Lakers an especially appealing destination. (Lakers Exceptionalism strikes again!)

If LeBron is willing to settle for the $9.4 million room mid-level exception, he wouldn’t cut into the Lakers’ spending power at all. They could spend their cap space first, then sign LeBron with the room MLE and re-sign Reaves. But if he wants more than that, he would eat into their cap space.

If the Lakers go on a deep playoff run this season, perhaps they’ll decide it’s worth bringing him back for a farewell tour even if it comes at the expense of their long-term future. However, they’ve spent all year signaling that they’re firmly focused on the Dončić era moving forward. That decreases the likelihood that they’d be willing to spend major money to bring back James, no matter how impactful he might still be.

So, Lakers fans should enjoy these next few months with LeBron. They very well might be his last in a Lakers uniform.

Unless otherwise noted, all stats via NBA.com, PBPStats, Cleaning the Glass or Basketball Reference. All salary information via Spotrac and salary-cap information via RealGM.

Follow Bryan on Bluesky.

Game Thread #2: Milwaukee Brewers (1-0) vs. Chicago White Sox (0-1)

Mar 16, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Chad Patrick (39) throws against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the first inning at Camelback Ranch-Glendale. Mandatory Credit: Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images | Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images

The vibes were good after the Brewers steamrolled to a 14-2 victory on Opening Day on Thursday, but these first 48 hours of their season have not been without challenges. After Jackson Chourio was unexpectedly placed on the injured list before the game on Thursday, the same has happened to Andrew Vaughn today. News broke this morning that top catching prospect Jeferson Quero was being called up to the big-league team, and after a couple hours of uncertainty about who he was replacing, it was revealed that Vaughn broke a hamate bone in his hand during Thursday’s season opener. He’ll have surgery on the hand and is expected to miss 4-6 weeks.

The choice of Quero is, on the surface, a little strange, but what it looks like is that Gary Sánchez will replace Vaughn as the right-handed side of Milwaukee’s first-base platoon. In those instances, Quero will either operate as William Contreras’s backup, or all three catchers could get into the lineup, presumably with Sánchez at first, Contreras as the DH, and Quero behind the plate. There’ve been questions about Quero’s readiness for prime time as his recovery from his early-2024 shoulder injury hasn’t gone exactly to plan, but it will be interesting, if nothing else, to get a look at him at the highest level. Whenever Quero first gets into a game (maybe against the lefty tomorrow?), it’ll be his major league debut, which is exciting for a guy who is still considered by many as a top 100 prospect. (It will not, however, be a family affair if Quero debuts today or tomorrow: there is no relation between Jeferson and White Sox catcher Edgar Quero.)

In any case, the Brewer offense, which walked 10 times, hit two homers, and put up 14 runs on Thursday, will try to keep it rolling even with the loss of two prominent hitters. Today, the lineup will look almost like it did on Thursday, but with Bauers at first base in place of Vaughn and Brandon Lockridge, who pinch-ran for Vaughn on Thursday, in left field. Bauers slides up in the order too, to fourth, while Lockridge will bat ninth. Otherwise, the starters are the same as they were in the opener: Joey Ortiz at shortstop, David Hamilton at third base, Sal Frelick in right field, Garrett Mitchell in center, and Christian Yelich as the designated hitter. Luis Rengifo will need to wait another day to get his first Brewers start.

On the mound for Milwaukee is one of last season’s breakout stars, Chad Patrick. Patrick had an effective stint in the rotation perhaps earlier than most expected as the Brewers dealt with depth issues amongst their starting group, but he performed well and had himself in the Rookie of the Year discussion for a while; after his 14th start on June 6, Patrick had a 2.84 ERA. But a slight loss of momentum over the next month and, more critically, the improving health of the Brewers’ staff, left Patrick as the odd man out and he returned to Triple-A Nashville in early July. But he was back with the Brewers by the end of August, and played an important role down the stretch and especially in the postseason, where he allowed just two runs while striking out 11 in nine relief innings. He’ll get a chance to prove himself as a big part of this rotation’s future this season, and he’ll be looking to get off to a good start after he allowed 16 runs in 12 1/3 innings this spring. (Spring stats don’t really matter, but I’m sure it’d still feel good to have a nice outing today.)

Starting for the White Sox will be the righty Sean Burke. After 19 effective innings in a brief 2024 debut, Burke made 28 appearances (22 starts) in 2025 and worked to a near-league-average 4.22 ERA in 134 1/3 innings. But he allowed a lot of baserunners: Burke walked 4.2 batters per nine innings and had a 1.444 WHIP, so his 4.92 FIP was quite a bit uglier than his 4.22 ERA. Burke sits 94-95 with his fastball and also features a curveball and slider, and will occasionally work in a changeup.

There are a few shuffles in Chicago’s lineup compared to Thursday: Austin Hays and Miguel Vargas move to the bench, while Lenyn Sosa will be in from the start at DH and Tristan Peters in center, with Luisangel Acuña moving from CF to SS, Colson Montgomery from SS to 3B, and Andrew Benintendi from DH to LF. Reese McGuire, who caught for the Brewers this spring, will also be in the lineup as the catcher.

First pitch is at 6:40 p.m. See it on Brewers TV (online or through your cable provider), and hear it on the Brewers Radio Network.

MLB Predictions and Moneyline Picks for Sunday, March 29

Want to get more Covers content? Add us as a preferred source on your Google account here.

Sunday offers us a 12-game MLB slate that is filled with pitchers struggling with command.

Below, we break down the top moneyline MLB picks for Sunday, March 29.

MLB moneyline picks for March 29

MatchupPick
Royals Royals
vs
Braves Braves
Braves
-154
Twins Twins
vs
Orioles Orioles
Orioles
-167
Rangers Rangers
vs
Phillies Phillies
Phillies
-175
Athletics Athletics
vs
Blue Jays Blue Jays
Blue Jays
-192
Red Sox Red Sox
vs
Reds Reds
Red Sox
-142
Rockies Rockies
vs
Marlins Marlins
Marlins
-227
Pirates Pirates
vs
Mets Mets
Mets
-200
Angels Angels
vs
Astros Astros
Angels
+152
White Sox White Sox
vs
Brewers Brewers
Brewers
-175
Rays Rays
vs
Cardinals Cardinals
Cardinals
-105
Nationals Nationals
vs
Cubs Cubs
Cubs
-240
GuardiansGuardians
vs
Mariners Mariners
Guardians
+128

Lines courtesy of Kalshi as of 3-29.

Start trading with Kalshi today!

Sign up now using our exclusive Kalshi promo code 'COVERS' and get a $10 trading bonus after you trade $10 on any other event contracts — including MLB moneylines!

Sign Up Now at img src="https://img.covers.com/betting/sportsbooks/336/kalshi.svg" alt="Kalshi" width="100" height="28" style="vertical-align: middle;"

*Eligible to ALL states + DC, (excluding Nevada)

Expert MLB moneyline picks for March 29

Royals vs Braves: Braves Braves (-154)

Grant Holmes has a big arm, and Atlanta has big bats.

Seth Lugo didn’t look that great this spring, and he will have his hands full against a Braves lineup that scored six runs on opening day. 

Twins vs Orioles: Orioles Orioles (-167)

Shane Baz is coming off a career-best season, while Minnesota starter Bailey Ober hopes to bounce back from his worst. 

Ober got lit up this spring, so I’ll side with Baz and Baltimore. 

Rangers vs Phillies:  PhilliesPhillies (-175)

Jesus Luzardo is the better arm here, and Philadelphia should force Mackenzie Gore to work.

Gore had difficulties getting outs this spring, and he’s hard to trust against this Phillies lineup. 

Athletics vs Blue Jays: Blue Jays Blue Jays (-192)

Eric Lauer is coming off the best season of his seven-year career.

A's righty Luis Morales got clobbered this spring, which could spell trouble on the road against Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and this Blue Jays offense.

Red Sox vs Reds: Red Sox Red Sox (-142)

Connolly Early has a live arm but struggled this spring, while Rhett Lowder missed a full season and was also hit hard during ST.

We’ll likely see the bullpens early, and Boston has the better one. 

Rockies vs Marlins: Marlins Marlins (-227)

The Rockies are coming off the worst record in baseball.

Miami's young-gun Max Meyer looked good this spring, and Miami has the better arms for this one. 

Pirates vs Mets: Mets Mets (-200)

Nolan McLean was a revelation in 2025 and carried that momentum into a strong spring.

Carmen Mlodzinski has command issues and will be in trouble against Juan Soto and a Mets lineup that scored 11 runs on Opening Day.

Angels vs Astros: Angels Angels (+152)

Tatsuya Imai makes his much-anticipated MLB debut, but the Angels have come out of the gate swinging. J

Jack Kochanowicz has command issues, but Houston's offense and the rookie pitcher are too difficult to trust.

White Sox vs Brewers: Brewers Brewers (-217)

The Chicago White Sox’s pitchers allowed 14 runs on Opening Day.

Lefty Anthony Kay has been plagued by command issues that persisted this spring and now faces a Brewers lineup that should give Brandon Sproat enough run support to win comfortably.

Rays vs Cardinals:  Cardinals Cardinals (-105)

Steven Matz faces his former team and boasts excellent command, but he’s 33-32 in career road games.

Dustin May has electric stuff, and the hot Cardinals’ bats should provide him with all the run support he needs.

Nationals vs Cubs: Cubs Cubs (-240)

Jake Irvin is coming off a solid spring, but his long ball issues on a breezy day make him a must fade for me.

Shota Imanaga has a strong track record against the Nationals, and I’ll back him along with the Cubs’ bats against Irvin.

Guardians vs Mariners: Guardians Guardians (+128)

Slade Cecconi is coming off a strong spring.

Although Cecconi faces a tough task against this Seattle lineup, he should get enough run support, as Emerson Hancock struggles with command and has a career 1.5 home runs allowed per nine innings.

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

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.

Pistons vs Timberwolves Discussion: Game Time, TV, Odds, and More

MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - MARCH 30: Ronald Holland II #00 of the Detroit Pistons and Donte DiVincenzo #0 of the Minnesota Timberwolves fight in the second quarter. Holland II and DiVincenzo were ejected from the game at Target Center on March 30, 2025 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by David Berding/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Detroit Pistons and Minnesota Timberwolves could be a terrific matchup, but it’d be even better if both sides had healthy lineups. Unfortunately, neither do. Cade Cunningham and Isaiah Stewart, effectively the first and fourth(?) most important members of the Pistons, are out. For the Timberwolves, Anthony Edwards, Jaden McDaniels, and Ayo Dosunmu will be absent. You can consider Edwards and McDaniels as fulfilling similar roles to Cunningham and Stewart (though as Minny’s best defender, he’s probably closer to Ausar Thompson), and Donsunmu is like Daniss Jenkins and Marcus Sasser combined. Those absences for the Wolves mean we will see veteran Mike Conley and second-year player Terrence Shannon Jr. enter the starting lineup. The game also has big NBA Draft implications, because the Pistons have the right to swap first-rounders in this year’s draft. Currently, the Wolves are in slot No. 22, and Detroit owns pick No. 28. A Pistons win can do nothing but help because Minnesota can’t fall enough in the standings to keep their pick.  

Game Vitals

When: 5:30 p.m. ET
Where: Target Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota 
Watch: ABC/ Fan Duel Sports Network Detroit
Odds: Pistons -1.5

Projected Lineups

Detroit Pistons (53-20)

Daniss Jenkins, Duncan Robinson, Ausar Thompson, Tobias Harris, Jalen Duren

Minnesota Timberwolves (45-28)

Mike Conley, Donte DiVincenzo, Terence Shannon, Julius Randle, Rudy Gobert

The Celtics’ newest player feels right at home in Boston

BOSTON, MA - MARCH 18: Charles Bassey #99 of the Boston Celtics looks on during the game against the Golden State Warriors on March 18, 2026 at TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. 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 Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

BOSTONCharles Bassey has played for five different NBA teams since being drafted in 2021. This season, he’s bounced around the league on Ten-Day contracts, enjoying stints with the Philadelphia 76ers and Golden State Warriors.

Since mid-March, he’s been with the Celtics; Bassey signed his first Ten-Day contract on March 15th, and his second this past Sunday.

And, while he doesn’t know what his future holds, this stint in Boston has stood out.

“This is professional,” Bassey told CelticsBlog. “Everything the coaches do, the players — it’s just direct. It’s just fun because everybody comes in and works, and they come in with a smile on their faces. It’s been great, to be honest. It’s been good being here.”

This month isn’t Bassey’s first experience with the Celtics. The 25-year-old spent this past Summer League with the Celtics, where he spoke openly about wanting to be a part of a championship-caliber organization.

Now, he’s seeing the behind-the-scenes of how the Celtics operate, and it’s struck him so far.

Optional workouts? Everyone files in, even the team’s stars, whether for rehab, on-court work, or film breakdowns.

“When the coach says, ‘Okay, there’s optional stuff, but you don’t [have to] come in’, everybody still shows up,” Bassey said. “That just helps the team grow, and helps build connection with the team. Guys are just coming in ready to work every day, regardless if it’s optional — you got to show up. They’re always in the gym, they’re always in the practice facility, so they put in the work. Me coming in and seeing that, it’s fun.”

His transition has been made easier due to the fact that the team is filled with familiar faces. Hugo Gonzalez, Baylor Scheierman, Jordan Walsh, Max Shulga, and Amari Williams were also all on the Summer League team — that’s five of the Celtics’ 13 rostered players.

On top of that, Bassey played against Luka Garza in college and knows both Garza and Neemias Queta from his time in the G League.

There’s a lot of familiarity with the coaching staff; he’s mostly worked with player development coaches Nana Foulland and Steve Tchiechang, both of whom he first got to know in July. Bassey oftentimes gets in post work before games alongside fellow center Williams.

“Everybody I was working with in the summer leagues are the same coaches I’m working with right now,” Bassey said. “So, it’s just familiar faces.”

Bassey is now on his second Ten-Day contract with the Celtics — that contract expires on April 3rd, and his future in Boston is uncertain. The Celtics are required to have 14 players on their roster, so they’ll have to sign someone once Bassey’s contract expires. Bassey is an option, or the team could go with someone else, such as a former Ten-Day player like Dalano Banton.

For now, he’s working hard to stay ready in case an opportunity emerges.

“You just gotta come ready to walk, man,” Bassey said. “You never know — there might be opportunities. So you just gotta come ready to just work, show the coaches and the guys you’re ready to work and help the team any way you can.”

‘It's a nightmare': Top prospect sizes up Zack Wheeler in rehab opener

‘It's a nightmare': Top prospect sizes up Zack Wheeler in rehab opener originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

ALLENTOWN, Pa. — The question is no longer if or when. It’s how.

How effective will Zack Wheeler be when he returns from thoracic outlet syndrome?

If Saturday against the Toledo Mud Hens was any indication …

So far, so good.

Wheeler began his rehab assignment with Triple-A Lehigh Valley, and the 35-year-old ace turned in an as-advertised, three-inning, 38-pitch outing at Coca Cola Park.

The weather was far from ideal for any pitcher — especially one who hadn’t thrown in competitive action in 225 days — but the most important part was clear, Wheeler walked off healthy and felt strong afterward.

“Obviously, it felt good,” Wheeler said. “At the end of the day, I wanted to focus on coming out healthy. That’s really all that mattered to me.”

Wheeler threw 38 pitches, 26 for strikes, with six swinging strikes. He worked through a full mix, but the cold clearly impacted the feel of the ball — and, by extension, the velocity. His fastball sat around 92 mph and topped out at 94.3.

That line looks like a rehab start. From the box, it didn’t.

Tigers outfielder Max Clark — MLB’s No. 10 prospect — faced Wheeler twice and got a quick reminder of why Wheeler’s at-bats don’t feel normal when he’s right.

“He’s a big extension guy and he’s got a low release, so the heater plays up,” Clark, who went 0-for-1 against Wheeler, said. “And then the sweeper’s a moneymaker. He made me look like a fool on a couple of them early. … He’s obviously one of the best in the game, so he can do a little bit of everything, and they’re all pretty elite.”

Even with Wheeler still building, Clark’s read was simple: the baseline is already tough.

“He was 93, up to 94 today,” Clark said. “And I can’t imagine what he’s like when he’s 96 to 98. … It’s a nightmare.”

Another factor on Saturday: Wheeler said he’s still down about 10 pounds, something he’s trying to build back up as he ramps.

It’s also important to remember Wheeler is still on schedule for this type of procedure. Venous/vascular thoracic outlet decompression has produced better return-to-play outcomes than neurogenic or arterial cases, which tend to be harder to come back from.

There are success stories on the vascular side. Phillies offseason acquisition Brad Keller has been through it. So have Mike Foltynewicz, Alex Cobb and Wheeler’s former teammate Dillon Gee.

On the other end, Wheeler has seen tougher outcomes up close, too. Another former teammate, Matt Harvey, was never the same after a neurogenic procedure. And thoracic outlet issues ended longtime Cardinals ace Chris Carpenter’s career.

Wheeler has moved quickly through the early checkpoints, but understanding the different lanes of TOS is why there’s reason for optimism.

“I’m a realistic guy, so there are going to be ups and downs,” Wheeler said. “Everything’s not always going to be perfect. You kind of just have to take them as they come and just keep working.”

One part of the rehab that has hung over him is pitching out of the stretch.

In bullpens in Clearwater, Wheeler didn’t always look like himself with his command, and velocity has been a major focus, especially when he was simulating runners on base.

Saturday, he felt progress.

“A couple of guys told me I was a little bit higher out of the stretch, which was good because I’ve felt terrible [out of the stretch] so far throughout this process,” Wheeler said. “We made a little adjustment and today felt a lot better.”

The adjustment was something he found with pitching coach Caleb Cotham. Wheeler described it like a reminder — small, but meaningful.

“It was just something small, like my front foot,” Wheeler said. “Sometimes it’s just the small stuff you need to nail down as you build up.”

As for what felt best, Wheeler pointed to the splitter.

“The splitter, I was really happy with that today,” he said. “It was working really well.”

KERKERING DISPLAYS NEW WEAPON

Working his way back from a hamstring injury suffered in Spring Training, Orion Kerkering continues to build — and continues to experiment.

Kerkering featured his new splitter twice in a 1-2-3 inning, 10-pitch outing for Lehigh Valley. He looked sharp and, like Wheeler, healthy. It’s a pitch he’s trying to gain feel for in every sense.

“I think the last two weeks have probably been the best I’ve felt with it, the most comfortable with it,” Kerkering said.

Kerkering’s view is that the pitch is necessary — especially for lefties — and it can pair naturally off his sinker.

“Playing off the sinker in, sinker away, then split down off of it,” Kerkering said. “I think it’s going to play really well … against both lefties and righties.”

Kerkering also said the downtime has helped him take a step back and reassess how his full mix can play together. He’s leaned heavily on his sweeper — last season, he threw it 48 percent of the time, third-highest in MLB among pitchers with at least 50 innings.

That usage helped him limit hard contact when paired with his sinker and four-seamer. Kerkering ranked in the 98th percentile in hard-hit rate last season.

For now, the rehab focus is workload. The stuff is there. The question is how quickly he can check the reliever boxes.

“As relievers, you never know when you’re going to throw — back-to-backs, three appearances out of four games,” Kerkering said.

Without Kerkering, the Phillies’ bullpen lacks right-handed depth behind setup man Brad Keller and closer Jhoan Duran. Zach Pop and Jonathan Bowlan are among the arms trying to carve out roles in that mix.

Both Kerkering and Wheeler are still in the early stages, but the direction is clear. When they’re back at Citizens Bank Park, the ovations will be there — for different reasons, but both well-deserved.