Sixers exercise team options for Barlow and Terry

Sixers exercise team options for Barlow and Terry originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Sixers on Friday exercised the team options for Dominick Barlow and Dalen Terry, a source confirmed to NBC Sports Philadelphia. 

The Athletic’s Tony Jones first reported the news. 

According to Spotrac, Barlow’s 2026-27 salary is approximately $3.4 million and Terry’s is approximately $2.6 million. 

Initially signed to a two-way contract last summer, Barlow inked a standard NBA deal in February. He appeared in 71 games, started 59, and averaged 7.7 points, 4.8 rebounds, 1.2 assists, 0.9 steals and 0.7 blocks in 23.8 minutes per contest. 

“Super impactful,” Sixers head coach Nick Nurse said of Barlow after his team’s April 1 win over the Wizards. “Again, just tremendous effort at all times. Just doesn’t really make many mistakes. … You just don’t see him blowing too many switches. You don’t see him missing block-outs. He’s really reliable with the ball. … Just hard play and high IQ.”

Barlow shifted to the bench for his first NBA playoffs and played in nine of the Sixers’ 11 postseason games. The 23-year-old’s best personal moment was a good small-ball center stint in Game 2 of the Sixers’ second-round series with the Knicks. Over 16 minutes, Barlow posted six points on 3-for-3 shooting, two rebounds, two blocks and a steal in a tight loss without Joel Embiid at Madison Square Garden. 

The Sixers signed Terry to a two-way deal in February and converted him to a standard NBA contract in April.

The 23-year-old wing played 14 times for the Sixers in the regular season and averaged 4.1 points, 1.6 assists and 1.6 rebounds in 12.4 minutes per game. He was not part of the Sixers’ playoff rotation. 

The Sixers have declined Trendon Watford’s team option of $2.8 million, a source confirmed. The Athletic first reported the news.

That means the 25-year-old forward is set to hit unrestricted free agency. Teams can officially begin negotiations with all free agents starting Tuesday at 6 p.m. ET.

Memphis Embraces Boozer, But he Ja Morant Problem Isn’t Going Away

MEMPHIS, TN - JUNE 25: Cameron Boozer #27 of the Memphis Grizzlies poses for a portrait on June 25, 2026 at FedExForum in Memphis, Tennessee. 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 Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Cameron Boozer and his fellow rookie teammates, Karim Lopez and Richie Saunders, have been introduced to fans by the Memphis Grizzlies, and Boozer, at least, seems to have gone over well.

The team clearly plans to build around him, and that could mean a tricky transition between the Grizzlies being Ja Morant’s team and Boozer’s.

It’s no secret that Memphis would like to move Morant, who has derailed his career with stupid acts, generally involving guns, or defying what the franchise or his coach wants him to do.

To be clear, he’s not interested in staying with Memphis either, but between his behavior, injuries, and declining performance, there’s just not much of a market for his services right now.

This site suggests trades might be possible with Boston, Miami, and Chicago.

Brad Stevens (Boston) and Pat Riley (Miami) have been around long enough to have clearly defined cultures, and both have already had talented players who had serious issues fitting in. For Stevens, it was Kyrie Irving; for Riley, Jimmy Butler. Both were expensive lessons, and we can’t imagine either wanting to try that again.

Chicago?

Maybe.

Unless and until it happens, it’s going to be difficult for Morant to watch the offense and attention shift to Boozer, who, while still just 18 (he turns 19 on July 18) is already more mature than his older teammate. That dynamic is going to be tough to handle.

In a small bit of other rookie news, Maliq Brown and Isaiah Evans have picked their new numbers. Brown will wear #15, while Evans has taken #33, perhaps to remind him that he lingered in the draft until that point, and now plans to use it as motivation.

Go to the DBR Boards to find Blue Healer Auctions || Drop us a line

Top 15 remaining 2026 NBA free agents: Jalen Duren, LeBron James, James Harden still available

Since we first published this list, a few big names have signed deals (Austin Reaves, Trae Young, Isaiah Hartenstein), yet the biggest names are still on the board. Here is our updated list of the 15 top free agents still on the market one day before the official start of free agency (June 30 at 6 p.m. ET).

1. Jalen Duren (restricted)

There's a lot of sympathy around the NBA for Jalen Duren among players and agents — they all despise restricted free agency and how powerless it can leave a player. Duren is in that spot now, and while there have been reports of him looking for a sign-and-trade somewhere, the most another team could give him is four years, $177 million, a deal the Pistons would just match. Other teams know that and are not going to tie up their money for 48 hours waiting for that to play out. Reportedly, Duren is seeking something more like five years at $200+ million (more than $40 million per season on average), while the Pistons want to stay in the mid-$30 million-per-season range (say, five years, $180 million, or $36 million per year average). The expectation around the league is that the sides will find a middle ground (maybe in four years), and a deal will get done. There is no way Detroit lets him leave.

2. James Harden (player option)

This is another case where there's no question Harden will be back next season in Cleveland, the only questions are the years and the money on his new deal. As noted here previously, there is zero chance Harden gets traded from the Clippers to Cleveland without a handshake agreement for an extension already in place. The question is the number the sides land on with the new deal. Harden will decline his $42.3 million player option and sign a deal with a lower per-season number but a higher total.

3. LeBron James

When free agency starts on June 30, LeBron James will be a free agent. The latest reports say there has been little contact between the Lakers and LeBron's camp (led by agent Rich Paul) as the team has been focused on upgrading the roster at the five and on the wing. As it has been from the start, the question around LeBron's next team always comes back to the money. Golden State can offer up the mid-level exception of $15.1 million, and that may be the best free agent offer out there (and it keeps LeBron on the West Coast closer to his family).

Cleveland is a favorite target of speculation among fans, but the math doesn't work out. The most the Cavaliers can offer straight up is $3.9 million at the veteran minimum. While Cleveland is a fun sign-and-trade speculation (Max Strus or Cam Johnson coming to Los Angeles), the reality is that any sign-and-trade hard caps the Cavaliers at the first apron, and the team is already about $14 million over that number and would have to cut much more salary.

League sources continue to tell NBC Sports they expect the Lakers to get their other business done, then re-sign LeBron on a one- or two-year deal, at a price maybe less than what LeBron hopes but for more than anyone else is offering.

4. Peyton Watson (restricted)

Denver has made it very public that they intend to match any offer for Watson, a player who averaged 14.6 points a game last season, played well off Nikola Jokic, is a plus defender on the wing and shot 41.1% from 3-point range. Denver is also a team feeling a financial crunch under the aprons. All of which has other teams asking, "What would we have to offer before Denver could not match?" Jake Fischer and Marc Stein of The Stein Line reported that number could be around $30 million a year. The Lakers, Bulls and even Clippers have been mentioned, but would any really go that big to get Watson? This smells a lot like an agent trying to get Denver to up its offer to his client and get him every last dollar (which is exactly what an agent should do). The smart money is still on Watson staying in Denver, but the negotiations are getting interesting.

5. Walker Kessler (restricted)

Kessler is joining Duren in the "we hate restricted free agency" club. He is at a stalemate with the Jazz. It has been reported that Utah's offer to the 7'2" big man is five years, $140 million ($28 million per year average), and he and his agent are trying to squeeze more out of Utah. However, would the Lakers or any other team interested in him offer much more than what is on the table, or more bluntly, enough more to make Utah not match? Kessler is a player who has shown promise, but he also played just five games last season due to shoulder surgery. Also, there is a three-team trade floated online involving the Lakers and Heat (and Andrew Wiggins), a proposal a league source called "fanciful" speaking to NBC Sports. Much like Duren, Kessler and the Jazz will eventually find a number.

6. Norman Powell

The structure of the Giannis Antetokounmpo trade (the Heat used more than 100% of the traded player exception) means the Heat are hard capped at the first apron, leaving them about $18 million to fill in four roster spots. Powell made $20.5 million last season and, coming off an All-Star campaign, is looking for a raise. The math on him returning to Miami gets difficult without them making other moves. The Chicago Bulls are interested, and the Pistons have had their eyes on him. There is an increasing sense that Powell will be in a new home next season (a setback for the Heat's plans).

7. Rui Hachimura

If the Lakers end up bringing back guards Marcus Smart and Luke Kennard, Hachimura may be the odd man out. There are a lot of teams that could use a 6'8" forward who shot 44.7% from 3-point range last season and has shown the last couple of years that he can step up and be better on the big stages in the postseason. NBA insider Jake Fischer reported the Nets and Spurs are interested in Hachimura. The Spurs could use a big forward who can stretch the floor like him, it would be a natural fit. Wherever he signs, expect Hachimura to make a little more than the mid-level exception ($18-$20 million a season on average).

8. Tari Eason (restricted)

Eason is the archetype of a player every team could use: a 6'8" high-level defensive wing player who has started to find his shot and hit 35.8% from 3-point range last season. Which is why Eason will be given a qualifying offer from the Rockets making him a restricted free agent. Houston and Eason are reportedly not close to a deal, just as they could not reach one after last season (the Rockets reportedly offered him $100 million at the time). By all accounts Eason wants to remain in Houston, it's just a matter of money.

9. Andrew Wiggins

We'll know a lot more about Wiggins by the time free agency starts. Will he pick up his $30.2 million player option, or will he become a free agent? If he hits the open market, a number of teams would be interested, although the offers for him would likely be less per year and with the added security of extra seasons. A proven two-way wing who has won a ring before, a lot of teams could use Wiggins on their roster.

10. Tobias Harris

After the season, Pistons head of basketball operations Trajan Langdon publicly said they wanted to bring back Harris, but no deal has been reached, and other teams are reportedly lurking with interest (the San Antonio Spurs among them). There had been reports that the Pistons were "determined" to bring back Harris, but until a deal is agreed to, everything is on the table.

11. Marcus Smart

Smart has a $5.4 million player option he is largely expected to decline, and while the Lakers have said they want to bring him back, it all comes down to the money. Houston reportedly is interested, Smart played for current Rockets coach Ime Udoka in Boston. If he hits the market, other teams likely will be interested as well.

12. John Collins

A lot of teams that could use depth up front have their eye on Collins, a solid pick-and-roll big who can pop out and hit the 3 (he shot 40.6% last season) and is a respectable shot blocker and rim protector. The Clippers want to bring him back, but also the 76ers, Magic and Spurs are reportedly interested, according to Jake Fischer at The Stein Line.

13. Kristaps Porzingis

The expectation is that Porzingis and the Warriors will announce a new deal not long after free agency officially opens, reports Marc Stein and Jake Fischer. The only question is what the final number will be.

14. Draymond Green (player option)

The expectation in league circles remains that Green will opt out of his $27.7 million player option for next season and re-sign with the Warriors for two years at a slightly lower per-year number but with more total guaranteed money. If Green picks up that option, it's a sign the Warriors are using his salary in a much larger trade, but that seems unlikely.

15. Bennedict Mathurin

Mathurin came over to the Clippers in the Ivica Zubac trade, and in 26 games for LA, he averaged 17.4 points per game — he was good for them. Mathurin's elite skill is getting downhill and drawing fouls, things the Clippers could use (a contrast to Darius Garland), but after just drafting Keaton Wagler fifth in the NBA Draft, would Mathurin's minutes get squeezed? Some are expecting him to test the free agent waters — there is speculation about the Nets being interested, but that's what every agent leaks because they have cap space. He likely re-signs with the Clippers, although there has been some speculation that if the Clippers need to clear cap space they could renounce his rights.

Looking back on Royce O’Neale and Grayson Allen’s time in Phoenix

PHOENIX, AZ - DECEMBER 19: Grayson Allen #8 and Royce O'Neale #00 of the Phoenix Suns high five during the game against the Indiana Pacers on December 19, 2024 at Footprint Center in Phoenix, Arizona. 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 2024 NBAE (Photo by Barry Gossage/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

After spending a season together on the Utah Jazz years prior, Royce O’Neale and Grayson Allen were once again reunited after the Phoenix Suns acquired O’Neale from the Brooklyn Nets in February 2024, less than six months after Allen was sent to Phoenix in a deal that sent Damian Lillard to the Milwaukee Bucks and Deandre Ayton to the Portland Trail Blazers. Now that they have been traded to the Charlotte Hornets in a deal in which the Suns acquired Miles Bridges, it’s time to look back on their Phoenix tenures.

In their three seasons together, the two played a variety of roles while being part of three wildly different Phoenix Suns teams.

After being on a balanced Milwaukee Bucks roster that boasted the best record in the NBA, Allen was quickly thrust into an important role on a Phoenix team short on depth outside of its big three of Kevin Durant, Bradley Beal, and Devin Booker once he was traded. Starting in 74 games, the Duke product averaged career highs in minutes, points, rebounds, assists, and, most importantly, three-point percentage, where he led the NBA by shooting 46% from downtown.

With Bradley Beal and Devin Booker in and out of the lineup at times, Allen got ample opportunities to show off his playmaking chops, which were best on display in a February 2024 matchup against one of his former teams.

Amid Allen’s strong year, O’Neale was reunited with his former teammate after he was traded to Phoenix and, like Allen, was quickly thrust into a significant role early in his Suns tenure. Playing mostly the four spot, O’Neale took some of the team’s toughest defensive assignments to help Phoenix’s stars preserve energy for the offensive end, along with putting up a lot of threes.

In his 30 games with Phoenix during the 2023-24 season, he put up 157 threes, shooting 37.6% from deep.

Thanks to a short playoff run and Allen getting hurt, neither made much of an impact when the team got swept by the Minnesota Timberwolves in the first round, but after signing Tyus Jones in free agency and with Booker, Durant and Beal having another year under their belt playing together, things were supposed to look bright in Arizona until the season happened.

Going 8-1 to start the season, when Kevin Durant got hurt in a game against the Dallas Mavericks in November 2024, Phoenix never recovered, going 28-45 down the stretch, but the root of the team’s struggles wasn’t on either of them. Allen did miss 18 games, but O’Neale averaged a career high in points per game up to that point.

The two of them solidified their status as some of the most impactful Suns role players of the past decade with this past season. Coming into this past season, there were rumblings about both of their long-term futures, considering the financial and roster positions the squad was in. With the team drafting rookies Khaman Maluach and Rasheer Fleming, along with trading for 23-year-olds Jalen Green and Mark Williams, both O’Neale’s and Allen’s positions on a team retooling around Booker looked murky, but both found ways to contribute.


In the team’s 11th game of the year, Allen made history when he hit a franchise record 10 threes during his career-high 42-point performance against the New Orleans Pelicans. The game put the Suns over .500, where they remained for the rest of the season.

When Booker was out, Allen stepped up as a scorer. His 28-point game against the Los Angeles Lakers helped the team end a February they struggled in with a comeback win against a top-six team. With Booker out in a January 29 game against the Eastern Conference’s top-seeded Detroit Pistons, he dropped 24 points while going a perfect 10 for 10 from the charity stripe in a surprising 114 to 96 victory for the team.

Missing nearly 40% of the season mainly because of lower-body injuries, Allen was in and out of the lineup, but remained impactful, averaging over 15 points a game as a reserve.

For O’Neale, unlike Allen, he started the season coming off the bench, but that didn’t last long after his strong shooting to start the season. Starting in 67 of 78 games played, O’Neale built off his career year in the 2024 2025 campaign with even better numbers and productivity in an increased role. He averaged the most points and threes made per game on the best three-point efficiency of his career, hitting nearly 41% of his treys. His shining moment came in the same game Allen scored 28 against the Lakers, when O’Neale scored the team’s final seven points and hit the game-winning three with less than a second left to seal the victory.

Playing in different roles and positions on different types of teams, both found ways to make an impact as strong floor spacers in every minute on the court.

While neither will go down as the most iconic or greatest players to ever don a Phoenix Suns uniform, in their three seasons on the team, Royce O’Neale and Grayson Allen helped a playoff team get back to the playoffs after a down year and helped re-establish a culture that was lacking.

And personally, as a young reporter speaking to them in NBA locker rooms after wins and losses, they gave me the respect and patience to answer my questions not only with thoughtfulness but also with kindness, which will not be forgotten.

Best of luck to them both in Charlotte. They made an impact in Phoenix.

NBA Free Agent Rankings: Best 69 players available in 2026, including LeBron James

DUBROVNIK, CROATIA - JUNE 13: Basketball Player and Team AlUla Co-Owner, Lebron James looks on in the E1 Owners Suite during the E1 Series Dubrovnik GP on June 13, 2026 in Dubrovnik, Croatia. (Photo by Joe Portlock/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The NBA offseason is already off to a fast start. The draft has come and gone, Giannis Antetokounmpo has been traded to the Miami Heat, and the Charlotte Hornets sent LaMelo Ball to the Minnesota Timberwolves in a stunning move. It feels like the fireworks are just getting started as the league transitions to free agency, which unofficially opens June 30 at 6 p.m. ET with the start of the negotiation moratorium.

This is not the best class of free agents. The top unrestricted free agent still available is … Norman Powell? Tobias Harris? Soon-to-be 42-year-old LeBron James? The pickings are slim when it comes to elite talents, but every year has a few under-the-radar free agents who end up making a difference in the playoff chase.

The restricted free agent crop is filled with considerably more talent, though their incumbent teams will have the right to match any offer. Want to pry Jalen Duren out of Detroit or Walker Kessler from Utah? It’s going to take a fat bag of cash and potentially some good assets out the door in a sign-and-trade.

Here’s our ranking of the top-69 NBA free agents in 2026. Why 69? That’s just where my long list of names fell, and also I thought it was funny. More analysis after the table.

Let’s get into some of the biggest topics of free agency.

NumberPlayerPositionPrevious teamType
1Jalen DurenCDetroit PistonsRFA
2LeBron JamesFLos Angeles LakersPlayer Option
3James HardenGCleveland CavaliersPlayer Option
4Walker KesslerCUtah JazzRFA
5Norman PowellGMiami HeatUFA
6Tari EasonFHouston RocketsRFA
7Kristaps PorzingisCGolden State WarriorsUFA
8Tobias HarrisFDetroit PistonsUFA
9Mitchell RobinsonCNew York KnicksUFA
10Lu DortGOklahoma City ThunderTeam Option
11Bennedict MathurinGLos Angeles ClippersRFA
12Peyton WatsonFDenver NuggetsRFA
13Andrew WigginsFMiami HeatPlayer Option
14Fred VanVleetGHouston RocketsPlayer Option
15Robert WilliamsCPortland Trail BlazersUFA
16Anfernee SimonsGChicago BullsUFA
17Sandro Mamukelashvili CToronto RaptorsUFA
18Rui HachimuraFLos Angeles LakersUFA
19Landry ShametGNew York KnicksUFA
20Gary Payton IIGGolden State WarriorsUFA
21Jonathan KumingaFAtlanta HawksTeam Option
22John CollinsFLos Angeles Clippers UFA
23Collin SextonGChicago BullsUFA
24Mo WagnerCOrlando MagicUFA
25Brandon WilliamsGDallas MavericksUFA
26Bones HylandGMinnesota TimberwolvesUFA
27Quentin GrimesGPhiladelphia 76ersUFA
28Marcus SmartGLos Angeles LakersTeam Option
29De’Anthony MeltonGGolden State WarriorsPlayer Option
30Jonathan IsaacFOrlando MagicUFA
31Marvin Bagley IIIFDallas MavericksUFA
32Josh Minott FBrooklyn NetsTeam Option
33Jock LandaleCAtlanta HawksUFA
34Keon EllisGCleveland CavaliersUFA
35Deandre AytonCLos Angeles LakersPlayer Option
36Kevin HuerterGDetroit PistonsUFA
37Dean WadeFCleveland CavaliersUFA
38Javonte GreenFDetroit PistonsUFA
39Bruce BrownGDenver NuggetsUFA
40Russell WestbrookGSacramento KingsUFA
41Kevon LooneyCNew Orleans PelicansTeam Option
42Jusuf NurkicCUtah JazzUFA
43Tim Hardaway Jr.GDenver NuggetsUFA
44Luke KennardGLos Angeles LakersUFA
45Gary Trent Jr.GMilwaukee BucksUFA
46Zach CollinsCChicago BullsUFA
47Quentin PostCGolden State WarriorsRFA
48Simone Fontecchio FMiami HeatUFA
49Kenrich WilliamsFOklahoma City ThunderTeam Option
50Precious Achiuwa C/FSacramento KingsUFA
51Ziaire Williams F Brooklyn NetsTeam Option
52Khris MiddletonFDallas MavericksUFA
53Harrison BarnesFSan Antonio SpursUFA
54Josh OkogieGHouston RocketsUFA
55Moussa Cissé CDallas MavericksRFA
56Bradley BealGLos Angeles ClippersPlayer Option
57Andre DrummondCPhiladelphia 76ersUFA
58Kellly OubreFPhiladelphia 76ersUFA
59Nikola VucevicCBoston CelticsUFA
60Taurean PrinceFMilwaukee BucksPlayer Option
61Ousmane Dieng FMilwaukee BucksRFA
62Spencer JonesFDenver NuggetsRFA
63Jamaree BouyeaGPhoenix SunsTeam Option
64Mike Conley Jr.GMinnesota TimberwolvesUFA
65Jevon CarterGOrlando MagicUFA
66Guerschon Yabusele F/CChicago BullsUFA
67Dalano Banton FBoston CelticsTeam Option
68Jeremy Sochan FNew York KnicksUFA
69Cam ThomasGMilwaukee BucksUFA

Can anyone pry Jalen Duren out of Detroit?

Jalen Duren earned Third-Team All-NBA honors for the Pistons this past season at age-22. Duren’s incredible leap was unfortunately overshadowed by a rough playoff performance that exposed some holes in his game. After averaging 19.5 points and 10.5 rebounds on 68.8 percent true shooting in 70 regular season games, Duren’s averages fell to 10.2 points and 8.5 rebounds on 55.3 percent true shooting in 14 playoff games. Duren is still an elite driver, interior scorer, and rebounder for a big man, but he’s not exactly a defensive anchor, and he also has little shooting range.

Duren reportedly wants $40 million per season on his next contract, but the Pistons are trying to get him back on the lowest number they can. Detroit holds the all chips here because he’s a restricted free agent, meaning the Pistons have the right to match any offer to him.

There’s not a team in the league that has $40 million in cap space to offer him a deal right now. A sign-and-trade is still a possibility, but base year compensation rules will likely make that more complicated than it seems. My guess is Duren goes back to Detroit for something like $34 million per season, which both sides can claim as a win. Still, it’s always possible that Duren comes away with hurt feelings during the negotiations, and that opens the door for someone else to make a push for the league’s best young bigs.

Where will LeBron land?

LeBron James is trying to win the GOAT argument on longevity, and he was still probably a top-50 or top-60 player in the league last season at age-41. Absolutely ridiculous. Even if his play continues to fall again for next season, LeBron is still an impactful player in a right role who could have a strong positive influence on a playoff run.

Right now, it feels like there are three real suitors for LeBron. Here’s how I would rank them:

  1. Cleveland Cavaliers
  2. Los Angeles Lakers
  3. Golden State Warriors

Do the Lakers even want LeBron back? They haven’t offered him a contract thus far, and there has reportedly been very little communication between the two sides. I’ve been predicting a LeBron-to-Cleveland reunion for his retirement tour all year, but that would either require him taking a huge pay cut, or the Cavs being willing to trade Jarrett Allen for him. The Warriors are looming as another possible option to team up James and Steph Curry. My wildcard is the New York Knicks, because that would just be fun.

I still think LeBron ends up in Cleveland based on nothing but gut feeling. I also think this could linger pretty far into the offseason.

Who do you want your team to sign?

Let us know in the comments. I’ll also answer any questions you have about free agency, trades, these rankings, or anything else.

Weekly Cupcakes: Avs make a number of trades

Colorado Avalanche News

  • Joe Sakic praises Nichushkin after trade, Avs ‘don’t win Cup’ without him. [Denver Sports]
  • Predators acquire forward Ross Colton in trade with Avalanche. [Sportsnet]
  • Bruins acquire Ivan Ivan from Avalanche for Fabian Lysell. [TSN]
  • Drury traded to Predators by Avalanche. Colorado receives forwards Svechkov, L’Heureux; Nashville also gets Bradley, 3rd-round pick. [NHL]
  • The Predators sign recently acquired Jack Drury to five-year contract with a $4.5 million annual average value. [Sportsnet]
  • Brent Burns signs on for another season with the Avalanche. [The Hockey News]
  • Joe Sakic already making big deals, bringing back veterans in return to Avalanche GM role. [KDVR]

News Around the League

  • Maple Leafs make forward Gavin McKenna first pick of NHL draft. [CBC]
  • Joe Iginla out to prove ‘haters’ wrong after Calgary Flames draft son of franchise legend Jarome. [Calgary Herald]
  • More Evidence Emerges of Senators’ Locker Room Rift With Brady Tkachuk. [PFSN]

If the Red Sox are going to go on the run Craig Breslow’s been calling for, now is the time

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - JUNE 28: Willson Contreras #40 of the Boston Red Sox reacts as he scores on a single that was hit by Caleb Durbin #5 during the fourth inning of a game against the New York Yankees on June 28, 2026 at Fenway Park in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Maddie Malhotra/Boston Red Sox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Have you seen Dune: Part Two?

Excellent picture; that and its predecessor are both well worth your time. I feel like I’m a bit of a Dune fraud since I haven’t read the books, but Denis Villeneuve’s series has been awesome so far. I digress.

In the sequel, without giving too much away, Paul Atreides (Timothée Chalamet) takes some cool ass liquid and begins to gain the power to clearly identify countless outcomes to future events. That clairvoyance makes him realize that while his odds of victory (again, to keep things general) are slim, there is one pathway that he and his allies can take to achieve their goals.

In other news, the Yankees suck.

It’s Monday Morning Brushback time, y’all.

………They couldn’t possibly, right?

The 2026 Boston Red Sox season has been catastrophic from the word “go.” The won the very first game of the season in Cincinnati, dropped the second game of the opening series against the Reds to drop back down to .500, and then proceeded to fail to get back to .500 from game number three on. Guys have gotten hurt, fired, called up, sent down, and straight up roasted by some members of the fan base during that entire time, all while Boston’s gap from .500 remains double-digits as we begin the week of this nation’s 250th birthday.

Throughout that time, there’s been one refrain that Chief Baseball Officer Craig Breslow has continued to share with the media, fans, and anyone else that would continue to listen to him. His idea is that all these Red Sox have to do – the team with statistically one of the worst offenses in the league (though a really good pitching staff, to keep everything fair) while playing half of its game at a hitter’s paradise, the team that experienced about 25 hours above .500 this season (not a typo; I did the math on it) is going to go on a run. The illusive, wonderful, dare I say mythical run is the thing that can fix all of this. The roster, he believes, is still good enough to compete in spite of the record; he thinks it’s just a matter of getting the motor up and running (or whatever platitude you wanna use).

I’m sure you’ve seen those comments made by Breslow in recent weeks, but just in case you need the proof: instances of The Magical Run being referenced can be found here, here, here, and here.

In recent weeks, the more I’ve heard or read these types of comments from Breslow, the more and more I’ve felt like I’ve been taking crazy pills.

Granted, I tweeted that before we went on to sweep the Yanks in four games at Fenway this weekend. The situation’s still bad, but here comes that nasty ol’ friend named Hope coming back to try and sneak into the home they were properly evicted out of a while ago.

One part of me understands that as the leader of the front office, Mista Breslow is sorta required to say stuff like that to a certain extent. Regardless of how far fetched it may seem to say you still believe in a team that is setting up shop with the rest of MLB’s basement dwellers, your directive as a CBO likely includes putting up the image of a united front, trying to portray an environment where everyone is rowing in the same direction, all that fun stuff. The other part of me sees that facade fall apart when I remember that only six clubs have as many or fewer wins than the Red Sox do as of this morning. Enough said.

To quote The X-Files, though: I want to believe. I want to see the narrow path forward for this Red Sox season. I want a reason to continue to watch this team other than the fact that I write for OTM! I want to stay locked in during the summer! In spite of what I’d call a (rightfully) pessimistic mood (maybe even apathetic) I’ve had in these articles as of late, I want an excuse to stay optimistic. I want some hope, as dull as any light of hope may be right now.

And to be fair to Breslow, you can squint and see a possibility (not sure if you can tell that I’m trying to add qualifiers wherever possible) where maybe the Sox can crawl their way back into at least being in the conversation in this dogshit American League that we’re seeing in 2026. Prior to the start of play on Sunday, we were the only Junior Circuit team with a positive run differential that could not lay claim to a playoff spot. The pitching is still quite encouraging… just don’t ask me about the consistency of the bats. I’m still gonna go ahead and say that the campaign remains on life support, but the flat line hasn’t fully kicked in yet. Sunday night’s win might’ve been the best of the season. To fight back after that brutal half-hour stretch in the ninth and tenth inning takes something that this club has lacked just about all year: character.

All of that is to say this: if the Red Sox are gonna go on this season-saving run that Breslow keeps going on about, it’s gotta start – or continue, I suppose, following the weekend at Fenway – right here this week. I reserve the right to start believing in something beyond the trade deadline if they can keep this momentum going, because sustained momentum would be a novel concept for the 2026 Red Sox. The opportunity is there, but I think this might be the last legit one before the trade deadline–and therefore, it could be the last chance for Breslow’s team to make good on his “we just gotta get hot” claims before he’s shown the door. After all: I had said that Breslow was officially driving the boat after April’s house clearing. If he’s so convinced that the only thing his roster needs is a hot stretch, now would be the time to see it through.

To me, it’s quite simple: this so-called “run” the CBO’s been on about has to happen leading up to the All-Star Break.

The Nationals, who are hovering right around .500 and score about as many runs as they let up, are coming into town for three games starting tonight. We then head out on the road prior to the holiday to take on one of the only teams in the league that are undoubtedly worse than us: the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim of California of the United States of North America of the Western Hemisphere of Earth. From there, a trip to the South Side of Chicago to take on the Pale Hose marks the toughest matchup on paper leading up to the Midsummer Classic. We finish up the first half of the season in Queens to face another team in crisis in the Mets. One team is legally obligated to win those games on any given night, believe it or not.

Within that group, I see one solid team, one OK team, and two awful teams in that stretch of 12 games. One could certainly call us awful, too, and we did just drop two out of three games to arguably the most inept organization in the sport before giving the Yankees the business. But that’s not the point.

The point is that now might be the last chance in 2026 to go on that run that could change the perception of the season before we reach a point of no return. I’m not saying Boston has to run the table here–hell, I don’t even know what a successful record in that stretch specifically looks like. Maybe it’s 8-4, or does it have to be 9-3 or better considering the hole we’ve already dug ourselves in? Let me know what you think below in the comments.

And just to be clear here: even if the Red Sox enter the break on a heater, they’re still very likely to be behind the eight ball in the grand scheme of things. One fantastic two-week stretch does not automatically save the season nor erase any of the problems that we had prior to the hot stretch. At the very least, though, it could–key word could, before you all yell at me–change the dynamic by the time the ASG begins in Philly.

If the Red Sox don’t take advantage of these next two weeks, it’s back to our regularly scheduled programming filled with “Fire Breslow” and the like. If they do strike now, perhaps the tune we take on is drastically different. This feels like the last chance for them to realistically do so, though.

To bring it back to Dune……..

“Our enemies are all around us and in so many futures they prevail. But I do see a way. There is a narrow way through.”

Last call for “The Run,” Craig. Bar’s closing.

Song of the Week: “Lost Boys” by Phoebe Bridgers

The queen is back.

Same time and same place next week, friends. Enjoy your holiday and go Sox!

Orioles minor league recap 6/29: Tides split doubleheader, Delmarva’s offense explodes

SARASOTA, FL - MARCH 20: Enrique Bradfield Jr. #99 of the Baltimore Orioles bunts during the game between the Boston Red Sox and the Baltimore Orioles at Ed Smith Stadium on Friday, March 20, 2026 in Sarasota, Florida. (Photo by Scott Audette/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Triple-A: Durham Bulls 7, Norfolk Tides 0 (F/7)

Norfolk’s Nestor German allowed four runs in the game’s first two innings, and since the Orioles got one-hit by three Durham pitchers, this added up to a loss. Cameron Weston allowed three runs in 1.2 innings of work, and José Espada pitched 1.1 scoreless. The only Tides hit: a Ryan Noda double.

Box Score

Triple-A: Norfolk Tides 2, Durham Bulls (TBR) 1 (F/7)

Runs were scarce in the bottom half of the doubleheader, but the Tides came out on top. In the first inning, Enrique Bradfield singled, stole second, and took third on a bad throw by the Bulls’ catcher. Call it an EBJ triple. A sac fly brought him home. Bradfield also doubled later in the game, but Heston Kjerstad lined into an unlucky double play, so there’d be no run. The Tides did scratch across a second run in the sixth inning, through as Bryan Ramos singled, EBJ bunted him over, and Kjerstad singled him home.

Four Tides pitchers combined to shutout Durham until the final frame: Yaqui Rivera (2.2 IP, 0 R, 2 H, 1 BB), Dietrich Enns (W, 2.1 IP, 0 H, 3 K) and Nick Raquet (1 IP, 0 H, 1 K).

Box Score

Double-A: Chesapeake Baysox vs. Harrisburg Senators (WSH) – PPD (rain)

Lots of rain this weekend. The Baysox’s Sunday scheduled game will be made on a date TBD.

High-A: Wilmington Blue Rocks (WAS) 4, Frederick Keys 2

The Keys dropped the series finale on Sunday as a tie game in the seventh became a 4-2 loss courtesy of a bases-loaded walk and an RBI groundout off Frederick’s Tyson Neighbors.

Wilmington had struck first with a two-RBI single in the first inning off Carson Dorsey, but the Keys cut the deficit in half at 2-1 off an RBI from Leandro Arias in the third, then tied it in the top of the seventh on Yamil Bucce’s fourth homer of the season. Ike Irish doubled, and Wehiwa Aloy finished 2-for-3 with a walk.

Box Score

Low-A: Delmarva Shorebirds 11, Fayetteville Woodpeckers (HOU) 4

This was a 0-0 game into the fourth and then the Shorebirds exploded for a five-run inning. Three home runs—by Braylon Whitaker, DJ Layton, and Joshua Liranzo—helped. They added two more in the fifth when Miguel Rodriguez hit a two-run single. Then they rallied for four more runs in the seventh on a parade of singles: four in that inning alone, plus two steals.

Whatever this was, it wasn’t a banner day for Fayetteville pitching. Every Shorebird had a hit or more on a day they racked up 15. Whitaker finished 1-for-3 with that homer and a pair of walks. Stiven Martinez went 3-for-5 with three runs scored. DJ Layton had two hits, including a homer, plus two walks.

The pitching barely mattered, but starter Stephen Still, a May free agent signing, pitched five one-run innings with eight strikeouts. Michael Caldon allowed Fayetteville to get closer, with a three-run homer allowed, but J.D. Hennen and Zac Lampton turned in good outings in relief.

Box Score

Monday’s Schedule

There are no scheduled games for today.

Monday Rockpile: Making an All-Star case for Hunter Goodman

MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - JUNE 27: Hunter Goodman #15 of the Colorado Rockies celebrates his solo home run against the Minnesota Twins with teammates in the first inning at Target Field on June 27, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Photo by David Berding/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In mid-May, I made an All-Star case for Mickey Moniak. On June 1, I made an All-Star case for Antonio Senzatela. With All-Star voting closing on Thursday, it’s time to make the case for Hunter Goodman making his second-straight All-Star game.

Goodman took 2025 by the horns and never looked back.

He made his MLB debut in August 2023, and then bounced around the diamond in 2023 and 2024. Ahead of the 2025 season, he was informed that he would be catching full time, and he made the most of his opportunity. Not only was he named to the Opening Day roster, but he was also named the Opening Day catcher ahead of veteran Jacob Stallings (who was eventually DFA’d in June). 

In 144 games in 2025, Goodman set career highs in just about every statistical category. But he also led the Rockies in numerous categories, leading to him being selected to the All-Star game and winning a Silver Slugger. He also ranked first in our Ranking the Rockies series. 

In 2026, it’s quite possible he will break his own records from 2025 (if he hasn’t already), and he could be the Rockies’ first back-to-back All-Star since Nolan Arenado, Charlie Blackmon and Trevor Story all went in 2018 and 2019.

Here’s how he ranks among qualified NL and MLB leaders so far in 2026 (all stats current through the June 27):

StatNumberNL RankMLB RankNL C RankRockies Rank
Runs Scored52T-5thT-5th1st1st
Home Runs252nd2nd1st1st
RBI4711thT-10th3rd1st
SLG.5374th5th1st1st
Total Bases159T-5thT-5th1st1st
AB/HR11.842nd2nd1st1st

In addition to the above stats, Goodman logged his first three-homer game on Saturday night. For those calling “Coors,” 18 of his 25 homers have come on the road, which is the most pre-All-Star break by a Rockie all time. The player who most closely trails him? Hall of Famer Larry Walker, who recorded 16 home runs in his MVP 1997 season. He is also the first Rockie to hit 25 homers before the All-Star Break since Carlos González did it in 2013, but Walker holds the record of 27 in 2001. 

While Goodman sits in good Rockies company, he also sits in good baseball company.

With his three homers on Saturday night, he became the fourth primary catcher to log at least 25 homers before the All-Star Break (since 1933). He joined Cal Raleigh (38, 2025), Iván Rodríguez (26, 2000) and Johnny Bench (28, 1970). All three went on to be All-Stars that year. Could that bode well for Goodman?

Goodman vs. The Field

The catching field is not nearly as crowded as some of the other positions, but Goodman was ranked fifth after the latest voting update was released on Monday. He sits behind Drake Baldwin (ATL), Will Smith (LAD), J.T. Realmuto (PHI), and William Contreras (MIL).

Baldwin leads all catchers, but Smith was also named a finalist despite currently being on the 10-day IL with neck inflammation. Goodman is in the mix with mostly Contreras and Baldwin, but has a sizable lead over Smith in games played (78 to Smith’s 52), runs scored (52 to 23), home runs (25 to 6), RBI (47 to 23), SLG (.535 to .382), total bases (159 to 66) and at-bats per home run (11.84 to 28.83). 

Here is how Goodman stacks up against the NL catching field:

StatNumberNL C RankNext NumberPlayer
Runs Scored521st46William Contreras (MIL)
Home Runs251st14Drake Baldwin (ATL)
RBI473rd50William Contreras (MIL)
SLG.5371st.472Liam Hicks (MIA)
Total Bases1591st128William Contreras (MIL)
AB/HR11.841st16.21Drake Baldwin (ATL)

Goodman vs. The Rockies

When Mickey Moniak went on the 10-day IL with ankle tendinitis, Goodman was able to overtake him in many statistical categories. And not only does he lead the team in numerous categories now, but he leads by a wide margin in many cases:

StatNumberRockies RankNext NumberPlayer
Runs Scored521st37Willi Castro
Home Runs251st12TJ Rumfield, Mickey Moniak
RBI471st45TJ Rumfield
SLG.5371st.493TJ Rumfield
Total Bases1591st142TJ Rumfield
AB/HR11.841st24.00TJ Rumfield

Goodman (2026) vs. Goodman (2025)

All stats through the last Saturday in June in both 2025 and 2026.

Interestingly, Goodman is on pace for what he did in 2025 in a lot of categories. He took a dip in doubles and triples, but has made up for it in home runs. In 2025, he had 34 extra-base hits through June 28th; so far in 2026, he has 37 (and counting). His average has also dipped, but he didn’t really turn things on until June. 12 of Goodman’s 25 home runs have come in the month of June, and his June OPS is 1.035 – ranking him third in the National League behind Pete Crow-Armstrong and Shohei Ohtani.

The strikeouts have decreased, the power has increased, and Goodman is making an All-Star case at the right time.

Stat20262025
Games7775
Doubles1217
Triples03
Home Runs2514
Runs Scored5240
RBI4748
AVG.246.287
OPS.854.844
wRC+114119

Final Thoughts

The obvious choice for the Rockies’ All-Star representative at this point is Hunter Goodman. He is peaking at the right time and is on pace to shatter many of the records he set in 2025. If Moniak or Senzatela could join him, that would be a bonus. But at this point, all signs point to Hunter Goodman as the 2026 Rockies All-Star.

(And if there’s any justice in the universe, he should be the National League’s starting catcher.)


On the Farm

Triple-A:Albuquerque Isotopes 11, Salt Lake Bees 5

It was homer-palooza in Albuquerque against the Salt Lake Bees (Angels). The Isotopes scored in five of the first six innings, and put up multiple runs in five of them. Zac Veen (No. 9 PuRP) swatted his 13th homer of the season to get things going in the first. Not to be outdone, Charlie Condon (No. 1 PuRP) swatted a solo homer of his own in the second. He hit a three-run homer in his next at-bat one inning later, racking up the score 6-2.

Nic Kent joined the homer party in the fifth to score Condon, and then Chad Stevens homered in the sixth to finalize the Topes’ scoring at 11. They gave up two more runs in the ninth, but stopped the Bees at 5. In total, the Isotopes had five homers on the evening.

Double-A:Portland Sea Dogs 6, Hartford Yard Goats 0

The Yard Goats were baffled by the Portland Sea Dogs (Red Sox). They mustered just two hits en route to a shutout loss. Jack Mahoney gave up three runs on five hits with one walk and six strikeouts. One of the runs was a solo homer in the first by Sea Dogs’ right fielder Miguel Bleis. The other two came on a wild pitch in the third and an RBI single by shortstop Franklin Arias in the fifth.

The majority of the damage came in the ninth, when Sam Weatherly gave up three more runs on back-to-back home runs — a two-run shot to third baseman Jack Winnay and a solo shot to left fielder Matt Fraizer.

High-A:Spokane Indians 3, Tri-City Dust Devils 2

It was a back-and-forth affair for the Indians against the Dust Devils (Angels), but they were able to walk it off for the victory. Lebarron Johnson Jr. pitched six innings and allowed just one run on one hit (a solo homer) while recording one walk and six strikeouts. Nathan Blasick gave up one run on three hits over three innings, which ended up blowing his fifth save. However, Hunter Mann put up a scoreless/hitless 10th to record the win.

Jack O’Dowd recorded the Indians’ first two runs with an RBI single in the first and an RBI double in the third, scoring Tommy Hopfe both times. Roynier Hernandez was the hero of the night, though, with his single in the 10th to score Kelvin Hidalgo and secure the victory.

Low-A:Lake Elsinore Storm 6, Fresno Grizzlies 4

The Grizzlies got off to a hot 4-0 start in the first over the Storm (Padres), thanks to Roldy Brito (No. 11 PuRP), Wilder Dalis (No. 24 PuRP) and Matt Klein. Brito doubled to score Cam Nelson; Dalis doubled to score Brito and Ashly Andujar (No. 26 PuRP); and Klein doubled to score Dalis. Unfortunately, though, the pitching could not hold Brady Parker’s incredible start.

Parker threw six innings, allowing just one hit while walking two and striking out eight. Yanzel Correa allowed three runs on three hits with a walk and two strikeouts to put the Storm within a run. And then things really unraveled for Dylan Crooke, who gave up three more runs on five hits in just one third of an inning. He didn’t walk anyone, but also didn’t strike out anyone. Seth Clausen recorded the final two outs without giving up a hit, a run or a walk (he struck out two), but the damage was done.


Rumfield reunites with coach who taught him the lessons that have made him a ROY candidate | MLB.com

Hunter Goodman may be the Rockies best hitter right now, but TJ Rumfield is not far behind him. He’s also making a case for NL Rookie of the Year. In Minnesota, he reconnected with his Triple-A hitting coach, Trevor Amicone, who is now the Twins assistant hitting coach.

Rockies pitchers deal with mental challenges of Tommy John surgery rehab | Denver Gazette ($)

Earlier this year, Renee Dechert wrote about RJ Petit’s journey back from Tommy John surgery in spring training. Kevin Henry followed up with Jeff Criswell and Jaden Hill, as well as the Rockies’ training staff, to discuss what the entire process is like from diagnosis through rehab to returning to the mound.


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!

Please keep in mind our Purple Row Community Guidelines when you’re commenting. Thanks!

MLB News Outside The Confines: Two get the axe

Good morning.

Kansas City Royals news: Carter Jensen sets Royals rookie record

Jun 28, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Kansas City Royals catcher Carter Jensen (22) celebrates after hitting a single against the Chicago White Sox during the ninth inning at Rate Field. Mandatory Credit: Patrick Gorski-Imagn Images | Patrick Gorski-Imagn Images

The Royals were happy to salvage the series on Sunday, writes Jaylon Thompson.

“They have a good offense and have been on a roll,” Quatraro said. “It was our bullpen that did the job.”

KC finishes with a 3-4 road trip. The club split a four-game set against the Tampa Bay Rays and picked up a win on Sunday.

“I don’t think it’s a bad road trip considering the teams that we are playing,” Thomas said.

Jac Caglianone was scratched from Sunday’s game, writes Anne Rogers.

Manager Matt Quatraro said Caglianone woke up Sunday with soreness and it didn’t improve when he got to the field after treatment. It also didn’t subside when he tried to get it to loosen up through some pregame work. His status off the bench was unclear, and the next steps will be determined based on how he feels throughout the day, when the Royals get back to Kansas City on Sunday night and throughout Monday’s team off-day.

“They’re going to reevaluate,” Quatraro said. “Obviously, we’re going home tonight. We’ll see how it feels and see if we have to do any further testing or anything.”

Carter Jensen extended his hitting streak to 19-games, setting a Royals rookie record.

“It means a lot, for sure,” Jensen said of his hit streak. “I think it’s a testament to hard work from me, hitting coaches, a bunch of people who have helped me along the way. It definitely means a lot to me. But I think just trying to get some wins across is the most important thing for me, honestly.”

Cole Ragans will have surgery this week.

After determining last week that Cole Ragans needs elbow surgery, the left-hander has a date set and will undergo the procedure this coming Wednesday, July 1, but we won’t know the full extent and severity of the surgery until the doctors begin to operate.

Dr. Neal ElAttrache will perform the surgery on Ragans next week.

“They’ve read the MRI, but I think they’re not going to be clear on the extent of [the surgery] until they get in there and understand what they see,” manager Matt Quatraro said.

Michael Wacha reached the 1,500 career strikeout mark.

Kris Bubic threw two scoreless innings in a rehab start for Omaha.

The Red Sox complete a four-game sweep of the Yankees.

Junior Caminero hits his seventh home run in the last six games.

Kyle Schwarber becomes the first player to reach 30 home runs this season.

Former teammates Josh Naylor and Austin Hedges have a heated argument.

The Braves sign first baseman Carlos Santana to a minor league deal.

Could Albert Pujols become the next manager of the Mets?

The Mariners are looking for bullpen help and a right-handed bat.

Would a new Angels GM trade Mike Trout?

The mediocre American League will define this year’s trade deadline.

Austria and Algeria deliver a thriller in Kansas City.

The Warriors are pursuing Anthony Davis and LeBron James.

What did Americans eat in 1776?

Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey is sparking renewed interest in the Classics.

Alan Jackson performs his final concert.

Your song of the day is Moby featuring Gwen Stefani with South Side.

Which series are Giants fans most interested in this week?

DENVER, CO - APRIL 4: A general view as fans approach the outside of the stadium at the intersection of 20th and Blake before a game between the Philadelphia Phillies and the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field on April 4, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Dustin Bradford/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Good morning, baseball fans!

A new week of San Francisco Giants baseball is upon us, which means it’s time to see what’s on deck for the week.

First up, the Giants head to the desert to begin a three-game series against Arizona Diamondbacks tonight. They have Thursday off, then they keep moving to begin a three-game series against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field.

Normally, there is no chance in hell that I’m picking a series against the Rockies at Coors Field as the series I’m most interested in. But given the way things have been unraveling, I’m morbidly fascinated to see how the Giants pitching staff fares against the MLB hellmouth. So I guess I’m picking that series.

Which series are you most interested in this week?

What time do the Giants play today?

The Giants head to Phoenix to begin their three-game road trip against the Diamondbacks tonight at 6:40 p.m. PT.

Monday morning obersvations about John Mozeliak to the Angels

ST. LOUIS, MO - JULY 28: St. Louis Cardinals general manager John Mozeliak looks on from the stands during a game against the Cincinnati Reds at Busch Stadium on July 28, 2015 in St. Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Dilip Vishwanat/Getty Images) | Getty Images

I don’t know if I have a point to my post. I just want to say that upfront. I saw something interesting happening online, and while online isn’t representative of everyone, I see no reason to see a much different response from the offline folks. Ideally, I would have some sort of intention with writing this article. But I don’t. I merely want to point something out.

Let’s talk about John Mozeliak getting hired by the Los Angeles Angels as the interim general manager. I honestly didn’t expect him to continue being involved with baseball, but as I and everyone reading this are huge baseball fans, I think we can all understand why he’s back in the game so soon. If I could work in baseball, I would absolutely work in baseball for as long as I could.

I also think we can all agree that it was time for John Mozeliak to leave. The Cardinals were stuck in a middle ground and couldn’t seemingly get out of it. I probably have a different opinion than most about this. I think Mozeliak is a very good scapegoat, or public punching bag, or whatever you want to label it, but that ultimately Bill Dewitt cut payroll and certainly strongly approved of the cuts going from the unseen parts of the organization. Should Mozeliak have pushed back on this? Certainly. May have been that he just knew Dewitt too long and too well, and implicitly understood what he wanted. And it was just more comfortable to not push back.

In regards to Chaim Bloom, I think he had very good timing. I think the evidence was mounting that things needed to change and he had the right kind of leverage and message to change the direction of the franchise. I just personally believe the three seasons of missing the playoffs were to some extent needed to make Dewitt go “yeah okay, something different needs to happen.” Again perhaps a hot take, but luckily we all benefit.

But my comparison to Bloom and Mozeliak, and the reason I chose to write about this is because, when Bloom was hired, it was a near universal positive response to what he had to say. He was a breath of fresh air. He was saying different things than his predecessor. He did back it up, at least so far, with what appear to be the right kind of moves.

I got deja vu reading the responses to John Mozeliak from Angels fans. I’m not even kidding, they are very similar to how Cardinals fans responded to Bloom. I think Cardinals fans trust Dewitt a hell of a lot more than Angels fans trust Arte Moreno, and understandably so, so there was some hedging and mistrust still. But it had nothing to do with Mozeliak. The Mozeliak start to the Angels has been a 100 percent success.

To make a direct comparison, now you know what it feels like to be a Boston Red Sox fan when they hear any of us talk about Chaim Bloom. And weirdly, I think everyone might be right. Sometimes, you just need a change of scenery.

If Bloom did what he did in Boston in St. Louis, we would not be Chaim Bloom fans. The general ‘we,’ there are exceptions of course. I would probably defend him like I am defending John Mozeliak. Cardinals fans are also right to be optimistic about Bloom as POBO. He learned from his experience at Boston, made sure to set demands before he was hired, and well free agent signings go sideways a lot, so let’s hope that goes better this time around.

In a similar fashion, Cardinals fans are right to think Mozeliak needed to leave. I think fans go too far when talking about his tenure of course. I think this is a good move for the Angels. Fans talk about Mozeliak like he was Dave Littlefield, leaving five prospects unprotected in the Rule 5 draft.

No, he can build a team. Hell, he built most of this current team. And yes I’m aware improved development is helping this team. I’m just pointing out he was in charge when most of this team was acquired. He also presumably had a hand in Bloom coming here and was involved partially with the increased emphasis on development and coaches, something he will probably take with him in his new role with the Angels.

And I don’t know if he’s staying past December. I’m guessing it has a lot to do with Moreno. If he feels like he’ll have the freedom to do things the way they need to be done, he might be the new POBO then. If he starts seeing why it’s hard to be general manager for the Angels, he’ll pick his replacement and leave.

Anyway, I don’t really have a point to my article so much as it’s just kind of funny how a new face can seem refreshing given the right circumstance. I listened to Mozeliak’s interview with the broadcast booth during the game. To me, he sounded the same as he sounded here, but I didn’t also fly into a blinding rage when I heard that man talk, which I understand happens to some fans.

I’ve never heard Perry Minasian, so it’s possible Mozeliak only sounds good because that guy sounded like he was going to steal my lunch money whenever he talked, I don’t know. But I’m guessing Minasian didn’t sound THAT bad to an outside ear if you’ve never heard him talk, and I’m guessing if you’re tired of a guy, there’s almost nothing they can say that you will like.

At the very least, the Angels haven’t had a winning record since 2015 and haven’t made the playoffs since 2014, and Mozeliak can at least set that organization up for better than that. Not a high bar, but also not as easy as it sounds either.

Blaze Jordan

I missed Saturday and most of yesterday’s game, but I feel like I blinked and suddenly Jordan has an 80 wRC+. He’ll get more run obviously, and his defense has been a pleasant surprise, so if you would have told me he had an 80 wRC+, I’d have expected him to be below replacement level a month ago.

Nonetheless, I honestly think his bat will have a bit of a learning curve. He reminds me so much of Alec Burleson, for better or worse, and if he follows Burleson’s trajectory, it’s going to be a while. Now, if he’s actually good on defense, that makes it easier. I am skeptical he’s actually good. He has been upgraded to playable, which is actually a big upgrade from what I thought before, but if you think I’m buying his numbers because of 101 innings at 3B, you don’t know me at all.

Anyway, it got me thinking… Nolan Gorman might rise from the dead. The opportunity might be there. Yesterday, Gorman went 1 for 3 with a HR and a BB. And no strikeouts. It’s already his second homer in 5 games in Memphis. And yes he has struck out a ton so far, but not striking out yesterday lowered his K rate 10 percentage points. He’s also walked four times in 5 games. It’s really not hard to imagine him quickly having good, promotable numbers in Memphis.

To be clear, this is Nolan Gorman’s last chance, but when I say it’s his last chance, the entire year is his last chance. And also Gorman does have to actually start mashing in Memphis. Like this is a hypothetical right now. But it’s hard to give up on a player who has quite literally hit 27 homers per 600 PAs in his career. Yeah like it’s easy to say he only hit 27 homers once, but his career average is actually 27 homers per 600 PAs. Even with not hitting many homers this year. He’s also 26 right now.

I’m merely presenting the fact that Blaze Jordan may head back down to Memphis, probably after 100 PAs or so – clearly Gorman is a good week or more away from this even being a possibility. To take it back to my Burleson comparison, Burly was a bad hitter in his first 400 PAs – even if they do make the swap and Gorman is still bad, that’s fine, because we got to get 100 Blaze Jordan development plate appearances out of the process. We try this again later this year, and we know Gorman is burnt toast with the Cardinals.

And yes, I know Jordan is still hitting better than Gorman was. I totally get that. I’m not giving up on Jordan. But he wouldn’t be the first player who struggled in his first MLB season and he won’t be the last and considering the goals of the season, I truly think they want to exhaust Nolan Gorman as a possibility. Hell, part of the reason Gorman might come back is because he’s out of time. Jordan has plenty of time.

Sharks sign defenseman Michael Kesselring to a three-year, $13.5M contract

Sharks sign defenseman Michael Kesselring to a three-year, $13.5M contract originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Sharks have signed Michael Kesselring.

San Jose signed the 26-year-old defenseman to a three-year, $13.5 million contract ($4.5 million AAV), buying up two of his UFA seasons. There were no trade protections. Kesselring was a pending RFA.

The Sharks acquired the 6-foot-5 right-hander and the No. 27 pick in the 2026 NHL Draft from the Buffalo Sabres on Jun. 17, in exchange for the No. 20.

Kesselring was coming off a tough season with the Sabres, posting two assists in 34 games. He was a frequent healthy scratch and also dealt with injuries.

But Kesselring broke out with the Utah Mammoth in 2024-25, notching seven goals and 29 points, skating 17:41 per game. He also was used on the second-unit power play.

The Sharks are hoping for at least that type of return to form from Kesselring.

Read the full article at San Jose Hockey Now

Download and follow the San Jose Hockey Now podcast

Atlanta Braves News: West Coast Woes, AJ Smith-Shawver Rehab Starts, More

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 28: Chris Sale #51 of the Atlanta Braves pitches against the San Francisco Giants in the bottom of the fifth inning at Oracle Park on June 28, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

June cannot end soon enough for the Atlanta Braves.

It was another miserable week for the Braves, as Sunday was just the latest disappointing performance despite another awesome effort from ace Chris Sale. It truly has been an entire month of struggles for the Braves, who know see that the NL East division lead is down to three games over the Phillies. However, neither Walt Weiss or the Braves seem to concerned about anyone else but themselves. The focus remains on righting the ship as the calendar turns to July.

Braves News

AJ Smith-Shawver, on his way back from last year’s Tommy John Surgery, will begin a rehab assignment on Tuesday.

Tate Southisene produced his first home run for Rome over the weekend.

Mark Bowman highlights how Chris Sale continues to look highly impressive in his starts but also how the lack of support remains a concern.

MLB News

The Boston Red Sox decided to show a bit of life with a 4-game sweep of the Yankees.

The Rangers placed outfielder Wyatt Langford on the IL due to a hamstring strain.

The Feed

And for a bit of positivity, Eric Hartman once again went deep on Sunday.