Rust and Kindel help the Penguins beat the Golden Knights 5-0

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Bryan Rust, Ben Kindel and Justin Brazeau each had a goal and an assist, helping the Pittsburgh Penguins beat the Vegas Golden Knights 5-0 on Sunday.

Rickard Rakell and Egor Chinakhov also scored as Pittsburgh improved to 10-1-3 in its last 14 games. Erik Karlsson had two assists, and Arturs Silovs made 22 saves in his first shutout since opening night on Oct. 7 at the New York Rangers.

Vegas goaltender Adin Hill stopped 17 shots. The Golden Knights dropped to 4-7-2 in their last 13 games.

Vegas captain Mark Stone left late in the first period with an undisclosed injury. Penguins defenseman Kris Letang gave Stone a seemingly harmless shove to the left arm with his stick in the neutral zone, though it may have caught him in the gap between his elbow and shoulder pads. Stone grimaced in pain, went down to one knee and skated off.

Kindel, a first-round pick in the 2025 draft who turns 19 on April 19, scored his 15th goal with 5:04 left in the first.

The Penguins grabbed control with three more goals in the second. Rust and Rakell each scored on the power play.

Brazeau made it 5-0 with 5:01 left in the third. It was Brazeau's 16th on the season, extending his career high.

Up next

Both teams play again on Tuesday night. The Golden Knights visit Buffalo, and the Penguins are at Boston.

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AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Will Warren dominates with tone-setting start in Yankees' 5-3 spring training win at Phillies

The Yankees improved to 8-2 with a 5-3 spring training win Sunday at the Philadelphia Phillies' BayCare Ballpark in Clearwater, Fla.

Takeaways

  1. Will Warren started fast and finished strong. He struck out the side -- Trea Turner, J.T. Realmuto and Alec Bohm -- in the first inning on his way to 3.2 scoreless innings frames with one hit, which was Rafael Marchán's one-out double in the third. Warren, who threw 33 strikes on 50 pitches, has allowed one run on five hits through his first two spring training starts of 2026. He has struck out seven and walked none.
  2. Trent Grisham was hitless in his two at-bats, but he made a second-inning snag that reminds of why the Yankees value him so highly. Batting leadoff and starting in center field, Grisham's one-out grab robbed Bryson Stott of a potential double to the gap and kept Warren humming along.
  3. J.C. Escarra was a bright spot for the Yankees, whose starters were hitless through four innings against the Phillies' arms of starter Andrew Painter and relievers José Alvarado and Tanner Banks. New York's sixth-batting starting catcher picked up Ryan McMahon's leadoff strikeout in the fifth inning, tagging Jonathan Bowlan for a one-out double and coming home moments later via Seth Brown's two-out single, putting the Yankees on the board at 1-0. Escarra's 3-for-8 spring includes one home run, two RBI and four runs scored in three games.
  4. Jasson Domínguez's 0-for-3 afternoon out of the third spot in the batting order felt like a missed opportunity. He did have a successful ABS challenge, overturning a strike up in the zone to a ball, but his eventual strikeout swinging -- Painter's only punchout in two innings -- was a lowlight result.

Who's the MVP?

Warren, whose nearly four shutout frames set the tone as the Yankees' bats -- eventually their non-starters later in the game -- came alive for the spring training win.

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees host Panama in Tuesday's 1:05 p.m. game.

Penguins/Golden Knights Recap: Pens bounce back, shutout Vegas 5-0

PITTSBURGH, PA - MARCH 01: Bryan Rust #17 of the Pittsburgh Penguins celebrates his second period goal against the Vegas Golden Knights at PPG PAINTS Arena on March 1, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Pregame

Same lineup for the Penguins again, Arturs Silovs gets back in the net.

First period

Fun first period with free-flowing play and limited faceoffs. Vegas is the better team in the first 5-10 minutes, Pittsburgh then battles back and tips the scales as play moves along. Evgeni Malkin sets the tone with a huge hit on Tomas Hertl, then later helps build momentum with Egor Chinakhov with several scoring chances.

Back-and-forth play ambles along, Ben Kindel has two Golden Knights in front of him when he snaps a long-range shot. It catches Adin Hill a little off guard, 1-0 Pens.

The rest of the period slips away quickly, there are only eight faceoffs in the whole period. Shots are low too, 6-5 Pens.

Second period

Mitch Marner takes the first penalty of the game when he trips Erik Karlsson. The ensuing power play doesn’t get much going but does have a lot of zone time. That leads to Tommy Novak hitting Chinakhov with a pass soon after the penalty expired, Chinakhov displayed his lightning quick release to beat Hill to the far side. 2-0.

A bit later, Avery Hayes hits Colton Sissons, pretty routine. Cole Reinhardt skates over and asks for a fight, Hayes is very willing to give it to him. They throw a few punches and then get tied up, nothing major. The Pens come out of that deal with a power play with Reinhardt picking up an extra minor. The power play scores quickly, Erik Karlsson throws a high shot to the net, the puck bounces around and Bryan Rust is the first on it. Rust flicks it by an out of sorts Hill. 3-0.

The Golden Knights get their first power play of the game, Kris Letang is sent off for tripping. The strong Pens PK takes care of it.

Pittsburgh then gets another power play, Vegas is caught with too many players on the ice. The Pens make quick work of it again, Karlsson finds Rickard Rakell who sweeps a puck in past Hill. 4-0.

The penalty-fest continues when Blake Lizotte gets called for reaching in and tripping Jack Eichel, another successful penalty kill.

The three-goal second period puts the Pens up a commanding 4-0 after 40 minutes, shots were 11-7 PIT in the middle frame.

Third period

The Knights start trying to get it into gear late but hit a road block when Reilly Smith trips Lizotte.

Hertl pays Malkin back from the first period with a massive open ice hit of his own.

Play continues on, Kindel drops a puck in the offensive zone for Justin Brazeau in support and skates to the net. Brazeau shoots from distance, Hill doesn’t pick up on it. 5-0.

Some thoughts

  • Chinakhov is up to seven goals in his last nine games. Even when he doesn’t score, the threat of his shot and the possibility is there almost every shift. Really impressive to watch him operate these days, such a talent. He doesn’t need a lot of time or space to get a hard shot away.
  • The Bob Grove stat of the day: 2-7-3 in their last 12 home afternoon games and 0-4-2 in the last six Sunday home games. Games like this can be tricky with out of cycle starts and usually back-to-backs on a Sunday.
  • Very disjointed game from Vegas, made worse when Mark Stone left with an injury in the first period and didn’t return. Couldn’t have helped matters there, weird occurrence where Letang gave a little push on Stone’s upper arm. No twisting or huge force but something went awry.
  • Vegas played to type from the preview, they don’t give up a ton of shots but they don’t get a lot of saves. The Kindel shot was tricky but caught Hill back in his crease. The third goal Hill was also a bit out of position from the mayhem in front and Rust made him pay.
  • Unique way for Hayes to pitch in by getting in a fight that drew an extra penalty on the other guy. As it should have, there was nothing wrong with Hayes’s hit in the first place. Reinhardt, understandably, was looking to do something to provide a jolt to his team in that moment (down 2-0 and looking sleepy throughout) yet it backfired since the Pens scored quickly and turned it into a 3-0 game.
  • Big game from the special teams, the power play scored twice (plus scored a defacto PPG six seconds after one expired), the PK was 2/2. That’s the foundation for a winning recipe.
  • a

Good bounceback from the Pens for letting a point getaway yesterday, the party moves onto Boston on Tuesday night.

Rutgers slips past Maryland 69-65 after 20-point lead disappears

COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) — Tariq Francis scored 19 points and Rutgers, which once led by 20 points in the first half, defeated Maryland 69-65 on Sunday to sweep the season series between the teams.

Rutgers won 68-57 at home against Maryland in the other meeting this season.

Trailing by 19 at halftime, Maryland stormed back early in the second half. Elijah Saunders and Andre Mills hit 3-pointers and the Terrapins added five three throws in a 13-0 run that got them within 45-41 six minutes into the second half.

Maryland took the lead once at 48-47 and the score was tied at 54 with a little under five minutes remaining. Rutgers quickly went back ahead 60-54 and led the rest of the way. The Terrapins were within two points twice in the final half-minute but both times Rutgers delivered at the free-throw line to preserve the win.

Darren Buchanan Jr. scored 14 points and Jamichael Davis had 12 for Rutgers (12-17, 5-13 Big Ten).

Mills had 15 points and 10 rebounds and Saunders had 11 and 14 for Maryland, which had a 50-26 advantage on the boards but had 19 turnovers to six for Rutgers. Solomon Washington had 15 points and four blocks and David Coit scored 10 for the Terps (11-18, 4-14).

Maryland made only 1 of 14 3-pointers and had 14 turnovers in the first half. Rutgers had a 14-0 advantage in points after turnovers, helping the Scarlet Knights take a 39-20 halftime lead. In one eight-minute stretch the Scarlet Knights outscored the Terrapins 18-4.

The Scarlet Knights gained their second road win of the conference season.

Up next

Maryland: at Wisconsin on Wednesday.

Rutgers: at No. 13 Michigan State on Thursday.

___

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Surging Sabres Sweep Road Trip, Could Be Buyers Before Deadline

Concerns over whether the Buffalo Sabres would be able to recapture their winning momentum after the Olympic break have been put to the side, as the club swept all three games coming after the lengthy hiatus. The Sabres snuck by New Jersey and the reigning Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers with one goal wins, and punctuated the three-game sweep with a dominating 6-2 victory over the Atlantic Division-leading Tampa Bay Lightning on Saturday.

"We got off to a great start. Skated really well, moved the puck well,  got support of the puck well. Coming out of the zone led a lot of good opportunities,"Sabres head coach Lindy Ruff said after the game. "We got around net-front where (we had a) tip goal and we a lot of great opportunities."

Buffalo surged out to a 5-0 lead in the second of back-to-back games in the Sunshine State, with Josh Norris leading the way with a pair of tallies, and got a strong 36-save performance from Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen to move into sole possession of second place in the division, one point ahead of the Montreal Canadiens and just four points in back of the Lightning. 

"When you look at opportunities, there's a lot of nights you get a lot of good opportunities, (that) you don't take advantage," Ruff said. "In Florida, we had a lot of good ones, the two-on-ones we gave, we didn't generate a lot (of chances), I thought today, we made some good plays, and then we put them in the back of the net, which, early on, really put (Tampa) in a bad place and they tried to press a little bit, and then we caught him, we got on the other side of them and created some even better opportunities."

 Other Sabres Stories

Six Former Sabres Who Signed Elsewhere

Rasmus Dahlin - Norris contender?

Questions of whether the Sabres will make the playoffs are beginning to fade, as the club is seven points ahead of the Washington Capitals (who are in ninth place in the Eastern Conference standings). The unknown with five days remaining before the NHL trade deadline is whether GM Jarmo Kekalainen will take the opportunity to add to the roster before 3 pm Friday.

The Sabres do not have their second-round pick in 2026, due to the swap with Ottawa for Norris, but have extra picks in the middle rounds, all their picks in 2027, and a bevy of prospects in the organization. Youngsters like Isak Rosen and Devon Levi are blocked within the organization’s depth chart. Both will lose their waiver exemption next season, so they could be pieces that Kekalainen uses to bring back a significant return. Using some of their draft capital could bring back a depth rental in a key area, and there are indicators that the Sabres are looking to add a veteran right-handed blueliner, with Michael Kesselring having health issues all season and veteran Conor Timmins currently on injured reserve recovering from a broken leg. 

Follow Michael on X, Instagram @MikeInBuffalo

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Cavs at Nets open gamethread

BROOKLYN, NY - OCTOBER 24: Evan Mobley #4 of the Cleveland Cavaliers dribbles the ball during the game against the Brooklyn Nets on October 24, 2025 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. 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 2025 NBAE (Photo by David Dow/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers will look to break their two-game skid as they head to New York to take on the Brooklyn Nets.

I’ll be in the comments throughout the game sharing my thoughts. Feel free to join in on the conversation and let your voice be heard in the comments below.

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Go Cavs!

Spring Training Game Thread: Texas Rangers at Seattle Mariners

Feb 23, 2026; Tempe, Arizona, USA; Texas Rangers outfielder Mark Canha (33) looks on prior to a spring training game against the Los Angeles Angels at Tempe Diablo Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Matt Kartozian-Imagn Images | Matt Kartozian-Imagn Images

Today the Texas Rangers travel over to Peoria, AZ where they will take on the reigning AL West champion Seattle Mariners who are fresh off being just a handful of outs away from the World Series before heartbreak last October.

Texas will send LHP Jacob Latz to the mound opposite RHP Logan Gilbert for Seattle.

Today’s Lineups

RANGERSMARINERS
Alejandro Osuna – LFVictor Robles – CF
Jake Burger – 1BCole Young – 2B
Kyle Higashioka – CRob Refsnyder – DH
Josh Smith – 2BBrennen Davis – LF
Ezequiel Duran – 3BConnor Joe – 1B
Tyler Wade – CFColt Emerson – 3B
Mark Canha – DHAndrew Knizner – C
Michael Helman – RFLeo Rivas – SS
Cameron Cauley – SSLazaro Montes – RF
Jacob Latz – LHPLogan Gilbert – RHP

The Mariners have video, otherwise you can listen via 105.3 The Fan or follow along on Gameday. First pitch from Peoria Stadium is scheduled for 2:10 pm CT.

Go Rangers!

Arizona Diamondbacks Spring Training Gameday Thread, #10 vs. Cleveland Guardians

SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 23: A general view of the stadium during the spring training game between the Colorado Rockies and Chicago White Sox at Salt River Fields at Talking Stick on February 23, 2026 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by Ric Tapia/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Back to Salt River Fields for the D-backs, who are now without most of their expected starting infield. Carlos Santana, Ketel Marte and Geraldo Perdomo are now off to join their country for the World Baseball Classic, so won’t be back for a while. It’ll therefore be up to Nolan Arenado to marshal the infield in their absence, and that’s what we see in the line-up today. Luken Baker, Tommy Troy and Jose Fernandez take over for the trio named above, with Arenado and Alek Thomas perhaps the only players who’ll be in our Opening Day line-up. Which is now this month, folks. Welcome to March!

Michael Soroka, who now looks to be back in the rotation to start the year, following Merrill Kelly’s issues, gets his second start of spring. So I’d expect him to try and get through three innings this afternoon. He allowed a run on two hits and a walk over two innings his first time out, with three strikeouts. We should get to see some familiar names out of the bullpen after Soroka, with the following potentially on the list: LHP Kohl Drake, RHP Kevin Ginkel, RHP Ryan Thompson, RHP Drey Jameson, RHP Shawn Dubin, RHP Alfred Morillo and LHP Spencer Giesting.

Again, no TV for this one, but as was the case yesterday, you can tune in on Arizona Sports 98.7 FM or online, with Chris Garagiola & Brandon Webb bringing you the game.

Finally, the first big bunch of roster moves for Arizona this morning.

Dodgers vs. Angels game chat

TORONTO, ONTARIO - OCTOBER 25: (L-R) Mookie Betts #50 and Freddie Freeman #5 of the Los Angeles Dodgers celebrate after getting the third out against the Toronto Blue Jays during the second inning in game two of the 2025 World Series at Rogers Center on October 25, 2025 in Toronto, Ontario. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Mookie Betts is in the lineup for his first Cactus League game in 2026, one of a handful of Dodgers regulars being slow-played this spring. Freddie Freeman is also in the lineup, in his planned cleanup spot.

Sunday game info
  • Teams: Dodgers vs. Angels
  • Ballpark: Camelback Ranch
  • Time: 12:05 p.m. PT
  • TV: SportsNet LA
  • Radio: AM 570

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Spring Training Game #8: A’s versus Reds Game Thread

The Athletics have had a rough start to spring training, going 1-6 in their first seven preseason games. However, a new month means a fresh start and a sign that the start of the regular season is inching closer. With the calendar shifting to March, it is time for the A’s to start playing better in preparation for Opening Day at the end of this month against the defending American League champion Toronto Blue Jays.

Right-hander J.T. Ginn will be making the start for the A’s this afternoon against the Cincinnati Reds. Ginn pitched well against the San Francisco Giants a few days ago in his spring debut, racking up three strikeouts over two perfect innings. The focus will be on Ginn today to see if he can follow up that performance with another strong outing, one that will likely last longer as the A’s evaluate whether the best place for him is in the starting rotation or the bullpen. Ginn should be on the A’s roster to begin the season in some capacity as he is proficient at inducing groundouts, something A’s pitchers need to induce more often in year two of the team’s temporary residence at Sacramento’s Sutter Health Park.

The A’s lineup this afternoon shakes out like this:

For the second day in a row, Nick Kurtz is batting behind Jacob Wilson atop the lineup, an alignment that should carry over into the regular season. If Kurtz homers with Wilson—or another leadoff hitter—on base, that’s two runs on the scoreboard. In general, it’s a sound strategy to place a power threat behind a high-contact hitter who consistently gets on base.

Both of the team’s catchers are in this afternoon’s lineup as is third baseman Max Muncy, who is off to a hot start this spring with four hits in ten at bats. Muncy can put some ground between him and the other third base competitors with another strong performance today. Lastly, today’s outfield starters are all prospects. Henry Bolte and Junior Perez are getting extended looks early this spring, yet both have struggled so far.

The Reds have Andrew Abbot, one of the best left-handed pitchers in the National League, lined up for his second spring start this afternoon. Here is how Cincinnati lines up behind him:

The Reds have several regulars in their starting lineup, so it should be another good test for Ginn and the pitchers lined up to follow him out of the A’s bullpen. JJ Bleday has gotten off to a strong start this spring, but can he keep it going against his former team?

What better way to start a new month than with an A’s win. Let’s go A’s!

Mavs sign undrafted rookie guard Ryan Nembhard to standard contract

DALLAS (AP) — The Dallas Mavericks have signed point guard Ryan Nembhard to a standard NBA contract after he thrived as an undrafted rookie free agent on a two-way deal.

The multiyear agreement announced Sunday fills the roster spot created when the Mavericks waived point guard Tyus Jones, an 11-year veteran who was part of the three-team, nine-player trade that sent 10-time All-Star Anthony Davis from Dallas to Washington.

The Mavericks also filled two openings for two-way contracts by signing guard John Poulakidas and forward Tyler Smith. Dallas waived two-way guard Miles Kelly to make room for both signings.

Nembhard was closing in on the maximum number of games allowed under two-way contracts when the Mavericks turned Jones loose to give him a chance to sign with a contender. Dallas has lost 12 of its past 14 games and is on the way to missing the postseason for the second year in a row.

Nembhard has made 17 starts in 38 appearances for the Mavericks, averaging 6.7 points while leading all rookies at 4.9 assists per game. He became the first undrafted rookie with at least 25 points and 10 assists without committing a turnover, scoring 28 points with 10 assists in a 131-121 victory over Denver on Dec. 1.

Poulakidas started the season with the G League's San Diego Clippers after going undrafted out of Yale.

Smith started this season with Rio Grande Valley in the G League. He previously played one season for the G League Ignite before getting drafted by Milwaukee in 2024. Smith played 23 games as a rookie for the Bucks.

___

AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/NBA

Game Thread: White Sox (6-4) at Cubs (4-5)

Always nice to have a last name like Anthony Kay’s that identifies what you try to do to batters. | Diamond Images/Getty Images

Do you think players trying to make the team or holdovers trying to keep their jobs care as much that the opponent is the Cubs as fans do? They probably have other things on their minds, but thumping That Other Team in Town back in the first Cactus League game was sure fun for us.

The parade of pitchers for the Sox today will begin with lefty Anthony Kay, a presumed member of the starting rotation once games count. Kay gave up a run against the Mariners in his first spring start, with two walks in two innings causing the damage.

The Cubs counter with rotation member Shota Imanaga, who had two scoreless innings but gave up three hits in his first outing. Imanaga will face a lineup recovered from the split squad games Friday:

The Cubs lineup against Kay et al. also includes a number of presumed regular season starters, but not all:

First pitch is scheduled for 2:05 p.m. Central, with temps expected to again get warmer than 90°. The Cubs Marquee network is covering the game, but the network of the team whose chairman hates fans almost as much as he hates players only has the game on radio. So if you don’t get Marquee, pull the rocker up to the Truetone, pretend it’s 1935, and dial up ESPN 1000.

Jack Leiter's mental development helps drive the physical development he needs for a breakout

It wasn't a simple road for Jack Leiter to get through his first MLB season. The son of 19-year MLB veteran Al Leiter, Jack was a dominant starter at Vanderbilt and was drafted second overall in the 2021 MLB Draft. It seemed like the younger Leiter was uniquely positioned to handle the mental and physical grind of professional baseball, but not many people expected that theory to be tested so quickly.

In his first professional season, Leiter posted a 5.54 ERA in 92.2 innings at Double-A. He missed plenty of bats, but he also gave up tons of hard contact. He came back in 2023 and spent the vast majority of the season at Double-A again, posting a 5.07 ERA but improving his strikeout rate from 25.6% to 31.3%. In 2024, the Rangers pushed him to Triple-A, and he responded with a 3.51 ERA and 33.3% strikeout rate in 77 innings before getting his first crack at big league innings. That debut did not go swimmingly, with Leiter posting an 8.83 ERA in 35.2 innings and seeing his strikeout rate drop to 17.9%.

Still, Leiter entered the 2025 season undeterred. He added a sinker to his arsenal and modified his changeup to try to help him against left-handed hitters. He garnered some buzz in spring training and then came out of the gates hot, pitching to a 3.48 ERA and 1.16 WHIP in his first 10 starts. The strikeouts still weren't near the level he had shown in the minors, but the progress was clear. After a tough six-start stretch in June and early June, Leiter rebounded over his final 13 starts, posting a 3.28 ERA, 1.19 WHIP, and nearly 27% strikeout rate.

It seemed that the 25-year-old had finally begun to figure it out, thanks to the evolution of his mental approach to the game.

"I think a lot of it's just how I've developed mentally, in my mindset and my mental preparation and my process," Leiter said after a spring training start this year. "I think the more process-oriented you get in this game, the better, especially this time of year, because you can drive yourself crazy with results... I think the more game reps you can get, which last year I was fortunate enough to have 29 starts in the big leagues, I think that just helps you evolve mentally in itself, but also with your routines, your preparation, your analysis of games."

So, how has Leiter's mental approach changed since his big league debut in 2024?

"It just becomes different, more refined. A game like today [allowing two runs on three hits in 1.1 innings], maybe three years ago, it would have just been kind of pure frustration off of results. But now it's about diving into each pitch and how I was executing. I like to break it down by each pitch type. Say my execution was down to, let's call it 60% from 68% last week, but maybe the cutter was kind of swaying that because it was only 3-for-9. Now it's like, okay, we have a direct point of emphasis for increasing my overall execution, because at the end of the day, execution is the name of the game, and the higher percentage that I can execute pitches, the more I'd be willing to bet on good results."

That shift in focus away from results has been crucial for Leiter, especially at this time of year.

"It's all about process. Understanding what time of year it is, and understanding what I'm trying to work on...Even the pitches where I wasn't so happy about the results, I think the shapes, the stuff, and the way that I was throwing it is definitely encouraging...At the end of the day, some pitches that get hit could have been a groundout to short. Obviously, they could always be better, but, again, you could drive yourself crazy, so I think the way to go is always a kind of positive mindset, continue to build off the positives, and learn from the negatives."

What does that look like for Leiter, specifically? Well, a big focus has been on attacking with the four-seam fastball. In his last spring training start, Leiter was encouraged that the pitch "was in the zone a lot." That's going to be important for him coming off a season in which his four-seam fastball had just a 52% zone rate, which was below league-average. That was a big reason why he added the sinker because he's able to command that pitch in the zone more often; however, being able to fill up the strike zone with both fastball variations could go a long way towards alleviating some of the command concerns that sprouted up after he posted a 10.4% walk rate.

The other focus for Leiter this spring has been on the introduction of a new cutter. The sinker last year was a good weapon for right-handed hitters to complement his four-seam fastball, but it performed poorly against lefties. His sinker allowed a 53% Ideal Contact Rate and a nearly 13% HR/FB rate to lefties, both of which were significantly worse than the league average. His four-seam fastball performed well to lefties, missing bats and not allowing much hard contact, but, again, it's not a pitch that Leiter has commanded in the strike zone regularly. The cutter to lefties could fill the same role that the sinker to righties did last year as an early-count strike pitch.

In his first spring outing, Leiter threw just two cutters, but both of them resulted in outs, so Leiter turned to it more often in his second spring start.

"It's a new pitch, and I'm working on it. I think what we saw with only throwing two [cutters] and getting two outs on them last week was to kind of see when we can and can't throw it in a game," Leiter explained after his start on February 28th. "Game results are the best feedback for that. Early on, I threw some really good ones, like in that [Kyle] Tucker at-bat in the first inning. I think at that point it might have just become like, 'Okay, that pitch is on today,” and then in the second inning, it wasn't quite the same. I think I was kind of just getting underneath it and just missing. Obviously, that's a pitch that we need to be in the zone at a high percentage, because it's meant to be thrown forward for contact. It's not a chase pitch.”

Understanding the bigger picture and what he's building towards is crucial for Leiter to take the next step in his development. However, there are some other things he'd like to see in addition to the cutter. He talked about the curveball feeling good out of his hand early in camp, and that would also be crucial for him. Even if Leiter uses the cutter to get ahead in counts against lefties, he didn't have a single pitch that had a better-than-league-average swinging strike rate (SwStr%) against lefties in 2025.

His slider, which he used 15% of the time to lefties, posted a 13.1% SwStr%, which was 43rd percentile, and was below-average as a two-strike pitch. His curveball, which he used 13% of the time to lefites had a 9.5% SwStr% but did perform well with two strikes, which suggests it could be a decent option when he mixes it in sparingly or, perhaps, is a pitch that he can find more comfort in this season and improve upon.

What we do know is that Leiter has the right mentality to figure that out.

Cambridge scores 33 to lift No. 13 Ohio State women over No. 15 Michigan State, 87-68

EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) — Jaloni Cambridge scored 33 points, Chance Gray added 21 and No. 13 Ohio State hit a program record 18 3-pointers in a 87-68 win over No. 15 Michigan State on Sunday afternoon in the regular season finale for both teams.

Cambridge shot 12 of 24 from the field and 7 of 12 from beyond the arc, the most she has made from deep all season. Gray shot 7 of 11 from 3-point range.

Elsa Lemilla recorded a double-double for the Buckeyes (24-6, 13-5 Big Ten) with 11 points and 10 rebounds. Kennedy Cambridge put up 10 points.

The Buckeyes had a 15-0 run in the second quarter, putting them up 38-11, and they went into halftime leading 49-26.

The Spartans (22-7, 11-7) were led in scoring by Grace VanSlooten, with 17. Rashunda Jones scored 16 and Ines Sotelo added 11.

Up next

Michigan State: Will be the No. 7 seed in the Big Ten tournament in Indianapolis. The Spartans play on Thursday.

Ohio State: Can be the No. 4 seed in the Big Ten tournament with a Minnesota loss against Illinois, or the No. 5 seed if Minnesota wins.

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Golden Knights' Mark Stone leaves game at Penguins with an undisclosed injury

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Vegas Golden Knights captain Mark Stone left his team’s game at the Pittsburgh Penguins on Sunday because of an undisclosed injury.

Penguins defenseman Kris Letang gave Stone a seemingly harmless shove to the left arm with his stick in the neutral zone late in the first period, though it may have caught him in the gap between his elbow and shoulder pads. Stone grimaced in pain, went down to one knee and skated off.

The 33-year-old winger has a history of injuries sidelining him throughout his NHL career over the past decade-plus, including a wrist injury in the fall. He has never played all 82 games in a season since becoming a full-time player in the league with Ottawa in 2014-15.

Stone is the Golden Knights’ second-leading scorer with 60 points in 43 games. He just helped Canada reach the final at the Olympics before losing to the U.S. in overtime.

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