The Timberwolves return to their home floor with a slight edge in setting, but still head into Game 3 as 46% underdogs, while the Nuggets draw the spotlight as 54% favorites to snag a road win.
Our prediction:Nuggets to win
The Minnesota Timberwolves came back from 19 points down in Game 2 and held on convincingly in the final minutes. The praise is deserved.
But no one should be shocked if Minnesota now offers an absolute let down, something that the Denver Nuggets will gladly take advantage of.
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Game 3 should be a Nikola Jokic showcase, even if the game’s overall defense drastically improves thanks to the added day between games.
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For Carolina Hurricanes rookie defenseman Alexander Nikishin, the second taste of playoff hockey has felt very different than the first.
Just under a year ago, the highly touted Russian blueliner made his NHL debut in the second round of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs in Game 5 against the Washington Capitals and he would appear in three more games that postseason.
There were certainly flashes in the pan for Nikishin during that span, namely a game-winning assist in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference Final, but it was clear that for the then 23-year-old, who had spent his entire career playing in Russia, there still was a lot to learn about the North American game.
"I don't know if there was a tougher spot to throw a kid in," said Carolina coach Rod Brind'Amour.
The Hurricanes play a pretty demanding system that has a lot of nuances to it.
So getting tossed into that on the biggest stage, against the toughest opponents and without a full grasp of the language was certainly no easy task.
"The way we play is hard for even NHL veterans to get used to," said Carolina general manager Eric Tulsky. "So someone coming over from a different league that sort of overall defends in a different way, it was a big adjustment."
Now, however, the talented defenseman has a full year of NHL hockey under his belt as he enters his second postseason stint and for Nikishin, that experience is making all the difference.
"It's different," Nikishin told The Hockey News. "I play last season, my first game, in playoffs and it's a different speed than the KHL. Also, for two months and a half, I didn't play a game. But right now, I play whole season and it's been big experience."
Nikishin has spent a full season learning and adapting to not only the Hurricanes' systems, but also the speed of the NHL, English, teammate tendencies and so much more.
He's gained a comfort level that wasn't initially there and that's allowed him to earn more and more trust from the coaching staff.
"Right now, I know what I need to do on the ice," Nikishin said.
Offensively, Nikishin was as advertised for the Hurricanes.
The Russian set the team record for both goals (11) and points (33) in a season by a rookie blueliner and also earned a spot quarterbacking the team's second power play unit.
And if there were such things as tertiary assists, he'd already have two points this postseason thanks to a pair of plays he made in Game 1.
Nikishin has also lived up to his trademark "Boom" nickname, delivering some of the team's biggest hits of the year and ending the season fifth overall on the team with a total of 132.
The Hurricanes elected to primarily pair him alongside their other top offensive blueliner in Shayne Gostisbehere and the two were a pretty dynamic duo for Carolina at even strength, especially so in the offensive zone.
The two defensemen combined for 24 goals and 83 points on the year and as you would expect, they had a significantly higher scoring rate than the team's other two pairs at 5v5, while still not conceding very much against either.
"I like playing with him," Nikishin said on Gostisbehere. "He loves playing in the offensive zone and he can make a great pass for open lane. I understand what he wants and he helps me too in the offensive zone. Many times we speak what we do in the d-zone too."
Nikishin also said that there's a big comfort level playing with Gostisbehere, which is an importance that can't be overstated for a rookie.
"Niki's obviously a physical presence and he's got a blistering shot," Gostisbehere said. "He's been a great addition and he fits seamlessly too and has really helped us."
While the offensive side of Nikishin's game was never in question, the one area of the game where he still has room to grow though is defensively.
Brind'Amour has talked extensively throughout the year on how he feels Nikishin is just "scratching the surface" when it comes to his overall playing ability and that primarily has to do with him still learning the nuances about defending at the NHL level.
But from his NHL debut to today, it's been like night and day.
In that first playoff experience, Nikishin had no idea where he was even supposed to be on the ice, often looking lost in his own end. He just wasn't prepared for the speed and intensity of the NHL playoffs, and especially so against a team like the Florida Panthers that year.
But that's not the case this year.
"My focus was on D-zone," Nikishin said on the main area of his game he worked on this year. "It's number one here."
"From where he was in Game 1 to now, you can see that he's getting a lot more accustomed to the way we ask people to gap up and close out," Tulsky said. "He understands that when a player turns up, he's got to go with him and close him down. That's getting more and more instinctive for him and as that happens, it becomes easier, more natural and faster. He's just getting more and more effective with time."
The Carolina Hurricanes have Stanley Cup aspirations and usually a team like that doesn't have time to get rookies up to speed.
So it's a testament to both Nikishin's talent and growth that he's already positioned himself into a dependable member of the blueline on a true Cup favorite and as Brind'Amour has said, his potential feels incredibly high.
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Boston, MA - July 7 - Red Sox owner John Henry sits in his box alone during the MLB game against the Colorado Rockies at Fenway Park. (Photo by Matt Stone/MediaNews Group/Boston Herald via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images
In 2022, the “It’s Not My Moneyball” series was created in response to the owners’ lockout, which disrupted Spring Training and arguably cost Clayton Kershaw a perfect game in Minneapolis (I had fun). As the season starts, the World Baseball Classic concludes, we must revive this series as trouble looms in the distance, hanging in the air, exactly in the way a brick does not.
This trilogy in four parts (it’s yet another Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy joke) was initially conceived from a single essay that ballooned in size to the point where a split was necessary. As I worked on Pandora’s Boxand MLB’s Dirty Dozen, I realized that there was a deeper story than skinflint owners and a perception problem that the Dodgers are more than happy to lean into…and then Sam Blum of The Athletic blew it all up with an excellent essay about a mostly fraudulent yogurt company, which is so good, it broke this essay in half.
Perception problem versus the actual problems
There are two cancers slowly metastasizing into the sport: the emergence of private equity into MLB ownership and the embrace of gambling. Both of these cancers are fueling the rationale for a hardline position during the upcoming labor crisis.
The perception problem baseball labors under is the bright, shiny object that is catching reporters like Jeff Passan’s attention. Reporters, like Mr. Passan, remain perplexed about how the sport that is riding all the momentum to regain the second spot in the American pantheon of sports is likely going to set it all ablaze in less than eight months’ time.
Each of these final subjects will get its own essay. Today, we give a crash course on private equity in baseball, starting with an update to a story that drew my attention like a moth to a flame.
The San Diego Padres are selling for how much?!? How?!?!?
That amount is also a record sale for an MLB franchise, eclipsing the $2.15 billion the Dodgers sold for in 2012 and the $2.42 billion Steven Cohen paid for the New York Mets in 2020. Talking about lighting a fire! In all seriousness, this sale shatters all expectations. Forbes valued the Padres at around $3.1 billion at the start of 2026, and potential sales in Anaheim and Minneapolis were thwarted, even if temporarily, because presumably the market was not there, fueling the owner’s argument going into the next round of labor talks.
With no disrespect to the Padres, I have the following response to the sale: Really?!?
The Padres have a lovely, if slightly overpriced and conceited, ballpark, and while the franchise is in a better position than the Dodgers were when emerging from bankruptcy, the ceiling for the Padres is inarguably lower than the Dodgers’ was when they exited bankruptcy. Even though we are now almost fifteen years later from the Guggenheim purchase of the Dodgers, you’re telling me that a team that is infinitely inferior in just about every facet is worth more than the Dodgers were back then?
When the Padres actually meet baseball expectations exactly once, I’ll revisit and possibly retract the snark.
“The smaller markets are selling for twice what the large markets are,” said agent Scott Boras. “An outlier? I would say the truth is (the Padres valuation) outs the lies that baseball isn’t at the most prosperous point of its existence.”
Added another agent: “These guys opened the books, saw everything and bought this for $3.9 billion as we go to a (potential) work stoppage? These are smart, savvy business owners. They are in the process of buying undervalued assets.”
The Padres are in a position to benefit massively from the new CBA, should the league meet its goal for a national media rights deal that could pay each club hundreds of millions annually starting in 2029. The Padres rank among the smallest in the league in local media revenue.
“I hope they aren’t an (outlier),” said another industry executive. “I hope it’s an example of what small-market teams can do with the right ownership. For years, there’s been people saying, ‘How can they keep spending?’ or ‘It’s going to massively crash on them,’ but kudos to them. They invested in the product and have been rewarded.”
(Emphasis added.)
In a rational universe, this sale would kickstart an honest negotiation that largely keeps the peace so that all parties can benefit from the new media deal likely to come in 2028. A larger pie feeds all comers, but instead, we will be led off the cliff by those who ignore this data point and focus on the hardline position like a rabid dog chasing a car, which usually ends badly for everyone involved.
The Padres had at least $300 million of debt on their books per The Athletic. The amount is substantial, especially given that the Minnesota Twins had $500 million in debt on their books and could not secure a $1.7 billion sale price. The Twins added minority partners in 2025 to help erase the debt.
Considering that these are the transactions we know about, if one were not paying attention to financial trends in baseball, one might be tempted to accept the owner’s claims of seemingly self-induced poverty.
After all, it takes a certain type of anti-talent to bankrupt a casino, or in this case, a major league franchise. Make your own Frank McCourt joke here.
The Dodgers franchise is somehow worth around $9 billion now, per Sportico. Again, without a public accounting, the figure feels more vibes-based than evidence-based. To be fair, this point is a feature rather than a bug of the market, and it applies to sectors other than baseball. Never forget that office space rental company WeWork was valued at $47 billion in its last funding round, before sanity returned and crashed the company’s value back to earth.
How the world thought an office-shared-space rental company was a software company is something I still cannot understand. Hopefully, when we look back on this period in baseball, no one is asking similar questions about how we all looked bad for not seeing the trends coming.
When the average franchise exceeds the record sale of marquee franchises just fifteen years later or five years later (if we are being generous to our cousins in Queens), alarm bells should be ringing.
Either baseball as a whole is just killing it, or something else is going on. Maybe both.
As if to give the game away, private equity firms have been more involved with buying stakes in MLB teams, more so than in other leagues, begging the obvious question to the average fan.
What is private equity?
A private equity firm is an investment partnership in which private investors buy struggling private companies and try to restructure and improve them so they both grow and operate more effectively, before the acquired company is either sold or transformed into a publicly traded company.
In theory, that description is perfectly benign and acceptable. Capitalism must capitalism, and the money, like the sands of Arrakis, must flow.
So why raise a stink, as the Padres’ news is entirely coincidental? In practice lately, the involvement of private equity amounts to the financial kiss of death for acquired companies.
What generally ends up happening is that the acquired company is loaded with debt and hollowed out, with all the subtlety of someone being busted out by the mob, before the acquired company goes bankrupt, with all the employees losing their jobs.
Remember when Red Lobster went bankrupt? Common wisdom said the company was felled by customers ordering too many shrimp during the Endless Shrimp promotion. Personally, guilty as charged, as I love shrimp, which actually explains a lot.
The truth was far more predictable and had nothing to do with consumer behavior. When Red Lobster was acquired by a private equity firm, the company was directed to sell its locations and then lease the buildings back to keep operating, among other short-term moves that torpedoed the future of the seafood restaurant.
It’s not just restaurants either. But if one has been to Jersey Mike’s lately, there’s a reason one’s Jersey Mike’s orders have gotten noticeably worse (higher prices, smaller portion sizes) since the company was acquired by private equity. Or put another way, if you are wondering why Toys R Us returned and then quickly disappeared again, thank private equity.
Therefore, private equity firm involvement is generally a giant red flag because of its well-earned reputation for sundering struggling businesses in the name of short-term profits.
…These days MLB doesn’t allow corporate ownership–current exceptions like the Blue Jays are grandfathered in—but the league’s comfort with institutions as owners could come from its long history of corporate ownership of franchises, with the Angels, Braves, Cardinals, Cubs, Mariners and Yankees among the teams that were mostly well-run under institutional oversight.
• Under current rules as reported by Sportico, a private equity fund can own up to 15% of a franchise, with no limit to the number of clubs a fund can invest in. • It’s not known if there is a minimum dollar investment or percentage ownership requirement for institutional investors. • On the team side, no franchise can sell more than 30% of its equity to PE.
(Emphasis added.)
Other sports leagues have followed suit. Private equity firms have become involved with 18 out of the 30 teams, including the Dodgers. Arctos Sports Partners is believed to have invested in six teams, including the Dodgers: the Chicago Cubs, the San Francisco Giants, the San Diego Padres, the Houston Astros, and the Boston Red Sox. From Luisa Beltran of Sportico:
A handful of private equity firms have taken stakes in MLB teams. This [involvement] includes Arctos, Sportsology Capital Partners and Sixth Street. RedBird Capital, the PE firm from Gerry Cardinale, backs Fenway Sports Group, which owns the Red Sox. Silver Lake owns Diamond Baseball Holdings, which has amassed a collection of 48 minor league teams. (Marc Lasry’s Avenue Capital is an investor in the Baltimore Orioles, but Avenue is a hedge fund and not private equity.)
Firms such as Arctos are not about civic involvement, or the joy of ownership. They evaluate opportunities on a “Can we make money?” basis. The data showed that Arctos and similar firms invested nearly $2 billion into stakes in pro sports teams last year.
“These are strong, recurring revenue businesses,” [Jordan] Solomon, [co-founder of Arctos] said.
The owners get a guaranteed share of growing league revenue, including national broadcast revenue — and not just from television networks, as Wednesday’s deal between Apple and MLB shows. The average annual value of the MLB national broadcast deals, according to Forbes: just shy of $2 billion, or about $66 million per team. That is guaranteed revenue, without even accounting for local cable rights or selling a single ticket or T-shirt.
And what are these firms’ money being used on? Ancillary measures per available reporting from last year by Lillian Rizzo of CNBC:
Private equity’s capital and influence often goes toward expenses surrounding teams, such as stadium and hospitality improvements and digital enhancements. This [capital] frees up more room for payroll spending, too.
“It is also interesting to watch as baseball works to introduce new rules, products and in-stadium experiences to connect with a younger audience,” said [Michelle McKenna, a senior advisor in Evercore’s strategic advisory practice], noting private equity’s expertise in a lot of those areas. “PE investment in sports isn’t your grandfather’s PE. These are longer-term partners with well-honed strategic advice in addition to capital.”
Whether teams are actually spending money on players is an open question, but if one proceeds as if the teams were assets trying to control costs and profits, the slow winters of the past few years both make sense and develop new meaning.
Accordingly, a majority of teams have let in outside capital, with a deserved reputation of torpedoing long-term stability for a quick buck, but with safeguards to keep them from sinking teams like Red Lobster or Toys R Us. What is the actual problem?
They were invited, and they are unlikely to leave.
The problem, or why we are here today, is that there is now an outside force, ancillary to ownership, that will be pushing for a hard salary cap, emboldening the more radical voices that threaten to stand atop the sport and drive it into a ditch. Why?
I have long maintained that baseball is smack in the middle of a valuation bubble.
Owning a team has value, but that value largely rests on factors that cannot be objectively verified unless one is talking about the Atlanta Braves. It would not be entirely incorrect to say that vibes are a component of what a team is worth, and honestly, when one looks at the numbers over the past couple of years, they no longer make sense.
Private equity firms have concluded that MLB teams are undervalued in part because there is no hard salary cap. Once again, Ms. Beltran from Sportico:
When it comes to valuing a club, many professional sports teams operate with negative cash flows, so traditional valuations metrics like EBITDA are useless, according to the Corporate Finance Institute. This [reason] is why MLB teams are often valued as a multiple of revenue. Using a revenue multiple allows clubs to capture revenue from local media and the intrinsic value of each team.
Valuing teams with an EBITDA multiple also doesn’t allow teams to include their scarcity value. “Sports team ownership, for an individual, in many ways is more analogous to the ownership of a valuable piece of art than it is to cold economic rationality,” said Stephen Amdur, a partner with law firm Fried Frank, who has advised on sports transactions such as the sale of Chelsea FC and the San Francisco Giants’ partnership with Sixth Street. “I don’t know how a person ultimately decides exactly what a Picasso should be worth, just as I don’t know how a person decides exactly what the Chicago Bears should be worth. It all depends on the team, the situation and your own personal enjoyment of the sport.”
The average MLB team is worth $3.17 billion…[This value] translates to an average multiple of about 7.2x revenue. This low valuation is mainly due to the league’s looming labor issues. The current collective bargaining agreement between MLB and the MLB Players Association is set to expire on Dec. 1, and many expect a work stoppage.
A major point of contention is the salary cap….“Leagues that have salary caps like NFL have more predicable costs, which is helpful for investors in long-term planning,” [Aaron Mulvihill, global alternatives strategist at J.P. Morgan Asset Management] said.
(Emphasis added.)
Once you realize people are largely just guessing at what an MLB team is worth, you should realize that you have heard a version of this argument before: the 2008 financial crash. The system in place works, assuming franchise values continue to increase. If the music were to slow or, God forbid, stop…heaven help everyone.
Unlike the financial crisis, if you know where to look, you could see the storm coming. Here, all the books but one are closed. Before anyone thinks that this conclusion is benign need only continue to wait for representatives to say the quiet part out loud. For a final time, Ms. Beltran of Sportico:
Broken player economics, including the lack of a salary cap, is suppressing MLB multiples, according to one private equity executive, who declined to speak on the record.
A second PE exec, who also asked not to be named, thinks there will be a delay to the 2027 season with games likely starting in June.
Some bankers and PE executives believe all this volatility makes MLB a great place for private equity to invest right now. They say there are some longtime owners with majority stakes who are economically exposed to baseball’s volatility and would welcome taking money off the table.
Once MLB fixes its problems, including clinching a new CBA, team valuations are expected to jump….
(Emphasis added.)
In the least charitable light, you potentially have a cadre of owners and private equity firms essentially incentivized to hold a hard line to keep this bubble going. After all, “stable labor costs” (known to others as depressed wages, regardless of what pundits like Brodie Brazil say) likely means more private equity investment, from the same types of people who drove Red Lobster et al. into the ground, more acquisition of commercial land by using the franchise value as collateral, and on and on the cycle goes.
Or put another way: If you give a mouse a cookie, he’s going to ask for milk. And then demand it. Teams like the Dodgers are likely able to resist any turbulence, but smaller teams (especially ones that seemed to rack up mountains of debt — looking at the Twins here) seem likely to bear the brunt of whatever is coming.
Or if you want a joke to tweak our northern cousins: Why did the San Francisco Giants need to buy the Curran Theater? Because the money had to go somewhere other than the team.
Remember, about 10 owners contributed more to the “we’re going to lock out the players’ fund” than to free-agent acquisitions this year. What could possibly go wrong in this scenario, especially if the owners get what they want and get a protracted lockout?
In fact, we have a current example of a large market team that started operating as if governed by the Excel spreadsheet rather than as a competent franchise.
Cautionary tale: From darling to dud
If one were to ask what team was the model baseball franchise of the 21st century, and they asked before 2020, one would be hard-pressed not to say the Boston Red Sox. Four titles in 20 years after almost 90 years of futility, an owner beloved by the fanbase, a fanbase basking in glory, most recently with the Mookie Betts-led 2018 championship squad.
As Joon Lee from More Perfect Union demonstrates, the arc from darling to dud can often be swift, tragic, and ultimately foreseeable in hindsight. The main villain? Going too far.
Owner John Henry brought a new philosophy to the club, combining scouting and analytics with financial muscle. In a sport where you can be rich, smart, or good, the Sox were flirting with being all three, leading to gutsy moves to fund this system, like trading Nomar Garciaparra.
But if this era started with a gutsy trade that made baseball sense, it ended when the Red Sox traded Mookie Betts…to the Dodgers. And looking back, that one move is the rock on which this dynasty’s foundation was laid.
Rather than a move to make the Red Sox better, the move was financial. There was no legitimate baseball reason to make that deal, especially by dumping Betts and David Price for salary relief and prospects Alex Verdugo, Connor Wong, and Jeter Downs. Six years later, only Wong is still with the Red Sox in a regular role. Verdugo is now on his third team since leaving Boston. Downs has been out of baseball since 2024.
From this point on, the Red Sox underwent a slow march and went from the centerpiece of Fenway Sports Group to just another cog, along with Premier League football club Liverpool, the NHL’s Pittsburgh Penguins, and RFK Racing. And if you are starting to realize that the Dodgers’ current ownership group, Guggenheim, owns the Dodgers, has a majority ownership of the Los Angeles Lakers, the Los Angeles Sparks, and is a part owner of the Chelsea Football Club…the realization I might be throwing a rock from a glass house hits like a brick.
It’s best to view the Red Sox now as a financial asset masquerading as a baseball team, rather than as a baseball team that happens to be a financial asset. That distinction might seem minor, but once that line is crossed, all sorts of terrible moves make a lot more “sense,” like doing nothing in San Francisco, especially after forcing the Athletics out, like banking on the severity of a self-imposed lockout with a warchest of $2 billion.
If private equity has accelerated a trend catering to the 1% of bank accounts, trying to monetize every last dollar (be it paying for FanFest, a $70ish dollar souvenir cup, increased parking, etc., etc.), the Red Sox might have just gotten to the destination first, after having a head start.
In a sport where you can be rich, smart, or good, the Dodgers are ultimately and inescapably all three. Enjoy the current campaign, everybody. I predicted we would lose at least half of 2027, largely based on initial research that informed this report. I would truly, desperately love to be wrong. In the end, it’s not my Money(ball).
OKLAHOMA CITY, OK - APRIL 22: Khaman Maluach #10 of the Phoenix Suns celebrates during the game against the Oklahoma City Thunder during Round One Game Two of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on April 22, 2026 at Paycom Center in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. 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 Barry Gossage/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
The Phoenix Suns might be down 0-2 after losing Game 2 to the Oklahoma City Thunder, but I walked away from that one appreciating some of the adjustments from Jordan Ott. I know. Words I didn’t know if I’d be typing for the remainder of this season. The final two months of the season were rough for the Suns, and while injuries played a big role, the team struggled with rotations, couldn’t close games, and lost some of the competitive edge and execution that defined them early on.
From a fanalyst perspective, one of the more frustrating parts of that final stretch was the lack of minutes for the rookie class. This is a team that needs internal development to sustain anything long-term, yet Khaman Maluach and Rasheer Fleming were collecting DNPs when clear opportunities were available.
Maluach’s absence stood out the most because the situation was tailor-made to give him an opportunity. Mark Williams missed 17 of the final 21 games, and in that stretch, the 7’2” center out of Duke averaged only 13.7 minutes per game. He put up 4.6 points, 4.6 rebounds, and 1.2 blocks, which scale to 12 points, 12 rebounds, and 3.2 blocks per 36 minutes. You had the seventh seed locked in. Your starting center was out. The minutes were sitting there. It felt like the right time to see more of him.
I get it. He’s 19. There is going to be hesitation. But he is also the 10th overall pick. At some point, you have to put him on the floor, take the training wheels off, and let him grow.
On Wednesday night against the Oklahoma City Thunder, we finally saw more of Khaman Maluach. I am not sure if it was a planned adjustment by Jordan Ott and his staff or if they reached a point where they said, “Eff it, let’s see what this looks like.” Because Oso Ighodaro did not look good in this game. My apologies. “Did not look good” is being nice. He was bloody awful. He was short-rimming shots, turning the ball over, and doing a convincing impression of a traffic cone as the Thunder repeatedly waltzed to the rim. It wasn’t pretty. And perhaps Jordan Ott finally realized that I might as well try out this Malauch thing, give it some extended minutes, and see what happens.
If you are looking at the box score, what Malauch did does not stand out. 18 minutes, 4 points, 3 rebounds. No blocks, no steals, no assists. You can point to the plus/minus and see a +10, the only positive mark on the team, but that stat can be misleading in a single game. It says more about lineups than individual impact.
That +10, however, came in the fourth, when he played all 12 minutes. And what he brought was different. His size shifted the geometry of the game. All of a sudden, the Suns looked like a basketball team. His presence alone made opponents think twice about attacking the rim. Offensively, the team had someone who, when the ball touched his hands, the defense didn’t run away from. Because when you see the Thunder and how they react to Ighodaro, it’s comical. They know he can’t shoot. They know his primary function is to connect the possession. So they retreat, and all that is left is Oso in an arena with the ball in his hands, and that is not threatening.
I think back to that game against the Denver Nuggets, when Khaman Maluach did get some run with Mark Williams out. Nikola Jokic and that offense are a machine, and the Phoenix Suns had no real answer. But when Maluach was on the floor, you could feel it shift a bit. He was not shutting Jokic down — nobody does — but his size and length made things uncomfortable for the three-time MVP. He disrupted sight lines, forced tougher passes, and made everything a little less clean, especially compared to when Oso Ighodaro was on him.
And still, he only played 11 minutes. 6 points, 2 blocks. Meanwhile, Ighodaro logged 34. You know how it ended. Jokic gets a clean look over Oso and closes it out, 125-123.
That has been part of the frustration with the rotations. Oso is a good player. For a 40th overall pick, the return has been strong. He gives you a lot. He screens well, he connects the offense, you can run sets through him, he moves, he rebounds, and he can switch defensively. There is value in all of that.
But he is more of a Swiss Army knife. Useful in many ways, not overwhelming in any. And maybe that is why Jordan Ott leans on him. He fits into everything and allows for differing offensive connections and defensive switchability. But I’ll tell you this, if I’m eating a steak, I’m not reaching for a Swiss Army knife. I want a weapon. I want a damn steak knife. That is Khaman Maluach.
Oso is like a Swiss Army knife. He does a lot of little things, gives you versatility. But if I need to eat a steak, I’m using a goddamn knife. Maluach is that weapon
He does not have the same all-around skill set as Oso Ighodaro, but he brings something different. Power. Motor. Length. Shot deterrence. And there is a hint of shooting there. It is not polished yet. He has not had the reps, but you can see the possibility of him stretching the floor when needed.
More than anything, he changes that geometry. His presence alone shifts how teams approach the paint. He gives you size and length at the rim. He will have his issues in space, especially in high pick-and-roll situations where his closeouts need work, but around the basket, he alters his behavior. Teams think twice, and they settle more.
You saw it in the numbers. Through three quarters, the Oklahoma City Thunder were 21-of-31 in the paint, 46.5% of their attempts. In the fourth, that dropped to 3-of-6, 35%.
OKC attempted 46.5% of their shots in the paint during the first three quarters of Game 2 and made 67.7% of them (21-of-31). In the fourth quarter, that number fell to 35% of their attempts and 50% (3-of-6)
Khaman Maluach played all 12 minutes of the fourth.
In short, he nudges teams toward jump shots instead of letting them live downhill.
Chances are Mark Williams is done for the year. I would be surprised if we see him in Game 3. That shifts the focus to Jordan Ott and how he handles the frontcourt minutes. Does he start Khaman Maluach? Does he expand his role?
On Wednesday, Oso Ighodaro played 29 minutes, and Maluach played 18. I think that should flip. It gives you a better chance to compete. It also matters for development. This is the time to start thinking about next season, about what this team could look like, and what the rotation might be. Rosters change, that is part of the league, but Maluach is part of the future. Give him the minutes, give him the reps, and let him provide the size this team needs.
I will end on something a little ridiculous. I have been diving into the Marvel Cinematic Universe, watching everything in chronological order. Not release order. Timeline order. I am 14 movies in and heading toward Avengers: Infinity War. It’s a maniacal way to end my days, but for some reason, I started something, and I can’t stop until I am finished.
Why bring it up? Because Maluach feels like one of the infinity stones. And if the Suns ever rolled out Maluach with Rasheer Fleming, it starts to feel like the set is complete. Snap your fingers, and defenses have to adjust. It is a little tongue-in-cheek. I have preached patience all season, and now I am leaning the other way. But at this point, what are you really risking?
At this point, the downside of playing it safe outweighs the risk of finding something real. You are already down 0–2. The known quantities have not been enough, and sticking to them is not going to suddenly change the trajectory of this series. Maluach might not be polished, and there will be mistakes, but he offers a dimension this team otherwise lacks. And sometimes that alone is enough to tilt a game, or at least force the opponent to think twice.
If this season is going to end, it should end with clarity, not hesitation. Give him the floor, live with the results, and see if there is something there worth carrying forward. Because right now, that possibility is more valuable than the illusion of control.
SAN FRANCISCO, CA - MARCH 25: New York Yankees pitcher Camilo Doval (75) New York Yankees catcher Austin Wells (28) walk on the field after a MLB game between the New York Yankees and the San Francisco Giants on March 25, 2026 at Oracle Park in San Francisco, CA. (Photo by Trinity Machan/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
Right now, everybody’s talking about bullpens. Earlier this week, the Los Angeles Dodgers put newly signed closer Edwin Diaz on the injured list after a disastrous start to his LA career, as he undergoes surgery to remove loose bodies from his elbow. Over in Queens, their two new bullpen arms, Devin Williams and Luke Weaver, have been major contributors in what was heading into last night’s action a 12-game losing streak. And of course, here at Pinstripe Alley, there’s a good chance you’re already sick and tired of hearing about Camilo Doval, Jake Bird, and, to be honest, every reliever except Tim Hill, Fernando Cruz, and, somehow, Brent Headrick.
At this point, the narrative is pretty clear. For many years, the Yankees invested heavily into their bullpen, signing big name closers and top-shelf relievers to set up for Mariano Rivera (e.g., Tom Gordon, Kyle Farnsworth, Rafael Soriano), spending big money on closers following Rivera’s retirement (e.g., Andrew Miller, Aroldis Chapman), trading for closers to set up for other closers (e.g., Zack Britton, David Robertson, Tommy Kahnle), and signing top relievers on the free agent market to fill out the ‘pen (e.g. Adam Ottavino, Darren O’Day, Justin Wilson). They did this while developing a parade of bullpen arms that would be closers elsewhere, including Dellin Betances, Chad Green, Jonathan Loáisiga, and Michael King (before he became a starter, of course). And the Yankees — particularly during the Baby Bombera era, from 2017 to 2021 — saw major return on that investment: their 33.0 fWAR in that span ranks first, four runs ahead of the second-place Rays (whose 29.3 fWAR is artificially inflated by their liberal use of openers, who are officially classified as relievers) and well ahead of the third-place Dodgers.
Since 2021, however, the Yankees have taken a very different approach when it comes to building their bullpen. Rather than signing the top of the market players, they have opted to look in the bargain bin to find relievers — some of whom have worked out, and others who have not. The few top-level arms they do acquire have been brought in via trade, not signed as free agents, and are generally still arbitration-eligible. No matter how they’re acquired, however, when these relievers reach free agency, they have, for the most part, let them walk: since 2021, Aroldis Chapman, Chad Green, Wandy Peralta, Tommy Kahnle, Clay Holmes, Devin Williams, Luke Weaver, Jake Cousins, and Jonathan Loáisiga have all been allowed to leave in free agency, and Ian Hamilton, Scoff Effross, Mark Leiter Jr., Ron Marinaccio, Michael Tonkin, and more have been designated for assignment and released despite providing key innings. In fact, over the last few years, only Tim Hill, Ryan Yarbrough, and Paul Blackburn have been retained, and the latter two were brought back specifically because they also serve as rotation depth.
This philosophical shift has unsurprisingly generated some frustration among fans, especially when the bullpen has floundered (as it has so far this season). And I’m not going to argue with the idea that, maybe, just maybe, the team should have invested a tad more into the bullpen over the winter, instead of running out a bullpen that was clearly insufficient at the end of last season (no, Angel Chivilli and his career 6.18 ERA heading into the season doesn’t count as reinforcements, despite his young age) — there’s a sound logic to how they’ve treated the bullpen in recent years.
The traditional maxim has been that relievers are volatile, but in the mid-to-late 2010s, it seemed like that was no longer the case. While relievers did continue to rise and fall regularly, the race for spin rate on the fastball, and the apparent direct correlation between spin rate and bullpen success, meant that it was easier than ever to predict which relievers were a flash in the pan and which would continue to be dominant. And in that world, if you were absolutely certain which relievers were good, then it made sense to invest heavily into the bullpen and build a super-pen.
Once the sticky stuff crackdown occurred, however, relievers became more volatile once more, as the chase to increase spin rate… didn’t exactly stop, but wasn’t able to be as reliably intensified. This crackdown represents the turning point where the Yankees as an organization seem to have de-prioritized the bullpen in order to bolster the rotation: in that same span of time where they have not heavily pursued relievers in free agency, the Yankees have added a pair of top-of-the-rotation starters in Max Fried and Carlos Rodón, spent money on Marcus Stroman, and wooed Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Rōki Sasaki. There’s a clear logic to this strategy: it’s easier to rework a bullpen than it is to find a top starter in the middle of the season, and on the whole, top starters age more gracefully than top relievers (an ace who declines typically becomes a bottom-of-the-rotation starter, while a reliever who declines is usually destined for mop-up duty).
And while it can be annoying at times, this strategy has clearly worked for the Yankees. For all the handwringing about the bullpen this year, they are tied for seventh in baseball in fWAR with 0.9, fourth in ground ball percentage, and top-10 in FIP, xERA, and left on base percentage. Do I wish that Bednar didn’t require emotional support runners on the basepaths in order to lock in? Would I prefer to have a setup man who didn’t stress me out as much as Doval? Of course! But then again, as I look across the city to Queens, or to the other coast in LA…well, maybe the grass isn’t always greener.
Apr 22, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Detroit Tigers third baseman Kevin McGonigle (7) celebrates in the dugout after scoring a run against the Milwaukee Brewers in the fifth inning at Comerica Park. Mandatory Credit: Lon Horwedel-Imagn Images | Lon Horwedel-Imagn Images
Detroit Tigers (13-12) vs. Milwaukee Brewers (13-10)
Time/Place: 1:10 p.m., Comerica Park SB Nation Site: Brew Crew Ball Media: Detroit SportsNet, MLB.TV, Tigers Radio Network Pitching Matchup: LHP Tarik Skubal (3-2, 2.08 ERA) vs. RHP Brandon Sproat (0-1, 6.88 ERA)
HOUSTON, TEXAS - APRIL 18: JJ Wetherholt #26 of the St. Louis Cardinals in action during the game against the Houston Astros in the game at Daikin Park on April 18, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Kenneth Richmond/Getty Images) | Getty Images
I love JJ Wetherholt. You love JJ Wetherholt. Oli Marmol seems to love JJ Wetherholt, and, presumably his mom loves him, too. I’m not shy to admit that I’ve become enamored by a guy that I hope is in Cardinals red for a very long time – and immortalized in a red jacket long after he’s done playing.
At 23 years old, he has come to St. Louis and been exactly as advertised. I would contend that his offense is not even all the way unlocked yet and he’s still running a 111 wRC+. That’s pretty good work if you can get it. Honestly, JJ Wetherholt has star written all over him as evidenced by the fact that he’s on pace for a clean little 5.8 WAR season as a rookie. If this holds, and yes I’m aware it’s officially still Early, that would rank him 16th all-time in fWAR as a rookie, right behind a gentleman named Jose Alberto Pujols, who ran a 6.1 fWAR in the Bobby Bonilla-aided 2001 campaign. (Seriously, thanks Bobby!)
I’ll detail why the defining feature of Wetherholt might just be his floor as a player, as strange as that seems, but I’d like to consider him from this angle and what it means for roster construction moving forward. Now, before you get your torches and pitchforks out, let me just say I think Wetherholt has more in the tank offensively and could see individual seasons where all goes extremely well for him and he’s on MVP ballots. I’ll give you a second to find hay for your pitchforks and water to safely extinguish your torches now.
I would contend that you need 2-3 transformational pieces to be in title contention. We can quibble about that, and I don’t want to get too lost in the weeds on that because every team is different. But, in baseball, it takes more than just transformation pieces. You need a depth of quality that leaves you with enough excellence to push through multiple rounds of the playoffs against the very best competition. I’m not sure the Cardinals currently have any transformational pieces in St. Louis (although there is at least one obvious candidate trying to change all our minds), but they certainly have some low floor pieces right now. In fact, we spent some time talking about what I’m calling the Crumbs of the Roster in our last Redbird Rundown episode. Give it a listen if that’s your thing – Apple and Spotify!
High-floor pieces are critical to building a championship contender, which is why I’m so enamored with thinking about JJ Wetherholt from this angle. The more of these players the Cardinals can lock in, the quicker this rebuild will be over and we can crack open the championship window and smell the alcohol-soaked locker rooms again. (Bad for the cleaning staff – great for the fans!)
So, what about his floor as a player has me so excited? Let’s start with his strike zone command. The eye test tells you he’s feels about 3-2 counts the way most normal people feel about bubble baths. It’s his comfy zone. When watching the games, it feels as though every one of his at bats goes to 3-2. According to research by Jeff Zimmerman of Fangraphs fame, strikeout rate is at its lowest at age 25 and walk rate peaks from ages 29-31. This is a clear indication that a player commands the strike zone better as he ages.
That bodes extremely well for Wetherholt who is already running a walk rate in the 82nd percentile and a strikeout rate in the 65th percentile early in his rookie season. (Yes, I know it’s early!) Obviously there will be variance as the season goes on, but this is not the first time Wetherholt has ever played baseball. He has a sterling reputation (and statsheet to back it up) from college and last season in the minors to let us know he knows what he’s doing at the plate.
What does this mean? Wetherholt is as sure a lock for a 23 year old rookie with 24 games played to be a high OBP offensive player as you’re going to find. At a bare minimum, that screams high floor like a yeti on the backside of the Himalayas. Even now, he’s a one man wrecking crew for pitch counts and it’s entirely possible he will get better at these skills as he ages. Even accounting for times that will surely vary as a rookie, that’s an exciting prospect! (See what I did there…ahh the old double entendre!)
The high OBP floor isn’t the only marble surface worth shouting about when it comes to Wetherholt, the defense has been even better than advertised so far. Obviously, there will be some variance in this rookie season, but thus far he’s in the 98th percentile for defensive value in the MLB. Watch the games. He’s making the routine play and the spectacular – that’s a great sign. Once again, the defensive age curves favor Wetherholt as defense typically peaks around 26 years old.
Honestly, this all tracks. He played shortstop for a major collegiate program and was drafted at that position. The only scouting concerns I can dig up on his defense were a worry about his throwing arm at short. Add in two quarts of Masyn Winn and two cups of a position change to second base and – voila! – you’ve got a fix. He gives every appearance of having a shortstop’s range and instincts while playing second base.
On the bases, he has league average sprint speed but is currently in the 92nd percentile in run value. This tells us that despite average physical gifts for speed (now he’s certainly much faster than you or I), he’s a very smart baserunner. Add this in with all the other ingredients and now you can see why I’m looking at JJ Wetherholt and seeing gleaming marble floors from an upscale building.
Let me go further, even if he never maxes out his offensive capabilities, JJ Wetherholt is bound to be a very valuable piece for years to come. I feel confident in what we’re seeing as confirmation that he is and will continue to be a high-floor player at a minimum. I also believe that these kinds of players are exactly what a roster needs to be populated with to truly compete.
That makes me excited – what about you? Let me know what you think in the comments, and, as always – thanks for reading!
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - APRIL 20: Alex Bregman #3 of the Chicago Cubs stands on second base with a double in the fifth inning as Bryson Stott #5 of the Philadelphia Phillies applies a late tag at Wrigley Field on April 20, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Sage Zipeto/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Here are the lineups for the final game in Chicago. Let’s discuss.
The Los Angeles Kings currently find themselves down 2-0 to the Colorado Avalanche in the first round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs. The season is essentially on the line for the Kings in game three, as falling down 3-0 to the President's Trophy winner's would be a next to impossible hole to get out of.
Although they've struggled on home ice this season, the Kings will hopefully get a jolt to their system as they head home to play in front of their fans.
This season, the Kings went 15-17-9 at Crypto.com Arena, which is night and day compared to 2024-25 when they were the best team in the league at home.
Last season, the Kings finished sixth place in the entire National Hockey League, in large part to dominant play on home ice. L.A. finished 31-6-4 at home, which was the best record of any team in the NHL.
Although this season has been the complete opposite for the silver and black, the Kings must find a way to get back to their winning ways at home in order to save their season.
With that being said, it will be no easy task as the Kings are 2-8 in their last 10 games against the Avalanche at home. With that being said, one of those victories came last season in a 5-4 game on April 12th.
So just over one-year later, Anze Kopitar and the Kings have the chance to get another home win over a tremendous Avs team.
Hopefully the home ice advantage fuels the Kings offence and allows more than just Artemi Panarin to find the back of the net, as the Russian star has both of L.A.'s only two goals in this series.
The season could very well be on the line tonight at 10:00 PM ET as the Kings continue to try and break through and finally breakthrough against the Avalanche.
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What is the old phrase?...Familiarity breeds contempt? Yes, and tt certainly can be applied to the Western Conference series between the Denver Nuggets and the Minnesota Timberwolves. This is the third time in the last four years they are meeting in the playoffs. The latest iteration continues tonight with Game 3 of their Western Conference first round series.
Last postseason these teams entertained us with a thrilling seven-game series in the Western Conference Semis with Minnesota prevailing 4-3. The Timberwolves took Games 6 and 7 to advance to the conference finals. In 2023 Denver won in the Opening Round against Minnesota taking the best-of-seven series in five games, 4-1. Minnesota has won nine of their 17 playoff games overall against Denver.
Monday night saw the Nuggets blow an early 20-point lead at home and eventually lose to the Timberwolves, 119-114. Anthony Edwards poured in 30 points to leads Minnesota’s attack. Naz Reid added 27 and Julius Randle added 24 to help support the comeback. Nikola Jokic was just OK for Denver putting up what for him was a pedestrian stat line of 24 points, 15 rebounds, and 8 assists in the loss.
Game 3 more than likely comes down to how efficiently the Nuggets are on offense vs. Minnesota’s ability to shut down the perimeter defensively. Jamal Murray has done whatever he wants to this point. That needs to stop for Minnesota to win and grab the upper hand in this series.
Lets take a closer look at tonight’s matchup and take into consideration lineups, injuries, and other factors affecting the line and total.
We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on how to catch tipoff, odds courtesy of DraftKings recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.
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Game Details and How to Watch Live: Timberwolves vs. Nuggets
Date: Thursday, April 23, 2026
Time: 9:30PM EST
Site: Target Center
City: Minneapolis, MN
Network/Streaming: Prime Video
Rotoworld has you covered with all the latest NBA Player News for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!
Game Odds: Timberwolves vs. Nuggets
The latest odds as of Thursday courtesy of DraftKings:
This game opened Nuggets -1.5 with the Game Total set at 231.5.
Be sure to check out DraftKings for all the latest game odds & player props for every matchup this week on the NBA schedule!
Expected Starting Lineups: Timberwolves vs. Nuggets
Minnesota Timberwolves
PG Anthony Edwards
SG Donte DiVincenzo
C Rudy Gobert
SF Julius Randle
PF Jaden McDaniels
Denver Nuggets
PG Jamal Murray
SG Christian Braun
SF Cam Johnson
C Nikola Jokic
PF Aaron Gordon
Injury Report: Timberwolves vs. Nuggets
Minnesota Timberwolves
Anthony Edwards (knee) is listed as probable for tonight’s game
Denver Nuggets
Aaron Gordon (calf) is probable for tonight’s game
Peyton Watson (hamstring) has been declared OUT of tonight’s game
Important stats, trends and insights: Timberwolves vs. Nuggets
The Timberwolves are 26-15 at home this season
The Nuggets are 26-15 on the road this season
The Nuggets are 45-39 ATS this season
Minnesota is 38-46 ATS this season
The OVER has cashed in 53 of the Nuggets’ 84 games this season (53-31)
The OVER has cashed in 38 of the Timberwolves’ 84 games this season (38-46)
Christian Braun is 3-6 from 3-point range in this series
Cam Johnson is 3-13 from 3-point range in this series
Donte DiVincenzo is 8-14 from 3-point range in this series
Rudy Gobert is averaging 8.5 rebounds per game in this series
Rotoworld Best Bet
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Once the model is finished running, we put its projections next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.
Here are the best bets our model is projecting for tonight’s Timberwolves and Nuggets game:
Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Timberwolves on the Moneyline
Spread: Rotoworld Bet is recommending a play on the Timberwolves +2.5 ATS
Total: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Game Total UNDER 233.5
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On April 23, 1993, Teemu Selanne scored his first career playoff hat trick, a moment that reflected the explosive scoring ability he had already showcased during one of the most remarkable rookie seasons in NHL history.
Selanne’s arrival with the Winnipeg Jets in 1992–93 immediately changed the franchise. Nicknamed the “Finnish Flash,” he took the league by storm, scoring 76 goals and adding 56 assists for 132 points.
His 76 goals remain the NHL rookie record, surpassing marks set decades earlier and still standing as one of the most impressive single season achievements in hockey history. He also popularized his iconic goal celebration, pretending to shoot a glove into the air, which became one of the most recognizable celebrations of the era.
During his time in Winnipeg, Selanne was the centerpiece of the Jets’ offense. Between 1992 and 1996, he consistently produced at an elite level, forming a dynamic partnership with fellow Finnish star Teppo Numminen and giving the Jets a much needed offensive identity. Despite financial challenges and roster limitations, Selanne helped keep the team competitive and electrified fans with his speed and scoring touch.
After his Winnipeg years, Selanne went on to build a Hall of Fame career, most notably with the Anaheim Ducks. He became the face of the franchise and played a key role in their 2007 Stanley Cup.
Over his long career, he scored 684 goals and recorded 1,457 points, earning numerous accolades including the Calder Trophy as rookie of the year and multiple All-Star selections. Selanne was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2017, cementing his legacy as one of the greatest goal scorers in NHL history.
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Apr 21, 2026; San Antonio, Texas, USA; San Antonio Spurs forward Keldon Johnson (3) reacts after scoring a three point basket during the second half of game two of the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs against the Portland Trail Blazers at Frost Bank Center. Mandatory Credit: Scott Wachter-Imagn Images | Scott Wachter-Imagn Images
A former Kentucky Wildcat was awarded with the NBA’s 6th Man of the Year Award.
Keldon Johnson received the award after a season in which he averaged 13.2 points and 5.4 rebounds per game for the San Antonio Spurs, while shooting just shy of 52 percent from the floor and about 36 percent from beyond the arc.
Johnson became the first Spur in franchise history to score at least 1,000 points off the bench in a season. His 1,081 points off the bench this season were the second-most in the NBA.
After becoming a starter early in his career with the Spurs, Johnson has flourished in his role coming off the bench in San Antonio, becoming a key piece for a Spurs team that won 62 games in the regular season and earned the 2-seed in the Western Conference.
Johnson beat out Miami Heat forward Jaime Jaquez Jr. for the award, earning 404 total points compared to 331 for Jaquez.
Johnson is the second former Wildcat to win the 6th Man award over the last few seasons, with Tyler Herro earning the award in 2022.
NEW YORK — Sandy Koufax has won the sixth Lifetime Achievement Award presented by Baseball Digest.
The Hall of Fame pitcher was honored Thursday with an annual distinction that “recognizes a living individual whose career has been spent in or around Major League Baseball and who has demonstrated outstanding character and has made significant contributions to the game.”
Willie Mays won the inaugural award in 2021, followed by Vin Scully (2022), Joe Torre (2023), Dusty Baker (2024) and Bob Costas (2025).
“It’s a great honor to be recognized along with the previous award winners,” the 90-year-old Koufax said in a news release. “I thank the distinguished panel.”
Koufax made his major league debut for his hometown Brooklyn Dodgers in 1955, when they won the franchise’s first World Series championship. After the team moved to Los Angeles, he became one of baseball’s most dominant pitchers during the 1960s.
The left-hander won three Cy Young Awards, an MVP trophy and five consecutive National League ERA titles. He had three 25-win seasons, leading the majors each time, and made seven All-Star teams from 1961-66.
Koufax threw four no-hitters, including a perfect game, and was the World Series MVP twice, after leading the Dodgers to crowns in 1963 and ’65. He also was a member of Los Angeles’ championship squad in 1959.
After retiring at age 30 following the 1966 season because of traumatic arthritis in his pitching elbow, Koufax became the youngest player inducted to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1972. Later that season, the Dodgers retired his uniform No. 32. He was named to MLB’s All-Century Team in 1999.
“The name Sandy Koufax has become a synonym for ‘great pitcher,’” Baseball Digest publisher David Fagley said. “It’s hard to believe it has been 60 years since he last pitched so brilliantly for the Dodgers but, since his retirement, Sandy has been a remarkable representative of our national game, a symbol of class and dignity.”
Koufax was selected to receive the award in voting by a 21-member panel of longtime MLB participants and observers, including writers, broadcasters, former players and executives.
AJ Dybantsa, the projected No. 1 pick on most draft boards, is headed to the NBA.
Dybantsa made the expected official on Thursday, dropping a short on his YouTube channel saying he was declaring for the 2026 NBA Draft.
Dybantsa climbed to the top of most teams' draft boards after an impressive freshman season at BYU, averaging 25.5 points, 6.8 rebounds, 3.7 assists per game, while shooting 51% from the field.
Two things moved him to the top of those boards. One is his ceiling, he is maybe the best athlete in the draft as a 6'9" wing player, the archetype most in demand around the NBA right now. What impresses scouts is that Dybantsa can do it all: He can get downhill, create separation to get his shot off, but also has shown to be a good, tough-shot maker. He has great footwork for a young player, and a comfort level shooting contested shots (which most shots in the NBA are).
The other thing that moved him to the top was his availability. Kansas' Darryn Peterson entered the season as the No. 1 pick for most teams, but injuries that had him in and out of the Jayhawks lineup — and leaving multiple games early — raised some concerns with teams. Peterson's medical reports from the NBA Draft Combine next month will have a big say in where he is drafted.
Whether Dybantsa or Peterson (or, maybe, Cameron Boozer) is taken with the top pick will come down to the NBA Draft Lottery next month — which team will land the top pick. While Dybantsa is on top of most teams' boards, there are still Peterson believers out there, and if the right team has the ping-pong balls favoring them — and Peterson's medical reports are clean and he has strong pre-draft workouts with teams — he could go first.
Either way, Dybantsa is going to go near the top of the draft and has a promising NBA future.
PHOENIX — Arizona Diamondbacks closer Paul Sewald knows that — in theory — Major League Baseball’s new Automated Ball-Strike system shouldn’t favor batters or pitchers.
In practice, he thinks one side has gained an advantage.
And it’s not the guys throwing the baseball.
“It’s what (MLB) wanted — people on base,” Sewald said. “Tough time to be a pitcher. Balls flying everywhere, you’ve got a smaller strike zone. But you just go out there and do the best you can.”
So ... is Sewald right? It depends on which numbers you want to use, but it sure seems like the strike zone has shrunk.
Walks have skyrocketed to near historic highs through the season’s first month. There’s no direct evidence ABS is the reason for the increase, but as D-backs catcher James McCann said: “Of course it is. What other rules have changed?”
MLB players have drawn a walk in 9.8% of plate appearances this season, which would be the highest rate since 1950. The rate is likely to come down as the season progresses — pitchers usually have more trouble finding the zone during widespread chilly conditions in northern cities during March and April.
But even adjusted for the time of year, walks have made a massive jump from last season.
Everyone knew the strike zone would change. MLB had to re-write its definition of the zone to accommodate the shift to robot umpires. The Official Baseball Rules long described a zone stretching from the midpoint of the hitter’s torso down to the “hollow beneath the kneecap.” The new zone is more precise. It starts at 27% of a batter’s standing height and stretches to 53.5%. The ABS zone is 17 inches wide, matching the width of home plate. All pitches are measured at the midpoint of the plate.
The spike in walks doesn’t tell the whole story about who is benefiting during the ABS era. MLB’s league-wide batting average is down slightly to .240, a few ticks below the .242 rate through last year’s games in March and April. That pokes a hole in Sewald’s claim that there are “balls flying everywhere.”
The difference in opinion is fascinating as MLB players digest the new rules and new data.
New York Yankees outfielder Cody Bellinger isn’t putting too much stock in the early numbers. He said hitters and pitchers are always playing a cat-and-mouse game, and there will eventually be equilibrium.
“I think there’s always an adjustment to something new,” the 2019 National League MVP said. “It’s also such a short sample size. It’s (20-25) games into the season, so numbers skyrocket both ways early on.”
McCann’s not so sure. The veteran catcher said a smaller strike zone will inevitably lead to more walks.
“I think it’s tighter in general,” McCann said. “Umpires are getting instant feedback on what’s a strike or a ball and everything’s becoming much more uniform. That’s what the guys who had used it in the minor leagues told me was going to happen before the season started, and they were exactly right.”
Chicago Cubs star infielder Nico Hoerner had a slightly different take — arguing that hitters might be benefiting in the short-term by laying off pitches at the top of the strike zone — but that all adjustments have an expiration date.
“Getting on base has been emphasized for a long time,” Hoerner said. “Walking is incredibly valuable as a hitter. A lot of pitchers — their approach is to avoid slug at all cost. Sometimes that involves throwing less strikes. But I’m sure there will be a back and forth, just like every trend in baseball.”
If recent history is any indication, MLB rule changes can cause a lasting effect. There was a nearly 50% increase in stolen bases from 2022 to 2023 after a rules package introduced a pitch clock and limits on how many times a pitcher could make pickoff throws.
Stolen bases have remained high in the subsequent years — even after teams adjusted to the new rules.
And when MLB lowered the mound in 1969, the walk rate jumped from 7.6% to 9.1%. It dipped slightly after that but didn’t return below 8% again until 2013.
Miami Marlins manager Clayton McCullough believes the ABS issue is a different animal. He’s watching the trends and doesn’t believe the higher walk rate is here to stay.
Who knows? The next five months will tell the tale.
“I think that we’ll get to a point where it gets close and stabilizes to what it’s been, where relievers are walking around 10%. Starters are going to be more around 8%,” McCullough said. “My hypothesis sitting here now early in the year is that by the time the season ends, (walk rates) will look very much like they have, say the last several seasons.”