Malkin gets 2 goals in his return from suspension as the Penguins beat the NHL-leading Avalanche 7-2

DENVER (AP) — Evgeni Malkin scored twice in a four-goal first period and added an assist in his return from a five-game suspension for slashing, sparking the Pittsburgh Penguins to a 7-2 victory over the league-leading Colorado Avalanche on Monday night.

Malkin's punishment from the NHL was for raising his stick and striking Buffalo Sabres defenseman Rasmus Dahlin on the helmet and shoulder during their game on March 5. The 39-year-old Malkin has been suspended three times in his career.

Anthony Mantha, Elmer Soderblom, Erik Karlsson, Bryan Rust and Noel Acciari also scored for the Penguins, who matched their season high for goals on just 20 shots while playing for the 11th straight game without star center Sidney Crosby. Pittsburgh's leading scorer, who sustained a lower-body injury while playing for Canada in the Winter Olympics last month, has been skating with the team during this five-game trip that wraps up Wednesday.

Karlsson added two assists and has three goals and 11 assists in his last 10 games for the Penguins, who moved two points ahead of the New York Islanders for sole possession of second place in the Metropolitan Division.

Nathan MacKinnon and Brent Burns scored for the Avalanche, who matched their most goals allowed in a game this season. Scott Wedgewood, the league leader in save percentage and goals-against average, was pulled 13 minutes in after falling behind 3-1 on five shots. Wedgewood was replaced by Mackenzie Blackwood, who made 11 saves.

Colorado has lost three of four and leads Dallas in both the Central Division and overall NHL standings by three points. The Avalanche have one game in hand on the Stars.

Up next

Pittsburgh plays at Carolina on Wednesday.

Colorado hosts Dallas on Wednesday.

___

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

San Antonio at Los Angeles, Final Score: The Spurs survive Clippers’ surge, escape with 119-115 win

INGLEWOOD, CA - MARCH 16: Stephon Castle #5 of the San Antonio Spurs drives to the basket during the game against the LA Clippers on March 16, 2026 at Intuit Dome in Los Angeles, California. 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 Juan Ocampo/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The San Antonio Spurs got their 50th win of the season against the Clippers in Los Angeles. They dominated the glass and got significant contributions from Area 51 plus more. It’s their first time reaching that many wins since 2016-17, and they still have 14 games left.

They came out stumbling like they had the Venice Beach flu, missing their first seven shots and were behind 14 points in fewer than five minutes. Their offense was getting out of the mud by the end of the first quarter, in part because of De’Aaron Fox’s rim pressure and Carter Bryant’s hustle, but they were slow to get back in transition and cover the 3-point line. 

The Spurs’ ball movement and persistence to break into the lane closed the distance quickly in the second quarter. The other factor was that the Clippers’ half-court offense couldn’t sustain its production, and they weren’t allowed to advance on the break anymore. It was turning into a massacre going into halftime as the Spurs outscored them by 22 in the period.  

They subsequently returned to blasting the paint like a wild ball and chain leveling a building. On top of that, Devin Vassell made sure to sprinkle in two 3-pointers, and they led by as much as 24 points.

Naturally, they got comfortable, and a Clippers surge followed when Castle checked out. By the fourth, Wemby’s length wasn’t the same intimidation factor since the Clippers were getting inside, and the frustration on the Spurs was palpable. They were hanging on for much of the period and even when they were about to pull away, Darius Garland nailed a four-point play to keep LAC in it.

The Spurs had to play the free-throw game in the last minute, and Vassell plus Fox delivered. They also got some help by the Clippers taking too long to shoot before fouling, and they weren’t 3-pointers, which played into the Spurs’ hands.

Observations

  • No Kawhi Leonard for the Clippers meant that they couldn’t bend the defense at mid-range, yet the Spurs still took them lightly and were a step slow to recover after helping. Stephon Castle’s top assignment became Garland. The latter’s shot creation caused the Spurs to over-help, as he set up 3-pointers, and he burned them with multiple of his own, yet he slowed down in part by his own hand, making lazy passes that ended in turnovers.
  • Luke Kornet’s absence opened the door for Mason Plumlee and Bryant to get minutes as the backup center. Bryant even got some time checking the burly Brook Lopez and was trying to front the entry pass to the post. He did well and played a key stretch of center in the fourth, but these types of challenges won’t always have positive results this early in his career. What counts is that he plays every game like it’s his last.
  • The Spurs can crank up the intensity with any squad. Bryant and Castle each recovered an offensive rebound after a free throw in the first half, and Johnson forced a turnover in Clippers territory while in full-court press. Yet they can also suffer terrible drop-offs, like six third-quarter turnovers, that reinvigorate the opponent, and sometimes the team has to win twice.
  • The threes weren’t falling in the first half, so the Spurs detonated in the paint for 42 paint points despite seeing more bodies up close because of a zone, and finished with 64. Their reinforcements, led by Johnson, were not effective in the second half, and it took major work in the trenches to get away. Keep in mind that the team had 22 offensive rebounds, a new season high, and those turned into 25 second-chance points.
  • Multiple penetrators next to the Wemby in the rotation ensure a high level of read-and-react offense in which opponents mostly pick the wrong poison. Castle was fearless when he put his head down, and even showed off some fancy dribbling. Most impressively, he finished with a 2.67 assist-to-turnover ratio.

Avalanche Blown Out 7-2 Against Pittsburgh Penguins

It wasn’t going to be easy getting back in the win column for the Colorado Avalanche, going up against a hot Pittsburgh Penguins team, but no one would have expected the outcome the way it did. Bad defense, not great goaltending, mistakes everywhere led to a brutal night of hockey as the Avalanche fell 7-2.

Period 1:

Thirty seconds in, Evgeni Malkin is called for tripping, but the Avalanche couldn't capitalize on the early power play. Just over 10 seconds out of the box, Malkin with a nice spin-o-rama backhand shot beats Scott Wedgewood to make it 1-0 on their first shot of the game. Though it's Martin Necas who finds Nathan MacKinnon trailing, and he toe-drag riles a shot, beating Artur Silovs and tying the game 1-1.

The Avalanche defense is caught lacking as Erik Karlsson fires a cross-ice pass to Anthony Mantha, as he finds himself behind the defense and scores on the breakaway, making it 2-1. Ville Koivunen is called for cross-checking, sending the Avalanche to the power play, and it does look much better than their first opportunity. Jack Drury is called for interference, sending the Penguins to their first power play, but the Avalanche does a good job killing it off.

Again, it's the Avalanche defense making it too easy for the Penguins as Josh Manson gets beat to the puck and Nick Blankenburg drifts way too far over, leaving Malkin all alone, making it 3-1. With that goal, Wedgewood's night is over as he lets in three goals on five shots, and Mackenzie Blackwood comes in. It's not a great start for Blackwood as he stops his first shot seen, but Devon Toews is out bodied in front by Elmer Soderblom, and he's able to score the rebound, 4-1.

MacKinnon post game after 7-2 loss to Penguins

Burns late in the period sends a shot from the blueline and is tipped by Mantha, and in making it 4-2 heading into the second period. That goal helped him pass Bobby Orr and now ranks 7th among defensemen in NHL history for goals.

Period 2:

Mantha is called for holding, but the Avalanche's power play goes nowhere. Set up in the offensive zone, Karlsson’s shot from the blueline is tipped by Noel Acciari and in, making it 5-2. Silvos goes for the poke check, but trips Roy in turn and is called for it, but the Avalanche penalty goes 0/4 in the turn.

Ilya Solovyov’s First NHL Goal Remains a Special Memory From His Time in DenverIlya Solovyov’s First NHL Goal Remains a Special Memory From His Time in DenverEven months after leaving Denver, Ilya Solovyov still remembers the thrill of scoring his first NHL goal during his brief stint with the Avalanche.

Roy is called for tripping, but the Avalanche continue to hold strong on the penalty kill, though right as they kill off the penalty, they are immediately called for too many men. They get a good scoring chance on the pk with a 3-on-2, but they turn it over, and it's Bryan Rust waiting for the breakaway to make it 6-2 as the period ends.

Period 3:

Soderblom with his best Malkin impression of the spinorama pass, and it bounces off Acciari’s skate and in 7-2. Drury dropped the gloves against Connor Clifton and was pretty much out of the third period.

It was an ugly game, to say the least, but the one positive was that the Dallas Stars lost to the Utah Mammoth 6-2 tonight, so no ground was lost.

Though it's going to be a key matchup when they face them on Wednesday, March 18, at home.

The NHL’s Overtime Format Stinks — It’s Time for a ChangeThe NHL’s Overtime Format Stinks — It’s Time for a ChangeDo Avalanche fans agree?

Kristaps Porzingis has biggest game as Warrior in win over Wizards

WASHINGTON, DC - MARCH 16: Kristaps Porzingis #7 and De'anthony Melton #8 of the Golden State Warriors celebrate in the first quarter against the Washington Wizards at Capital One Arena on March 16, 2026 in Washington, DC. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Greg Fiume/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It was the stoppable force meeting the movable object Monday night in Washington, D.C. The Golden State Warriors had lost five straight games and played without Al Horford and both Curry brothers. The Washington Wizards had lost 11 straight and was starting WNBA star Angel Reese’s brother and three players who weren’t alive yet when “Anchorman” was released.

But Kristaps Porzingis scored 30 points against his old team, De’Anthony Melton scored 27, and Gui Santos scored 18 in 28 minutes in a foul-plagued effort as the Warriors won, 125-117. It was a welcome win for the slumping Warriors, who have four games left on a cross-country road trip that heads to Boston Wednesday.

Was it a sloppy game of basketball? Yes it was, as seen when Pat Spencer and Jamir Watkins traded no-look passes to no one in the first quarter.

I regret to inform our readers that both players were definitively Shaqtin’ A Fool on that play.

Porzingis was the star, shooting 8-for-13 and making 13 of 14 free throws. He added five rebounds, four assists, three blocks, two steals, and a partridge in a pear tree. KP’s prettiest basket came on a great pass from Gary Payton II, who had 15 points off the bench.

Melton remains one of the NBA’s best signings this year, putting up 20+ points for the third time in four games. He shot 12-for-17 for the game and delivered one of the Warriors’ best dunks of the season when he elevated for an emphatic dunk over Sharife Cooper.

Golden State took a 17-point lead early in the second quarter, after Bub Carrington was called for a technical foul. Six minutes later, Trae Young and rookies Tre Johnson and Will Riley had brought the Wizards to within two points, though two free throws from new Warrior Omer Yurtseven gave them a seven-point halftime lead.

The Warriors got a huge break in the third quarter after another Shaqtin-adjacent play from Spencer. Second-year guard Bub Carrington broke Spencer’s ankles and dropped him, before sinking a jumper. Carrington appeared to continue chirping at the other end, and Scott Foster ejected him.

It’s very rare that Scott Foster holds a grudge or makes an NBA game all about him instead of the players, so Carrington clearly said something bad like, “Say hi to your old friend Tim Donaghy” or “You were pretty unfair to Chris Paul.”

That was the story of the game: The Warriors took a big lead, the Wizards chipped away at it, but couldn’t quite catch up. The Dubs didn’t have the players to put away the Wizards, while the Wizards didn’t have the players, at all, especially with Young and the rookie Johnson staying on the bench for the whole final quarter.

The game wasn’t locked up until the Wizards started playing Porzingis like he was Bam Adebayo and sending him to the line every Warriors possession. The final dagger came when Brandin Podziemski (10 quiet points) rebounded a Porzingis miss and Gui Santos found Payton for a layup.

Young, Riley, and Bilal Coulibaly all scored 21 points for the Wizards, who seem like they could be a dangerous team soon, if their coach was actually trying to win. But Washington is more concerned with preserving their top-8 protected pick in June than winning games, even when you’d think you’d want a No. 6 overall pick like Johnson to play in fourth quarters in close games.

But unlike the Dallas Mavericks and Utah Jazz in recent games, the Wizards simply refused to let the Warriors blow a win they effectively handed to them. Getting 65 bench points (versus 29 for the Wizards) went a long way, as did Santos’ four three-pointers and 16 energetic minutes from Malevy Leons (8 points, two offensive rebounds).

Porzingis trade update:

Porzingis has now played the same number of games for the Warriors that Jonathan Kuminga has for the Atlanta Hawks.

Kuminga: 23.4 minutes, 14.6 PPG, 8 rebounds, 2.6 assists, 2.4 TO

Porzingis: 21.6 minutes, 17.6 PPG, 3.8 rebounds, 2.8 assists, 2 blocks

The Hawks are 5-0 in Kuminga’s games. Golden State is 1-4 with Porzingis.

The Warriors remain a half-game ahead of the 10th-place Portland Trail Blazers and somehow only one game back of the Los Angeles Clippers. At this point in the season, the Warriors can’t take any games for granted or let any win pass without savoring it. Monday, they stopped a skid and grabbed a win that would have been awful to let slip away.

Player Grades – Recapping the Mavericks vs. the Pelicans

NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA - MARCH 16: Cooper Flagg #32 of the Dallas Mavericks looks to pass against Zion Williamson #1 of the New Orleans Pelicans during the first half at Smoothie King Center on March 16, 2026 in New Orleans, Louisiana. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Tyler Kaufman/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Dallas Mavericks took on the New Orleans Pelicans Monday night to close out a seemingly endless road trip. The Pelicans dealt Dallas a 129-111 loss, resulting in a potentially meaningful impact on each team’s draft chances this offseason. With the loss, Dallas and New Orleans are now tied in the standings, but the Pelicans have a 3-1 season series advantage (or disadvantage) over the Mavs.

Let’s get to the grades!

Ryan Nembhard: C-

2 PTS / 4 REB / 6 AST / 0 STL / 0 BLK – 25 MIN

A 1-for-8 shooting night drives Nembhard’s grade down despite a solid assist total and even a few rebounds. He didn’t have much playing time, but regardless, there was very little to write home about Monday night.

Max Christie: B+

12 PTS / 4 REB / 0 AST / 2 STL / 0 BLK – 32 MIN

Christie may just be finding his form again, with the second night of a back-to-back looking much like the first night. Christie didn’t light up the box score, but he hit his shots (4-for-7 overall; 4-for-6 from deep) and even played a bit of defense in a solid game where Naji Marshall and Cooper Flagg (rightfully) got a ton of touches, leaving him to make the most of what he could. Fewer three-point attempts and more drives or mid-range shots would have been nice, but you can’t argue with the results from deep in this one.

Naji Marshall: A+

32 PTS / 8 REB / 7 AST / 0 STL / 0 BLK – 33 MIN

Although he wasn’t as blazing hot from the field as he was on Sunday, Marshall was by far the best player for the Mavs on Monday night and converted on half of his 24 shot attempts. He did just about everything right, and it’s a struggle to find anything to be unhappy about. Maybe no steals or blocks, but that is a nit-picky stretch. Marshall was just awesome across the board.

Cooper Flagg: B+

21 PTS / 7 REB / 8 AST / 2 STL / 1 BLK – 30 MIN

While not as dominant as Marshall was, Flagg had a great game in his own right. This is the second game in a row his turnover total was high (four), but his assist total was quite high as well. Once he refines that part of his game just a bit, he’s likely going to maintain those high-assist nights with low-turnover performances and it’s going to be amazing.

P.J. Washington: A-

18 PTS / 7 REB / 1 AST / 1 STL / 0 BLK – 31 MIN

Washington has been showing glimpses of the player so many fell in love with. His grade drifts a bit high, in part because he re-established his baseline somewhat low of late. Monday night, he was 7-for-13, including 4-for-8 from deep, had zero turnovers, and committed only a single foul in a very nice complementary game.

Marvin Bagley: A-

9 PTS / 9 REB / 1 AST / 1 STL / 0 BLK – 19 MIN

Bagley has largely won me over at this point (if not many games ago). He was 4-for-7, including hitting his only three-point attempt and sniffed a double-double in under 20 minutes. Even better, six of his nine boards were on the offensive end. This was an efficient game where Bagley, like Christie, made the most of his minutes and touches.

Khris Middleton: C-

6 PTS / 4 REB / 1 AST / 2 STL / 0 BLK – 18 MIN

It’s not immediately clear what happened with Middleton Monday night, but it wasn’t exactly pretty. He did a little bit here and there, but was only 2-for-9 in a game where he just never got comfortable.

Final Thoughts

The Mavericks have lost three of four matchups with the Pelicans, with whom they are now tied in the standings. The Pelicans are trending in the opposite direction as Dallas over the past few weeks, so the Mavs may just secure a lower place in the standings when all is said and done. While this obviously isn’t the goal, the silver lining to a tough season is a potentially better draft pick come summertime.

I invite you to follow me @_80MPH on X, and check back often at Mavs Moneyball for all the latest on the Dallas Mavericks.

Stats Rundown: 3 numbers to know from the Mavericks loss to the Pelicans

NEW ORLEANS, LA - MARCH 16: Zion Williamson #1 of the New Orleans Pelicans plays defense during the game against the Dallas Mavericks on March 16, 2026 at the Smoothie King Center in New Orleans, Louisiana. 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 Layne Murdoch Jr./NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Dallas Mavericks lost 129-111 to the New Orleans Pelicans Monday night in New Orleans. This was the Mavericks fourth game in five nights, a rarity in the modern NBA, and the team certainly looked sluggish.

New Orleans waxed the Mavericks from about midway through the first quarter and never truly looked back. The Pelicans had a double-digit lead for most of the game and were never threatened after taking a six point lead at the end of the first quarter.

Zion Williamson led the Pelicans with 27 points on only 13 shot attempts. Naji Marshall led the Mavericks and all scorers with 32 points. The Mavericks will now take on the red-shot Atlanta Hawks next, winners of 10 straight games.

Here are the numbers we noticed.

68: Pelicans points in the paint

The easiest number to look at after a blowout is how much paint points did the team give up, and Dallas didn’t disappoint there: the Pelicans nearly notched 70 points in the paint and rampaged toward the basket with ease all night.

Dallas started PJ Washington at center for the second straight game and this time got punished for it. The Cavaliers basically had just Evan Mobley as the only threatening big on Sunday, and couldn’t do much to punish the Mavericks small ball lineup. New Orleans plays a ton of bigs — Williamson, Yves Missi, Karlo Matkovic, and rookie Derik Queen. All four of those guys had positive impacts on the game, with Williamson shooting a nearly perfect 11-of-13 from the floor.

New Orleans as a team shot 29-of-41 from the restricted area. The makes and attempts are really bad for the Mavericks there, and they had zero juice on the their second back-to-back in five days.

2: Cooper Flagg free throw attempts

Cooper Flagg is getting a rookie whistle, which is going to drive Mavericks fans nuts, but it’s OK. It happens. Tonight’s game was particularly egregious though: Flagg shot 17 shots in the paint and only had two free throw attempts to show for it.

The highlight (or really lowlight) was in the second half when Flagg got the rim, got his shot blocked, but the Pelicans player in his follow through came down across Flagg’s face and whacked him in the head. I get it, NBA players are allowed to commit felonies as long as they get the ball first, but this was silly. Even if it’s not a shooting foul it felt like it should have been *something*, and it was just an a bad moment.

It’s annoying that this really only gets solved with Flagg not being a rookie anymore, and that doesn’t change for seven or so more months. Sigh.

39: Fastbreak points for the Mavericks

This was a wickedly fast game, both teams got up and down the floor a bunch. It’s not very often you’ll see a team score nearly 40 points in transition and get blown out.

This was just such an weird game. I don’t have much more to say about this stat other than it caught my eye. It’s hard to score 39 transition points and lose, and not only lose, but lose by a lot!

Lakers surge late and defeat Rockets for their sixth consecutive win

Los Angeles Lakers' Luka Doncic (77) shoots as Houston Rockets' Jabari Smith Jr.
Lakers star Luka Doncic, left, shoots over Houston's Jabari Smith Jr. during the first half of the Lakers' 100-92 win Monday. (David J. Phillip / Associated Press)

In their first meeting of the season on Christmas Day, Lakers coach JJ Redick said the Lakers were “punked” by the Houston Rockets and vowed not to let it happen again.

On Monday, the Lakers displayed their toug to hness in a 100-92 win over the Rockets at Toyota Center.

Even when they missed 14 comsecutive shots at one point in the fourth quarter, the Lakers showed their resilience with a gritty defensive effort that kept them in the game. The Lakers scored only 17 points in the fourth, but they held the Rockets to just 12 points en route to their sixth consecutive win.

Read more:How Austin Reaves pulled off a perfect game-tying missed free throw in Lakers' win

“They're a really good basketball team and they make you either play hard and match their physicality, and how they muck the game up, or you can lay down,” Redick said. “And we didn't lay down tonight. Had a deficit there in the third quarter. Our guys just kept playing.”

Luka Doncic led the Lakers with 36 points, six rebounds and four assists. LeBron James scored 18 points and Austin Reaves had 15 points.

But three big baskets from Deandre Ayton (seven points, 11 rebounds) and a big three-pointer by Marcus Smart (11 points) helped the Lakers open their six-game trip with a win.

Sitting third in the Western Conference, the Lakers (43-25) will take a 1½-game lead over the Rockets (41-26) into their rematch on Wednesday night.

“Obviously, we have another one on Wednesday, but it was a very important game," said Doncic, who shot 14 for 27 from the field. We've been playing very good. Our defense has been pretty good, so just gotta continue that way.”

The Lakers threw double teams at Houston's Kevin Durant all game, limiting him to 18 points and forcing him into seven of the Rockets' 24 turnovers.

Durant shot only 16 times yet made eight. He was one for three in the fourth quarter and had just as many turnovers as points (two) in the final 12 minutes. One of those turnovers was on an eight-second violation.

“He’s one of the greatest players we’ve ever seen play," James said. "Obviously you got to try to show him different looks, try to keep him off-balanced and when he shoots, hope he misses. So, I thought we did a good job of having a game plan but also just switching up our pitches.

"You can’t show a great like that too many of the same coverages throughout the whole game. He’ll get a feel for it."

Doncic got off to what has become his typical first-quarter starts, scoring 16 points on seven-for-10 shooting. But Houston took a 58-51 lead at halftime after taking control of the boards in the second quarter. The Rockets turned six offensive rebounds into 13 points.

Read more:LeBron James' adaptability a key in victory over the Bulls

The Lakers also had a hard time scoring, shooting only 32% from the field and 13% (one for eight) from three-point range in the quarter.

After trailing by as many as 10 points in the third quarter, the Lakers surged and took an 83-80 lead heading into the fourth. After what happened in L.A. back in December, the Lakers were determined not to let Houston run away with the game.

After taking an 85-80 lead, the Lakers struggled to find consistent offense until Ayton checked back into the game with 4:52 left. Ayton scored on a tip shot to give the Lakers an 89-88 lead, then scored off a pair of offensive rebounds in the final 90 seconds to help keep the Lakers ahead for good. He finished with six points and five rebounds in the fourth quarter.

“He was amazing,” James said. “I mean, just the fact that he was sitting over there for as long as he did and stayed locked in on the game and came in and finished the game. He was able to get a tip-dunk, a couple of jump hooks around the rim, and a couple of rebounds. He helped us finish the game.”

Note: Lakers backup center Maxi Kleber did not play as he continues to recover from a lumbar back strain. "He's basically been shut down for five days to sort of heal,” Redick said. “He's not with us right now, and we hope he's able to join us later on in the trip."

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Lakers push winning streak to six games with victory over Rockets

Los Angeles Lakers’ Luka Doncic (77) shoots as Houston Rockets’ Amen Thompson (1) defends during the first half of an NBA basketball game Monday, March 16, 2026, in Houston. (AP...

HOUSTON — It wasn’t the prettiest game.

And both teams seemingly showed the effects of a late start. 

But at this point of the season, winning is what matters most, and that’s exactly what the Lakers did in their 100-92 victory over the Rockets at Toyota Center.

Luka Doncic led the Lakers with 36 points, six rebounds, four assists and a pair of steals. 

Los Angeles Lakers’ Luka Doncic shoots as Houston Rockets’ Amen Thompson defends. AP

LeBron James had 18 points, five rebounds, five assists and two steals. Marcus Smart finished with 11 points, shooting 3-of-7 on 3-pointers. 

Austin Reaves struggled with his shot (5 of 18) but finished with 15 points, five assists and four steals.

What it means

The Lakers improved to 43-25 on the season, not only maintaining their No. 3 spot in the Western Conference standings, but giving themselves a cushion.

They also pulled off their fourth straight win over a team with a .600-or-better  winning percentage.

Houston Rockets’ Kevin Durant is defended by Los Angeles Lakers’ Marcus Smart. AP

Turning point

When Tari Eason was called for goaltending on Deandre Ayton with 3:16 left in the game. 

The score not only put the Lakers up 89-88, but it was technically their first made basket in eight minutes of game action. 

The Lakers closed out the game on a 13-4 run.

MVP: Luka Doncic

Doncic had his sixth game scoring at least 30 points. 

Luka Doncic shined once again. NBAE via Getty Images

Stat of the game: 15

That’s how many offensive reboudnds the Rockets grabbed. 

The Rockets scored 23 second-chance points off of those extra opportunities, their biggest advantage over the Lakers, who scored 11 second-chance points.

But the Lakers scored seven more points from the three throw line. 

Up next

The Lakers will play the Rockets again on Wednesday at Toyota Center for the second matchup of their six-game trip.

Penguins/Avalanche Recap: Malkin scores twice, Pens shock Colorado in 7-2 win

DENVER, COLORADO - MARCH 16: Kris Letang #58, Evgeni Malkin #71, Egor Chinakhov #59 and Thomas Novak #18 of the Pittsburgh Penguins celebrate after a goal against the Colorado Avalanche at Ball Arena on March 16, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Michael Martin/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Apologies in advance, a power outage has put a damper on the night at Pensburgh HQ but nothing could slow the Penguins on this night. Pittsburgh went into the NHL’s best team’s barn and took a monster 7-2 win.

There were a couple changes in the lineup; Evgeni Malkin returned from suspension, as expected. Less expected was Justin Brazeau’s quick return from injury, helping to spell for Blake Lizotte leaving the lineup for this game due to an injury of his own.

https://x.com/penguins/status/2033757253736468767?s=46&t=F9heTkWtNC7aYX_AqwPvxA

It was a classic Evgeni Malkin night, as only he could do it. Malkin took an offensive zone penalty on his first shift, only to score that beauty with a spinning backhander almost immediately after getting out of the penalty box. That set the tone for the game, even though Nathan MacKinnon quickly answered that first goal, the Pens sprung Anthony Mantha for his breakaway goal as a response to the response. From there, the Pens were off to the races, scoring early and often within the first couple of periods. We’ll have much more tomorrow in response to a massive statement game for Pittsburgh. They’re up to 2-1-1 during a very daunting and challenging road trip, playing as dangerous as ever, and all without Sidney Crosby.

Doncic leads Lakers to a 100-92 victory over the Rockets for their sixth straight victory

HOUSTON (AP) — Luka Doncic scored 36 points to lead the Los Angeles Lakers to a 100-92 victory over the Houston Rockets on Monday night in the opener of a two-game series between teams fighting for Western Conference playoff position.

Los Angeles moved 1 1/2 games ahead of Houston for third in the West standings. There were 13 lead changes in a game that had a playoff atmosphere, but the Lakers ultimately won their sixth straight.

LeBron James found Marcus Smart for a corner 3-pointer that put Los Angeles up 94-90 with 2 minutes remaining. James finished with 18 points, five rebounds and five assists.

Doncic hit back-to-back 3-pointers in the fading minutes of the third quarter to give the Lakers an 83-80 lead after trailing 57-51 at halftime. Doncic was 4 for 12 on 3s in the game and needs 11 more to match D’Angelo Russell’s franchise record of 226 in a season.

Doncic had his sixth straight game with 30 or more points but fell just short of his 12th 40-point game this season. He went 14 for 27 from the field.

Jabari Smith Jr. led Houston with 22 points. Amen Thompson had 19 and Kevin Durant added 18 for the Rockets, who committed 24 turnovers compared with just 12 for Los Angeles.

Houston was without Alperen Sengun, who was dealing with lower back pain. Sengun is averaging 20.2 points, second only to Durant for the Rockets.

The Rockets took the first meeting between the two teams this season, 119-96, in Los Angeles on Dec. 25.

Up next

The teams meet again in Houston on Wednesday.

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

Lakers grind out victory over Rockets for sixth straight win

HOUSTON, TEXAS - MARCH 16: Luka Doncic #77 of the Los Angeles Lakers drives to the basket against Dorian Finney-Smith #2 of the Houston Rockets during the first quarter of the game at Toyota Center on March 16, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Kenneth Richmond/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Lakers survived an ugly, ugly fourth quarter of basketball to come away with a sixth straight win, knocking off the Rockets on the road, 100-92.

An absolute rock fight broke out between the two teams in the fourth as they combined for just 12 points in the first eight minutes of the period. The Lakers eventually found offense, opening up a multiple-possession lead that proved enough.

In the end, some big baskets from Deandre Ayton and a strong defensive showing in the fourth proved enough to come away with yet another big win against a fellow playoff contender.

The game began with Clint Capela splitting a pair of free throws. LeBron James and Luka Dončić were leading the Lakers early with four and nine points, respectively. Jabari Smith Jr. started well for Houston with four points. 

Both teams were shooting 60% from the field. The Rockets missed two 3-pointers, while LA made one. 

Los Angeles went on a run that put them ahead by two at the 6:40 mark. Luka entered double figures with 14 points. 

Kevin Durant started cooking with eight points. Rui Hachimura provided a nice spark off the bench with four points. At the 2:16 mark, the Lakers were up by three. The purple and gold allowed Reed Sheppard to score a fast five points, cutting the lead to just one for LA.

Austin Reaves opened the second period with a layup for Los Angeles. Smith Jr. responded on the other end with a triple. Reaves converted on another layup, giving him six points. After Jake LaRavia scored on a layup, Houston called a timeout. 

Out of the break, Dorian Finney-Smith drained a 3-pointer. 

In the battle of the bigs, Capela was winning so far with six points and three rebounds. Deandre Ayton had zero points with three rebounds and a steal. LaRavia and Reaves were both fouled a few times, converting on six free throws combined. 

At the 7:25 mark, LA was up by four. 

Houston jumped ahead after scoring four in a row. The Lakers retook the lead after Luka converted on a midrange jumper. Both teams started going back and forth, taking the lead. The Rockets were up by three with 2:45 left in the half. 

At halftime, the Lakers were down by six. 

Amen Thompson started the third period with a layup for Houston. Smart responded on the other end with a layup himself, pushing his point total to eight. The Rockets were shooting 60% in the quarter, while LA was shooting 44%. LeBron had five of Los Angeles’ 10 in the quarter. 

Luka began heating up, scoring a quick five points. 

Over a two-minute span, the Lakers put together an 11-2 scoring run that gave them a one-point lead. The run had expanded to 23-7 until Houston surged for four in a row to stop some of the bleeding. 

Heading into the fourth, Los Angeles was up by three. 

The final frame started with both teams turning the ball over. LeBron then dunked on the other end off an assist from Reaves. Houston responded to make it a two-point game. LA started missing their shots, but their aggressive defense kept them in the lead and forced 20 turnovers for the Rockets. 

Houston tied the game at the 6:52 mark.

The 23-5 margin in second-chance points was hurting the Lakers. The Rockets were on an 8-0 run. LeBron converted on free throws to cut the deficit to one for Los Angeles. Reaves had 15 points, but was a brutal 0-7 from behind the arc. 

Durant picked up his sixth turnover. 

After a rough seven-minute scoring drought for the Lakers, Ayton scored on a layup that was deemed a goaltend by Tari Eason. Luka then converted on a jumper to give LA a three-point lead. 

With 2:14 left, Los Angeles was nursing a one-point lead. 

Smart knocked down a big-time triple to put LA up by four. Ayton then ignited for two clutch buckets, pushing Los Angeles’ lead to eight with 43 seconds left. Reaves stole the ball and threw an assist to LeBron for a dunk that sealed the win. 

Key Player Stats

Luka finished with 36 points, six rebounds and four assists. LeBron ended with 18 points, five rebounds and five assists. Reaves scored 15 points with three rebounds, five assists and four steals. 

Smart notched 11 points. LaRavia pitched in with seven points and three steals. Hachimura had six points with three rebounds. 

The Lakers’ next matchup will be against the Houston Rockets on Wednesday at 6:30 PM PT.

You can follow Karin on Twitter at @KarinAbcarians.

Nets, Blazers make ‘special’ history with three Israelis playing in same game

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Ben Saraf and Deni Avdija pose for a photo after a jersey swap, Image 2 shows Danny Wolf #2 of the Brooklyn Nets dribbles the ball during the game against the Portland Trail Blazers

With the Nets hosting Portland — and rising Trail Blazers star Deni Avdija taking on Nets rookies Ben Saraf and Danny Wolf — Monday marked the first time three Israelis ever faced off in the NBA. 

“Yeah, it’s special,” said Nets coach Jordi Fernández. “When other countries outside the US and Europe can be represented with three players here, it means the world, and it’s a special day that everybody has to enjoy. And I think they are already. …I don’t know Deni, but I’m sure he’s excited to play. I know Ben and Danny are. 

“And that’s good. It’s one of the two times that we’ll see this and hopefully for many years, see how these guys grow. Obviously Deni, a career year and how much better he has gotten. And then our two young guys, they’re getting better. And I want to see this matchup over the years and how interesting, how cool it is to see them play against each other.” 

Deni Avdija (R.) and Ben Saraf pose together after the Nets-Blazers game on March 16, 2026. NBAE via Getty Images
Danny Wolf dribbles during the Nets-Blazers game on March 16, 2026. NBAE via Getty Images

Wolf started a third straight game with Michael Porter Jr. out. 

He came into Monday averaging 12.2 points and 6.2 rebounds over his prior ten games before Portland. 


Porter missed a third straight game with a sprained right ankle Monday vs. Portland, but has resumed on-court work and appears to be close to a return. 

“Yeah, I’m not qualified to talk about grades [on his sprain], but I can share that he did form shooting in the last game that we played, and [Monday] is going to be his first workout,” Fernández said before Brooklyn hosted the Trail Blazers. “So let’s see how he feels after it. He’s getting better, and then we’ll assess.” 

Porter has sat out four of the past five games. 

With 14 games left in the regular season, the Nets host the reigning champion Thunder on Wednesday. 

Backup center Day’Ron Sharpe (left thumb UCL tear) and rookie lottery pick Egor Dëmin (left plantar fascia injury management) have both already been ruled out for the season. Veteran Terance Mann missed Monday’s tilt with left Achilles soreness and Noah Clowney was simply rested. 

Saraf was available after having been listed as questionable with a left calf contusion. 

The Nets started rookies Wolf, Nolan Traore and Drake Powell, along with Ziaire Williams and Nic Claxton. 


Portland’s Damian Lillard and Shaedon Sharpe were both out. Chinese rookie Hansen Yang was with the G-League Remix.

Yankees news: Cam Schlittler won’t be fully built up to start season

TAMPA, FL - MARCH 11: Cam Schlittler #31 of the New York Yankees pitches during the game against the Toronto Blue Jays at George M. Steinbrenner Field on March 11, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

MLB.com | Bryan Hoch: As spring training nears an end, these are some interesting observations or storylines to follow. Due to a minor setback, Cam Schlittler’s buildup time was pushed back a little, so while he’ll probably only be able to throw 70 or so pitches come Opening Day, the Yankees can leverage a piggyback situation for his season debut since they won’t need a fifth starter the first time through the rotation. Outside of that, Carlos Lagrange and Kervin Castro are names to watch. While the former will likely continue to build up as a hard-throwing starter in the minors, both could make an impact out of the bullpen at some point this year.

New York Post | Mark Suleymanov: Following the United States’ victory over the Dominican Republic on Sunday night, Aaron Judge spoke to reporters about the atmosphere that he’s been a part of during the World Baseball Classic. Captain America compared the atmosphere of the tournament to the World Series we don’t talk about and said that it’s “been bigger.” It makes sense though as fans get to cheer for their countries here and display national pride, and right now his team’s winning as they get ready to play Venezuela in the final tonight.

FanGraphs | Davy Andrews: It’s everyone’s favorite time of year — Power Rankings Season! Between now and Opening Day, FanGraphs will be going around the diamond and doing a positional power ranking to see how teams stack up against each other. They start with catchers and the Bombers come in just outside of the top five in sixth place. Though Austin Wells is coming off a down year in 2025, he’s still projected to be a solid lead backstop for The Bombers and legitimate power threat who can really be an asset at home plate. This ranking also factors Ben Rice into the catching mix, even though he’ll likely see little-to-no playing time there, barring an emergency, but they’re also still high on J.C. Escarra.

FanGraphs | Eric Longenhagen: When MLB is considering any drastic rule changes, they first pilot them in the minors to see how players adapt to them and see what kind of results they produce. So it’s always interesting to see what rule changes MLB is trying out in the minors, as they announced their latest set of experimental rules. Granted none of these are locks to make it to the majors, but still fun to see and think about. Some of the more interesting ones include rules to allow a starting pitcher to re-enter a game after being removed and introducing a “Check-Swing Challenge” to go along with the ABS system. Outside of that, they’re experimenting further tinkering with rules around mound visits, pitch clocks, batter disengagements, and the position of second base.

Penguins' Winger Set New Career-High

The Pittsburgh Penguins have been getting production from up and down their lineup during a 2025-26 season in which they've exceeded expectations, and they find themselves in the thick of the playoff race. 

And one winger - new to the Penguins this season - continues to build on what has been the best year of his NHL career.

In Monday's game against the Colorado Avalanche, winger Anthony Mantha set a new career-high in goals when he potted his 26th of the season on a breakaway during the first period. Mantha's goal was Pittsburgh's second of the game and, at the time, put the Penguins up, 2-1.

And, with the goal, he continues to build on a new career-high in points (52) as well.

The 31-year-old was signed to a one-year, $2.5 million deal in the offseason by Penguins' GM/POHO Kyle Dubas after playing just 13 games last season for the Calgary Flames. Mantha tore his ACL, which ended his 2024-25 season prematurely. 

He is just one goal shy of tying captain Sidney Crosby - still out with a lower-body injury - for the team lead in goals. 

Penguins Call Up Defender & Send Another To AHLPenguins Call Up Defender & Send Another To AHLThe Penguins have made some roster moves ahead of their contest against the Avalanche.

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