Ronald Acuña, Jr. to bat lead-off this season

NORTH PORT, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 20: Ronald Acuña Jr. #13 of the Atlanta Braves poses for a photo during Spring Training photo day at CoolToday Park on February 20, 2026 in North Port, Florida. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The question as to where in the 2026 Atlanta Braves batting order outfielder Ronald Acuña, Jr. will hit can come to an end. Braves manager Walt Weiss told reporters this morning that Acuña, Jr. will reclaim his spot at the top of the order, batting lead-off for the team this season.

Despite some questionable line-up constructions with Acuña, Jr. last season – him batting seventh was a thing that happened – it was reasonable to have expected him to return to the top of the order, the question was whether or not that would be in the lead-off spot or batting second.

Well, Acuña, Jr., he of the first 40 home runs, 70 stolen base season in MLB history will return to the spot where he has started 676 games during his career – at the top of the line-up. (His next highest batting order location is hitting third, which he’s done 46 times, by the way.)

As for who will bat second, that is still an open question according to the new Braves’ skipper, with Weiss noting that both catcher Drake Baldwin and first baseman Matt Olson hit left-handed pitching well enough that he could hit them back-to-back. Outfielder/designated hitter Jurickson Profar is likely another option, specially given his ability to switch-hit and get on base.

Now, for the next five weeks, it is just matter of everyone staying healthy so that the offense hopefully get off to a hot start when the Braves start their regular season at home against the Kansas City Royals.

What will become of baseball’s last knuckleballer?

Surprise, AZ - February 21: Matt Waldron #61 of the San Diego Padres throws during a spring training game against the Kansas City Royals on February 21, 2026 in Surprise, AZ. (Photo by K.C. Alfred / The San Diego Union-Tribune via Getty Images)

The San Diego Padres have played two Cactus League games with many more to go before Opening Day in late March. Even with only two games played, the Friars have given fans plenty to think about.

As Spring Training continues the next few weeks, certain players have more to prove than others in order to make it onto the major league roster. Among these there are few with as much on the line as Matt Waldron. 

The last of the knuckleballers

Apart from Waldron, there are no active pitchers using the knuckleball in MLB. After R.A. Dickey retired in 2017, as well as Tim Wakefield in 2011, no one apart from Waldron has had any legitimate success with the pitch.

Part of this is due to the fact that the pitch, as unhittable as it is, is incredibly difficult for catchers to get their gloves on and for umpires to correctly call. Umps simply don’t know how to call the pitch well because of how much movement it has, and the catching situation is even more dire.

In 2024, Kyle Higashioka did most of the work behind the plate and managed to do a decent job of catching Waldron, but others have not done as well.

In his lone start of the 2025 season against the Philadelphia Phillies, Martín Maldonado caught for Waldron and allowed a passed ball and three wild pitches, leading to the Phillies scoring a run in the fourth inning.

Waldron used his knuckleball 74.0% of the time in his outing against Philly, much higher than the 38.2% average across the 2024 season.

The problem with the pitch is that if it’s not executed perfectly, batters will destroy it. And even if it is executed correctly there’s no guarantee the pitch will be called a strike, with umpires having difficulty calling the pitch accurately for Waldron throughout his career.

Struggles with settling in

Waldron has spent most of his career in the minors, but he spent significant time shuttling between the major and minor league clubs from 2023-25. His largest stint in the majors came in ‘24, making 26 starts for the Padres and helping them reach the postseason in October. 

In those starts, he finished with a 4.91 ERA across 146 2/3 innings. While most pitchers struggle their second and third times through the lineup, Waldron had his biggest problems his first time through. His ERA through the first three innings was much higher than it was in innings four through six (4.62 compared to 3.36). In fact, he ended the season with a 7.88 ERA in the first inning alone. 

Waldron’s problems settling in have hurt his resumé deeply, leading to a 6.48 ERA during the 2025 season spent in the San Diego minor league system. If Waldron can find a way to warm up sooner and settle in, he’ll be absolutely dominant with his unhittable knuckleball. 

Saturday’s start

In the Padres 10-3 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Saturday, Waldron allowed only one walk and one single across two innings of work. In those innings, Waldron decreased his typical knuckleball usage from 46.3% (major league career average) to 33.0%, opting to use a more balanced pitch mix.

In the first inning, he faced four batters who all start for Kansas City’s major league ball club, getting Jonathan India and Bobby Witt Jr. to groundout before walking Vinnie Pasquantino. He ended the inning by striking out Salvador Perez.

In the second, he got Kyle Isbel to lineout and then gave up a single to Dairon Blanco. Waldron then caught Blanco stealing second base before striking out John Rave, ending his first game of the year.

If he can capitalize on this start to Cactus League play over the next few weeks, it would earn Waldron consideration for a backend spot in the Padres’ rotation and possibly revive his career.

Maybe he learns how to settle in sooner and is used in a swingman role who can take over the brunt of a game’s middle innings. 

Whatever the case, Waldron is running out of time to prove his usefulness at the major league level. He’s out of options and, although it’s unlikely another club claims him off waivers, it’s always possible the Padres lose him for good. 

Spring Training Game Thread #2/3: Milwaukee Brewers (0-1) @ Chicago White Sox (2-0)/vs. Kansas City Royals (1-1)

Feb 20, 2026; Phoenix, AZ, USA; Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Robert Gasser poses for a portrait during photo day at American Family Fields of Phoenix. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

After a losing effort against the Guardians on Saturday afternoon, the Brewers are back at it with their first split-squad day of the spring. The road Brewer squad is in Glendale, where they’ll take on the Chicago White Sox, while the home team welcomes the Royals to American Family Fields of Phoenix.

In the road lineup, Joey Ortiz bats leadoff as the DH, followed by Andrew Vaughn, Akil Baddoo, and Tyler Black. Jeferson Quero makes his spring debut behind the plate, followed by top prospect Jesús Made at second base. Fellow top prospect Cooper Pratt starts at shortstop, Luke Adams starts at third, and Luis Lara rounds out the order in right field.

Logan Henderson starts on the mound in that one, with righties Carlos Rodriguez and Peter Strzelecki also scheduled to pitch behind him.

In the home game, Jackson Chourio bats leadoff and starts in left, followed by Gary Sánchez, who serves as the DH. William Contreras bats third and starts behind the plate, followed by Brice Turang, Sal Frelick, and Jake Bauers. New Brewer Luis Rengifo bats seventh and starts at third base, followed by center fielder Blake Perkins and Jett Williams at short.

Robert Gasser will start for the home squad, with fellow lefties DL Hall and Tate Kuehner also slated to pitch.

First pitch for the road game against Chicago is set for 2:05 p.m. CT, with the home game against Kansas City scheduled to begin at 2:10 p.m. The road game is also Milwaukee’s first televised spring game on Brewers TV, free for viewing (even in the blackout region). The road game will be broadcast on 94.5 ESPN Milwaukee and the Brewers Radio Network across the state.

New York Yankees vs. New York Mets: Luis Gil vs. Justin Hagenman

TAMPA, FL - MARCH 06: New York Yankees pitcher Luis Gil throws a pitch against the Tampa Bay Rays during Spring Training on March 6, 2024, at George M. Steinbrenner Field in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Brian Spurlock/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The first two games of the Yankees’ spring schedule showcased the two hottest pitching prospects in the organization, Elmer Rodríguez and Carlos Lagrange. Today, a post-hype-prospect-turned-post-hype Major Leaguer gets the ball. Luis Gil will need a big spring to reestablish his place in the MLB rotation, especially with those two hotshots rising through the ranks. He’ll make his first start opposite Justin Hagenman as the Yankees host the Mets at George M. Steinbrenner Field.

Gil only threw 57 regular season innings in 2025 after his AL Rookie of the Year-winning campaign in 2024. While his 3.32 ERA was fine enough, his strikeouts plummeted and his 4.63 FIP indicated deeper issues. He made an unimpressive start in the ALDS against the Blue Jays and enters 2026 with far less buzz around him than the new kids on the block. Even with Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodón set to miss the first chunk of the season, Gil still might not be guaranteed a rotation spot; FanGraphs’ RosterResource currently has him fifth on the rotation depth chart behind Max Fried, Cam Schlittler, Will Warren, and even new arrival Ryan Weathers (though the Yankees’ selection of Gil over Warren for a playoff start last October likely still reflects some internal thinking).

With that in mind, it will be interesting to see how he comes out of the gate following a long offseason. Will we continue to see Gil tamp down the fastball velocity as he did last season, in order to keep from running out of steam? Or will the urgency to win a spot and restore trust have him tossing fireballs right away? Of course, Gil likely won’t be built up to full velocity anyway, but we should still get a decent idea based on the numbers. As always, command and missing bats will be focal points as well.

Gil will be opposed by South Jersey native Justin Hagenman, who had his inaugural big-league cup of coffee after seven seasons in the Minors. The 29-year old right-hander posted a 4.56 ERA in 9 games with 23 K’s in 23.2 innings, not too shabby an introduction. We’re most likely looking at a depth reliever or swingman-type player here; he throws a lot of strikes but lacks a truly eye-popping offering. There may be an analogue to the Garden State in there somewhere.

It’s a packed lineup today for the Bombers. The full starting outfield—albeit with Aaron Judge at DH—will take their familiar top three spots in the lineup while Jazz Chisholm Jr. bats cleanup. Paul Goldschmidt will man the cold corner with Austin Wells behind the plate. Amed Rosario will play third base, former Rockie Yanquiel Fernández will be stationed in right field, and José Caballero rounds out the starting nine at shortstop.

How to watch

Location: George M Steinbrenner Field — Tampa, FL

First pitch: 1:05 pm ET

TV broadcast: Gotham Sports App, MLB Network (out-of-network only)

Radio broadcast: WHSQ 880AM & Audacy Mets Radio

Online stream: Gotham Sports App

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

Seattle Mariners backup catcher battle: pick your pony

Sep 16, 2025; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; San Francisco Giants catcher Andrew Knizner against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

One of the things about having a more established team is there are fewer spring training roster battles. Backup catcher isn’t exactly the most glamorous position, especially when backing up one of the league’s more famous iron men, but it is one of the things we have to watch this spring alongside the yearly bullpen battle and the platoon obstacle course in right field. As a reminder, the candidates are:

  • Andrew Knizner. Knizner has the advantage of being on the 40-man roster and earning actual guaranteed money no matter what happens this spring. He also has the backing of our own Connor Donovan, who came away from writing Knizner’s 40 in 40 with a newfound appreciation for the career backup.
  • Jhonny Pereda. Pereda has the advantage of being on the 40-man roster, although he did not inspire the same strong feelings in ZAM that Knizner did in Connor. Pereda’s other advantage is he has an option year left.
  • Mitch Garver. After saying earlier this winter that the team hadn’t had any conversations about bringing Garver back, Cal Raleigh apparently influenced the organization to bring back Garver on an MiLB deal after he went unsigned this winter. Garver has the advantage of knowing the system and the way he fits on this roster; he’s also enjoyed the most successful career out of any of the potential candidates, as a World Series champ with a Silver Slugger.

Then there are the non-roster invites currently in camp with the Mariners. Two are MiLB journeyman who have been with the Mariners in the past in Bryan O’Keefe and Nick Raposo, and three are homegrown prospects Josh Caron, Connor Charping, and Luke Stevenson. Jakson Reetz, another MiLB journeyman, rounds out this group. This crew is here mostly to catch because catchers make the spring training world go round – and gain experience in the case of the prospects – but there’s an outside outside outside chance O’Keefe, Raposo, or Reetz might have a late-career resurgence. Realistically, though, this is a three-horse race between Knizner, Pereda, and Garver. Given those options, which of the the three is your early spring pick to make the Opening Day roster? Really, what this question asks is: what do you see as the role of a backup catcher, and what traits do you value most in that position?

Canadiens: 2 Potential Trade Targets From Flames

Recently, we here at The Hockey News Montreal Canadiens have been looking at potential trade targets for the Habs from clubs that are expected to be sellers.

In this latest edition of the series, let's discuss two potential trade targets from the Calgary Flames that could be strong fits on the Canadiens' roster. 

Nazem Kadri, C 

Nazem Kadri has been connected to the Canadiens often this season, and it makes sense given their need for another star center. If the Canadiens landed Kadri, he could fit very nicely as their second-line center and power play. 

Kadri would also give the Canadiens a veteran forward who has a Stanley Cup on his resume. Furthermore, he would be more than a rental for Montreal if acquired, as he has a $7 million cap hit until the end of the 2028-29 season. 

Yet, with Kadri being one of the top centers in the trade market and having multiple years left on his deal, there is no question that the Flames would want a big return in a potential move. 

Blake Coleman, LW/RW

Blake Coleman is another notable Flames trade candidate who has been linked to the Canadiens this season. If the Canadiens brought him in, he would be an excellent addition to their middle six. 

Coleman is exactly the kind of forward that the Canadiens should be going after. This is because he not only contributes solid secondary offensive production, but also plays a heavy game. Furthermore, he is capable of playing multiple positions and is also well-known for his leadership qualities, which add to his appeal. 

Like Kadri, Coleman would be more than a rental for the Canadiens, as he has a $4.9 million cap hit until the end of next season. 

Knicks' Mike Brown dedicated to evolving offense, finding best fit for top scorers

There were many heroes in the Knickscome-from-behind win over Houston on Saturday.

OG Anunoby scored 20 points and made life difficult for Rockets star Kevin Durant. Karl-Anthony Towns scored seven of his 25 points in the fourth quarter and helped shut down Alperen Sengun (0-of-4 shooting, two turnovers in fourth quarter). Jose Alvarado had five points, three assists and three steals in the fourth quarter. Jalen Brunson went 4 for 4 in the final five minutes, making big shot after big shot in New York’s 18-point comeback.

“We found a way, that’s what I’m most excited about; we found a way,” Mike Brown said.

Brown and the Knicks would have gotten crushed locally if they’d lost on Saturday night. Two nights earlier, they were embarrassed at home by the Pistons.

Back-to-back losses out of the All-Star break would have had everyone on edge. But they avoided all of that. And they hit the road this week with an offense that’s still taking shape.

Brown’s offense has changed significantly since the start of the season. It will continue to evolve over the final few weeks of the regular season.

The ultimate goal? Find what works best for Brunson, Towns and the rest of the Knicks -- in that particular order.

“If you watch us closely from the beginning of preseason until now, our offense is different. And it’s different because … it’s evolving to try and fit not just Jalen, not just KAT, but all of our guys,” Brown said before Saturday’s game against Houston. “Knowing that those two guys are our leading scorer, our second-leading scorer, first-most shots, second-most shots; trying to fit those two guys in that order and then everybody else is what’s most important.”

Entering play Saturday night, New York has the No. 3 offense in the NBA. So the offense isn’t broken. But nights like Thursday -- when the Pistons embarrassed the Knicks and Towns doesn’t dominate a game with Jalen Duren and Isaiah Stewart sidelined -- lead to questions about the offense.

Towns, in particular, is under the microscope this season.

He entered play Saturday averaging 19.8 points -- the fewest since his rookie season.

After shooting 42 percent from beyond the arc last season, Towns is at just 35 percent this year. His shots per game are down (16.9 last season to 14.0 this season). His current mark has been impacted by his offensive fouls (he has 49, matching last season’s total).

Feb 21, 2026; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) reacts after getting fouled in the second quarter against the Houston Rockets at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images
Feb 21, 2026; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) reacts after getting fouled in the second quarter against the Houston Rockets at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images / © Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

Towns’ production and his fit have been talking points all season long for fans and media. Here is how Brown assesses what he’s seen from the All-Star center:

“I look at KAT and he’s probably right where he should be, right? Maybe he should be the leading scorer? I don’t know, but for sure the second-leading scorer. He’s that. He gets the second-most field goal attempts, right? Behind Jalen,” Brown said before Saturday’s game. “So if that’s gonna happen, it’s just like your work. You’re not gonna be up here (at a high level) every day. You’re gonna be (up and down) … but what is it gonna average out to? ... Hopefully it averages out to you getting the second-most if you’re the No. 2 guy. So I look at KAT, and that’s what his season’s about. … So that’s the way I look at it.

“And in a game, you can literally dissect every single game and say this guy didn’t get a shot. And yeah, that’s correct. It happens sometimes. That’s life. Sometimes OG may have 15 shots and KAT may have nine shots and Jalen may have 26 shots. But as long as at the end of the day it averages out to what it needs to be or what it should be, I think that’s what the season’s about.

“(The offense is) a work in progress. You’ve got to continue to feel and evolve as a group and hopefully you can do it around the guys that you need to knowing, ‘OK if this doesn’t work, I’ve got to go and change this,’ and like I said earlier, our offense is different from now than it was in the preseason because I’ve had to try to adjust and make it fit everybody to where Jalen’s getting his first, KAT’s getting his second, then we go from there.”

It’s common for teams to change their offense over the course of the season, said Brown, who referenced the Warriors with Durant.

“Even our teams in Golden State, when we got KD, we had to change,” Brown said. “It was a little different before KD, and KD gets here, we had to change it, and then as the season went along, we were like, OK this is not gonna work, we’ve got to change it.”

Brown has said that Towns has the toughest job on offense because he has to know the power forward and center spots.

In Brown’s offense, point guard, shooting guard and the small and power forward positions are interchangeable to a degree.

Center is totally different.

“He’s done fantastic,” Brown said of Towns. “And yes, we’ve simplified (the offense) a lot. We’ve simplified it a lot to try to fit him in and everyone else at the same time.”

That effort continues Sunday when the Knicks take on the Bulls.

Feb 19, 2026; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks head coach Mike Brown reacts during the first half against the Detroit Pistons at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images
Feb 19, 2026; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks head coach Mike Brown reacts during the first half against the Detroit Pistons at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images / © Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

POINTS VS. PISTONS

Brown was also asked some questions specifically about the Pistons game.

In talking about the Knicks’ screens and how they need to improve as screeners, in general, Brown said this about the Pistons:

“Trying to find different ways to attack their defense is gonna be something that I look forward to doing.”

Detroit has dominated New York, winning three games by a combined 84 points.

The Knicks don’t play the Pistons again in the regular season.

Like most Knicks fans, Brown obviously expects to see the Pistons in the playoffs.

MIKE BROWN ON TYLER KOLEK

Tyler Kolek played with the Westchester Knicks earlier Saturday; he scored 19 points and handed out 13 assists in Westchester’s win over the Cleveland Charge.

Kolek hadn’t played for the Knicks in the past 10 days. Brown was complimentary of the second-year guard when asked about him Saturday.

“Yeah, Jose is playing obviously. He’s played well for us and given us a different look. Tyler has been awesome for a Year 2 (player). He has a chance to be a good pro, a real good pro,” the coach said. “We have to find a way to help him by finding ways for him to get reps. Today was an opportunity for us to find a way for him to get a rep.”

Speaking of Alvarado, Brown pointed out that assistant Rick Brunson suggested subbing Alvarado into the game late in the fourth quarter.

Alvarado replaced Mikal Bridges with five minutes remaining. The Knicks trailed by six at the time.

And the new Knick played a major role in New York’s comeback. He had a steal, a layup and helped pressure the ball in those final minutes.

Mets vs. Yankees: Spring training lineups, broadcast info, and open thread, 2/22/26

Feb 18, 2026; Port St. Lucie, FL, USA; New York Mets outfielder Carson Benge steps up to take batting practice during spring training workouts at Clover Park. Mandatory Credit: Reinhold Matay-Imagn Images | Reinhold Matay-Imagn Images

Mets lineup

  1. Carson Benge – RF
  2. Mark Vientos – 1B
  3. Luis Torrens – C
  4. Jared Young – DH
  5. Christian Arroyo – 3B
  6. Ryan Clifford – LF
  7. Vidal Bruján – 2B
  8. Cristian Pache – CF
  9. Grae Kessinger – SS

Justin Hagenman – RHP

Yankees Lineup

  1. Trent Grisham – CF
  2. Aaron Judge – DH
  3. Cody Bellinger – LF
  4. Jazz Chisholm Jr. – 2B
  5. Paul Goldschmidt – 1B
  6. Austin Wells – C
  7. Amed Rosario – 3B
  8. Yanquiel Fernández – RF
  9. José Caballero – SS

RHP Luis Gil

Broadcast info

First pitch: 1:05 PM EST
TV: MLB Network (out-of-market only)
Radio: Audacy Mets Radio WHSQ 880AM, Audacy App, 92.3 HD2

Nets vs Hawks Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today’s NBA Game

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The Brooklyn Nets will look to rebound from two tough blowout losses as they continue their road trip against the Atlanta Hawks this afternoon.

Both offenses look a bit out of sync right now, and that’s why I’m taking the Under in my Nets vs. Hawks predictions.

Keep reading for a full analysis of this game and my free NBA picks on Sunday, February 22.

Nets vs Hawks prediction

Nets vs Hawks best bet: Under 228 (-110)

The Brooklyn Nets are among the slowest-paced teams in the NBA this year, averaging 99.3 possessions per game on the season.

We’ve also seen the Nets — already the worst team in the league in offensive efficiency — struggle mightily on this road trip, putting up 84 and 86 points in their last two games, respectively.

Normally, we could count on the Atlanta Hawks to lift the total, but they have hit three straight Unders themselves, averaging 107.0 points in that span.

With neither team putting up much offense, I’m taking the Under this afternoon.

Nets vs Hawks same-game parlay

While both teams have been struggling lately, the Nets are coming off two blowout road losses, and I’m looking to make that three in a row by taking the Hawks to cover in combination with the Under. I’ll also take CJ McCollum to hit his scoring total, as he’s hit that total in three of his last four games.

Nets vs Hawks SGP

  • Under 228
  • Hawks -10
  • CJ McCollum Over 17.5 points

Our "from downtown" SGP: Johnson lends his wing

I’m banking on a big game from Hawks leader Jalen Johnson. I’ll take him to get Over 7.5 assists, something he’s done in six of his last seven games, and to hit at least two shots from deep, which he’s already done three times this month. I’ll also throw in a bet on McCollum to hit Over 2.5 threes, a number he’s cleared in back-to-back games.

Nets vs Hawks SGP

  • Hawks -10
  • Jalen Johnson Over 7.5 assists
  • Jalen Johnson Over 1.5 made threes
  • CJ McCollum Over 2.5 made threes

Nets vs Hawks odds

  • Spread: Nets +10 (-110) | Hawks -10 (-110)
  • Moneyline: Nets +325 | Hawks -425
  • Over/Under: Over 228 (-110) | Under 228 (-110)

Nets vs Hawks betting trend to know

The Under is 3-0 in Atlanta’s last three games overall. Find more NBA betting trends for Nets vs. Hawks.

How to watch Nets vs Hawks

LocationState Farm Arena, Atlanta, GA
DateSunday, February 22, 2026
Tip-off3:30 p.m. ET
TVYES, FDSN Southeast Atlanta

Nets vs Hawks latest injuries

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Spring Game #2 GameThread: Jays At Red Sox

Feb 21, 2026; Dunedin, Florida, USA; Toronto Blue Jays infielder Kazuma Okamoto (7) misses the ground ball during the second inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at TD Ballpark. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images | Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images

Game two of the spring schedule. I was up early and at the bar for the hockey, and that is all I’m saying about it. Though beer at 6:00 in the morning is surprisingly good.

The Jays have Fernando Perez as the starting pitcher. He was good in Vancouver last year, 3.05 ERA in 20 starts, and finished the season in New Hampshire.

Less regulars today, as the veterans don’t like to make the bus rides:

Today’s Lineups

BLUE JAYSRED SOX
Myles Straw – CFRoman Anthony – DH
Jesus Sanchez – RFTrevor Story – SS
Eloy Jimenez – DHJarren Duran – LF
RJ Schreck – LFWillson Contreras – 1B
Leo Jimenez – 2BWilyer Abreu – RF
Brandon Valenzuela – CCaleb Durbin – 3B
Arjun Nimmala – SSCeddanne Rafaela – CF
Riley Tirotta – 1BCarlos Narvaez – C
Cutter Coffey – 3BIsiah Kiner-Falefa – 2B
Fernando Perez – RHPBrayan Bello – RHP

Go Jays Go.

Spring Training Game Thread: Blue Jays at Red Sox

FORT MYERS, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 17: Brayan Bello #66 of the Boston Red Sox poses for a picture during the 2026 Boston Red Sox Photo Day at JetBlue Park at Fenway South on February 17, 2026 in Fort Myers, Florida. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Can the US stick it to Canada twice today? We’ll find out! First pitch at 1:05 PM.

Is it on TV?

You bet! NESN is three-for-three so far in the spring. Give it up for cable television, ladies and gentlemen.

What’s the lineup?

What should we watch for?

As Alex Cora himself said, this is pretty close to a regular season lineup. I didn’t expect to see a lineup quite like this so soon, but the WBC is speeding things up a bit this spring, so let’s go ahead and pretend this is a real game for the first few innings.

Harry Ford should be the frontrunner for the Nationals starting catcher job

WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 20: Harry Ford #17 of the Washington Nationals poses for a photo during the Washington Nationals Photo Day at CACTI Park of the Palm Beaches on February 20, 2026 in West Palm Beach, Florida. (Photo by Rich Storry/Getty Images) | Getty Images

One of the biggest competitions we will see this spring is behind the plate. Top prospect and new Nat Harry Ford will be battling it out against Keibert Ruiz at camp. We will see who comes out on top, but for my sanity, I really hope it is Harry Ford. It would be the best outcome for Ford to win the job because he has more upside.

Keibert Ruiz has gotten chance after chance in his four plus seasons with the Nationals. However, he has never been able to put it together and has been regressing over the past couple of years. The bat first catcher is only hitting .235 with a .610 OPS over the last two seasons. When you combine that with awful defense, you get one of the worst regulars in baseball.

If it weren’t for his contract extension, Ruiz would probably have been non-tendered or DFA’d by now. However, he has that contract, so he is going to be on the team. His contract is not big enough to just promise him a starting role despite poor production. Ruiz is only making $5.375 million this year.

Meanwhile, Ford has proven everything he has needed to in the minors. He hit .283 with an .868 OPS in Triple-A last year. Ford also showed increased power production and slightly improved defense. The only reason he did not see more time in the MLB was because of how good Cal Raleigh is. In other organizations, Ford would have been a starter for at least part of last season.

Ford is 23 years old with four full seasons in the minor leagues now. The Mariners brought him along slowly and developed him nicely. Now, it is time for the Nats to reap the rewards and unleash him. If Ruiz and Ford are playing at the same level this spring, the tie should go to Ford not Ruiz.

We have seen Ruiz get the benefit of the doubt for so many years now. He has lost that right, and Harry Ford now has the title of catcher of the future in DC. Ford has a level of athleticism and plate discipline Ruiz could only dream of. We saw some of that plate discipline yesterday when Ford walked and got an RBI base hit.

The whole reason the Mariners traded Ford was because they knew he was basically big league ready but they did not have regular playing time for him. Rather than letting him rot on the bench or AAA, they wanted to flip the asset while he still had value. For the Nats to see that and decide to roll with Ruiz over Ford would be silly. It would kind of defeat the point of the trade. Why trade for a blocked big league ready catcher if you are not going to play him?

This is not to say there should not be competition. If Ruiz looks way better than Ford, he should get the job. However, in this battle, the tie should go to Harry Ford. Back a few years ago, Ruiz was the high upside catcher the Nats were developing, now Ford is that guy. At this point, Ruiz’s development is a secondary concern to Ford’s.

There is going to be one twist in this competition though. At the start of March, Ford will be leaving camp to play for Great Britain. He is one of the stars of that team and is a co-captain. His parents are British, so this is a great honor for him, but it could give Ruiz an upper hand.

The time away from camp gives Ruiz more reps and opportunities. If he takes advantage of that, Ruiz could be in the driver’s seat of the competition. As a fan though, I am really rooting for Ford to win this competition.

The Nats catching situation has been such a disaster the last couple years, and Ruiz has been the biggest problem. He has not been the player Nats fans thought they were getting when he was a headliner in the Scherzer/Turner trade. Rather than establishing himself as a star, Ruiz has struggled on both sides of the ball and has not stayed healthy.

There is a reason trading for Ford was Paul Toboni’s first major move. He knew the catching situation was not good enough. Toboni bet on Ford to be the answer. If Harry Ford has a comparable or better spring than Ruiz, unleash the young man and give him his shot.

Decoding Jayson Tatum’s Return Date

Boston, MA - October 4: Boston Celtics forward Jayson Tatum talks with head coach Joe Mazzulla at the Auerbach Center on October 4, 2025. (Photo by Matthew J. Lee/The Boston Globe via Getty Images) | Boston Globe via Getty Images

On Saturday in Los Angeles, Jayson Tatum did what he has done for weeks now: he said something that gave us pretty much nothing in the way of new information.

He hasn’t practiced with the team since his Maine session a week ago. The photos from San Francisco were — Tatum’s words — an “optional workout.” Joe Mazzulla said he’s continuing to hit his “check marks.” Brad Stevens repeated in his press conference that there is no timetable.

Simply put, there is no return date.

Naturally, the speculation has intensified.

So, I did what any rational Celtics fan would do. I pulled out my calculator. I stopped hearing and started listening. I looked in the places everyone else was looking, but I looked harder and better than everyone else.

After carefully studying the latest batch of quotes, I’ve narrowed Tatum’s return down to three possibilities. Let’s go through them.

Theory No. 1: March 6 vs. Mavericks

Joe Mazzulla: “It’s just trusting the group that we have around him. And taking it step-by-step.”

Joe could’ve said “day by day.” He didn’t. He chose “steps.” Steps imply a staircase. A finite number. You don’t reference steps unless you know how many there are.

He said this on February 21.

Count forward.

March 6 sits 13 days later.

13 is the average number of days between major lunar phase shifts. That’s Astronomy 101. I didn’t invent the moon.

Stay with me. Boston sits at roughly 71 degrees west longitude. Dallas is at 96. 96 minus 71 equals 25. 2 plus 5 equals 7. Take the 13-day lunar window and subtract 7.

Six.

March 6.

Now layer in the matchup. It’s at home, which Tatum has already said he’d like to return in front of a home crowd. The opponent is Dallas. Luka used to be there and now he’s not. What’s that all about? Related? I’m not ruling it out.

On March 6, we’ll (hopefully) be seeing Cooper Flagg, the next face-of-the-league candidate. Future superstar. Duke alum. Present convergence. All of this makes March 6 feel right.

Jayson Tatum talking to Cooper Flagg
Feb 3, 2026; Dallas, Texas, USA; Dallas Mavericks forward Cooper Flagg (32) hugs Boston Celtics forward Jayson Tatum after the game at American Airlines Center. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images | Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images

That said, Jupiter starts drifting toward retrograde around then, and planetary wobble can’t be ignored. So, while March 6 has intergalactic support, I can only label it as a strong possibility at this stage.

And it was actually while adjusting for Jupiter’s drift through my telescope that a different possibility came into focus. The stars were whispering, “San Antonio.”

Theory No. 2: March 10 at Spurs

Jayson Tatum: “Work out, see how you recover the next day and then you just make the plan from there.”

“The plan.” You don’t casually reference “The Plan” unless there is a plan. Likely a document somewhere. Printed. Stapled. Possibly laminated.

Now this is where I began pacing. Because once you introduce a plan, you introduce intent. And once you introduce intent, you introduce architecture. So, I zoomed out.

March 10. San Antonio. Duh.

If you’re at the table of long-term power structures in the NBA, you pay attention to San Antonio. Duncan. Parker. Ginobli. Leonard. Popovich. Five banners materializing like clockwork over fifteen years.

Spurs titles: ’99, ’03, ’05, ’07, ’14.

Add the last digits. 9 + 3 + 5 + 7 + 4 = 28. 2 + 8 = 10.

March 10.

Now this is where it gets interesting.

Wembanyama. Hector Banana-Bread. Seven-foot-four. Add 7+4, you get 11. Tatum wears 0. Subtract 1 for the silent digit, naturally. 10.

March 10.

Victor Wembanyama blocks Jayson Tatum’s shot
Feb 11, 2025; Victor Wembanyama shoots over Jayson Tatum during a matchup between the Spurs and Celtics.<br>Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images | Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images

Now, small complication. San Antonio sits at 29 degrees north latitude. Two plus nine gives you 11. Add the seven letters in “Go Spurs” and you land on 18. That’s just rudimentary math, folks.

And once 18 enters any predictive model, you have to take it seriously. Which is how, while re-running the numbers, March 18 began dancing on my calendar (I should mention I haven’t slept in 72 hours and am running out of yarn and hallucinations seem to be setting in.)

Theory No. 3: March 18 vs. Warriors

How could I be so foolish.

Of course, Mazzulla was throwing smoke screens. He knew I would run longitudinal numbers. He knew I would check latitude. He knew that I knew that he knew all along.

I had to wipe the board clean.

Jayson Tatum: “I’m just getting acclimated more and doing little things with some of the guys out there.”

“Acclimated.”

That’s not weight-room talk. That’s atmospheric. Someone adjusting to conditions before re-entry. You acclimate before you return from orbit.

Now, follow me carefully. Warriors. March 18. At home. The Celtics lost the 2022 Finals to Golden State in 6 games. They won the 2024 Finals in 5 games. 6 + 5 = 11. Steph has 4 rings. 11 times 4 is 44. Divide by the number of letters in “Tatum”, which is 5. 8.8.

Round up. Nine. Add the eight letters in “Warriors.” Seventeen. Add one for home court. Eighteen. 

March 18.

Golden State Warriors v Boston Celtics
Nov 6, 2024; Stephen Curry dribbles against Jayson Tatum during a Celtics–Warriors matchup at TD Garden.<br>Photo by Adam Glanzman/Getty Images | Photo by Adam Glanzman/Getty Images

Joe let me chase March 6. He let me flirt with March 10. The real answer was sitting there the whole time. Unless he’s already anticipated this too. Dammit, Joe, you marvelous genius.

Back to Earth

The truth is, none of us know when Jayson Tatum will play basketball for the Boston Celtics again. Not me, not the internet, and not my dog despite how many times I beg her for the answer (dogs know everything). The only people who know the timeline are inside TD Garden, and they’ve been consistent on not giving anything away on that front from the start.

Tatum will return when he’s ready. Whenever it happens, it’ll be because he decided it was the right time. And that’s probably the only calculation that actually matters in the long run.

Six Nations favorite France scores 5 tries in 33-8 win against Italy

LILLE, France (AP) — France remained on course for the Six Nations title after a scrappy 33-8 win against Italy on Sunday.

Fabien Galthié’s side is favored to win back-to-back titles and is the only team to have won all three matches. France grabbed five tries for a bonus point and has 19 tries so far, having managed a tournament-record 30 last year.

Jet-heeled left winger Louis Bielle-Biarrey, lock Emmanuel Meafou and makeshift flyhalf Thomas Ramos scored first-half tries at Stade Pierre-Mauroy in Lille, two of them set up by star scrumhalf Antoine Dupont.

But after leading 19-0 inside 30 minutes, the French tried too much entertaining as indiscipline allowed Italy back in.

An opportunist try from fullback Ange Capuozzo followed by Paolo Garbisi’s penalty pulled it back to 19-8.

The scoreboard stayed static until 31 minutes into the second half when the ever-alert Ramos kicked into the right corner to give winger Gaël Dréan a try on test debut.

That try came about when Italy was down to 14 players after winger Louis Lynagh — the son of Australian flyhalf great Michael Lynagh — was carelessly sinbinned for a deliberate knock-on.

Italy's bench was angry at the try, which came with the Italians effectively down to 13 because Capuozzo was not yet back on the field following treatment for a shoulder injury.

Center Emilien Gailleton showed his strength when he broke a tackle to dive over in the closing stages, and Ramos converted. ___

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

Suns star Dillon Brooks suffers broken hand in brutal injury blow

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Dillon Brooks Suns, Image 2 shows Devin Booker Suns hoodie
Star forward Dillon Brooks sustained a broken left hand during Saturday's double-overtime win over the Orlando Magic -- just days after superstar guard Devin Booker went down with a right hip strain.

The Phoenix Suns have taken their second crushing blow of the week. 

Star forward Dillon Brooks sustained a broken left hand during Saturday’s double-overtime win over the Orlando Magic — just days after superstar guard Devin Booker went down with a right hip strain.

Brooks is expected to be sidelined for an “extended period of time,” according to ESPN’s Shams Charania, and doctors will meet Sunday to determine his exact recovery timeline.

Suns forward Dillon Brooks suffered a broken left hand on Saturday. Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Ahead of Saturday’s game, Phoenix announced that Booker would miss at least one week to nurse a hip injury that he suffered on Thursday night against the Spurs.

The Suns — who sit seventh in the West with a surprising 33–24 record under first-year head coach Jordan Ott — will now have to hold strong in a heated play-in race without two of their top stars for the foreseeable future.

While Ott acknowledged there being an emotional “lull” after such a drastic setback, he emphasized that it’s no excuse to roll over — and that Phoenix still has the necessary tools to stand its ground. 

“We can’t feel sorry for ourselves,” Ott told reporters after the game. “No one’s going to feel sorry for us.

Suns superstar Devin Booker was sidelined Saturday to nurse a hip injury, which will keep him sidelined for “at least one week.” Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

“[Our opponents] surely aren’t going to. They’re trying to go out and win a game just like we are. No one cares… The only group that can help us when we’re stranded is our group.”

Brooks, 30, has had a breakout year after arriving in Phoenix by way of the Kevin Durant trade — averaging a career-high 20.9 points, along with 3.7 rebounds per game.

Phoenix is just 3-4 without the scrappy forward this season.

Booker, meanwhile, leads the Suns with 24.7 points and 6.1 assists a night in his age-29 campaign.

Phoenix continues its homestand Sunday night against the Trail Blazers before welcoming the Celtics and Lakers later this week.