Jets Face Familiar Postseason Roadmap Down Another Star Forward

Image coutesy of Sportsnet

The Winnipeg Jets will be without star forward Mark Scheifele for Game 6 in St. Louis on Friday.

His absence is directly related to an injury suffered on a check in Game 5 at Canada Life Centre on Wednesday night. 

The 32-year-old was crunched early in the first period on a punishable hit by Brayden Schenn, who jumped into an open-ice hit, catching Scheifele without the puck in Winnipeg's defensive zone. 

"Well, clearly they’re trying to do a job on our skilled guys, and trying to make them pay a price," Jets defenceman Dylan DeMelo said on Thursday. "We're trying to do the same too. It's a physical series. This has been right up there with some of the most physical hockey I've played in the playoff series. And we knew that going in, and they're going to continue to try to do that."

Scheifele bounced back up rather quickly and played another seven shifts. However, he was later hit in the open ice by Blues' forward Radek Faksa, which also knocked him down heavily to the ice.

After the game, coaches Jim Montgomery and Scott Arniel went back and forth on what caused Scheifele to miss the second and third periods, ultimately walking away undecided. 

Although pleading with the NHL Department of Player Safety to look at Schenn's high hit, Arniel had no success, and the Blues' captain will remain in the lineup for the pivotal Game 6. 

"We've talked to the league, like I said," Arniel said Thursday. "We've been talking. There's a supervisor that's here every day. So they know how we feel. We've passed on our message and we hope that those things don't happen. I'm not saying that we're going out to (get) retribution. But we've got to win hockey games. So however that comes about, we've got to get it done."

Scheifele, on the other hand, will not travel with the Jets and remains out of the lineup. 

"Obviously extremely (disappointed)," Arniel added. "You're hoping that maybe for the best, you wake up today and things are better. But right now he won't be making trip and we'll see, we'll just go day-to-day, moving forward."

Winnipeg missing star players come the postseason is not a new storyline, by any measure.

Scheifele, for instance, has missed games against Calgary alongside Patrik Laine (in 2020), sat out due to suspension in 2021 against Montreal and injured his shoulder against Vegas in 2023. 

Cole Perfetti also missed the postseason in 2023 against the Golden Knights. Nikolaj Ehlers made it into just one game that year after a dirty check from Ryan Hartman near the end of the regular season, while Josh Morrissey got hurt on his first shift of Game 2 against Vegas. He sat out the rest of the series. And who could forget Morgan Barron's nasty slice to the cheek - fortunately, he didn't need to sit out.

Brenden Dillon and Vlad Namestnikov both missed time in the opening round against Colorado last season, giving way to Cole Perfetti, who made his playoff debut in Game 5. 

As history shows, the Jets have rarely had a full lineup of regulars come playoff time since their rip to the Western Conference Final in 2018 vs. Vegas.

It appears as though that will also be the case this postseason. Already missing Ehlers until at least the second round (lower-body), Winnipeg was without Gabe Vilardi until Wednesday, who made his return to action after missing a month of time due to an upper-body injury.

“This is going to be a meat-and-potato kind of, work zone-to-zone, get out of our zone, get through that neutral zone and then make them spend some time in their end of the rink," Arniel said of Game 6. "You know, not having Nik, not having Scheif, kind of knocks out a couple of your top six players. So this is straightforward, grind it out kind of work for, fight for every inch and get those greasy goals, a lot like we scored last night."

Now, with Scheifele on the mend, the Jets will look to take care of business on the road for the first time this postseason, as they battle St. Louis in what could be the final test of the round. Or, the game could follow the script set over the first five games with the home team proving victorious. 

Puck drop is set for 7:00 PM central time on Friday. The game can be viewed live on Sportsnet.

Toronto Maple Leafs Win A Playoff Round For Second Time In 21 Years

The Toronto Maple Leafs beat the Ottawa Senators in six games. (Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images)

The Toronto Maple Leafs got the job done against the Ottawa Senators in Game 6.

With the Maple Leafsat risk of blowing a 3-0 series lead, they beat the Senators 4-2 to make the second round for the first time since 2023 against the Tampa Bay Lightning and just the second time since 2004, the last time they faced the Senators in the playoffs.

At the Canadian Tire Centre in Kanata, Ont., Toronto took the lead against Ottawa on Thursday night off a power-play goal by Auston Matthews. William Nylander extended the lead to 2-0.

Senators captain Brady Tkachuk tipped a shot into the net to cut the lead to one entering the third period, and David Perron tied the game by banking a shot off the back of the head of Leafs goaltender Anthony Stolarz.

Just over a minute later, however, Max Pacioretty capitalized on some offensive zone time to take the lead back. It was his first playoff goal since 2021 with the Vegas Golden Knights. He has a goal and an assist in four games this post-season after recovering from injury issues. His last regular-season game was Feb. 8.

Despite the Senators piling on the pressure in the final minute with an empty net, Nylander scored at the other end to seal the deal.

The Maple Leafs next face the defending Stanley Cup champions, the Florida Panthers, in the second round. The Panthers, which finished third in the Atlantic Division in the regular season, eliminated the Tampa Bay Lightning in five games.

When the Leafs beat the Lightning in 2023, they faced the Panthers in the second round as well. Florida won in six games and eventually made it to the Stanley Cup final before falling to the Golden Knights.

As for the Senators, they finish their first playoff appearance since 2017, when they made it to the Eastern Conference final. Tkachuk led the Senators in scoring in this series with seven points (four goals, three assists) in six games, while Matthews led the Leafs with two goals and five helpers for seven points.

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The Hockey News Playoff Frenzy Live: Join The Conversation As Maple Leafs Eliminate Senators

Anthony Stolarz (Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images)

Welcome to The Hockey News Playoff Frenzy Live, streaming nightly during the NHL's Stanley Cup playoffs.

After the big game of the night, our experts go live to react to the match that was, break down the key moments and storylines, provide updates on the rest of the night's NHL slate and read your opinions.

On tonight's show, Katie Gaus and Michael Augello react to the Toronto Maple Leafs beating the Ottawa Senators 4-2 in Game 6 and winning the series.

The Maple Leafs lost twice before winning the series, and they now face the defending Stanley Cup Champions, the Florida Panthers, in the second round.

Leafs vs. Sens Game 6 - Playoff FrenzyLeafs vs. Sens Game 6 - Playoff FrenzyWelcome to Playoff Frenzy Live by The Hockey News, where we're recapping all of the action from Game 6 between the Toronto Maple Leafs and the Ottawa Senators.

Share your thoughts in the comments and live chat, and the hosts may discuss your message during the stream.

Check out the show right now.

Ottawa Senators Season Ends With 4-2 Game 6 Loss To Toronto

It was a valiant comeback effort by the Ottawa Senators, but in the end, losing the first three games of their first round playoff series was just too much to overcome. 

May 1, 2025: Leafs goalie Anthony Stolarz (41) makes a save in front of Ottawa Senators center Ridly Greig (71) in game six of the first round of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs. Mandatory Credit: Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images

The Senators' 2024-25 season came to an end in Game 6 on Thursday night with a 4-2 loss to the Toronto Maple Leafs. William Nylander led the way for Toronto with two goals and an assist. Max Pacioretty, who was moved up to the second line tonight, had two points, including the winning goal with 5:39 to play. Brady Tkachuk and David Perron scored for the Sens, who were dead even in shots with Toronto at 23 apiece.

The opening period was one of the most wide-open we've seen in the series. Both teams had some excellent chances, but the scoring dam refused to break until Brady Tkachuk’s interference penalty in the neutral zone with just over two minutes left in the period. The hit was slightly late, but it's the kind of hit that officials frequently overlook, especially in games as important as this one.

After going cold for two games, Toronto then finally capitalized with the extra man. From the left point, Auston Matthews directed a puck at the net with the approximate speed of a firm pass. It made its way through traffic, and just as a screened Linus Ullmark came off the post in search of a view of the puck, the puck slid past his skate, just inside the post.

It was reminiscent of an intermission contest where a fan successfully shoots a puck through a tiny slot in a board covering the net.

That gave the Leafs some momentum heading into the intermission, and they built on their lead in the first minute of the second period. Pacioretty knocked the puck away from Nick Jensen at the Ottawa blue line and it ended up on the stick of  Nylander. Thomas Chabot, who backed up way too far, allowed Nylander all the time he needed to pick his spot under Ullmark's blocker.

Less than seven minutes later, both Chabot and Tkachuk made amends, teaming up for Ottawa's first goal of the game. Chabot's knee-high wrist shot from the left point was handled masterfully by Tkachuk, who tipped it over Anthony Stolarz's right shoulder to cut the lead in half.

The Senators came out strong in the third period. Tim Stutzle had an early chance, deflecting one off the goal post, and he created several great opportunities for himself throughout the period. However, he couldn't capitalize.

But Canadian Tire Centre erupted when veteran David Perron scored from down below the goal line, banking the puck in off of Stolarz's back to tie the game at 2.

The celebration was short-lived.

Less than two minutes later, with everyone thinking about yet another overtime, Toronto's Max Domi outworked Ottawa's defense behind the Senators' net and found Pacioretty alone in the high slot. Pacioretty then beat Ullmark to restore Toronto’s lead with less than six minutes to go.

Nylander then put the game away with an empty netter to seal the deal, ending Ottawa's season.

"I'm proud of the guys," Perron said. "(The loss) is tough to think about too much right now. You can always look at plays, but I'm proud of the guys and how much they grew this year. And even from game to game, it felt like we really had a chance to kind of push this to 7 and that's tough."

The fans shared Perron's emotions. During the player handshakes, the building was still fairly full, with fans applauding the effort. Not only did the Senators get back to the playoffs for the first time in eight years, the future appears to be extremely bright, o and off the ice.

Some of the fans began chanting Brady Tkachuk's name. Despite dealing with a nagging injury, big number 7 led the Sens with 7 points in 6 games, and after the game, the captain was highly emotional when asked about the loss.

"I mean, it's devastating, Tkachuk said, his voice barely a whisper. "I really believed... It's just a tough pill to swallow right now."

Tkachuk said he was proud of the team, even the guys who don't lace 'em up every night.

"I'm really proud of every single guy in this room. Everybody who wasn't playing – staff, trainers, everybody. Everybody in this organization. I mean, I think it takes will, it takes guts. 

"We didn't get the job done, but I think we're going to take these lessons and be that much better because of it. I know it's tough to realize right now, but everything happens for a reason, and I'll be better because of it."

As for Toronto, they win the first Battle of Ontario in 21 years, improving their playoff record against Ottawa to 5-0. The Leafs will have their hands full, facing the Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers, who just mowed down the Tampa Bay Lightning in round one.

By Steve Warne
The Hockey News

Be sure to bookmark The Hockey News Ottawa for Senators coverage all year long.

Report: Maple Leafs' Game Sheet Issue Almost Forces William Nylander Out Of Game 6 Lineup Against Senators

Apr 13, 2025; Raleigh, North Carolina, USA; Toronto Maple Leafs right wing William Nylander (88) goes out to the warmups before the game against the Carolina Hurricanes at Lenovo Center. Mandatory Credit: James Guillory-Imagn Images

On his 29th birthday, William Nylander was reportedly close to being held out of the Toronto Maple Leafs' lineup due to a game sheet issue.

Ahead of Game 6 against the Ottawa Senators, the Maple Leafs inserted Alex Nylander, William's brother, on the game sheet instead of the 29-year-old. According to Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman, NHL officials caught this before the game began, allowing Nylander to play.

If an official hadn't caught the mistake before the game started, there would've been a chance that Nylander wouldn't have been able to play.

Per rule 5.1 in the NHL's rulebook: "Prior to the game, if an official (on-ice or off-ice) notices that a player is in uniform but has not been included on the submitted lineup, the Referee shall bring this to the attention of the offending team so that the necessary correction can be made to the Official Game Report with no penalty assessed."

Below is rule 5.2 of the rulebook, which is what could've happened to Nylander had the officials missed it.

"Only players on the submitted line-up before the game may participate in the game. The determining factor when considering whether or not a player is eligible is that the player’s name, and not necessarily the player’s number, must be correctly listed by the Manager or Coach of that team," the rulebook states.

"Whenever an ineligible player is identified to the Referee, the ineligible player will be removed from the game and the Club shall not be able to substitute another player from its roster. No additional penalties are to be assessed but a report of the incident must be submitted to the Commissioner."

'We've Only Done It Once Before': Gauging The Temperature Of The Maple Leafs Ahead Of Game 6 Against The Senators'We've Only Done It Once Before': Gauging The Temperature Of The Maple Leafs Ahead Of Game 6 Against The SenatorsKanata, Ont. — The Toronto Maple Leafs have another chance to close out their series with the Ottawa Senators on Thursday when they visit Canadian Tire Centre for Game 6 of their first-round playoff series.

Nylander had an assist on Auston Matthews' power play goal in the first period of Game 6. His sixth assist of the series came on Toronto's first power play goal in an elimination game in 30 opportunities.

The forward also scored 43 seconds into the second period against Ottawa after intercepting the puck at the offensive blue line. It was Nylander's second goal of the series, after scoring in Game 1 on Apr. 20.

Nylander has eight points — two goals and six assists — through six games in the Battle of Ontario. He scored a career-high 45 goals in 82 games this season.


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Undefeated Knights Advance To J. Ross Robertson Cup

Several members of the London Knights celebrate a goal [Luke Durda/OHL Images].

Last night, the London Knights swept the Kitchener Rangers in the Western Conference Final of the OHL Playoffs. They now have the opportunity to win back-to-back OHL Championships. 

The Knights have played 12 games and come away with 12 wins in the postseason. The reigning champions have swept all three series they have played, coming away relatively unscathed. 

They go into the finals on course to accomplish a feat that has only been done one other time in OHL history. The last time an OHL team won a championship without losing a postseason game was during the 1987-88 season. 

Of the three remaining reams in the playoffs, London averages the highest goals per game (5.5) while also allowing the fewest goals against (2.3). Based on the stats, London is the heavy favourite to take the championship this season. 

You could feel the intensity from the Rangers' bench at the start of last night's game. Ottawa Senators prospect Luke Ellinas rewarded the Rangers' efforts by scoring the game's opening goal on the power play. The goal was the result of a beautiful passing play that left Knights' goaltender Austin Elliot completely in the lurch.

Jackson Parsons Named OHL Goaltender Of The YearJackson Parsons Named OHL Goaltender Of The YearThe Ontario Hockey League announced yesterday that Jackson Parsons of the Kitchener Rangers is the 2024-25 winner of the Jim Rutherford Award, which is awarded annually to the OHL Goaltender of the Year. 

The Knights responded immediately, tying the game under a minute later. Noah Read tracked down a bouncing puck in the Rangers' crease before pushing it into the back of the net. 

From there, London took full control of the game, scoring a total of four unanswered goals courtesy of San Jose Sharks prospects Sam Dickinson, Kasper Halttunen, and New York Islanders prospect Jesse Nurmi. 

Sennecke Scores Hattrick In Statement WinSennecke Scores Hattrick In Statement WinLast night, the Oshawa Generals defeated the Barrie Colts 7-1 to take a 2-0 series lead in the Eastern Conference Finals. Anaheim Ducks prospect Beckett Sennecke scored a hattrick and added an assist in the Generals' victory. 

Dickinson had another fantastic game, finishing the night with a goal and an assist. He's second on the team in postseason scoring with seven goals and 15 assists. 

Chicago Blackhawks prospect Jack Pridham did score in the third period to cut the London lead down to 4-2, however, it was too little, too late as London held on for the win. 

Interestingly, we could see a repeat of last year's championship series if Oshawa defeats the Barrie Colts in the Eastern Conference Final. The Generals currently hold a 3-0 lead in that series. London will await the winner of the series, having already punched their ticket to the finals. 


Mets at Cardinals: 5 things to watch and series predictions | May 2-4

Here are five things to watch and predictions as the Mets and Cardinals play a three-game series in St. Louis beginning on Friday at 8:15 p.m. on SNY.


Preview

The bullpen is in flux

With A.J. Minter and Danny Young both out for a significant amount of time, the Mets have been relying on some of their depth relievers lately.

On Wednesday against the Diamondbacks, Chris Devenski pitched the final two innings after Brandon Waddell -- who had been starting in the minors -- tossed 4.1 scoreless frames in relief.

Both Waddell and Devenski were optioned back to Triple-A Syracuse following the game, with left-hander Genesis Cabrera and right-hander Ty Adcock called up to replace them.

Cabrera, who has had big league success as recently as last season with the Blue Jays, is New York's only lefty reliever at the moment.

Meanwhile, Dedniel Núñez -- who missed the second half of last season due to injury and has been shaking the cobwebs off in Triple-A -- could be back in the big league bullpen "shortly."

Can Tylor Megill keep it going?

Megill has been tremendous this season, and the results aren't a fluke.

To go along with his sterling 1.74 ERA (2.34 FIP) and 1.12 WHIP, Megill is striking out a career-best 11.3 batters per nine, allowing a career-low 6.7 hits per nine, and has an ERA+ of 224.

Megill's advanced stats via Baseball Savant are mostly above average, and his stuff is performing as well as it ever has.

The upside has always been there for Megill, but he entered this season after a rocky first four years in the majors, where he combined to put up a 4.56 ERA.

Perhaps it's all coming together for Megill in what is his age-29 season.

Luisangel Acuña's development

Acuña opened this season needing to make strides offensively following an up-and-down 2024 season in the minors and a promising taste of the majors toward the end of the year.

And he's succeeding.

New York Mets second baseman Luisangel Acuna (2) celebrates hitting a double against the Minnesota Twins in the fifth inning at Target Field
New York Mets second baseman Luisangel Acuna (2) celebrates hitting a double against the Minnesota Twins in the fifth inning at Target Field / Jesse Johnson - Imagn Images

Acuña entered play on Thursday with a 101 OPS+, which is a tick above league average.

He is hitting .288 with a .342 OBP to go along with five doubles, but Acuña hasn't homered in his first 79 plate appearances after cracking three homers in just 40 plate appearances late in 2024.

Home run power isn't expected to be a big part of Acuña's game, but if he can tap into it just a bit, it will make him that much more formidable.

The Cardinals have been tough at home

The Mets took care of the Cardinals with relative ease during a four-game sweep last month at Citi Field, outscoring them 19-9.

St. Louis entered play on Thursday with a 14-17 record, though their run differential of +10 suggested that they've been a bit unlucky.

At home, the Cards are 10-5, including series wins over the Phillies, Astros, and Brewers.

The Cardinals have also been a relatively strong offensive team, scoring the 10th-most runs in baseball.

Brendan Donovan has been dangerous

Donovan has been one of the toughest outs in the St. Louis lineup.

Through 29 games, he's slashing .333/.379/.491 with three homers, nine doubles, 17 RBI, and a career-best .870 OPS.

He also carried an eight-game on-base streak into play on Thursday.

Meanwhile, Nolan Arenado -- who was nearly traded during the offseason and could be moved before the trade deadline -- has been solid, with a .747 OPS.

Predictions

Who will the MVP of the series be?

Brandon Nimmo

Nimmo's nine-RBI outburst earlier this week shouldn't have been a huge surprise. He had been hitting the ball hard all season, but to that point had been the recipient of some seriously bad luck on balls in play.

Which Mets pitcher will have the best start?

Clay Holmes

Holmes has allowed two runs combined over his last three starts, spanning 16.0 innings.

Which Cardinals player will be a thorn in the Mets' side?

Lars Nootbaar

Nootbaar has been heating up.

Suns shuffle front office, promote Brian Gregory general manager, James Jones becomes senior advisor

Rumors swirled that Suns' owner Mat Ishbia was going big game hunting for a new general manager, targeting former Warriors lead decision-maker Bob Myers among others. In the end, he stayed in house.

Phoenix has promoted Brian Greggory to general manager (he had been vice president of player programming), the team announced Thursday. Current GM James Jones has been kicked upstairs and given the title of "Senior Advisor."

“Brian has been a valuable member of our front office, playing an integral role in drafting and developing our young players,” Ishbia said in a statement. “I am excited for him to step into the role of general manager. He is a brilliant basketball mind, and he will transform and elevate our team.”

Gregory joined the Suns in 2023 after spending nearly two decades as a head coach in the college ranks, most notably with the University of South Florida. He also was the head coach at Georgia Tech and the University of Dayton (where he won the NIT Championship). His connection to Ishbia stems from his role as an assistant coach under Tom Izzo at Michigan State from 1999 to 2003, when Ishbia was a walk-on with the team. In addition, Oronde Taliaferro has been promoted to assistant general manager (from head of scouting) and Paul Rivers will add basketball operations responsibilities to his role as Chief Innovation Officer.

Gregory steps right into the fire — he is now the face of a massive roster overhaul, retooling the team around Devin Booker.

That has to start with finding an identity, something the Suns have lacked on and off the court in recent years. What kind of team are the Suns going to build around Booker?

Part of that identity is finding a new coach, who will be the team's fourth since Ishbia purchased the team in 2023. The Suns fired Mike Budenholzer after one very disappointing season, one in which he did not connect with the players and Phoenix missed even the play-in tournament.

It is expected that Gregory will work with Kevin Durant and his representatives to find the future Hall of Famer a new home, seeking a trade that benefits everyone. The challenge is the market for to be 37-year-old will not bring back the haul that Phoenix will want. The Suns also will attempt to trade Bradley Beal.

It's a lot on Gregory's plate, and Ishbia will still be hands-on, but the former college head coach is now the face of the Suns' latest rebuild.

Littler gets better of Van Gerwen to win record fifth Premier League night

  • Teenager triumphs 6-4 in Birmingham final
  • ‘I am very confident I will finish top of the table’

Luke Littler fought back to see off Michael van Gerwen 6-4 to win night 13 of the Premier League in Birmingham, setting a new record with a fifth overall evening victory of the season.

Littler, the world champion, had beaten Stephen Bunting 6-5 in the opening quarter-final at the Utilita Arena, leaving Bunting still bottom of the table, before also edging past Nathan Aspinall in a last-leg decider.

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Report: Former Penguins Coach Mike Sullivan Closing In On 'Rich' Contract With Rangers

Nov 30, 2024; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins head coach Mike Sullivan (rear) reacts on the bench against the Calgary Flames during the third period at PPG Paints Arena. (Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images)

After parting ways with the Pittsburgh Penguins on Monday, it was clear that former head coach Mike Sullivan was going to be in high demand.

And it appears he may have already landed his next gig.

According to a joint report by ESPN's Emily Kaplan and Kevin Weekes, the New York Rangers are in "advanced contract talks" to name Sullivan the 38th coach in franchise history.

In addition, the contract is allegedly one of the "richest" coaching contracts in NHL history. 

A native of Boston, Sullivan, 57, became the head coach of the Penguins in December of 2015. He led Pittsburgh to back-to-back Stanley Cup championships in 2016 and 2017, and he departed Pittsburgh a decade later as the winningest coach in franchise history with 409 regular season victories - as well as 44 playoff wins. 

Things Are Reportedly Getting Close And Trending Toward Mike Sullivan Becoming The Rangers' CoachThings Are Reportedly Getting Close And Trending Toward Mike Sullivan Becoming The Rangers' CoachThe New York Rangers appear very close to hiring their next head coach. 

The Rangers missed the playoffs this season as the reigning President's Trophy winners, falling short of expectations in every discernible way with an 11th-place Eastern Conference finish and six points out of the final wild card spot.

They finished the season 39-36-7 and fired former head coach Peter Laviolette following the conclusion of the regular season.

8 Possible Replacements For Mike Sullivan As Penguins Head Coach8 Possible Replacements For Mike Sullivan As Penguins Head CoachWith the shocking news that the Pittsburgh Penguins and longtime coach Mike Sullivan have mutually agreed to part ways, it comes as no surprise that one of the first talking points is who will be the one replace him.

Bookmark THN - Pittsburgh Penguins on your Google News tab to follow the latest Penguins news, roster moves, player features, and more!      

Mets Notes: Kodai Senga pitches through illness, decision to not use Edwin Diaz explained

The Mets dropped their first home series since last season after their 4-2 loss to the Diamondbacks on Thursday afternoon at Citi Field. After the game, manager Carlos Mendoza and the players spoke about the game and other topics...


Kodai Senga catches the bug

The Mets have had a stomach virus go through their locker room these last few days -- the same one that knocked Brandon Nimmo out -- and Senga was not immune.

The right-hander caught the bug and his start on Thursday was up in the air until the day prior when he told the team he was feeling better.

"He’s one of the guys with the same virus," Mendoza said after the game. "A couple of days ago, we didn’t know if he was going to be able to throw his bullpen. He ended up getting an IV, threw his bullpen, sent him home. Yesterday he felt a lot better. 

"We didn’t know until yesterday. He came in and said he was good to go tomorrow. Obviously, today he got an IV and he gave us what he had."

Senga gutted through just four innings (87 pitches/50 strikes) on Thursday afternoon. He allowed one run on five hits and three walks while striking out six batters.

Two innings got him, the second and the fourth, when the Diamondbacks got traffic on the bases, but Senga worked out of trouble. After the game, Senga, visibly tired, spoke about his outing and how he's feeling.

"Not great, but I made the decision to go out there and pitch," Senga said through an interpreter. "So as a starter, I wanted to go six-plus innings."

In the loss, Senga's four innings were the third-shortest start of his career, but he did extend his streak of not allowing more than two earned runs to 14 starts, which dates back to August 2023.

Apr 17, 2025; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets relief pitcher Edwin Diaz (39) enters the field during the ninth inning against the St. Louis Cardinals at Citi Field.
Apr 17, 2025; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets relief pitcher Edwin Diaz (39) enters the field during the ninth inning against the St. Louis Cardinals at Citi Field. / Vincent Carchietta - Imagn Images

Decision not to use Edwin Diaz

Mendoza has mostly pushed the right buttons this season, but Thursday was the second consecutive game he elected not to bring in Diaz with his team behind in the later innings.

On Wednesday, the decision resulted in Chris Devenski -- in his second inning of work -- allowing two runs, which were enough to ice the game away. In Thursday's game, Mendoza had a similar decision to make. Entering the ninth inning, and the Mets down 3-2, he elected to keep Reed Garrett in instead of use Diaz who was warmed up.

Garrett allowed a solo homer, and that wound up being the final run scored in the game. Mendoza was asked about that decision after the loss and echoed the same sentiments pregame, that he wasn't going to "chase" wins so early.

"You’re talking about two high-leverage guys. Once Garrett got out of that eighth inning pitch efficient, you’re chasing," Mendoza explained. "I thought ‘he’s pretty good too.’ I decided to stay with him. And he gave up the homer. That’s all to it."

The home run Garrett allowed was the first earned run he's given up all season.

Mendoza was then asked if Diaz was fine physically, and the Mets skipper said he was.

"He got up yesterday," he said. "If it was tied [then], today, if it was tied or better, he was going to come into the games."

Diaz last pitched Saturday, April 26, against the Nationals.

Jose Ureña elects free agency

The 33-year-old Ureña was designated for assignment by the Mets earlier this week, and despite clearing waivers, he elected free agency instead of accepting an outright assignment to the minors, per MLB.com's Anthony DiComo.

Ureña pitched one game for the Mets back on April 28 against the Nationals. In that game, he allowed five runs on seven hits and one walk across three innings but did come away with the save because of the Mets' massive 19-5 win.

Premier League: 10 things to look out for this weekend

City will be wary of a resurgent Wolves, Graham Potter needs a derby win and Roméo Lavia is vital to Chelsea

Six straight wins in a run of seven unbeaten has lifted Wolves to 13th. Now Vítor Pereira’s side pose a problem that Manchester City must solve as the latter chase maximum points from their last four games in the race for Champions League qualification. Pep Guardiola’s side are unbeaten in the last eight in all competitions and buoyed up by last Sunday’s reaching of a third successive FA Cup final, so this should be a close one. Keep an eye out for Guardiola potentially having a complimentary word with Matheus Cunha, as is his habit when coming up against a high-class opposition player. Jamie Jackson

Manchester City v Wolves, Friday 8pm (all times BST)

Aston Villa v Fulham, Saturday 12.30pm

Everton v Ipswich Town, Saturday 3pm

Leicester City v Southampton, Saturday 3pm

Arsenal v Bournemouth, Saturday 5.30pm

Brentford v Manchester United, Sunday 2pm

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Giants eagerly rallying around Verlander in his search for first win

Giants eagerly rallying around Verlander in his search for first win originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — Father Time is undefeated for just about every professional athlete not named Tom Brady.

And while the 42-year-old Justin Verlander has pitched quite well throughout the twilight years of his illustrious MLB career, time is running out to secure one major milestone.

Now in his 20th season, Verlander (262 wins) sits 38 victories away from reaching the exclusive 24-player 300-win club. After signing a one-year contract with the Giants this offseason, Verlander got off to a slow start this season but has excelled in his last three outings, surrendering two or fewer runs over six-plus innings in his last three starts.

Verlander was in line for his first win in a Giants uniform on April 20 after tossing six innings of one-run ball against the Los Angeles Angels before San Francisco’s bullpen blew a 4-1 lead in the bottom of the ninth. He followed up his strong start with a similar outing against the Texas Rangers on April 25 where he, again, allowed one run in six innings of work but received zero runs of support in a 2-0 loss.

That familiar trend continued in the Giants’ 4-3 loss to the Colorado Rockies on Thursday night at Oracle Park, where Verlander (ND, 6 1/3 IP, 5 H, 2 ER, BB, 4 K) once again pitched very well, only for his bullpen to once again blow his opportunity for that first win in Orange and Black.

“I really try and take a long view of this game, it’s really hard when you focus on a small sample size, so I’ve just got to keep trying to pitch well and hopefully a win will come,” Verlander said postgame.

“Look, of course we want to get him his first win, but it’s more importantly just winning the game period,” Giants manager Bob Melvin added. “No matter how you do it. But he pitched well enough to win, he’s done that probably a couple times now, so unfortunately hasn’t gotten that win yet. We’d like to get him one, but a team loss is a team loss.”

Verlander departed with one out in the top of the seventh inning after surrendering a solo home run to Rockies third baseman Ryan McMahon that cut San Francisco’s lead to 3-2.

When Melvin walked out to the mound to pull Verlander, the two had a brief chat that initially appeared to be the veteran righty pleading his case to remain in the game.

That, as the self-aware Verlander revealed after the game, was not the case.

“I just asked him if he took me out because I’m old,” Verlander said with a chuckle postgame.

In fact, Verlander understood his manager’s decision and even admitted that he was not properly prepared to be stretched out for another frame after the Giants’ offense sent seven batters to the plate in a two-run bottom of the sixth.

“The long inning, I might need to make some adjustments here with the cold weather, throw a little bit if we have a long inning like that,” Verlander said. “Kind of had a little difficulty getting loose, so went back out there and didn’t have my best stuff. So live and learn.

“Looking up and my first fastball is 92 [mph] instead of [93-94]. It just wasn’t quite moving as well, gave up a homer. So that’s something I need to make an adjustment to.”

Verlander added that he has no issues pitching in the cold weather, but simply felt he needs to do a better job of staying loose in between long innings.

Despite his mid-inning departure, Verlander still was in line for the win after right-handed reliever Camilo Doval retired the next two batters in the seventh.

However, it was Tyler Rogers, one of the Giants’ most reliable bullpen arms and one of the best relief pitchers in baseball, who spoiled Verlander’s shot at his first win with San Francisco after surrendering two runs in the top of the eighth inning, giving Colorado the 4-3 lead that the Giants’ offense was unable to overcome.

“It kind of stinks to mess up the win for JV, he’s still searching for that first win as a Giant and he’s chasing down a lot of wins,” Rogers shared.

“He’s probably going to the Hall of Fame [regardless of] what we do for him or not. I think that will be something to think about when he does go into the Hall of Fame, like ‘Oh, I was a teammate with him.’ Hopefully we can help him out some more, but to take away a win from any starting pitcher doesn’t feel good. It doesn’t matter if it’s his first or 300th or whatever.”

While a win, and 37 more, certainly would be nice, Verlander just wants to do his part to help the Giants, as a team, notch victories. Regardless of which pitcher has the “W” next to their name in the box score.

“You want to do your part, but also I think you try and look at it like you give your team a chance and if you give your team enough chances the wins will start coming, you go deeper in games, keep a lot of runs off the board,” Verlander added. “Those things just kind of fall in line and start happening.

“We’re sitting here talking about it, it’s just been unfortunate, our bullpen’s been phenomenal all season. Unfortunately, just a couple starts for me, but that’s baseball. You can’t sit here and be like ‘woe is me,’ you’ve got a bunch of teammates and you’ve got to trust each other. And we do.”

That first win in a Giants uniform will come. So will others. Will he notch enough in 2025 and beyond to join the exclusive club? That remains to be seen.

However, if one thing is certain, it’s that Verlander will do everything in his power to put his team in the best position to win. And if he’s successful in doing so, he more often than not will be awarded accordingly.

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