New England coach McDermott backs Connor and criticises Wane’s ‘unfair’ treatment

  • Super League Man of Steel central to World Cup plans

  • McDermott: ‘We can win it; absolutely we can win it’

Brian McDermott, the new England head coach, has insisted that Super League’s reigning Man of Steel, Jake Connor, is central to his plans for this year’s World Cup, before appearing to attack the treatment of the Leeds Rhinos half-back by his predecessor Shaun Wane.

McDermott was unveiled on Thursday as England’s coach on a short-term deal for the tournament in Australia this autumn. The former Leeds and London coach is now working in the NRL as an assistant for Gold Coast Titans and saw off competition from Sam Burgess to be named as Wane’s successor.

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De’Anthony Melton’s expected free agent market may lead to his leaving Warriors

SACRAMENTO, CA - APRIL 10: De'Anthony Melton #8 and Gary Payton II #0 of the Golden State Warriors look on during the game against the Sacramento Kings on April 10, 2026 at Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, 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 Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Rocky Widner/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

One of the best value contracts on the Warriors last season was De’Anthony Melton, who averaged 12.3 points and 1.6 steals in 49 games, for just under $3.1M. After proving he’d recovered nicely from his ACL tear early in the 2024-25 season, a Warriors insider suggested that Melton will have teams planning to offer him more than a one-year minimum deal.

Melton signed with the Warriors for $12.8M before the 2024-25 season, but suffered an ACL tear in his sixth game with the team. The team traded him for Dennis Schroder, then flipped Schroder in the trade for Jimmy Butler, while Melton spent the season rehabbing. He came back to Golden State on a make-good minimum contract, eventually debuting on Dec. 4.

He made good. Melton played 49 out of 60 games since his return, mainly due to sitting out one half of their back-to-backs. His outside shooting was pretty bad, going 29.4% from three-point range, but some of his shooting decline was due to having to shoot off the dribble and create his own shot more when the Warriors stars were out. Melton has been an excellent role player for some very good teams, the Memphis Grizzlies and Philadelphia 76ers, and last season indicated he could do it again.

At the very least, Melton should be able to get a two-year deal at the taxpayer mid-level exception, which would be roughly twice the years and twice the money of his 2026-27 player option.

Does that mean he’ll leave the Warriors? Honestly, the only player who seems certain to be a member of the 2026-27 Warriors is Wardell Stephen Curry. While the Warriors would probably love to have Melton back, their may be a limit to what they’d love to pay him.

Melton would probably love to get more financial security. The Warriors may no longer be in a position to offer that, nor can they entice veterans with the chance to compete for titles. Or, realistically, the chance to compete for guaranteed playoff seeds. If a quality role player wants to take a discount for a real shot at playing not one, but two play-in tournament games? Then welcome to the Chase Center!

Golden State already has a lot of free-agent decisions to make on players ranging from Kristaps Porzingis to Gui Santos to Gary Payton II. All signs are pointing to Melton joining that uncertain group.

Anthony Mantha is making the Penguins decision easy for them

Apr 20, 2026; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Flyers goaltender Dan Vladar (80) makes a save as Pittsburgh Penguins right wing Anthony Mantha (39) looks for a rebound during the third period in game two of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at PPG Paints Arena. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images | Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

There is not any one player or person that is responsible for the Pittsburgh Penguins 3-0 series deficit. It has been a well-earned, collective group effort that everybody has to own. The Penguins have allowed themselves to get suckered into Philadelphia’s game, there is little discipline, they are not in any way adapting to what the Flyers are doing defensively, and Dan Muse has not exactly covered himself in glory in his first big moment on the big stage.

But of all the players that have come up small in this series so far, Anthony Mantha might be one of the most obvious.

It might also be making whatever decision the Penguins have to make with him this summer a lot easier for them.

Coming into the playoffs, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman made mention that Mantha might be one of the most watched players in these playoffs (and that almost certainly includes the Penguins), and it’s not hard to understand why there would be so much interest in him.

He led the team with 33 goals and put together a career year.

He is an unrestricted free agent this summer and is going to be one of the top players available, at least in terms of production this season, in a painfully shallow pool of players.

A big postseason showing, on the heels of that regular season performance, would have certainly opened some eyes across the league. It would have also opened checkbooks.

While you shouldn’t let small sample sizes drive your team-building decisions, the harsh reality is teams put a lot of weight on what you do in the playoffs. Or sometimes what you do not do in the playoffs.

And the latter point is what is going to be the problem for Mantha.

He entered this year’s postseason having scored 0 goals in 14 career playoff games.

He has now played 17 career playoff games and is still stuck on zero goals, while being a complete non-factor in the first three games of the series.

Making matters worse, he took one of the costliest — and most easily avoidable — penalties in recent Penguins playoff history when he inexplicably launched the puck from the defensive zone into the stands over the team’s bench. It was not only a bad penalty to take just because it is such an avoidable play, but also because of the timing. There were only eight minutes remaining in the game. The Penguins were still trailing by a goal, had just scored to make it a one-goal game, and were starting to tilt the ice a little bit. There was some momentum building.

And then it was gone.

And then Philadelphia responded with a power play goal to put the game, and maybe the series, back out of reach.

Given the context of the entire situation, it was just a brutal play.

Mantha was never meant to be a long-term answer for the Penguins when they signed him this past offseason. The plan was almost certainly for him to get put somewhere in the top-six, build up his value by chipping in some goals for a rebuilding team, and then get dealt at the trade deadline for a second-round pick. But both he and the Penguins threw a wrench into that plan. The Penguins by being better than expected and making the playoffs, and Mantha by being their top goal-scorer, with several of them coming in big moments.

As the Penguins inched closer to a playoff spot, and he kept producing, there was no chance they were going to move him in-season.

That eventually led to discussion of a possible extension, especially given the lack of quality free agents on the open market and the amount of salary cap space the Penguins have available to them.

But it’s hard to imagine this performance is making anybody in the Penguins front office excited about the idea of re-investing him, especially given the way this series has played out. It’s almost certainly hurting his standing in the eyes of fans.

Is that a valid response to a three game sample size?

Or is it an overreaction given how good the season as a whole went?

Maybe a little of both. But at some point the Penguins do need to find a way to get younger and faster, and a 32-year-old winger with an injury history that’s been a non-factor in the playoffs, and is probably unlikely to repeat his regular season performance, doesn’t seem to be the way to do that.

I don’t blame the Penguins for not trading him in March, and I am not going to criticize them for that decision. Given the way the season played out and the way expectations changed, it was the right move. The initial signing itself has also been an obvious win. But it might be best to just leave it at that. The tough decision they had this summer is not looking as tough as it did a couple of weeks ago.

Game 26 Preview: Tigers turn to Skubal to clinch series vs Brewers

The Detroit Tigers managed to bounce back in the second game of their weekday series against the Milwaukee Brewers, earning a 5-2 win behind a strong outing by Casey Mize and Spencer Torkelson’s first home run of the 2026 campaign.

Kenley Jansen made things a bit too exciting in the final frame, giving the fans some José Valverde vibes, but alas, the Motor City Kitties tied things up, setting up Thursday’s rubber match at Comerica Park.

Looking to clinch the series win, Detroit has left-handed ace Tarik Skubal taking the mound. The twice-consecutive Cy Young Award winner last faced Milwaukee on April 14, 2025, throwing seven shutout innings, allowing four hits and no walks while striking out nine in a 9-1 win.

Opposite him is second-year hurler Brandon Sproat, a right-hander who has only thrown 37 2/3 MLB innings so far in his young career, putting up a 5.73 ERA, 1.71 WHIP and a 4.36 FIP over that stretch. Thursday night’s start will be his first-ever appearance against the Tigers.

Take a look below at how the two match up.

Detroit Tigers (13-12) vs. Milwaukee Brewers (13-10)

Time (ET): 1:10 p.m.
Place: Comerica Park, Detroit, Michigan
SB Nation Site:Brew Crew Ball
Media: Detroit SportsNetMLB.TVTigers Radio Network

Game 26: LHP Tarik Skubal (3-2, 2.08 ERA) vs. RHP Brandon Sproat (0-1, 6.88 ERA)

PlayerGIPK%BB%GB%FIPfWAR
Skubal530.128.05.142.92.071.1
Sproat417.021.614.937.86.25-0.3

SKUBAL

SPROAT

Kentucky Football and Will Stein face MLB Draft hurdle for 4-star QB Matt Ponatoski

matt ponatoski
Moeller senior Matt Ponatoski prepares for a pitch as Moeller defeated Ryle 12-2 in the River Cup during the Skyline Chili Reds Futures Showcase March 29, 2026, at Sycamore High School. | James Weber/The Enquirer / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Will Stein and Nick Mingione have been working in tandem to map out just how 4-star quarterback Matt Ponatoski can play baseball and football at Kentucky.

There is just one massive, unavoidable hurdle standing in the way of getting Ponatoski, who has already signed, to campus: the MLB Draft.

The generational profile of Matt Ponatoski

Ponatoski’s resume is the stuff of legend. He was named Mr. Football in Ohio for the 2024 season and was a finalist again in 2025. He also swept the Gatorade Player of the Year awards in both baseball and football for the 2025 season.

He signed early with Kentucky once Will Stein replaced Mark Stoops, locking him in as a possible QB of the future. But when you possess the kind of raw talent Ponatoski does, the lure of turning professional straight out of high school is incredibly strong.

Just how elite is his baseball profile? When he stepped onto the diamond for a recent Perfect Game showcase, scouts tested his arm strength across the infield. Ponatoski unleashed an absolute heater that was clocked at 101 MPH. For context, that is the type of arm strength usually reserved for elite MLB superstars like the Reds’ Elly De La Cruz, except Elly is 24 years old, and Matt is just 18.

The mindset and the money

Currently, MLB scouts are weighing the risk of Ponatoski’s football commitment against his undeniable baseball ceiling. In a recent ESPN mini-mock draft from April 17, Ponatoski was projected to go at No. 69 overall. Factoring in compensation and competitive balance additions, that projection places him as a borderline second-round pick.

For Ponatoski, the decision is a win-win scenario, but it requires serious deliberation.

“I’m going to be fully prepared to go to school and go be at Kentucky and enroll and go compete for a quarterback battle when I get there,” Ponatoski recently said regarding his thought process. “But at the same time, like going and putting my best foot forward to these MLB teams and showing them like I have what it takes for you to draft me.”

“It’s one A and one B,” he continued. “I’m going to go have a great career at Kentucky, or I’m going to go be a professional baseball player. It’s like you can’t draw it up much better.”

Financially, the playing field is surprisingly level. A second-round slot value in the MLB Draft usually guarantees a signing bonus between $1 million and $2 million. In the modern NIL landscape, a 4-star SEC quarterback of his caliber will command a very similar valuation if he decides to honor his commitment to Kentucky.

The timeline

Ultimately, the decision will come down to how MLB front offices evaluate him. If a team falls in love with his 101 MPH arm and he creeps into the first round, the guaranteed money will likely pull him to the minor leagues. If he remains a second or third-round evaluation, returning to Lexington makes all the sense in the world.

The stakes are high because of MLB Draft eligibility rules. If Ponatoski enrolls at a four-year university like Kentucky, he is locked into the college ranks and cannot enter the MLB Draft again until after his junior year or until he turns 21, whichever comes first.

He is currently not on campus and plans to join the football team in the fall if he chooses the collegiate route. The MLB Draft takes place from July 11-12 in Philadelphia. After being selected, Ponatoski will have to choose to either sign or go to college. He may also let teams know ahead of time that he is going to college, so no one drafts him. Either way, we will finally know if Kentucky’s dual-sport dream will become a reality soon.

Can Cam Schlittler surpass the hype tonight?

NEW YORK, NY - APRIL 17: Cam Schlittler #31 of the New York Yankees looks on before the game against the Kansas City Royals at Yankee Stadium on April 17, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Yankees have stormed Fenway and taken their first series meeting with the Red Sox, and now they stand on the precipice of opening the season series up with a sweep. Their pitching has kept the Sox shut down thus far, tossing a shutout in the first game and allowing a single run in the ninth inning of game two. While the two teams have been on different trajectories to start the year, this matchup has only furthered the gap with a chance to punt them further down into the cellar of the AL East.

Now the baton passes over to Cam Schlittler to get the job done, and while it’s nowhere near the same scenario as the last time he lined up against them there’s a familiar vibe to this start. Schlittler was the man most responsible for ending Boston’s season last year, pitching eight shutout innings in Game 3 of the AL Wild Card Series and striking out a dozen batters in the process. This time around the Sox aren’t dead in the water if they lose, but a poor April can doom a team in this division especially when you tip the season series heavily in the favor of a team that you know you’ll be chasing all year. They certainly can’t be thrilled that they’re facing the young phenom here in this moment, even if the thought of revenge is on most of their batters’ minds.

That outing was by far the highlight of Schlittler’s 2025 season, as he delivered a generational postseason performance for the Yankees’ staff. He was excellent in his regular season starts, earning his way into the circle of trust for an October outing in the first place despite debuting midway through the year, but no one could have expected him to go out and carve up Boston. Now the expectations have heightened considerably for him in his sophomore season, and he’s somehow managing to deliver. He’s the owner of a sparkling 1.95 ERA thus far, but his FIP is even more outstanding at 0.87 — that’s the kind of potential that the Yankees haven’t seen out of a pitching prospect in ages, and it’s coming closer to fruition with each successful start. Add onto that how down-trodden the Sox currently look offensively, and there’s a perfect storm building for the brooms to kick up a lot of dust as they get brought out.

Baseball rarely plays to expectations, though. The better a team plays, the more surprising the random pitfalls that they go through become. And even the best teams are going to drop dozens of games that make you scratch your head and wonder “how did they lose that?” So with the stage set for Schlittler to take it to his hometown team once more, will he live up to that hype? Can he manage to beat it even? Or will the Sox protect their pride and answer back, adding another page into this chapter of the rivalry?


Today on the site, we’ve got a full schedule leading up to the series finale. Peter starts us off by looking at Luis Gil’s recent stellar outing against the Sox for the Sequence of the Week, and then I’ll handle the Rivalry Roundup. Jeff wishes newly-minted Hall of Famer Andruw Jones a happy birthday and reminisces on his playing career, John muses on the modern bullpen building methods that the Yankees have deployed, Kento considers the recent wave of early extensions that teams have been handing out and how it tempers the ability to rely on free agent retooling, and Peter returns to examine the resurgence of the sinker in the Yankee organization.

Today’s Matchup

New York Yankees at Boston Red Sox

Time: 6:10 p.m. EST

Video: YES Network, NESN+, FS1

Venue: Fenway Park, Boston, MA

Pens Points: Not Great

PHILADELPHIA , PA - APRIL 22: Pittsburgh Penguins right wing Bryan Rust #17 attempts to step on Philadelphia Flyers right wing Travis Konecny #11 during game three of the Stanley Cup Playoffs First Round between the Philadelphia Flyers and the Pittsburg Penguins on April 22nd, 2026 at the Xfinity Mobile Arena in Philadelphia, PA. (Photo by Terence Lewis/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Needing a win to avoid going down 0-3 in the series, the Pittsburgh Penguins struck first on Wednesday night for their first lead of the series, but three second period goals from the Philadelphia Flyers erased that deficit and the Penguins subsequently came apart at the seams in what turned out to be a 5-2 loss in Game 3 and had the Penguins staring down a possible first round sweep at the hands of their cross-state rival. [Pensburgh]

If the Penguins hope to avoid an embarrassing sweep, they will need to win Game 4 which is scheduled for Saturday evening back in Philadelphia.

Pens Points…

It’s not a roster move that had any effect on Game 3 between the Penguins and Flyers last night, but goaltender Sergei Murashov was recalled from the AHL to serve as the third netminder on the roster with the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins being off until their playoff series begins next week. [The Hockey News]

NHL News and Notes…

Roope Hintz remained out for the Dallas Stars in Game 3 of their first round series with the Minnesota Wild and all signs point to Hintz also being out for Game 4 on Saturday. Since sustaining a lower-body injury back on March 6th, Hintz has not played or even skated at practice for the Stars. [NHL]

Battle of Penn at the brink, North Star battle goes to OT

One of the many uniforms… | Getty Images

Wednesday night was another fun one in the first round of the NHL playoffs.

  • The Battle of Pennsylvania continued to inflict much-deserved pain on Pittsburgh, as the Penguins fell behind 3-0 in their series with the Flyers after a wild sequence where every skater on the ice was sent to the box early in the second period.
  • The Battle for North Stars History continued between the 3rd-overall Dallas Stars and 7th-overall Minnesota Wild, extending deep into double overtime before the Stars converted on their second 2OT power play opportunity (this, after the Wild whiffed on two power plays in the first OT).
  • Meanwhile, the Ducks got on the board to even their series with the Oilers after a 6-4 win over Edmonton where Connor McDavid was held pointless.

Thursday Night

Meanwhile, Thursday night the Bridgeport Islanders are in Hershey hoping to extend their mini-series after dropping Game 1 at home, 2-0.

  • Here’s Andrew Gross’ piece on Long Island fans heading to Bridgeport to take them in one last time. [Newsday]
  • Speaking of the Isles’ AHL affiliate, they’ve filed for some trademark options for the team in Hamilton. [THN]

And in the NHL, there are three games Thursday with the Bruins and Sabres knotted at 1-1, while the Hurricanes-Senators (2-0) and Avalanche-Kings (2-0) switch venues with the trailing teams at home hoping to stay in the series.

Cavs have a plan for keeping Jaylon Tyson informed about Jordyn during NFL Draft

ATLANTA, GA - APRIL 10: Jaylon Tyson #20 of the Cleveland Cavaliers shoots the ball during the game against the Atlanta Hawks on April 10, 2026 at State Farm Arena in Atlanta, Georgia. 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 Adam Hagy/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

INDEPENDENCE — Brothers Jaylon and Jordyn Tyson have a friendly wager on whether Jordyn will be a top-10 NFL Draft pick. Unfortunately, Jaylon won’t be able to go to the draft or even watch it on TV live to find out who wins the bet. The Cleveland Cavaliers take on the Toronto Raptors at the same time the Draft is set to start.

The Cavs can’t let Jaylon watch the start of the draft, but they are working on a plan to keep him updated on what’s happening.

“We’re going to make sure he gets the news somehow,” head coach Kenny Atkinson said after practice on Wednesday. “I know it’s the playoffs and all, but that’s your family and your brother. So we’re going to get that to him.”

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We’ll see where Jordyn ends up going in the draft. Many see him as the best wide receiver in this year’s draft class. ESPN’s latest mock draft has him landing in the fifth spot with the New York Giants. However, there’s speculation that he may fall down the board due to some injury concerns.

Although Jaylon doesn’t see a fall happening. He’s been steadfast in his belief that Jordyn is going to go high.

“JT has been telling me he’s a top-10 pick, so I’m going with that,” Atkinson said. “That would be awesome.”

Jaylon is expected to have a big role in Game 3 for the Cavs. Atkinson thinks that Tyson has played well in the minutes he’s gotten in the first two games of the opening round series and believes that he will have a breakout game. It’s not a matter of if, just a matter of when.

“I told him today he’s next up,” Atkinson said. “Max had that big game, core four had their big games. [Next] it’s going to be Jaylon Tyson. I can almost guarantee that he’s going to have one of those games.”

Living legend Max Scherzer says playing piano saved Hall of Fame career

It has been Max Scherzer’s extraordinary talent, work ethic and health that have put him in rarified air, but it was a simple piano session that has enabled him to go where only 10 men have ever gone in baseball history.

Scherzer, scheduled to start Friday for the Toronto Blue Jays against the Cleveland Guardians, needs just one strikeout to become only the second pitcher to eclipse 3,500 strikeouts in the past 24 years. He is just 11 strikeouts shy of passing legendary Walter Johnson to crack the top-10 in baseball history.

“The cool thing is I really appreciate the history of this game, and it’s been played for over 100 years," Scherzer, 41, told USA TODAY Sports. “When you can kind of connect the eras, and have an accomplishment that only so many guys have gotten to that number, it’s humbling.’’

While Nolan Ryan is the all-time strikeout leader with 5,714, the only player to eclipse the 3,500-strikeout barrier since Hall of Famer Randy Johnson in 2002 is Scherzer’s former Detroit Tigers and New York Mets teammate, Justin Verlander. He accomplished the feat last September with the San Francisco Giants, and has 55 more strikeouts than Scherzer while pitching 92 more innings.

Max Scherzer stats are astounding

There are only four pitchers in history who have struck out at least 4,000 batters: Ryan (5,714), Randy Johnson (4,875), Roger Clemens (4,672) and Steve Carlton (4,136). Scherzer doesn’t plan to hang around that long, but passing Walter Johnson (3,509) on the all-time strikeout list is mind-boggling to him.

“Passing Walter Johnson, the Big Train, everyone knows who that is," Scherzer said. “You just appreciate the game where it was, where it is now, and where it’s going to be. It’s pretty special.’’

And to think, without sitting down and learning how to play the piano again last July at his rental Toronto condo, he might be sitting home with his wife and four kids in Jupiter, Flaorida these days, retired from the game.

Scherzer says that twice last year he was one more missed start, or even a missed bullpen session, from taking off his uniform for the final time.

Simply, Scherzer was exasperated, believing his inflamed right thumb would never allow him to again be an effective starter. He thought the thumb might have been the root of his strained right teres major muscle in 2023, and his shoulder fatigue that sidelined him for six weeks in the second half of 2024.

“In the offseason, I tried every grip strength I could to try to address it,’’ Scherzer said, “and I thought I did. But as soon as the [2025] season started, it blew right back on me."

He made one start in 2025, was back on the injured list for three months, and came oh so close to calling it a career before sitting down at that piano.

“I was drowning last year with my thumb injury," Scherzer said. “I tried every grip strength exercise I could to address it, but would pitch with pain, but every time I would pitch with pain, I would blow out my shoulder. So, it was definitely a career-threatening injury that I had going on."

Scherzer, the eight-time All-Star, three-time Cy Young winner and two-time World Series champion with a career 222-119 record, was beyond frustrated when he decided to sit down at the piano. He took lessons as a kid, but decided to brush up on his skills with a few notes, keys and chords, just to ease his mind.

“I was just trying to get my kids to play the piano," Scherzer said. “All right, I’ve got to learn a few songs to teach them now to play the piano. And when I did that, I noticed, oh, my fingers are sore from playing the piano. And I go pitch, and I’m like, “Wait a minute, my thumb’s better.

“I played a little bit more, played more with the kids, and my hand’s even better. I’m like, 'Oh my gosh, did I finally figure this out?’ So I chased it. I tried to play as long as I can, and my fingers are really sore in between starts. Then, I get back out there, and my thumb pain was gone."

Scherzer couldn’t believe it. He made 12 starts in the second half, and when the Blue Jays needed him the most, was 1-0 with a 3.76 ERA in the ALCS and the World Series.

It still boggles his mind that after all of the strength exercises, treatment and cortisone shots, it was a piano that has kept his career alive.

“I mean, I had tried everything,’’ he said. “Every treatment, you name it, and this is what worked."

Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Max Scherzer reacts against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field.

“I have to play the piano if I want to keep pitching'

It’s not like the folks at the "New England Journal of Medicine" will be asking for Scherzer’s thoughts any time soon, but for all the trainers and medical staff that MLB teams employ, well, this could be a chapter for their books.

“Why it works is because playing the piano is making you work through your fingertips,’’ Scherzer said. “So, all of the grip strength exercises that we do goes through more of the palm of your hand and up higher. I needed my finger tips for the lower part of my hand. So, playing the piano was giving me a lot of finger strength.

“It’s like no one wants to run for five miles, but if you can play basketball and get the same conditioning, you’ll do it. Same thing here. I’m doing something I can have with, and it’s a challenge to figure out how to play."

Nowadays, the portable keyboard travels wherever Scherzer goes. When Blue Jays manager John Schneider was talking to reporters in his visiting office at Chase Field last week, the sounds of Scherzer could be heard through the walls. He was playing Dr. Dre’s “Still D.R.E.,” Eminem’s “Lose Yourself,” Meek Mill’s “Dreams and Nightmares," and a little bit of the intro to Kanye West’s “Heartless,” too.

“I have to play the piano," Scherzer said, “if I want to keep pitching. If I don’t do it, my thumb issue will come right back."

So, Scherzer will play at least three or four times a week, an hour or two at a time. He doesn’t know how to read music yet, but has learned by watching YouTube tutorials with a blend of  “Guitar Hero.” He’ll play in his hotel room, hotel lobbies, the clubhouse, or even the team plane.

His wife, Erica, is playing the piano, too, along with his kids. Blue Jays catcher Alejandro Kirk, who’s on the injured list with a fractured and dislocated thumb, says he’s even willing to give it a go.

“I’m trying to get him to learn some [Eddie] Van Halen," Schneider said.

In the meantime, Scherzer has more strikeout victims in his path. He grew up in the St. Louis area, and was a diehard Cardinals fan who idolized the legend of Gibson. He was in awe of Johnson, Pedro Martinez and John Smoltz as a young pitcher, all who are enshrined in Cooperstown.

Now, his name will be in the same conversation as those strikeout greats.

“Growing up in St. Louis, I’ll always have a bias towards Gibson," Scherzer said. “I’ve gotten to appreciate how good Tom Seaver was. And to see Nolan Ryan have 5,700 strikeouts is just unbelievable. What an iron horse.

“So, to be on the same list of those guys, I can’t even describe it."

And, to think, if not for the assistance of a mere piano, being one of baseball’s top-10 strikeout artists would never be a reality.

“Amazing," Scherzer said, “what a piano is doing for my career."

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Blue Jays' Max Scherzer says piano saved his Hall of Fame career

The Celtics have a Game 2 problem

Apr 21, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston Celtics guard Jaylen Brown (7) drives tot he basket against Philadelphia 76ers forward Paul George (8) in the second half of a game two of the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at TD Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brian Fluharty-Imagn Images | Brian Fluharty-Imagn Images

It’s impossible not to think back to the unprecedented shooting bombardment Boston endured in a Game 2 loss to the Miami Heat in the opening round of the 2024 playoffs, which will have happened two years to the day when the Celtics travel to Philadelphia for Game 3 of their current first round matchup. 

On that night, the Heat, after a 20-point loss in Game 1 and without Jimmy Butler for the entire series, hit a franchise playoff record 23 3-pointers, running away from a Celtics team led by Jaylen Brown’s 33 points that got the deficit down to as close as six points late in the fourth quarter before the Heat slammed the door shut. 

“It seemed we couldn’t get them to miss,” Brown said after that game. “They made a lot of shots that usually we’re comfortable with.”

In the end, it was a small divergence from a 5-game series where Boston smacked Miami in every other game, but we’ve seen it before and we’ve seen it since: the Celtics have lacked comfort as hosts in Game 2.  

Among their last eight Game 2s at home, they’re now 3-5, with frustrating displays against Cleveland in 2024 (118-94), New York last year (91-90) and now, against an Embiid-less Sixers, who shot 49% on 19 made threes and were led by a VJ Edgecombe 30-point, 10-rebound performance that hasn’t happened since Tim Duncan’s rookie year in 1998. TIM DUNCAN.

Between Boston’s own shooting misfires (they were 13/50 from beyond the arc), a deep drop coverage that opened the door for Edgecombe and Tyrese Maxey to fire pull up threes at will, and Philly’s own defensive adjustments that shut the door on a paint that Boston had previously owned, the Celtics often looked unrecognizable from the team we’ve seen this season. 

Even as they cut the deficit to two with 6:25 left to play, the Celtics, already with the slowest pace in the league, spun their wheels deeper and deeper into a muddy rut, and in this area of the game in particular, the Sixers do deserve credit for putting more foot traffic in the middle of the floor.

Though the first quarter indicated more of the same from the Celtics after they attacked Philly’s weak point-of-attack defense in Game 1, the 76ers started to send more help defenders into pick-and-roll actions, while playing their bigs up-to-level and pushing pickup points farther out from the 3-point line. 

Simply put, they made the Celtics work when they wanted to drive.

The Celtics took 22 shot attempts with a shot clock of seven seconds or lower on Tuesday night, shooting just 5/21 (24%) on those possessions. That’s 24% of their shots for the entire game that came with the clock winding down. 

On the other end, two days after hitting just four 3-pointers for an entire game, the Sixers looked way too comfortable shooting the ball, most evident in their shooting around screens. 

Nearly a third of Philly’s shots were from 24 feet or deeper. Of Philly’s 90 shots for the game, 47 were considered either open (4-6 feet of space) or wide open (6+ feet of space), and they shot 55% on those attempts.

It often felt like after a sluggish shooting night in Game 1, the Celtics dared the Sixers to beat them from deep rather than give up space in the paint for Maxey or Edgecombe to accelerate into, and the Sixers happily obliged.

It was a gamble that didn’t pay off. 

When the Celtics did bring Queta closer to the action at the end of the game, the results still weren’t promising.

“That’s the low-hanging fruit to look at,” Joe Mazzulla said of Philly’s 3-point shooting. “It starts with the stuff that we can control.”  

Mazzulla pointed to pick-and-roll positioning and the timing and level of their defensive shifts as adjustments to make it harder on Philly to generate open looks. 

Of the three most recent Game 2 losses the Celtics have endured after a win (Miami 2024, Cleveland 2024 and now Philadelphia 2026), they’d entered that night by winning their series openers by an average of 25.7 points.

Pure and utter dominance, right out of the gate.

For it to follow with uncharacteristic shooting execution both from them and against them is a tough pill to swallow for this group, but in a more hopeful outlook for Friday, they’ve gone 4-1 in their last five Game 3s that followed a loss.

The Sixers landed a big punch across the jaw to split their games on the road, and now we’ll get to see exactly how Boston responds. At least we can’t say we haven’t seen this story play out favorably before.

Yankees news: Players push for new uniforms

MESA, ARIZONA - MARCH 23: Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees arrives to the spring training game against the Chicago Cubs at Sloan Park on March 23, 2026 in Mesa, Arizona. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Athletic | Brendan Kuty: ($) Yankees players are lobbying their organization to let them wear their batting practice jerseys as an alternate road jersey, a move which would break with the team’s tradition of utilizing only one home and one road jersey. No reason has yet been given publicly for the request, which would likely need to be approved by owner Hal Steinbrenner. The BP jerseys in question feature “New York” across the chest in gray letters and numbers with white trim alongside the ubiquitous Starr Insurance sleeve patch.

MLB.com | Bryan Hoch: Congratulations are in order for the Weathers family, after Thayer, the wife of Ryan, gave birth to their son Paul David on Wednesday. The new father landed on the paternity list in advance of Wednesday’s game, with reliever Jake Bird called up from Triple-A to take his place on the active roster. Weathers, who announced with his wife that they were expecting a child in December, had his best outing as a Yankee his last time out, going 7.1 scoreless innings to earn his first victory with the team. Bird broke camp with the Yankees but was demoted after posting a 7.71 ERA through eight appearances.

MLB.com | Max Ralph: A couple of big names are slated to arrive in Fishkill this week. Carlos Rodón will commence his rehab assignment with the High-A Hudson Valley Renegades on Friday, a day after Gerrit Cole is scheduled to make his second rehab start. Rodón last threw batting practice on Saturday and is stretched out to 60 pitches. For his part, Cole threw 44 pitches in 4.1 innings during his last start with Double-A Somerset.

NJ.com | Randy Miller: Giancarlo Stanton was the hero Tuesday, knocking in three to snap a 1-for-21 skid. He attributed the outburst, at least in part, to playing at Fenway Park, where he’s hit .316 over his career. In other housekeeping news, Anthony Volpe played in his third rehab game Tuesday, notching two hits, including a 378-foot home run. With his return on the horizon and Jasson Domínguez hitting .333 in 19 games at Triple-A, Randal Grichuk’s roster spot could soon be imperiled.

College basketball transfer portal team rankings: Which school has best class so far?

The deadline for men's college basketball players to enter the transfer portal has come and gone (April 21). And while five of USA TODAY's top-six ranked portal entrants remain available, many players have already found new homes.

Which schools have done the best business so far this offseason? We're glad you asked. Here are USA TODAY Sports' portal class team rankings so far (as of 10 p.m., Wednesday, April 22).

These rankings take into account just incoming players, not players who are leaving.

1. Indiana

  • C Aiden Sherrell (Alabama)
  • C Samet Yigitoglu (SMU)
  • PG Markus Burton (Notre Dame)
  • SG Bryce Lindsay (Villanova)
  • SF Darren Harris (Duke)
  • SG Jaeden Mustaf (Georgia Tech)

Incoming by the numbers: 66.3 ppg, 24.1 rpg, 11.3 apg, 47.7% FG, 34.9% 3FG, 245 career starts

Indiana is going hard in the transfer portal — because it has to. Darian DeVries' first season was a complete waste as the Hoosiers missed the NCAA Tournament yet again, and DeVries was left having to rebuild nearly an entire roster again (only freshman Trent Sisley is coming back). His bosses are figuring out spending big in the portal is probably cheaper than more coach buyouts. Ryan Carr arrived from the Pacers front office to help build this roster, and so far the results are encouraging. This group includes something of everything: a point guard, multiple bigs, wing depth and perhaps most important — players with multiple years of eligibility so Indiana doesn't have to do this all over again next year. Sherrell (No. 13), Burton (No. 21) and Yigitoglu (No. 39) all land inside the top 40 of USA TODAY's portal player rankings.

2. Tennessee

  • SF Jalen Haralson (Notre Dame)
  • PG Dai Dai Ames (Cal)
  • SG Tyler Lundblade (Belmont)
  • SG Terrence Hill Jr. (VCU)
  • PF Miles Rubin (Loyola Chicago)

Incoming by the numbers: 75 ppg, 18.5 rpg, 11.7 apg, 48.6% FG, 38% 3FG, 256 career starts

It's a total reboot in Knoxville for Rick Barnes, who has to replace his top six scorers from this past season, assuming freshman standout Nate Ament (16.7 ppg) declares for the NBA Draft. J.P. Estrella's transfer to Michigan hurts, and Bishop Boswell's decision to head to Maryland removes another starter. But the Vols have done some good work in the portal. There's no star in this group, though all five of their additions averaged at least 11.3 ppg last season and bring substantial starting experience (except Hill, who was VCU's microwave off the bench). Haralson is a do-everything small forward (except hit 3s), with room to grow. Rubin is your Estrella replacement, but with a defensive edge (2.3 blocks per game). Ames, a third-team All-ACC pick, will run the point, while Lundblade, the MVC Player of the Year, and Hill, the A-10 Sixth Man of the Year, provide the shooting. It's a strong class, that likely isn't done yet.

3. Louisville

  • C Flory Bidunga (Kansas)
  • PG Jackson Shelstad (Oregon)
  • SF Karter Knox (Arkansas)
  • PF Alvaro Folgueiras (Iowa)

Incoming by the numbers: 45.4 ppg, 20 rpg, 9.8 apg, 52.3% FG, 33.5% 3FG, 200 career starts

Bidunga, USA TODAY's No. 2 ranked player in the portal, was one of the biggest gets of the entire offseason. He's still raw offensively, but his defense changes games. The Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year averaged 2.6 blocks per game, fourth-most in the NCAA last season. Shelstad, No. 15 in USA TODAY's portal rankings, had his season cut short after just 12 games, but was a double-digit scorer in each of his three seasons in Eugene and was making nearly three 3-pointers a game before his injury. Knox hasn't quite lived up to his recruiting hype and was limited with injuries last season, but the talent is there. Folgueiras started just one game for Iowa last season, but he broke out in March Madness. His last-second 3 knocked Florida out of the tournament and he averaged 14.7 points per game in Iowa's three NCAA Tournament wins. Even if Folgueiras doesn't start for the Cardinals, having a scoring forward off the bench who can spread the floor will be of great value to Pat Kelsey.

4. Duke

  • SG John Blackwell (Wisconsin)
  • PF Drew Scharnowski (Belmont)

Incoming by the numbers: 29.8 ppg, 11.1 rpg, 4.9 apg, 50.3% FG, 38.5% 3FG, 98 career starts

It's just a two-person class so far, but it's more about fits and quality than quantity. Blackwell was arguably one of the biggest fish in the portal after the former Wisconsin guard averaged 19.1 points with 5.1 rebounds and 2.3 assists per game last season, earning third team All-Big Ten honors. Blackwell, the No. 8 player in USA TODAY's portal rankings, will fit in seamlessly if Isaiah Evans enters the NBA Draft. Scharnowski is a big pickup in the frontcourt to offset the loss of do-everything Cameron Boozer and Maliq Brown. The 6-9 Scharnowski was a first team All-Missouri Valley Conference pick, averaging 10.7 points (68.1% FG), 6.0 rebounds and 2.6 assists during his sophomore season at Belmont.

5. Texas

  • PF David Punch (TCU)
  • PG Isaiah Johnson (Colorado)
  • SF Elyjah Freeman (Auburn)
  • SG Amari Evans (Tennessee)

Incoming by the numbers: 44.3 ppg, 18.1 rpg, 7 apg, 47.3% FG, 32.7% 3FG, 99 career starts

Start with Punch and Johnson, who both earned Big 12 honorable mention last season. Punch is the 10th-ranked player in USA TODAY's portal player rankings, while Johnson landed at No. 17. Johnson averaged 16.9 points for the Buffaloes, while Punch provided 14.1 ppg, 6.8 rebounds and 1.9 blocks per game for the Horned Frogs. Freeman averaged 9.2 points and 5.2 rebounds in his lone season at Auburn after transferring in from Division II. Evans played 14.4 minutes a game as a true freshman for Tennessee and his addition, along with Johnson, will be key to replacing Dailyn Swain's production.

6. North Carolina

  • SG Neoklis Avdalas (Virginia Tech)
  • SG Matt Able (NC State)
  • SG Terrence Brown (Utah)
  • PF Maxim Logue (Florida Atlantic)

Incoming by the numbers: 45.6 ppg, 12 rpg, 9.3 apg, 44.3% FG, 32.9% 3FG, 111 career starts

Three of Michael Malone's first four transfer additions landed inside USA TODAY's top 40 portal player rankings: Avdalas, No. 11; Brown, No. 29; Able, No. 35. Brown, Able and Avdalas are all combo guards and perhaps offer a glimpse into the style Malone will bring to Chapel Hill. Brown was All-Big 12 honorable mention, averaging 19.9 ppg for Utah after arriving from Farleigh Dickinson. Avdalas and Able had decent freshman seasons in the ACC last year, but Avdalas will need to improve his 38.6 FG% and 2.2 turnovers per game.

7. Houston

  • PG Dedan Thomas Jr. (LSU)
  • SG Corey Hadnot (Purdue Fort Wayne)
  • PF Delrecco Gillespie (Kent State)
  • PF Braden East (Lamar)

Incoming by the numbers: 66.2 ppg, 27.1 rpg, 12.4 apg, 50.9% FG, 32.7% 3FG, 192 career starts

Houston had plenty of holes to fill, primarily in the backcourt with Kingston Flemings headed to the NBA and Milos Uzan and Emanuel Sharp out of eligibility. Thomas , the No. 16 player in USA TODAY's portal rankings, will slot into the point guard role. He was averaging 15.3 ppg and 6.5 apg before a foot injury ended his season in January. A first-team All-Horizon League pick, Hadnot exploded last season improving his scoring from 9.0 ppg as a sophomore to 20.4 as a junior. Gillespie was a do-everything for Kent State, averaging a double-double (17.1 ppg, 11.3 rpg) and East nearly averaged a double-double at Lamar (12.8 ppg, 9.1 rpg). Except for Thomas, the Big 12 will be a major step up in competition for this transfer class, but Kelvin Sampson should be able to coach them up.

8. Providence

  • SG Ryan Sabol (Buffalo)
  • SG Devin Vanterpool (Florida Atlantic)
  • SG Miles Byrd (San Diego State)
  • PG Malik Mack (Georgetown)
  • PF Arrinten Page (Northwestern)
  • PG Gavin Hightower (South Florida)
  • C Samson Aletan (Yale)

Incoming by the numbers: 80.7 ppg, 29.2 rpg, 17.1 apg, 44.5% FG, 34.3% 3FG, 344 career starts.

Bryan Hodgson is getting the financial backing Providence promised when he chose the Friars job over interest from Syracuse. Five of the seven incoming transfers averaged at least 10.2 ppg last season, and all but one (Hightower, the lone USF player to follow Hodgson) were starters at their previous school. Vanterpool was the American Conference's Most Improved Player, and Hodgson knows the scouting report on the third-team all-league pick. Sabol is one of the best shooters in the country, his 3.8 made 3s per game were third-most in the country last season. Mack (13.6 ppg, 4.1 apg) will run the point, with 90 career starts under his belt. Byrd was the Mountain West Defensive Player of the Year, averaging 2.2 steals and 1.5 blocks per game. The 6-11 Page will be on his fourth team in four years, but had his best season last year, averaging 10.2 ppg and 4.5 rpg for Northwestern.

9. Iowa State

  • PG Jaquan Johnson (Bradley)
  • SG Ryan Prather Jr. (Robert Morris)
  • PF Tre Singleton (Northwestern)
  • SF Leon Bond (Northern Iowa)
  • PF Taj Manning (Kansas State)

Incoming by the numbers: 56.3 ppg, 22.4 rpg, 11.1 apg, 45.1% FG, 34.3% 3FG, 185 career starts

The Cyclones are losing their top scorer (Milan Momcilovic, portal), top rebounder (Joshua Jefferson, graduation) and top guard (Tamin Lipsey, graduation). So it's no surprise T.J. Otzelberger has been busy in the portal. This is a class built on depth and less on star quality. Johnson, a first-team all-MVC pick and the conference's Most Improved Player, will try to fill Lipsey's shoes. He was the MVC's No. 2 leading scorer (16.9 ppg), while also earning the league's Defensive Player of the Year. Bond joined Johnson on the MVC All-Defensive team in keeping with Otzelberger's rugged style. Singleton started 31 of 34 games as a true freshman at Northwestern and has plenty of room for growth in his game after averaging 7.6 ppg and 4.8 rpg last season. Prather was a second-team All-Horizon League selection after averaging 15.7 ppg last season with 84 made 3s.

10. Cincinnati

  • C Riley Allenspach (George Mason)
  • SF Tyler Tejada (Towson)
  • SG Myles Colvin (Wake Forest)
  • PG Tylen Riley (Tulsa)
  • G Trevian Carson (North Dakota State)
  • SF Eric Mahaffey (Akron)
  • PG Elijah Perryman (Utah State)
  • PF Adlan Elamin (Utah State)
  • C David Iweze (Utah State)

Incoming by the numbers: 88.7 ppg, 36.7 rpg, 17.3 apg, 46.8% FG, 32.8% 3FG, 275 career starts

New Bearcats coach Jerrod Calhoun brought three Utah State players with him from Logan who will help teach his impressive offense to the rest of the roster, which is basically a complete reset. In addition to the incoming former Aggies, Cincinnati's haul includes plenty of mid-major all-conference picks. Riley was a second-team All-American Conference selection at Tulsa and will likely be the Bearcats' primary ball-handler. The 6-11 Allenspach will help anchor the post. He earned second-team All-Atlantic 10 honors averaging 13.6 points and 6.1 rebounds per game. Tejada was sixth in the CAA in scoring (17.7) and a third-team all-conference pick. Carson did a bit of everything at NDSU and was a first-team All-Summit League and All-Defensive team pick, while Mahaffey was MAC All-Freshman. Colvin is an explosive athlete, who averaged 11.6 ppg in his lone season at Wake Forest after two seasons at Purdue.

Honorable mention: Pitt, Xavier, DePaul, Creighton

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: College basketball transfer portal team rankings, best classes, signings

Mammoth and Golden Knights tied 1-1 heading to game 3

Vegas Golden Knights (39-26-17, in the Pacific Division) vs. Utah Mammoth (43-33-6, in the Central Division)

Salt Lake City; Friday, 9:30 p.m. EDT

LINE: Golden Knights -111, Mammoth -108; over/under is 6

NHL PLAYOFFS FIRST ROUND: Series tied 1-1

BOTTOM LINE: The Utah Mammoth and the Vegas Golden Knights are in a 1-1 series tie in the first round of the NHL Playoffs. The teams meet Tuesday for the sixth time this season. The Mammoth won 3-2 in the last meeting.

Utah has a 43-33-6 record overall and a 22-16-3 record in home games. The Mammoth are 20-10-1 in games they convert at least one power play.

Vegas has a 39-26-17 record overall and a 19-14-8 record in road games. The Golden Knights have given up 242 goals while scoring 264 for a +22 scoring differential.

TOP PERFORMERS: Nick Schmaltz has 33 goals and 40 assists for the Mammoth. Logan Cooley has six goals and six assists over the past 10 games.

Jack Eichel has 27 goals and 63 assists for the Golden Knights. Mark Stone has scored seven goals and added four assists over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Mammoth: 6-4-0, averaging 3.8 goals, 6.4 assists, 3.9 penalties and 8.1 penalty minutes while giving up 3.1 goals per game.

Golden Knights: 8-1-1, averaging 3.9 goals, 6.6 assists, 3.2 penalties and 6.7 penalty minutes while giving up two goals per game.

INJURIES: Mammoth: Barrett Hayton: out (upper-body).

Golden Knights: William Karlsson: out (lower body).

___

The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Mark Vientos goes from goat to big hero in ending Mets’ brutal skid

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Mark Vientos hits the go-ahead single in the eighth inning of the Mets' 3-2 win over the Twins on April 22, 2026 at Citi Field

Mark Vientos went from goat to hero in a matter of two innings in the Mets’ 3-2 win over the Twins on Wednesday night that ended a 12-game losing streak.

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First, Vientos made an eye-popping baserunning mistake, running through third base coach Tim Leiper’s stop sign on a Marcus Semien double to the gap in the sixth inning of a tie game.

He was thrown out by a considerable margin to end the inning.

But in the bottom of the eighth, Vientos delivered the go-ahead single, a flare to right that scored Brett Baty.

“I’m glad he got that hit,’’ Carlos Mendoza said with a smile.

Vientos made no apologies for his gaffe on the bases.

“My instinct was once the ball was off the wall, I was gonna score,’’ Vientos said.

Vientos, part of a lineup that has floundered for much of the season, said he saw Leiper put up the stop sign but ignored it.

Mark Vientos hits the go-ahead single in the eighth inning of the Mets’ 3-2 win over the Twins on April 22, 2026 at Citi Field. rad Penner-Imagn Images

“We want to make the right play, but I’m always gonna be aggressive,’’ Vientos said. “I’m not gonna play passive on the field. I’d rather make a mistake aggressively than [passively].’’


After flopping as the closer for the Yankees a year ago, Devin Williams looks to be doing the same thing on the other side of town this season.

But even after a three-appearance stretch in which he allowed seven runs, four walks and six hits in just 1 ¹/₃ innings while blowing a save and taking the loss in another, Mendoza said Wednesday he is not considering pulling Williams from the role.

“I know he’s going through it right now, but as I’m sitting here, we haven’t had that discussion,’’ Mendoza said prior to the Mets win.

Williams, who had pitched twice in three days, was unavailable Wednesday, so Luke Weaver got the final four outs.

Asked why he remains confident that Williams — who was pulled from the ninth-inning job in late April with the Yankees and then again in August — can overcome his current struggles, Mendoza said, “He’s done it before.”

Still, after Williams was yanked as closer in the second half of last season and had some success in a setup role, he didn’t get it back.

But Mendoza hasn’t given up on Williams, who signed a three-year, $51 million deal in the offseason even after his rough showing in The Bronx.

“It’s the nature of the business,’’ Mendoza said of Williams’ recent poor results. “You’re gonna go through stretches when it’s hard and you find a way to get back on track. There’s gonna be adversity, [there’s] gonna be stretches you’re not at your best and he’s done that before a few times. That’s what gives me confidence he’ll get there again.”


A.J. Minter continued his rehab assignment Wednesday with his first appearance with Triple-A Syracuse, as the lefty comes back from lat surgery that cost him most of 2025.

He allowed three hits and a run in his one inning and didn’t strike out or walk any batters.

Mendoza said Tuesday that the 32-year-old would likely need two more weeks of rehab games to get accustomed to pitching on back-to-back days again.


Austin Warren was still stunned Wednesday about the odd reaction he got from the small number of fans that remained at Citi Field in the ninth inning of Tuesday night’s loss, when the right-hander replaced Williams with the bases loaded and left them stranded by striking out the next three batters.

The crowd repeatedly chanted “MVP” as Warren piled up the strikeouts and kept it a two-run game.

“I was absolutely [surprised],’’ Warren said. “I’m sure everyone heard all the boos and I’m glad I could go in there and flip the switch a little bit and keep them on our side.”

The cheers began as soon as the threw a strike to Royce Lewis.

“I was like, ‘What’s going on?’’ Warren said. “I’m glad it went well and I could strand runners for Devin.”

The 30-year-old right-hander is in his second year with the Mets after being claimed off waivers from the Giants prior to last season.

“I feel I proved some people wrong with that kind of game,’’ Warren said. “I’ve always been an up-and-down [to the minors] guy since my debut. It sucks losing, but it feels good to do that.”