Carolina Hurricanes Recall Spencer Martin From Chicago

Dave Kallmann / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The Carolina Hurricanes have recalled goaltender Spencer Martin from the Chicago Wolves, it was announced Tuesday. 

Martin joins the Hurricanes as goaltender Frederik Andersen deals with an injury. 

A product of Oakville, Ont., Martin is in his first full season in the Hurricanes organization, having split time between the NHL and AHL this year. In nine NHL appearances, he went 3-4-1 along with a 3.89 GAA and a .846 SP. Over 31 AHL games, Martin posted much better numbers, collecting a record of 20-8-2 as well as a 2.34 GAA and a .909 SP. 

Martin also appeared in two playoff games with the Wolves, going 0-2 while posting a 2.78 GAA and a .900 SP, with the team ending their season after being swept by the Rockford IceHogs. 

Drafted by the Colorado Avalanche in the third round of the 2013 NHL Draft, Martin has made 66 career NHL regular season appearances with the Avalanche, Hurricanes, the Vancouver Canucks and the Columbus Blue Jackets. 

With Martin being recalled to the NHL, he will likely serve as Pyotr Kochetkov's backup until Andersen is ready to return to the team. Having been listed as day to day, Andersen should be back soon but until then Martin adds a safety net for the team. 

'I’ve Always Said, You’re Never Out Of It' — Senators One Win Away From Forcing Game 7

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If doubt has started to creep into the minds of the Maple Leafs after blowing a second chance at advancing to the second round, then the opposite is occurring with Ottawa Senators following a 4-0 win in Game 5.

They are starting to believe.

It wasn’t long ago that the Senators were down 0-3 in what had been a mostly one-sided Bludgeoning of Ontario. Now, after back-to-back wins with their season on the line, they are one win away from forcing a Game 7.

“I’ve always said, you’re never out of it,” said Senators captain Brady Tkachuk. “And for us tonight, it was nothing other than winning Game 5. There was no other thought about any other games in the series.”

It was after being down 0-3 when Tkachuk said the series was far from over. Teams had come back after being down 0-3, he said. He even brought up the Boston Red Sox's 2004 comeback against the New York Yankees as proof.

"It's been done before," he said, "and I believe that it can happen again."

Down 3-0 To Leafs, Ottawa Senators' Brady Tkachuk Brings Up Red Sox's Reverse Sweep In 2004Down 3-0 To Leafs, Ottawa Senators' Brady Tkachuk Brings Up Red Sox's Reverse Sweep In 2004The Ottawa Senators trail the Toronto Maple Leafs 3-0 after losing in overtime Thursday night.

More and more, it is starting to feel that way.

Maybe it is because the Leafs have a history of choking. Or that the Senators are finally getting bounces — and the saves — that they weren't getting in the first three games.

Either way you look at it, the pressure is no longer on Ottawa. Suddenly, it's shifted to Toronto.

“Whenever you lose two in a row, it’s not a good feeling,” said Tkachuk, who had a goal and assist in Game 5. “We lost three and it’s a shitty feeling.”

These Maple Leafs Were Supposed To Be Different, But In Game 5, It Was More Of The SameThese Maple Leafs Were Supposed To Be Different, But In Game 5, It Was More Of The SameAnyone who has watched the Toronto Maple Leafs over the past decade has seen Game 5 of the Battle of Ontario so many times.

The Senators, meanwhile, have momentum on their side. And really nothing to lose. Whether they force a Game 7 or lose in Game 6, they’ve made a series out of what looked like it was going to be sweep.

“It can change fast,” Senators coach Travis Green said of the momentum swings of the series. “You can feel great about yourself; feel shitty about yourself as well.”

That pretty much describes how the Leafs must be feeling these days.

They did not want this series to be going to Game 6. Had their once-scorching power play not gone stone cold, this would have already been over.

But now, with Game 6 back in Ottawa, all bets are off.

"Well, I expect pure insanity, that’s for sure," said Tkachuk. "Our mindset right now is that these are do-or-die games."

The Hockey News Playoff Frenzy Live: Join The Conversation As Senators Beat Leafs In Game 5The Hockey News Playoff Frenzy Live: Join The Conversation As Senators Beat Leafs In Game 5Welcome to The Hockey News Playoff Frenzy Live, streaming nightly during the NHL's Stanley Cup playoffs.

Canadiens Trying To Stay Alive

Apr 27, 2025; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; Montreal Canadiens right wing Ivan Demidov (93) and left wing Juraj Slafkovsky (20) wait for a face-off beside each other during the third period in game four of the first round of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Bell Centre. Mandatory Credit: David Kirouac-Imagn Images

After a day off on Monday, the Montreal Canadiens were back at practice on Tuesday in readiness for Wednesday night’s game five against the Washington Capitals. Patrik Laine was back at practice wearing a regular jersey, indicating he might be nearing a return to play. When Martin St-Louis spoke to the press after the skate, he said Laine was still considered day-to-day but would be travelling to Washington, just like Alexander Carrier, who is also day-to-day. However, the bench boss wasn’t sure if Samuel Montembeault would make the trip.

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The Canadiens did not call up anyone from the Laval Rocket, so if Alexandre Carrier is not ready to go, Jayden Struble will reintegrate the lineup. Given how shaken up he looked after the Tom Wilson hit, I would be shocked to see Carrier play.

The uncertainty about Montembeault making the trip kind of settles the question of who will likely start for the Canadiens. Jakub Dobes should be back in the net for a second consecutive game. The youngster surrendered three goals on 24 shots on Sunday night, ending his day at the office with a .875 save percentage, and looked good aside from a costly hesitation on the game's first goal. 

As for the Capitals, it’s clear that Logan Thompson will once again be in the net, since he led his team to the first three wins against the Canadiens. In four games, he has a 2.54 GAA and a .912 SP.

It would be surprising to see Patrik Laine back in the lineup. The Finnish sniper’s most significant selling point is his ability to score on the power play, but it hasn’t been the case since the start of the playoffs. Furthermore, the newly formed first power play unit featuring Nick Suzuki, Cole Caufield, Juraj Slafkovsky, Ivan Demidov, and Lane Hutson was the most significant threat on the ice for the Habs on Sunday night and must remain together.

Of course, Laine could always be put on the second unit, but does his five-on-five play warrant inserting him in the lineup instead of Oliver Kapanen, who was centering a line between Joel Armia and Emil Heineman in game four? I’m not entirely sure.

So far in the series, Hutson leads all Montreal players with five points in four games, followed by Caufield with four, while Suzuki and Slafkovsky only have two. If the Canadiens hope to remain alive, they’ll need an improved offensive contribution across the board.

Meanwhile, Dylan Strome, Anthony Beauvillier, and Alexander Ovechkin lead the hosts with seven, five, and four points, respectively. The Caps’ captain didn’t skate on Tuesday, but that was nothing to write home about as he was taking a maintenance day. Meanwhile, Aliaksei Protas was a full participant at practice and even took contact. Washington didn’t do line rushes, so it’s impossible to know where he would slot in for now.

The game is set for 7:00 PM and it’s a do or die tilt for the Habs who are on the brink of elimination. Should the Canadiens lose, it would be David Savard’s last career game, chances are that will be used as motivation by the Habs.


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Why The Maple Leafs' Confidence In Anthony Stolarz Hasn't Faltered After Back-To-Back Losses To Senators

Apr 29, 2025; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Maple Leafs goaltender Anthony Stolarz (41) follows the play against the Ottawa Senators in the second period during game five of the first round of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Scotiabank Arena. Mandatory Credit: Nick Turchiaro-Imagn Images

As Ottawa Senators defenseman Thomas Chabot fired a shot from the point in the second period of Game 5, Anthony Stolarz did his best to track the puck. But he couldn't see anything until it was too late.

"That's playoff hockey right there," the goaltender said, following Toronto's 4-0 loss that forces a Game 6 in Ottawa.

Indeed, Stolarz is correct. The playoffs are all about goals within the crease and through screens. Unfortunately for the Toronto Maple Leafs, Tuesday night didn't go their way in that area, with the Senators making life difficult in front of Stolarz.

On Chabot's goal specifically, you could argue that Claude Giroux interfered with Mitch Marner, who was en route to the point to block the shot. Marner not arriving in time allowed the Ottawa defenseman more time to pick his spot, and the rest is history.

"I’m just trying to get to the point. Kind of tough," Marner said of the play.

The 31-year-old's save percentage is currently in free-fall, going from a .926 through the first three games of the series, to an .842 through Toronto's last two games. Five of Ottawa's 14 goals have come off of point shots.

Following the game, though, Maple Leafs head coach Craig Berube listed several reasons for the Senators' success from the point. He didn't blame Stolarz, but said that the players in front of him can do more.

'I Don't Think There's Any Panic': 'I Don't Think There's Any Panic': "Maple Leafs Miss Another Series-Closing Opportunity in Frightening Déjà Vu'It was that familiar feeling of tension that Toronto Maple Leafs fans at Scotiabank Arena have felt before. The crowd went silent when Dylan Cozens finished off a 2-on-1 opportunity to give the Ottawa Senators a 2-0 lead midway through the third period in Game 5. Reality set in, when Tim Stutzle and Brady Tkachuk scored empty-net goals to defeat Toronto 4-0 and force a Game 6 at Canadian Tire Centre in Ottawa on Thursday.

"I thought that shot tonight, he couldn't see it. So, first of all, we could do a better job off that faceoff," Berube said. "We've got to have a block there, or we've got to have guys clearing out in front of the net so we can see the puck. One of the two."

If you were looking for Joseph Woll to enter the series in Game 6, this quote pretty much shuts that narrative down.

Berube is still confident in Stolarz. The coach alluded to it before Game 5, saying he's only focused on Stolarz playing. "I don’t think there’s any reason to change right now," he said.

‘Don’t Think There’s Any Reason To Change’: Why The Maple Leafs Are Sticking With Anthony Stolarz In Goal Following His Worst Game Of The Season‘Don’t Think There’s Any Reason To Change’: Why The Maple Leafs Are Sticking With Anthony Stolarz In Goal Following His Worst Game Of The SeasonDespite a shaky start in Ottawa for Game 4, the Toronto Maple Leafs are sticking with goaltender Anthony Stolarz in the blue paint for Game 5 on Tuesday. Head coach Craig Berube confirmed pre-game that the 31-year-old will once again get the start as the Leafs look to eliminate the Ottawa Senators in Game 5 of their first-round series.

And there's a reason for that.

For the most part, Stolarz hasn't allowed many egregious goals (aside from his first of the series). His save percentage has dipped significantly over the last two games, but Toronto has also limited Ottawa to 38 shots in that span.

When Toronto needed a save, though, Stolarz gave it to them.

The Senators are doing what the Maple Leafs did well at the beginning of the series: making life difficult on the goaltender. Following Tuesday's loss, several Maple Leafs players said they will get more bodies in front of Linus Ullmark in Game 6.

"I thought at times and stretches throughout the game, could’ve done a better job getting more guys to the net and making it a little bit tougher on him," Auston Matthews said Tuesday night.

"This time of year, it’s greasy goals. It’s not the prettiest of things, so that’s the way you got to approach it."

'It's Hard For Him':  Why David Kampf Hasn't Been Able To Get Into Any Maple Leafs Playoff Games Against Senators'It's Hard For Him': Why David Kampf Hasn't Been Able To Get Into Any Maple Leafs Playoff Games Against SenatorsToronto Maple Leafs head coach Craig Berube was so impressed with the way his team finished the regular season that he kept his lineup mostly intact. Unfortunately, for David Kampf, it's kept the defensive forward on the sidelines and he will miss his fifth consecutive playoff game as a healthy scratch.

If the Maple Leafs want to exit the Battle of Ontario victorious, they'll need to do the work which gave them the 3-0 series lead in the first place.

Simon Benoit made headlines for setting up Max Domi, who scored in overtime in Game 2. That goal came with tons of bodies in front of Ullmark. As did Benoit's overtime-winner in Ottawa a few nights later in Game 3.

Toronto will attempt to rewrite the narrative on Thursday with Game 6, and it appears they'll be doing so with Stolarz behind them in the net.


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Why Parsons believes Warriors' Butler trade better than Luka-to-Lakers

Why Parsons believes Warriors' Butler trade better than Luka-to-Lakers originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Both the Warriors and the Los Angeles Lakers pulled off stunning blockbuster deals at this year’s NBA trade deadline.

Jimmy Butler left behind a messy situation in Miami and landed in Golden State, while Luka Dončić, unbeknownst to him, was shipped to Southern California in a move that sent shockwaves throughout the entire sports world.

Each star made an instant impact on their respective teams, guiding them to a trip to the postseason and securing a first-round playoff series. Now with a bit more time to digest the original news of each trade, FanDuel TV’s “Run It Back” crew evaluated the moves and chose which team made the better trade.

“It’s the Warriors and Jimmy Butler,” former NBA forward Chandler Parsons said. “The impact he made. This team was dead in the water. The window was closing. … Then we bring in Jimmy Butler. This team has just taken off to a whole new level. And I think we can judge Luka’s impact further down the road. The guy’s 25, 26 years old. I think his impact will come. The Lakers were already good with LeBron James and Anthony Davis. Do I think they got better with Luka? 100 percent. But there’s no denying the impact that Jimmy Butler has had on [the Warriors].

“They went from a team that was on the fringe of even making the playoffs. I think they were the 11th seed when they made the trade all the way up to the seventh seed, where they could’ve been even higher than that. And now they’re a team that’s a real contender. Once they get past this round, they got a chance to win next round, too. Jimmy Butler’s impact is 100 percent more valuable than anybody right now at the deadline.”

The numbers don’t lie.

The Warriors are 25-8 with Butler in their lineup and 26-27 without. The Lakers are 19-13 with Dončić and 32-22 without.

And currently, Golden State holds a 3-1 playoff series lead over the Houston Rockets and is one win away from advancing to the Western Conference semifinals. Los Angeles, meanwhile, is on the brink of a first-round exit down 3-1 against the Minnesota Timberwolves.

In 28 regular-season games with the Lakers, Dončić averaged 28.2 points on 43.8 percent shooting, with 8.1 rebounds, 7.5 assists and 1.6 steals in 35.1 minutes.

Butler averaged 17.9 points on 47.6 percent shooting in 30 regular-season contests with the Warriors, adding 5.5 rebounds, 5.9 assists and 1.7 steals in 32.7 minutes.

Maybe only time will tell the true impact each player will have on their teams, but as of now, Parsons is pretty confident the Warriors have the edge.

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Starting Pitcher News: Nick Lodolo's strong start, who is Ben Casparius?

It's Wednesday, which means it's time for us to visit the bump on Hump Day and discuss starting pitcher news. Each week in this article, I'll be taking a deeper look at a few trending/surging starting pitchers to see what, if anything, is changing and whether or not we should be investing in this hot stretch.

The article will be similar to the series I ran for a few years called Mixing It Up (previously Pitchers With New Pitches and Should We Care?), where I broke down new pitches to see if there were truly meaningful additions that changed a pitcher's outlook. Only now, I won't just look at new pitches, I can also cover velocity bumps, new usage patterns, or new roles. However, the premise will remain the same: trying to see if the recent results are connected to any meaningful changes that make them worth buying into or if they're just mirages.

Each week, I'll try to cover change for at least four starters and give my clear take on whether I would add them, trade for them, or invest fully in their success. Hopefully you'll find it useful, so let's get started.

Most of the charts you see below are courtesy of Kyle Bland over at Pitcher List. He created a great spring training app (which he's now carried over into the regular season) that tracks changes in velocity, usage, and pitch movement. It also has a great strike zone plot feature, which allows you to see how the whole arsenal plays together.I'll also use Alex Chamberlain's awesome work with his Pitch Leaderboard.

Nick Lodolo - Cincinnati Reds (Pitch Mix Change, Arm Angle Change, New Slider Shape)

After years of injuries and inconsistencies, are we finally getting the Nick Lodolo that we anticipated back when he was a prospect? Lodolo carved up the minor leagues, with a 2.70 ERA and 1.09 WHIP in 96.2 minor league innings, where he also struck out 149 batters and walked just 22. Yes, a 149:22 K:BB ratio. Yet, due to multiple injuries and some confounding trouble with command, Lodolo has a 4.24 career MLB ERA in 289 innings with 91 walks to 326 strikeouts.

This season, however, he has come out like a house on fire, registering a 2.25 ERA, 0.86 WHIP, and 26:4 K:BB ratio in 36 innings through six starts. So, how has he done it?

For starters, Lodolo is healthy now, which is great news after pitching just 115.1 innings last year and 34.1 innings the year before that. He has also made some minor shifts in his pitch mix, dialing back the use of his four-seamer and leaning into both the changeup and sinker more.

Nick Lodolo pitch mix

Pitcher List

As you can see from Kyle Bland's chart, in Lodolo's last start against the Rockies, he went to his sinker far more than his fastball despite facing all right-handed batters. He keeps the sinker high and outside to righties, which allows it to miss slightly more bats than the average sinker, but it does have a 41% ICR, which is only slightly better than league average. All things considered, it's about a league average pitch, but should set the four-seamer up to miss more bats up in the zone if hitters get used to seeing the sinker and then get the four-seamer upstairs. Lodolo seems to agree, which is why his four-seam fastball has been in the top third of the zone 10% more to righties this year. However, it's not missing many bats, and a lot of that could be that the sinker and four-seamer are basically the same velocity with minimal movement differences, so it's not enough to fool hitters.

What has been a nice change for Lodolo this year has been using the changeup more often. Last year, he threw the pitch 16% of the time, but he's using it 23% of the time this year. He also seems to have tightened up the movement on it, taking off some of the horizontal run and adding a touch more drop. That could also be helping him command the pitch better since he has a 40% zone rate and 71% strike rate on the changeup this year after posting a 35% zone rate and 64% strike rate last year. He's also been using it more in two-strike counts and keeping it arm-side almost 10% more, which is helping his PutAway rate on the pitch in those two-strike counts. The pitch models like this new version of the changeup, and so do I.

He also seems to have taken off some of the horizontal movement on his curveball as well this season, which had me thinking that there might be a bigger change behind all of this. Turns out, there might be.

Lodolo arm angle

As you can see from Alex Chamberlain's Pitch Leaderboard, Lodolo has now dropped his arm angle for the third straight season. Perhaps that's simply an angle he feels better pitching from. We talked about how Matthew Boyd changed his arm angle this season to let pitches move more naturally rather than force a movement profile onto them. That might be what Lodolo is doing here too. Perhaps lowering his arm slot allows him to command the changeup and curve more effectively because they move slightly less East-West.

What we do know is that Lodolo has a career-high zone rate, is getting ahead of hitters more regularly than he ever has, and has a career-high strike rate. The issue is that increased command has so far come at the expense of strikeouts since he has a career-low swinging strike rate (SwStr%) and strikeout rate. Yet, looking at his approach and his pitch shapes, I think Lodolo still has the arsenal to post a 25% strikeout rate. He just needs to figure out how to optimize this new pitch mix and maybe address the lack of velocity and shape difference between his sinker and four-seamer.

Matthew Liberatore - St. Louis Cardinals (Changeup shape, Cutter Shape, Attack Plan Change)

Matthew Liberatore is another former well-regarded prospect who has not lived up to expectations but is taking a step forward in 2025. Liberatore was not the level of prospect that Lodolo was, but he debuted with St. Louis at 22 years old, and many people assumed he would be a fixture in their rotation for a while. So far, he's pitched to a 4.73 ERA and 1.36 WHIP in 96 MLB appearances with only 29 starts. Yet, here he is with a 3.19 ERA, 0.97 WHIP, and 23.1% strikeout rate through his first five starts. So what do we make of this?

The first change I noticed is that Liberatore has not only changed the shape of his changeup but also doubled the usage to 14.3% from 7.2% last year. He uses the changeup exclusively to righties and has added three inches of horizontal run this season while cutting off two inches of vertical break and also throwing the pitch two mph faster. James Schiano, who co-hosts the Rotoworld Fantasy Baseball Q&A with me on Mondays at Noon ET, speculated that Liberatore could have switched his grip to a kick-change, which would fit with his release point and movement profile.

We also know that Liberatore is throwing the pitch in the zone more often, missing slightly more bats, and trying to use the changeup early in the count to righties. This allows him to rely less on his four-seam fastball and sinker to righties since he can get ahead with the changeup, and that's been a nice change for him. Last year, his cutter and sinker got hit hard by righties, and his four-seam fastball didn't miss many bats, so he needed a change in approach there.

Liberatore

Pitcher List

He has also changed his attack plan to righties with just his locations. In addition to using his changeup more often, he's throwing his four-seam inside to righties 20% more often and his cutter inside to righties 30% more often. His plan appears to be to jam righties inside with his fastballs to offset the changeup away or the slider low in the zone. That approach has led to plenty of weak contact but a drop in SwStr% to righties. Still, that's a change I'll take, especially since Liberatore's swinging strike rate to lefties has climbed to nearly 18%.

Part of that is because he's using his slider 7% more often to lefties and getting it glove-side far more often. The other change has been that Liberatore is using his cutter more to lefties as an early-in-the-count offering and doing a better job of keeping it low and away. The cutter is now two inches slower with less drop and more horizontal bite, which makes it a solid pairing with the slower and sweepier slider. Using the cutter more often early in the count has also allowed Liberatore to dial back the usage of his sinker and four-seamer to lefties, and the cutter is grading out as a good pitch for him this season.

At the end of the day, I think these changes make a lot of what we're seeing from Liberatore legitimate. I don't think he'll finish with a 3.19 ERA, but he's reducing hard contact to righties and missing more bats to lefties, which means you may get a lot of starts from him where he goes six innings, allows two runs, and strikes out four batters. That's going to be valuable in deeper formats, and I think he has a long leash in this rotation that's collapsing around him.

Ben Casparius - Los Angeles Dodgers (New Cutter, Arm Slot Change, New Changeup Shape)

With the Dodgers' rotation banged up and the team beginning a stretch of 10 games in 10 days, Dave Roberts has said a few times that they have discussed stretching Ben Casparius out as a starter. The 26-year-old has thrived in a relief role for the Dodgers this season, but 19 of his 21 appearances in the minors last year came as a starter, so this isn't some major role change. He was also pretty good between Double-A and Triple-A last year, posting a 3.35 ERA, 1.25 WHIP, and 28% strikeout rate, even though he was old for the level.

Given that he could find himself with a rotation spot on one of the best teams in baseball, I thought it was smart to look into who Casparius is and what he's doing this year that might be working for him.

Ben Casparius

Alex Chamberlain’s Pitch Leaderboard

Right here, we have our first hint from Alex Chamberlain's Pitch Leaderboard. Casparius raised his arm angle over four degrees from last year, and we can see how drastically that has changed the horizontal movement (H-Mov) profile of his pitch mix. Coming from that higher arm angle has allowed his slider and cutter to pick up significant horizontal movement. His four-seam fastball also jumped in vertical movement from 14.8 inches of Induced Vertical Break (iVB), according to Pitcher List's metrics, to 18.1 inches this year. That has improved the PLV and Stuff+ grades on almost all of his offerings, but what does that mean for him as a pitcher?

We do need to highlight that Casparius' longest outing this season was 3.1 innings, so there are a lot of things you can do in your pitch mix when you don't have to go through the order two or three times. For instance, you can heavily dial back the usage of your four-seam fastball, as Casparius has done. That being said, I do love that Casparius has leaned into his cutter more this season. He uses it primarily to lefties - 28% of the time - but he also mixes it in 13% of the time to righties as a go-between for his four-seam fastball and slider.

This season, the cutter has more horizontal movement, as we covered above, and he's using it up in the zone more often against lefties. It's only up in the zone 38% of the time, but that's still an improvement from last year, and he throws it inside to lefties almost 50% of the time. He has also been using it a lot more in two-strike counts against lefties, and it is getting plenty of whiffs at the top of the zone as one of his best two-strike offerings.

That's important for him because he doesn't throw his slider much to lefties, and his curve, which he uses exclusively to lefties, is more of a pitch he tries to steal strikes with early in the count. He gets league-average swing and miss on the pitch, but it doesn't give up a lot of hard contact, so it's a fine but not great offering, which means he needs that cutter to miss bats against lefites if he's going to have a true out pitch for opposite-handed hitters. Other than occasionally going to the four-seamer upstairs.

Overall, I see that the pitch models like Casparius, and I see why he's been an impactful multi-inning reliever, but I'm not as convinced about him as a starter. One of the biggest reasons has to do with his locations.

Ben Casparius Pitch Plot

If you look at Kyle Bland's plot chart above, you can see that nothing Casparius throws moves down-and-in to righties, and the only pitch that even moves in to righties at all is his four-seam fastball. Yet, he throws his four-seam fastball inside just 25% of the time to righties, and, as is typical of the Dodgers, uses it up in the zone just 44% of the time despite adding vertical movement to it and making it a flatter fastball than in years past. (WHY DO YOU HATE HIGH FASTBALLS SO MUCH!?)

I think this arsenal, which almost exclusively attacks away to righties, is why his SwStr% is 5% better against lefties this season. The cutter and slider are good pitches, but we also saw Graham Ashcraft struggle for years against righties because both of his best pitches moved similarly and attacked the same part of the strike zone. I'm not saying Casparius is Ashacraft, but I'm just saying that while I like the IDEA of his pitch mix as a starter, I don't know if I love the attack plan, and so I'd need to see that change before I can buy into him being a reliable starter for fantasy baseball.

Andrew Heaney - Pittsburgh Pirates (New Curve, Slider Shape, Pitch Mix Change)

ARTICLE WAS DRAFTED AND SUBMITTED BEFORE TUESDAY NIGHT'S START

When I added Heaney to this article, I thought I was going to dig into what he was doing and tell you that this was the same old Heaney. Now, I’m not sure that’s true. Yes, the velocity is the same, and there is no brand-new pitch (or is there?), but Heaney is attacking hitters much differently in 2025.

One of the first major changes we can see is that he’s dialed back the use of his slider a lot and is using the curveball way more. Heaney threw his slider 28% of the time in 2024, using it 35% to lefties and 26% to righties. So far in 2025, he's using it 17% of the time overall, 20.5% of the time to lefites and 15% to righties. At first, that may seem confusing to you since we've associated Heaney with a slider for a while now, but his Ideal Contact Rate (ICR) on the pitch has been getting worse in every season since 2021. Last year, he allowed a 43% ICR on the pitch, which suggests that, despite it having a great swinging strike rate, it wasn't a pitch that he needed to use as often as he was.

So far, he's been using the pitch early in the counts less often and using it as more of a two-strike pitch, even to righties. Even though it's giving up a similar ICR, since he's using it less often, it's not hurting him as much, and he's still getting a lot of swings and misses on it. The slider also appears to be slower this season, coming in at 80 mph and with more horizontal break and drop, which has helped it to grade better on most pitch models. This could be because, much like Lodolo above, Heaney dropped his arm angle this season.

Andrew Heaney

Alex Chamberlain’s Pitch Leaderboard

Heaney is now throwing from a four-degree lower arm slot, which has taken away some of the vertical movement from his arsenal and added horizontal break overall. We see that on the slider, but also on the curve, which he has leaned on far more often this season.

Last year, Heaney threw the curve just 3.6% of the time, but he's up to 10% usage this year and throwing it to both righties and lefties after rarely throwing any to lefties last year. That could be because he has more horizontal break on the pitch and felt more comfortable using it as a strike pitch to lefties, with a 60% zone rate, as he doesn't need to focus only on burying it low-and-away.

We should acknowledge that Statcast has Heaney throwing a slider, a curve, and a "slow curve," but none of Pitcher List, Brooks Baseball, or Alex Chamberlain have that same classification, which is why the curveball and slider metrics are a bit all over the place. Has Heaney truly added a new curve, or is he manipulating the spin on it like we know Seth Lugo does to throw different versions depending on the count and the handedness of the hitter? Whatever he's doing there, it has been working.

He’s also using the sinker far more to left-handed hitters and using the changeup more to both righties and lefties, which means he's less reliant on his four-seam fastball, which is a good thing. His strikeout rate and swinging strike rate are the highest they’ve been since 2022, and his Ideal Contact Rate is the lowest it’s ever been, so the new approach is certainly working. However, I'd be lying to you if I said I believed this would last the full season. His sinker is getting hit hard, so I'm not sure using it more is good, and the fastball is still an average pitch. The slider is giving up a decent amount of hard contact, and his changeup appears to be a slightly above-average pitch that's actually underperforming last year.

At the end of the day, I think Heaney's new pitch mix and approach raise his floor just a bit, but I don't believe it leads to this kind of ceiling. I think he's in the middle of one of the hot stretches we've seen him go on before, and he now pitches his home games in a park that suppresses home runs, which has been a major weakness of his. That may mean he pitches well enough to stay on deep league rosters all year long, but I don't believe he's going to be somebody you start regardless of who the opponent is.

Mosley's reaction to Banchero foul highlights difference between C's, Magic

Mosley's reaction to Banchero foul highlights difference between C's, Magic originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Jamahl Mosley and Paolo Banchero both knew the stakes.

When Banchero was called for his fifth foul just three minutes into the second half of the Orlando Magic’s Game 5 first-round playoff matchup with the Boston Celtics, it meant Mosley would have to send his star player to the bench for an extended period during a crucial stretch, or keep him on the floor and risk him fouling out of an elimination game.

So, Banchero and Mosley both shared choice words for referee Tony Brothers, while Mosley disgustedly signaled for a challenge to try to get the call overturned. But Banchero’s foul on Jaylen Brown stood, and what happened next was inevitable.

The Celtics ripped off a 30-9 run with Banchero on the bench, turning a 53-53 tie into a 21-point lead and transforming a close game into a series-ending, 120-89 blowout.

Mosley didn’t mince words when asked about Banchero’s fifth foul, in which Banchero got into Brown’s airspace and took an inadvertent elbow to the face as Brown went up for a layup.

“It definitely swung the series. It definitely swung the game. I have no idea what the explanation was,” Mosley told reporters. “He came into his path. All I saw is Paolo getting an elbow to the face or back into the face – and he got the foul.

“That was a game-changer right there. Your best player picks up his fifth foul in the third quarter. It’s tough to come back from that moment, but our guys continued to fight.”

Mosley is right, of course. It’s tough to come back from losing your star player — especially when he’s your entire offense.

Banchero averaged 29.4 points per game over the five-game series, accounting for nearly one-third (31.4 percent) of Orlando’s total points. Banchero (147 total points) and sidekick Franz Wagner (129 points) scored 276 of the Magic’s 468 points over five games, generating nearly 60 percent of their offense.

No other Orlando player scored more than 51 total points in the series.

Banchero is the engine that drives the Magic offense. But he and Wagner are essentially the entire car, as Orlando’s supporting cast was essentially non-existent in this series. Magic players not named Banchero or Wagner shot just 39.9 percent collectively in the series and a putrid 23.9 percent from 3-point range (22 for 92).

The Celtics have their own star duo in Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown, who also did a bulk of Boston’s scoring in this series (31.3 points per game for Tatum; 23 per game for Brown). But they have the luxury of a much deeper supporting cast, from Derrick White (30 points in Game 1; 17.2 points per game in the series), to Kristaps Porzingis (20 points in Game 2; 19 points in Game 4), to Jrue Holiday (20 points and 11 assists combined in Games 1 and 2), to Payton Pritchard (33 combined points in Games 1 and 2).

And that’s not to mention Al Horford’s five blocks in Game 4 or Sam Hauser’s 10 points off the bench in Game 5.

Depth was a difference-maker for the Celtics during their 2024 championship run, and it helped them overcome a feisty Magic team in the first round. The path gets more challenging going forward — the C’s await the winner of the New York Knicks and Detroit Pistons in the second round — but the more contributions they can get outside Tatum and Brown, the better chances they’ll have at repeating.

Rory McIlroy moves into ‘new chapter’ and targets more big prizes

Masters triumph was unique but Northern Irishman knows more silverware will follow if he maintains his fine form

When you have spent so long labouring under a burden associated with the reaching of targets, it would seem ridiculous to set more. At Augusta National this month Rory McIlroy didn’t just win the Masters. He didn’t just complete his career Grand Slam. He didn’t just end a wait for a fifth major that had stretched back to his halcyon summer of 2014. McIlroy did all of this at once; his emotion on the 18th green was partly because of the almighty weight that had been prised from his shoulders.

McIlroy’s subsequent celebration was endearing, but also thought-provoking. He spent time with his parents, his wider family, his lifetime coach and childhood friends. There was no open-top bus parade through the streets of his native Holywood or wild party at the golf club bearing the same name. No public lap of honour. All of that can wait.

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Djokovic pulls out of Italian Open on back of three-match losing streak

  • World No 5 to skip ATP Tour event before French Open
  • Serb will arrive at Roland Garros with lone win on clay

Novak Djokovic has reacted to his run of poor form by pulling out of the Italian Open in Rome next week. The 24-times grand slam champion is on a three-match losing streak, having crashed out of the Madrid Open after defeat by Matteo Arnaldi.

Tournament organisers announced on social media that Djokovic would not be playing in the Italian capital, with the Serbian writing on Instagram: “Rome, I will miss you. I hope we meet next year.”

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Raphinha goes from missing man to Barcelona’s Ballon d’Or contender

The former Leeds forward was on the periphery but is now key to Hansi Flick’s team thanks to his hunger for goals

To score, first you have to learn how to miss. Raphinha, to be fair, misses a lot. Most common of all, perhaps, is the low screamer, dragged across goal with the left foot, disappearing into the advertising hoardings with an unseen thud as the goalkeeper calmly strolls off in search of a fresh ball. If you close your eyes and try to picture Raphinha missing, this is almost certainly the miss you are imagining.

But Raphinha can miss in a plethora of other ways, too. The wild slice at the back post is another favourite. The free-kick into the wall. The mistimed header sailing harmlessly over the bar and Raphinha has never been the greatest header of a ball, but he is going to keep making the run nonetheless, again and again, all night if he has to. If it feels weird to begin a discussion of one of Europe’s most prolific forwards by listing all the ways he can miss then one helps to explain the other. Raphinha is a winger rather than a pure striker, but the trait he has in common with all the world’s great goalscorers is the ability to prize volume over grace, to put the last miss out of his mind, to keep coming and keep shooting with a ruthless, relentless hunger.

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Jamal Murray drops 43, sparks Nuggets to comfortable 131-115 win over Clippers, 3-2 series lead

NBA: Playoffs-Los Angeles Clippers at Denver Nuggets

Apr 29, 2025; Denver, Colorado, USA; Denver Nuggets guard Jamal Murray (27) reacts after a steal and basket in the fourth quarter against the LA Clippers during game five of the first round for the 2025 NBA Playoffs at Ball Arena. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

This is the Jamal Murray Nuggets fans have been waiting for this postseason. With this version of Murray, playing off Nikola Jokic, the Denver Nuggets resemble their 2023 championship team. The issue this season has been that version of Murray has not been around consistently.

That Murray showed up on Tuesday night, dropped 43 on the Clippers, sparked a comfortable 131-115 win, and now the Nuggets are one game away from advancing to the second round.

Denver’s offense had its best game of the series and now leads 3-2, heading back to Southern California for Game 6 on Thursday night.

For the first three games of this series, the Clippers looked like the better team, but Denver escaped Game 1 with a win because vintage Russell Westbrook showed up in the clutch.

However, for the last two games, the Nuggets have been the better team for seven of the eight quarters. They were in charge after three quarters of Game 4, then almost had an epic meltdown, one salvaged by Aaron Gordon’s tip-in. That makes two games the Clippers let slip through their hands.

Game 5 Tuesday night was all Denver from the opening tip. The longer this series has gone, the more it has felt like Jokic and Murray have figured the Clippers out, while the opposite feels true for Kawhi Leonard and James Harden.

Jokic finished with a relatively quiet triple-double of 13 points, 12 assists and 10 rebounds. Aaron Gordon had 23 points, while Westbrook had a good game off the bench with 19 points, shooting 3-of-6 from beyond the arc.

The best Clipper on the floor Tuesday night was Ivica Zubac, who scored 27 points on 11-of-15 shooting. Leonard added 20 points and 11 assists, while Harden had another quiet game with 11 points and eight rebounds.

Expect a desperate Clippers team in Game 6, one at home and trying to save its season. A big night from Harden or Norman Powell, could help the Clippers extend their season, but what Los Angeles needs more than their offense is for the team to rediscover the defense that had stood out in the first three games of this series.

Knicks Notes: What went wrong for NY in Game 5 loss; Pistons growing confidence going into Game 6

Jalen Duren was probably one of the happiest people in Manhattan on Tuesday night.

“This is amazing. Being here, in this atmosphere, playing against this team, there’s nothing like it,” Duren said late Tuesday in the visitor’s locker room at MSG. “This is what you dream of as a basketball player.”

Duren’s dream was obviously a nightmare for the Knicks. New York let a chance to close out this series slip through their fingers on Tuesday night.

What went wrong? New York’s top two options on offense didn’t shoot the ball well. Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns missed a combined 21 shots on 30 attempts. The other Knick starters shot a combined 22-for-42 from the field.

The Knicks also seemed to botch a late-game situation.

Brunson (leg) and Josh Hart (wrist) both had left the game late in the fourth quarter due to injury. The Knicks traded water with Hart and Brunson. But both were ready to return, standing at the scorer’s table with under a minute to play and the Knicks down four. New York could have called timeout to get Hart and Brunson in the game (they had one timeout to use). The club also could have stopped the clock with a foul. But Tom Thibodeau decided against both options. He let play continue with Hart and Brunson standing at the scorer’s table. Cade Cunningham found Ausar Thompson for a layup on the ensuing possession, expanding the Pistons’ lead to six with 27 seconds to play.

“Just coach’s decision,” Thibodeau said after the game when asked about the sequence.

What factors go into the decision?

“You look at the time, score, penalty, timeouts, all of the above,” Thibodeau said. “What’s happening in the game. The next possession, we’re weighing — there’s a lot that goes into it.”

Hindsight is 20/20 but the coach’s decision late in Game 5 turned out to be the wrong one.

Detroit finished the Knicks off with two Cade Cunningham free throws.

Now, New York faces a Pistons team that’s loose and brimming with confidence entering Game 6 on Thursday. This is a Pistons team that doesn’t shrink in tough moments.

“When you’re back is against the wall, you might be stuck in the corner, the only way to get out is to keep swinging,” Duren said. “That’s what we did, just kept swinging. Got out that corner.”

The Knicks aren’t quite on the ropes entering Game 6 on Thursday. But a loss would put all of the pressure on the Knicks in Game 7. The Pistons are playing with house money; New York needs to win the series.

Will the Knicks be able to close it out on Thursday?

Cade Cunningham doesn’t think so. He plans to return to the Garden for Game 7.

“We’ll be back,” he said.