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  • Dbacks recap and notes

    • Diamondbacks’ Ildemaro Vargas: Scores twice in win

      Vargas went 0-for-3 with a walk, a stolen base and two runs scored in Sunday’s 5-1 win over the Mets.

      Vargas was involved in the offense for a second straight game after driving in both runs in Saturday’s 2-0 win. The utility infielder is expected to stick at first base even with the pending activation of Carlos Santana (hamstring). Vargas is slashing .341/.366/.571 with six home runs, a team-high 24 RBI and 21 runs scored over 32 games.

    • Diamondbacks’ Ryan Waldschmidt: Key contributions to win

      Waldschmidt started in left field and went 2-for-4 with a double, three RBI and a run scored in Sunday’s 5-1 win over the Mets.

      Waldschmidt drove in Arizona’s first three runs with a two-run double the second inning and a run-scoring single in the sixth. He made a second consecutive start, filling in for a resting Lourdes Gurriel, after the rookie defended center field Saturday. With Alek Thomas having been designated for assignment, center field will likely belong to Waldschmidt at least until Jordan Lawlar (wrist) returns and possibly beyond.

    • Diamondbacks’ Lourdes Gurriel: Out of Sunday’s lineup

      Gurriel is not in the lineup for Sunday’s game against the Mets.

      Gurriel started the first two games of the series but will hit the bench Sunday after going 0-for-8 with two strikeouts. Ryan Waldschmidt will shift to left field while Jorge Barrosa starts in center.

    • Diamondbacks’ Gabriel Moreno: Getting Sunday off

      Moreno started the first two games of the series but will sit Sunday while in the midst of a mini slump, as he’s gone 0-for-9 with two walks over his past four contests. James McCann is starting behind the plate for Arizona in the series finale.

  • NBA Draft Lottery winners and losers: Pacers’ bet fails, more Kings bad luck, Wiz, Grizz and Clips hit big

    nba-draft-lottery-wall-imagn.png

    Imagn Images

    Perhaps the most anticipated NBA Draft Lottery in history is in the books. The Washington Wizards won the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NBA Draft, and they’ll be followed by the Utah Jazz at No. 2, the Memphis Grizzlies at No. 3 and the Chicago Bulls at No. 4.

    The 2026 lottery was enormously consequential for a number of reasons. The draft class itself is considered one of the deepest in NBA history. Four players are considered star-level talents: BYU forward AJ Dybantsa, Kansas guard Darryn Peterson, Duke forward Cameron Boozer and North Carolina forward Caleb Wilson. While the draft is loaded with more guard prospects, those four players were the ones widely considered to be at stake on Sunday, and now, even if we don’t know the order in which they’ll be selected, we have an idea of the four teams likely to get them.

    NBA Mock Draft: Fits for all 30 picks with 2026 lottery set; Dybantsa No. 1 to Wizards, Peterson No. 2 to Jazz
    Adam Finkelstein
    NBA Mock Draft: Fits for all 30 picks with 2026 lottery set; Dybantsa No. 1 to Wizards, Peterson No. 2 to Jazz

    But perhaps more importantly, this was the last draft class for the foreseeable future expected to be heavily impacted by tanking. Lottery reform is expected to pass later this month, and the proposed system would punish the three worst teams in the NBA while flattening the odds for the other non-playoff teams. This was the last chance these teams were going to have to impact their own draft position. Moving forward, it’s going to be more random than ever.

    So now that the dust has settled, let’s dig into Sunday’s results. Who are the big winners and losers of the 2026 NBA Draft Lottery?

    Winner: Washington Wizards

    The Wizards will pick No. 1 for the first time since selecting John Wall in 2010

    The Wizards just became the first team in NBA history to lose 64 or more games in three consecutive seasons. They’ve been outscored by more than 11 points per game in that span. To call the last three years in Washington bleak would be an understatement. The lottery gods hadn’t exactly smiled on them in that window. They landed the No. 2 overall pick in the weak 2024 draft. That got them Alex Sarr, a fine player, but hardly a franchise-changer. They needed that luck more a year ago. Instead, they fell the maximum four spots possible, picking No. 6 from the No. 2 lottery position.

    Well, finally, the lottery worked out, giving them access to a selection that could potentially get this rebuilding team a franchise player. The timing couldn’t be better.  Being one of the worst teams in the league will no longer benefit them, and they just acquired Anthony Davis and Trae Young. That means one of two things are about to happen: either the Wizards will return to the postseason, or they’ll fall short and potentially double-dip on the lottery by benefitting from the weighted lottery of the past few years and the flatter one that’s coming now. The one thing the Wizards needed was a true, long-term franchise player. They just got one, and the system is set up to help them continue building around him.

    It feels somewhat fitting, with lottery reform coming, that we’d land on this, specific result. Since the odds changed in 2019, the worst team had never won the No. 1 overall pick. Now, in the final year of this format, that changes. The draft is meant to strengthen the worst teams, and that’s what the lottery did on Sunday.

    Loser: Brooklyn Nets

    Brooklyn’s bet from two summers ago has turned into a bust

    The Nets made an enormous bet against themselves in the 2024 offseason when they traded a handful of future picks acquired in Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving trades to Houston in exchange for control over their 2025 and 2026 draft picks back. In 2025, at least, they gained almost nothing out of that exchange. They won more than expected and Phoenix lost more than expected, so the Suns pick they gave Houston in that deal landed just two slots behind Brooklyn, at No. 8 and No. 10, respectively. As Egor Demin was a somewhat surprising selection, it’s entirely possible that Brooklyn could have gotten him without making that trade. That put a ton of pressure on their 2026 pick to make up for that bad outcome. They paid a small fortune for two spins in the lottery that would be based on a record they could control, and the first one was a bust.

    Well, now the second pick has disappointed as well. In total, the Nets gave up three first-round picks and one first-round swap to the Houston Rockets for two lottery picks that combined to fall down five total slots.

    It’s not a total loss. This is a deep enough draft to find a foundational player outside of the top four. But let’s be honest: when you trade as much as the Nets traded for control over your picks back, you probably don’t envision missing out on the top four in both drafts. With lottery reform coming, pick volume is going to become more valuable than ever. The Nets needed a young star to justify the volume they traded, and with Houston still in control of their 2027 pick, Brooklyn can’t even try to make up for this with a good lottery outcome next year. The future has never been murkier for the Nets. Their big 2024 swing now looks like a colossal miss.

    Winner: Utah Jazz

    Suddenly, the Jazz have a roster that should be ready to compete for the long haul

    The Jazz became one of the faces of tanking this season. They were fined $500,000 for conduct detrimental to the league. They were hit for punishing the player participation policy in the past. Yet, comparatively anyway, they both needed to tank less than other teams at the bottom of the standings and benefitted less from the tanking they’d already done.

    They blew up a fairly strong Donovan Mitchell-Rudy Gobert team to set up this rebuild when they still had several years of contract control on both. They overperformed in the first two years of their rebuild, ultimately winding up with players in Taylor Hendricks and Cody Williams who haven’t yet lived up to their draft position (and Hendricks is now in Memphis), then fell four slots to No. 5 with the NBA’s worst record last season. After trading for Jaren Jackson Jr., the Jazz were already well-positioned to compete next season, no matter where their top-eight protected pick landed.

    Well, that pick didn’t just land in the protected range. It came in all the way at No. 2. Now the Jazz have an embarrassment of riches. Between Jackson, Lauri MarkkanenWalker KesslerKeyonte George and Ace Bailey, it’s not even clear if Utah has a starting role available to offer. That’s a very good problem to have. Utah had already built the foundation of a playoff team, but nowhere in that core existed an obvious, All-NBA-level player. That limited this group’s theoretical upside, but a high lottery pick can certainly correct that. Utah’s rookie will be joining a team ready to make the playoffs right away. If he grows quickly enough, perhaps even the championship picture will be realistic before long.

    Loser: Sacramento Kings

    The consistently unlucky Kings fell all the way to No. 7 in the draft order

    The Sacramento Kings have spent a lot of time in the NBA Draft lottery lately. That’s what happens when you miss the playoffs 19 times in 20 years. Yet the ping pong balls haven’t exactly been kind to them during that streak of futility. Their pick moved up only twice in that span. They squandered the first one by taking Marvin Bagley over Luka Dončić. They got unlucky in the second, picking No. 4 in a draft that had All-Stars go No. 1 and No. 2.

    Even without lottery luck, the draft has really been Sacramento’s only source of hope across these two miserable decades. Fans could tolerate years of mismanagement because they knew that with the right pick, everything could turn around. Yet no team stands to lose more from the NBA’s upcoming lottery reform for the Kings. Suddenly, being one of the league’s worst teams every year will be actively detrimental in the lottery process, and since history suggests we shouldn’t assume the Kings are about to learn how to build a roster wisely, they’re in real danger of getting stuck at the bottom of a new system that offers them no lifelines.

    That’s what made today’s outcome so vital. It was their last real chance to secure a franchise changer by virtue of how badly they played. Maybe they’ll still get one outside of the top four. Maybe they’ll get lucky in the flattened lotteries to come. But that’s all it would be at this point: luck. They had two decades’ worth of chances to actually benefit from all of their losing. Now that’s all gone, and they’re stuck paying for miracles that the odds no longer remotely favor. Well, either that or correct everything that’s been wrong with their organization for the past two decades, but considering the track record, I’m not holding my breath.

    Winner: Los Angeles Clippers

    The Clippers’ future looks a lot better now than it did eight months ago

    There are currently only two active players in the NBA who were drafted by the Clippers in the lottery (and not traded on draft night). One of them is Eric Gordon, who was the ninth-oldest player in the NBA this season. The other is Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. The Clippers have been so competent and so aggressive for the better part of two decades now that they simply haven’t had access to high draft picks. It hasn’t helped that they’ve traded so many of their picks away for older players, but with several more years of draft control still owed from prior trades, they weren’t going to be in a position to make a lottery pick of their own any time soon. Yet introducing some upside into the equation here was an absolute necessity. Kawhi Leonard defied Father Time this season, but the next era of Clipper basketball is coming.

    And it will now include a high lottery pick. The Clippers didn’t need to trade Ivica Zubac. He’s only 29 and could have played alongside Darius Garland for years to come. They only did so for the chance to pick in a portion of the draft they just otherwise weren’t going to have access to any time soon. It was roughly a 50-50 shot based on the 1-4 and 10-30 protections the Pacers put on the pick, but that risk paid off for the Clippers, who can now add a foundational young piece to their new core of Garland and Bennedict Mathurin. How they use that pick will be one of the stories of the draft. The middle part of the lottery is very guard-heavy, and Garland and Mathurin have them set in the backcourt, so this will be a test of this front office’s creativity.

    But that’s a great problem to have. A year ago, they had one of the bleakest futures in the NBA. Now they have Garland, Mathurin, a top draft pick and cap flexibility in the NBA’s most desirable market. That’s a heck of a rebound.

    Loser: Indiana Pacers

    The Pacers’ reasonable roll of the lottery dice did not work out

    After losing Myles Turner, the Pacers knew they were going to need to make a significant investment to find a suitable replacement center. They also likely knew that with Tyrese Haliburton coming back, they would never have another chance at another very high draft pick. In the ongoing roster-building arms race led by San Antonio and Oklahoma City, winning a championship in the coming years probably necessitated both. So the Pacers took a risk: they traded their rare lottery pick, with protections from No. 1 through No. 4 and No. 10 through No. 30, as part of a package for Ivica Zubac. Essentially, this turned their certain lottery pick and rare chance to nab a high-upside youngster into a 50-50 proposition.

    That risk ultimately busted. Look, the Pacers are going to be OK. With Zubac replacing Turner, they’ll jump right back into the championship mix. But the Pacers have missed the playoffs 10 times since 1990. They’re just very rarely positioned to make high draft picks, and since the Indianapolis market isn’t exactly a star magnet, they’re unlikely to recruit any veteran stars to join them in the near future either. This was by far the best chance the Pacers were going to have at securing a long-term co-star for Tyrese Haliburton. Even if they won’t come out of this gap year totally empty-handed thanks to Zubac, that’s still a devastating blow. They tried to balance their short- and long-term needs by trading for Zubac in a way that still gave them a chance at landing a top pick, but their dice roll came up snake eyes.

    Winner: Memphis Grizzlies

    This was a crucial lottery for Memphis, and it worked out perfectly for the Grizz

    The Grizzlies picked a potentially unfortunate moment to initiate a rebuild. Though they got great returns for Desmond Bane and Jaren Jackson Jr., they won more games than they might have liked by holding Jackson into the season, and now, with lottery reform and weak draft classes coming, they theoretically have less to gain by being bad over the next few years than the teams that have spent the past few lotteries jockeying for position. That made 2026 a critical lottery for the Grizzlies, specifically. They didn’t get multiple bites at the weighted lottery apple. This was by far their best chance at a superstar.

    And they’ll fortunately have their chance at one. Considering their track record, a top-four pick in their hands is a fairly safe bet to become a high-level player. The Grizzlies are one of the best drafting and developing teams in the NBA, and even if Ja Morant and Jaren Jackson Jr. never led them to playoff glory, both became undeniable stars on their watch. Now this year’s pick should be at the center of a very promising rebuild. Cedric Coward was a home run selection last year and while Zach Edey hasn’t been healthy, he’s been great when he’s been on the floor. Combine those two with all of the picks the Grizzlies still have from the Bane and Jackson trades and they’re in great shape to build around their new centerpiece.

    More than that, this is a win for their fans. Though the Morant era went down in flames, he remains an enormously popular player in Memphis. He’s the only homegrown superstar that city has ever had, and getting this pick will make trading him far easier for those fans to stomach. They’ll have someone new to build around, and they’ll have someone new to market as the face of their city. Though relocation has never actually been on the table (so far as we know), that talk has pestered Memphis for years. LeBron James fed that fire earlier in the season. This pick has a chance to put the Grizzlies on the map in a way no player ever has. Memphis needed this win as much as the Grizzlies did, and the lottery balls delivered.

  • Killorn, Sennecke get big goals in Ducks’ series-evening, 4-3 win over Golden Knights in Game 4

    ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) Alex Killorn and rookie Beckett Sennecke had a goal and an assist apiece, and the Anaheim Ducks beat the Vegas Golden Knights 4-3 in Game 4 on Sunday night to even their second-round series at two games apiece.

    Ian Moore got his first career playoff goal, Cutter Gauthier contributed three assists and Mikael Granlund also scored for the upstart Ducks, who responded to their 6-2 blowout loss in Game 3 with a mature two-way performance in their first playoff run since 2018.

    Lukas Dostal made 18 saves in a strong bounce-back effort after getting pulled from Game 3 for allowing three goals in his latest shaky first period, and his teammates provided more than enough offense to even the series.

    Game 5 is Tuesday night in Las Vegas, with Game 6 back in Anaheim on Thursday night.

    Pavel Dorofeyev and Brett Howden scored for the Golden Knights, whose three-game road winning streak ended.

    Carter Hart stopped 19 shots despite some shaky moments, while Mitch Marner had three assists in Game 4 following his hat trick in Game 3, giving him an NHL-leading and career-best 16 points in the postseason.

    Anaheim scored two power-play goals in Game 4, ending the unit’s 0-for-11 skid and finally denting a Vegas penalty kill that allowed just one power-play goal in its first nine postseason games.

    After Killorn scored a tiebreaking power-play goal late in the second period, Moore added one early in the third with his first playoff point.

    Tomas Hertl scored for Vegas with 1:04 left while Hart was pulled for an extra attacker, but Anaheim held on.

    Sennecke, the Ducks’ 20-year-old Calder Trophy finalist, opened the scoring with just the second power-play goal allowed by the Golden Knights in the entire postseason, ending a streak of 21 straight kills and the Ducks’ 0-for-11 start to the series on the power play.

    Sennecke scored a goal in his third consecutive game, joining Sidney Crosby (2007) as the only players under 21 with a three-game postseason goal streak in the 21st century.

    Howden scored his seventh goal of the postseason early in the second period off a slick setup from former Ducks draft pick William Karlsson.

    But Killorn put the Ducks back ahead when his shot trickled through Hart late in the second period for his fourth goal of the postseason.

    Vegas played without captain Mark Stone, who incurred an undisclosed injury in Game 3.

    Anaheim shook up its lineup, inserting puck-moving defenseman Olen Zellweger for his playoff debut and his first game action since April 7. Moore and forward Mason McTavish also returned after healthy scratches.

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

    Copyright 2026 STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.

    Expert Picks
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    Matt Severance
    Matt SeveranceSeverance Pays
    #2
    +784.5 (66%)
    Last 29 NHL
    Anaheim-105
    Money Line
    Picked May 10 @ 3:02 pm, 0.5 unit on Caesars
    WIN
    Anaheim +1.5 would be nice, but that’s ridiculously priced so we’ll roll with a half unit on this. The main reason why is that Vegas captain Mark Stone has been ruled out. The veteran had 73 points in only 60 games and was plus-26 during the regular season; he has seven points and is minus-1 in nine playoff games. Vegas does not win the Cup a few years ago without Stone, who deserved the Conn Smythe Trophy but lost out to teammate Jonathan Marchessault.

    Matt’s Pick

    1 2 3 T

    2-2

    1 1 1 3

    2-2

    2 1 1 4
    STARS OF THE GAME
    SKATERS G A +/- SOG
    R. Andersson D 0 0 -2 0
    I. Barbashev LW 0 0 0 3
    D. Coghlan D 0 0 1 0
    P. Dorofeyev RW 1 0 1 4
    N. Dowd C 0 0 -2 1
    J. Eichel C 0 2 1 0
    N. Hanifin D 0 0 -2 1
    T. Hertl C 1 0 1 1
    B. Howden C 1 0 1 1
    B. Hutton D 0 0 1 0
    W. Karlsson C 0 1 2 2
    K. Kolesar RW 0 0 -1 0
    M. Marner RW 0 3 1 2
    B. McNabb D 0 0 0 2
    B. Saad LW 0 0 -1 0
    C. Sissons C 0 0 0 1
    C. Smith LW 0 0 -1 0
    S. Theodore D 0 0 1 3
    SKATERS G A +/- SOG
    J. Carlson D 0 0 0 1
    L. Carlsson C 0 0 -1 0
    C. Gauthier LW 0 3 1 4
    M. Granlund C 1 0 1 2
    R. Johnston LW 0 0 0 0
    A. Killorn LW 1 1 0 2
    C. Kreider LW 0 0 -1 0
    J. LaCombe D 0 0 -2 0
    M. McTavish C 0 0 1 3
    P. Mintyukov D 0 0 0 0
    I. Moore D 1 0 1 3
    R. Poehling C 0 0 1 1
    B. Sennecke RW 1 1 0 2
    T. Terry RW 0 0 -2 0
    J. Trouba D 0 0 -1 3
    J. Viel LW 0 1 1 2
    T. Washe C 0 0 -1 0
    O. Zellweger D 0 1 2 0
    GOALIES SA GA SV SV% TOI
    C. Hart 23 4 19 0.826 57:43
    GOALIES SA GA SV SV% TOI
    L. Dostal 21 3 18 0.857 59:53
  • Canadiens beat Sabres 6-2 to take a 2-1 lead in the second-round Eastern Conference series

    MONTREAL (AP) Cole Caufield scored his second goal of the playoffs and added an assist as the Montreal Canadiens beat the Buffalo Sabres 6-2 in a dominant Game 3 on Sunday night to take a 2-1 lead in their second-round playoff series.

    Alex Newhook had two goals, including an empty-netter, and Zachary Bolduc, Juraj Slafkovsky and Kirby Dach also scored for Montreal.

    Lane Hutson and Jake Evans each had two assists, and Jakub Dobes made 26 saves as the Canadiens won consecutive games for the first time in this season’s playoffs.

    The Montreal crowd broke into chants of “Do-by! Do-by!” – one of several ovations the rookie goalie received Sunday night – as Dobes burst into laughter from his crease.

    “It warms your heart, and I’m really proud to be a Canadien and play for this franchise,” Dobes said. “After the Tampa series, I couldn’t believe some of the things that happened in the city, but it’s so much fun. I’m just happy that the fans are having fun with this as much as we do.”

    It is quickly becoming the spring of Dobes in Montreal, though the candid netminder insists he’s still his same old self.

    “I’m not a hero, I’m just me. I’m just a goofy goalie who tries to stop pucks,” Dobes said. “I will pretty much go home, eat, watch Game of Thrones and go to bed. I don’t think that’s anything heroic.

    “And when it’s time to do my job I will do anything to win and make this franchise happy, make these fans happy.”

    Tage Thompson and Rasmus Dahlin each had a goal and an assist for Buffalo, which dropped its first road game of the postseason. Alex Lyon stopped 31 shots in his second straight loss.

    The teams split the first two games in Buffalo. The Sabres handed the Canadiens a 4-2 loss in Game 1 before Montreal responded with a 5-1 victory in Game 2.

    Game 4 is Tuesday night in Montreal.

    “Everyone in the room has better. We still haven’t gotten to what I think is our best game,” Thompson said. “It starts with me, it starts with Dahlin, (Alex) Tuch. There’s more in the tank.”

    Minutes after missing an open net, Caufield scored on the power play for his first goal in six games to give the Canadiens a 2-1 lead 6:05 into the second and kick off a wild, four-goal period.

    Hutson deked around a stick-less Jordan Greenway and dropped a pass to Caufield, who scored into the gaping net as the crowd erupted.

    The Canadiens appeared to gain a 3-1 lead one minute later when Josh Anderson’s backhand trickled through Lyon as Phillip Danault crashed the crease. The officials, however, ruled no goal.

    Bolduc ultimately gave the Canadiens a two-goal advantage at 10:43 in the second after Joe Veleno chased down a puck behind Sabres defenseman Logan Stanley and set him up.

    Chaos ensued two minutes later when Beck Malenstyn ran over Dobes, setting off a massive scrum and sending the Canadiens on a power play. Slafkovsky made it 4-1 with a deflection on Hutson’s point shot as Montreal went 2 for 5 with the man advantage.

    Dahlin cut into the deficit with 5:14 left in the second period, sending a shot off the far post.

    But Dach restored the three-goal lead at 8:46 in the third when he pulled a loose puck out from under Lyon and fired a shot into the open net.

    The goal followed multiple key saves from Dobes, twice denying Zach Benson, as the Canadiens fended off a Sabres pushback that included a nervy penalty kill early in the period.

    Newhook, who also scored twice in Game 2, added his second when he was hooked with a clear path to the empty net with 4:46 left in the third.

    Large crowds packed the surrounding streets hours ahead of the game. Kirk Muller carried the ceremonial torch before puck drop of the Canadiens’ first second-round playoff game before a full Bell Centre since 2015.

    Thompson wasted little time to – temporarily – quiet the crowd, opening the scoring 53 seconds in after Dahlin’s point shot deflected off the end boards and onto his stick. He ended a seven-game drought after going minus-4 with a costly turnover in Game 2.

    “We started off really good,” Thompson said. “There were spurts throughout the game where I thought we got to our game and played to our standard, but just not consistent enough, and we gave them life.

    “The building is pretty rocking, so it’s a little deflating.”

    Newhook sparked a run of four unanswered goals by the Canadiens.

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

    Copyright 2026 STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.

    Expert Picks
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    Todd Fuhrman
    Todd FuhrmanVegas Insider
    #1
    +987 (63%)
    Last 30 NHL
    Under 6-115
    Over / Under
    Picked May 9 @ 4:52 pm, 1 unit on Caesars
    LOSS
    Buffalo came out on fire in Game 1 and capitalized against a beleaguered Canadiens side; it was Montreal turning the tables in game 2 with with a pair of quick tallies to force Buffalo into a negative game state. Early goals have headlined this series so far yet we’ve seen both games push a closing total of 6. I expect Buffalo to simplify their approach on the road like they did vs Boston that made them so successful while Montreal showed their defensive mettle at home vs Tampa as well. Tage Thompson appears to be dealing with an undisclosed injury as well that can hamper the Sabres offensive push meaning this contest has all the makings of a 3-2 grudge match.

    Todd’s Pick

    1 2 3 T

    1-2

    1 1 0 2
    1 3 2 6
    STARS OF THE GAME
    SKATERS G A +/- SOG
    Z. Benson LW 0 0 -1 3
    B. Byram D 0 0 -2 2
    S. Carrick C 0 0 0 2
    R. Dahlin D 1 1 -2 3
    J. Doan RW 0 1 0 4
    J. Greenway LW 0 0 0 0
    P. Krebs C 0 0 -1 1
    B. Malenstyn LW 0 0 0 0
    R. McLeod C 0 0 -1 2
    J. Norris C 0 0 0 2
    O. Power D 0 0 0 0
    J. Quinn RW 0 0 -2 1
    M. Samuelsson D 0 0 0 1
    L. Stanley D 0 0 -1 0
    T. Thompson C 1 1 -2 3
    C. Timmins D 0 0 -1 0
    A. Tuch RW 0 0 -2 4
    J. Zucker LW 0 0 -1 0
    SKATERS G A +/- SOG
    J. Anderson RW 0 0 0 4
    Z. Bolduc C 1 0 1 1
    A. Carrier D 0 1 1 0
    C. Caufield RW 1 1 -1 3
    K. Dach C 1 0 2 4
    P. Danault C 0 1 1 3
    I. Demidov RW 0 1 1 1
    N. Dobson D 0 0 1 1
    J. Evans C 0 2 2 3
    K. Guhle D 0 0 1 0
    L. Hutson D 0 2 2 1
    M. Matheson D 0 0 1 0
    A. Newhook C 2 0 2 4
    J. Slafkovsky LW 1 0 -1 4
    N. Suzuki C 0 1 0 4
    A. Texier LW 0 1 1 0
    J. Veleno C 0 1 1 1
    A. Xhekaj D 0 0 0 2
    GOALIES SA GA SV SV% TOI
    A. Lyon 36 5 31 0.861 58:39
    GOALIES SA GA SV SV% TOI
    J. Dobes 28 2 26 0.929 59:53
  • ASU 11 Oklahoma State 7 Final ASU Baseball

    Oklahoma St. AT Arizona St. (33 – 18, 16 – 11) (34 – 17, 18 – 11)

    • Date

    • Attendance

      2910

    • Sport

      Baseball

    1ST 2ND 3RD 4TH 5TH 6TH 7TH 8TH 9TH R H E
    Oklahoma St. 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 4 7 10 2
    Arizona St. 1 0 5 0 2 1 0 2 0 11 12 1

    Scoring Summary

    OKLAHOMA ST. ARIZONA ST.
    Arizona St. 1st Toigo,Dean sacrifice fly to rf, RBI (1-0 B); Hairston,Landon scored, unearned. 0 1
    Oklahoma St. 3rd Conover,Alex homered to deep left field (389 ft), 11th of season, RBI (1-1 BF). 1 1
    Arizona St. 3rd Toigo,Dean advanced to second base on a passed ball; Hairston,Landon advanced to third base on a passed ball; Zavorek,Beckett scored on a passed ball, unearned. 1 2
    Arizona St. 3rd Smaldino,Dominic homered to deep left field (369 ft), 12th of season, 3RBI (2-1 BKB); Hairston,Landon scored; Toigo,Dean scored from second base. 1 5
    Arizona St. 3rd McGary,Ky homered to deep right field (412 ft), 1st of season, RBI (0-1 S). 1 6
    Arizona St. 5th Smaldino,Dominic homered to deep center field (434 ft), 13th of season, 2RBI (3-2 BBSSB); Contrades,Nuu scored from first base. 1 8
    Oklahoma St. 6th Norman,Sebastian homered to deep left field (402 ft), 6th of season, 2RBI (0-2 FF); Brueggemann,Colin scored from first base. 3 8
    Arizona St. 6th Smaldino,Dominic reached on a fielder’s choice hit through the left side of the infield, RBI (0-1 F); Hairston,Landon scored; Contrades,Nuu advanced to third base; Toigo,Dean out at second base, 3b to 2b. 3 9
    Arizona St. 8th Smaldino,Dominic homered to deep left field (389 ft), 14th of season, 2RBI (0-0); Contrades,Nuu scored from first base. 3 11
    Oklahoma St. 9th Ritchie,Kollin homered to deep left field (372 ft), 27th of season, 3RBI (2-2 KBBS); Indomenico,Remo scored from second base; Saunders,Evan scored from first base. 6 11
    Oklahoma St. 9th Meola,Aidan homered to deep right field (389 ft), 16th of season, RBI (1-2 KFB). 7 11

    Hitting

    POS PLAYER OKLAHOMA ST.
    AB R H RBI BB K LOB
    LF Conover, Alex 4 1 3 1 1 0 0
    PR Indomenico, Remo 0 1 0 0 0 0 0
    2B Ortiz, Avery 3 0 1 0 1 0 0
    PR Saunders, Evan 0 1 0 0 0 0 0
    CF Ritchie, Kollin 5 1 3 3 0 0 2
    3B Meola, Aidan 4 1 1 1 1 1 3
    DH Smithwick, Campbell 3 0 0 0 0 2 2
    PH/DH Pomeroy, Deacon 0 0 0 0 2 0 0
    1B Brueggemann, Colin 4 1 1 0 1 2 0
    RF Wallace, Danny 2 0 0 0 0 2 0
    PH/RF Norman, Sebastian 3 1 1 2 0 2 1
    C Francisco, Brady 4 0 0 0 0 2 1
    SS Bowen, Terrance 4 0 0 0 0 2 0
    P Phillips, Brennan 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    P Kennedy, Jake 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    P Jennings, Parker 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    P Blake, Drew 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    Total 36 7 10 7 6 13 9
    POS PLAYER ARIZONA ST.
    AB R H RBI BB K LOB
    CF Hairston, Landon 4 3 2 0 1 0 2
    2B Contrades, Nu’u 3 2 2 0 2 0 0
    RF Toigo, Dean 2 1 0 1 1 2 0
    1B Smaldino, Dominic 5 3 3 8 0 0 0
    LF Polk, Matt 1 0 1 0 0 0 0
    PH/LF McGary, Ky 2 1 1 1 0 0 0
    PH/LF Myers, Sam 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
    DH Niclai, Coen 2 0 0 0 1 1 0
    PH/DH Michel, Garrett 2 0 0 0 0 1 3
    SS Moutzouridis, PJ 4 0 1 0 0 1 0
    C Briggs, Brody 4 0 0 0 0 2 2
    3B Zavorek, Beckett 4 1 2 0 0 1 0
    P Klecker, Kole 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    P Overbay, Alex 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    P Fitzpatrick, Sean 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    P Edwards, Finn 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    P Linder, Colin 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    P Schaefer, Derek 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    Total 34 11 12 10 5 8 7

    Pitching

    OKLAHOMA ST.
    PLAYER IP H R ER BB SO WP BK HB IBB AB BF FO GO NP
    Phillips, Brennan (L, 3-3) 5.0 8 8 6 3 4 0 0 1 0 21 26 4 5 99
    Kennedy, Jake 1.0 2 1 1 1 2 1 0 1 0 5 7 0 1 23
    Jennings, Parker 1.0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 4 4 1 1 9
    Blake, Drew 1.0 1 2 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 4 5 2 0 15
    Total 8.0 12 11 9 5 8 1 0 2 0 34 42 7 7 146
    ARIZONA ST.
    PLAYER IP H R ER BB SO WP BK HB IBB AB BF FO GO NP
    Klecker, Kole (W, 6-2) 5.0 5 1 1 1 7 0 0 0 0 20 21 4 3 93
    Overbay, Alex 1.1 2 2 2 2 3 0 0 0 0 6 8 0 1 45
    Fitzpatrick, Sean 0.2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 4 2 0 21
    Edwards, Finn 1.0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 1 8
    Linder, Colin 0.1 2 4 4 2 1 0 0 1 0 3 6 0 0 26
    Schaefer, Derek 0.2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 2 1 0 8
    Total 9.0 10 7 7 6 13 0 0 1 0 36 43
  • Smaldino ties school record with three homers, Baseball salvages finale from Cowboys

    No. 16 Sun Devil Baseball avoided the sweep with the win on Mother’s Day as Dominic Smaldino hit three home runs and collected eight RBIs.

    Smaldino ties school record with three homers, Baseball salvages finale from Cowboys

    Alyssa Colwell 

    Dominic Smaldino hit three home runs in the victory against Oklahoma State

    PHOENIX — No. 16 Sun Devil Baseball did what it has done best all season, winning a series finale and – in doing so – salvaging its series against Oklahoma State with an 11-7 victory on Sunday at Phoenix Municipal Stadium.

    In the final home game of the 2026 regular season – a campaign that saw ASU set a school record in averaging 3,553 fans per game over the course of the year – Dominic Smaldino put the team on his back and matched an Arizona State single-game school record with three home runs while also logging eight RBIs.

    The Sun Devils (34-17, 17-10 Big 12) moved to 10-2 in series finales in the process (losses at KSU, vs. WVU) and maintained a hold on third place in the Big 12 rankings heading into the final weekend of play three games back from conference leader Kansas.

    Kole Klecker capped off his exceptional campaign within the hitter friendly confines of Phoenix Municipal Stadium with 5.0 innings of one-run baseball, striking out seven with just one walk while scattering five hits against one of the most potent offenses in the nation.

    Landon HairstonNu’u Contrades and Beckett Zavorek all notched multi-hit days. Sean FitzpatrickFinn Edwards and Derek Schaefer all stranded runners in relief in their 2.1 combined innings of work.

    Turning point
    The Sun Devils were in desperate need of a weekend-salvaging victory on Sunday and the team turned to the guy that has helped them be so good in series finales all year long in Kole Klecker. After watching the Cowboys homer seven times last night and eight times in the previous 10 innings of the series, Klecker – who had to leave last week’s Sunday game early – largely stymied the incredibly potent Cowboy offense and held it to just one run on a solo homer over his 5.0 innings of work. Klecker struck out seven and walked just one and stranded five baserunners. That effort allowed the Sun Devils to jump out to an 8-1 lead through his five innings, keyed by a five-run third inning that saw Smaldino pick up his first homer on a three-run shot while Ky McGary recorded his first career homer as a pinch hitter.

    Big moment
    With Oklahoma State’s potent offense and affinity for the long ball, no lead seemed safe and the momentum had shifted at the start of the back half of the game with the Cowboys getting two runs back in the fifth and having two runners on in the sixth when Aidan Meola ripped one to the wall in right center field. What looked like it would have plated two runs and brought OSU back within four runs proved to be the inning-ending out as Landon Hairston sprinted into the frame and made a leaping grab at the ball to get ASU through the inning unscathed and keep the game from spiraling into OSU’s favor.

    Final straw
    After OSU got two runners on to lead off the eighth, Finn Edwards entered and flashed his highest velo of the season as he notched a strikeout and got the Cowboys to roll into an inning-ending double play to put a zero on the board. Smaldino put the finishing touches on his day with a two-run homer on the first pitch he saw for his record tying third homer and an 11-3 ASU advantage. The Cowboys didn’t go quietly into the afternoon, however, notching a pair of homers and four runs in the ninth to put the tying run in the hole. Derek Schaefer entered and squashed that with two quick outs to seal the victory.

    The big number
    3 –
     Dominic Smaldino tied ASU’s school record for a single game with his three-home run effort on Sunday, giving him five homers in less than 24 hours after recording two last night. The two games marked the first two multi-homer games of the juniors career. Smaldino is tied with 10 other players that have notched the milestone in program history and became the first Sun Devil to record three homers in a game since Joey DiMichele on May 1, 2011 against Stanford. Smaldino recorded eight RBIs in the game, which ties him for fourth in ASU single-game history as well.

  • Edwards guides the Timberwolves past the Spurs 114-109 to tie the series after Wembanyama’s ejection

    MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Anthony Edwards had 16 of his 36 points in the fourth quarter to help the Minnesota Timberwolves even their second-round NBA playoff series against the San Antonio Spurs with a 114-109 victory, following the stunning ejection of star Victor Wembanyama early in the second quarter of Game 4 on Sunday.

    Naz Reid took the fateful elbow to the neck from a frustrated Wembanyama and finished with 15 points and nine rebounds to help the Timberwolves finish strong after some shaky stretches.

    “Pain is weakness in the body,” Reid said. “That’s it.”

    Edwards hit a 27-footer to bring the Wolves within 94-91, turning to shout at the crowd for some help down the stretch as the Spurs. His catch-and-shoot 3-pointer from the wing with 5:12 left put them up 98-97, their first lead since midway through the third quarter.

    Then the big men went to work without Wembanyama patrolling the paint. Rudy Gobert, who had 11 points and 13 rebounds, converted a three-point play with 3:02 left off a high-low feed from Reid and later threw down a dunk for a 107-101 lead with 1:56 to go after a slick pass from Julius Randle.

    Reid’s follow shot with 40 seconds left gave the Wolves a seven-point lead, before Dylan Harper had a rebound, a drawn foul, a steal, and two free throws to help the Spurs pull within three.

    After managing to corral a full-court baseball toss from inbound passer Jaden McDaniels as De’Aaron Fox undercut his leaping catch and caused a loose ball, Ayo Dosunmu drew a foul and sank two free throws with 9.8 seconds left to put the game out of reach and tie the series at two games apiece.

    San Antonio hosts Game 5 on Tuesday, with Wembanyama’s status to be determined by the league following the Flagrant 2 foul call and automatic ejection he was levied for the excessive contact to Reid.

    Harper and Fox each scored 24 points and Stephon Castle added 20 as the Spurs guards unflinchingly took the baton from their 7-foot-4 superstar and turned the rest of the night into a mid-range clinic with an array of pull-up jumpers in and around the paint.

    “Just trying to be what the team needed me to be,” said Harper, the second overall pick in the NBA draft last year. “I think I did OK. Obviously the main goal is to win. We didn’t get that done.”

    The crowd at Target Center went wild when Wembanyama walked off the floor with Minnesota leading by two, but the Wolves never fully took advantage of the gift created by his absence. They’ve long had a tendency of losing their edge, particularly defensively, when an opponent’s star player is missing.

    “When every team is missing their best player, everybody plays free. They get more shots, more confident,” Edwards said. “So I think it was a lot harder on us.”

    After committing six turnovers in a 20-point third quarter, the Wolves found themselves in another eight-point hole early in the fourth following Fox’s 3-pointer before delivering another clutch finish.

    “We have a resilient group of guys. No matter the circumstances, we are going to keep fighting and give everything we have and keep trusting one another,” Gobert said. “Just making the right play. That’s who we are. We might not be always consistent with that, but I feel like when it matters, we raise our level.”

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

    Copyright 2026 STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.

    Expert Picks

    View all 4 picks

    Prop Bet Guy
    Prop Bet GuyDoug
    +537 (71%)
    Last 14 NBA Player Props
    Under 28.5-120
    Julius Randle • PTS + AST + REB • Player Prop
    Picked May 10 @ 6:55 pm, 1 unit on BetMGM
    WIN
    B365/MGM. With Anthony Edwards re-entering the starting lineup, and looking healthier each game, this reads as a good spot to fade Julius Randle. The matchup doesn’t bode well as for Randle, who thrives when he can get to the basket – a very hard task against the Spurs. And the typical playoff minutes bump is not guaranteed for Randle, as the Naz Reid-Rudy Gobert pairing has proved to be the better front court matchup in this series. I’d take this down to under 27.5, as his usage (24% in Game 2, 21% in Game 3, is trending in the wrong direction).

    Prop’s Pick

    Prop Bet Guy
    Prop Bet GuyDoug
    +537 (71%)
    Last 14 NBA Player Props
    Over 12.5-125
    Victor Wembanyama • Rebounds • Player Prop
    Picked May 10 @ 6:15 pm, 1 unit on FanDuel
    LOSS
    FanDuel. Victor Wembanyama has exactly 15 rebounds in each game this series, averaging 21.7 rebound chances per contest. It’s a great matchup for the Frenchman, as he’s tasked guarding his countryman, Rudy Gobert, who does not pose much of an offensive threat. Free to roam around the bucket and crash, Wemby has thrived cleaning this glass this series. I don’t see that changing in Game 4.

    Prop’s Pick

    1 2 3 4 T

    2 Spurs 2-2

    30 26 28 25 109

    6 Timberwolves 2-2

    34 26 20 34 114
    TOP SCORERS
    D. Harper PG 24PTS 7REB 1AST
    A. Edwards SG 36PTS 6REB 2AST
    STARTERS PTS REB AST PF
    D. Fox 24 4 3 2
    S. Castle 20 6 4 4
    D. Vassell 14 1 3 2
    J. Champagnie 8 5 3 1
    V. Wembanyama 4 4 1 3
    BENCH PTS REB AST PF
    D. Harper 24 7 1 2
    L. Kornet 7 9 1 2
    K. Johnson 4 3 1 1
    H. Barnes 2 1 0 0
    C. Bryant 2 1 0 3
    B. Biyombo
    K. Olynyk
    M. Plumlee
    J. McLaughlin
    L. Waters III
    H. Ingram
    E. Miller
    Total 109 41 17 21
    STARTERS PTS REB AST PF
    A. Edwards 36 6 2 5
    J. McDaniels 14 6 0 4
    J. Randle 12 8 3 2
    R. Gobert 11 13 4 1
    A. Dosunmu 10 5 3 4
    BENCH PTS REB AST PF
    N. Reid 15 9 4 5
    M. Conley 8 0 2 1
    T. Shannon Jr. 8 2 2 1
    K. Anderson
    J. Ingles
    J. Phillips
    J. Beringer
    B. Hyland
    Z. Pullin
    J. Clark
    Total 114 49 20 23
  • Knicks bury 76ers 144-114 behind Game 4 3-point barrage, back in East finals for 2nd straight year

    PHILADELPHIA (AP) Jalen Brunson, Josh Hart and the New York Knicks are back in the Eastern Conference finals, tying the NBA postseason record with 25 3-pointers in front of a raucous crowd rooting for the road team and rolling past the Philadelphia 76ers 144-114 on Sunday to sweep the second-round series.

    Deuce McBride started in place of the injured OG Anunoby and hit seven 3-pointers, going 4 for 4 in the first quarter when the Knicks had another record with 11, and scored 25 points. Brunson had 22 points and Hart and Karl-Anthony Towns each scored 17 in the Knicks’ latest lopsided playoff victory.

    The Knicks’ 19.4 point-per-game margin of victory is the largest through two rounds since the playoffs went to 16 teams in 1984.

    “It’s just us being very locked in to the moment,” Towns said.

    The Knicks advanced to the East finals for the second straight season and will play the winner of the Cleveland-Detroit series. The Pistons lead 2-1.

    The Knicks last season reached the conference finals for the first time in 25 years before losing to Indiana. The Knicks then fired coach Tom Thibodeau and replaced him with Mike Brown, who has guided them to seven straight playoff wins, starting with the last three games against Atlanta.

    “Our guys tried to take it to another level with their focus on the details and their energy and effort level,” Brown said. “That’s a lot of the reason why we’re playing pretty good basketball.”

    Knicks fans made a habit of scooping up tickets by the thousands at the Sixers’ arena for playoffs games over the years, and in Game 4, they may have made the loudest statement yet. They raised brooms outside the arena and waved “Always Knicks” towels once inside, all while noisily neutering the few Sixers fans that didn’t make a few extra bucks on the secondary market and stuck around.

    The 76ers’ franchise failed to stop Knicks fans in their effort to buy tickets.

    The 76ers were greater failures in trying to stop the Knicks on the floor.

    Game 4 was a laugher from the tip, with the Knicks using the 3-point arc as a starting point for their personal pop-a-shot game.

    With Knicks fans on their feet and exclaiming “Deuuuce,” McBride hit one, two, three, four – four! – 3-pointers in succession for a 20-6 lead and the Sixers were already on their heels. McBride became the first Knick (since play-by-play tracking began in 1997) to hit four 3s in the first quarter of a playoff game.

    New York’s 3-point records were just heating up.

    Brunson added two in the period (six total) to help make the Knicks 11 of 13, which tied the NBA mark for most makes in a quarter.

    The Knicks totaled 18 3s in the first half to score 54 points off the long ball, compared to 57 total for the 76ers. Overall, that was an 81-57 lead and helped power the Knicks toward their first best-of-seven series sweep since the 1999 East semis against Atlanta.

    The Knicks scored 80-plus points in the first half twice in five road playoff games this season.

    The second half was a mere formality, and the Sixers are headed home after a gutsy 3-1 series comeback to beat Boston in the first round.

    “The energy was a big gap between their energy and our energy, I thought,” Sixers coach Nick Nurse said.

    Joel Embiid ended another injury-riddled season with 24 points, Tyrese Maxey had 17 and the Sixers still have not advanced out of the second round since 2001.

    “I came into this year not knowing where I was going to be (with health), how long I was going to play, if I was even going to play based on how the knee was the last few years,” Embiid said. “I came in just hoping for the best and I feel like we’re in a position where we figured out the knee. It hasn’t been an issue.”

    Towns had 10 assists. Hart hit four 3-pointers and celebrated by stripping off his jersey and tossing it to a woman in Sixers gear.

    “My right hand remembered that the goal was to make 3s,” Hart said. “Happy to have her back.”

    If the sweep and the Knicks’ fan takeover didn’t saddle the Sixers with enough bad news, there was one final cutting blow to the ego – Philadelphia’s two first-round 2018 draft picks are still playing: Mikal Bridges and Landry Shamet, of course, for the Knicks.

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

    Copyright 2026 STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.

    Expert Picks

    View all 12 picks

    Betting Picks for Every Game
    • Picks from Vegas experts and insiders
    • Optimal rankings, props, DFS strategy
    • Spread, OU, ML picks from 10k simulations
    Larry Hartstein
    Larry HartsteinThe Maestro
    #1
    +2542 (64%)
    Last 120 NBA Player Props
    Under 38.5-111
    Joel Embiid • PTS + AST + REB • Player Prop
    Picked May 10 @ 2:32 pm, 1 unit on FanDuel
    WIN
    Joel Embiid is probable to play despite his hip injury. But he’s coming off an ineffective 35 minutes Friday. In two games this series, Embiid is 10 for 28 from the field while averaging five rebounds and three assists. He sat out Game 2 and it was Philly’s best performance vs. New York. With his team facing elimination, I’m confident Embiid will try to play. But I’ll bet against the combination of minutes and efficiency he’ll need to clear this prop total.

    Larry’s Pick

    Bob Konarski
    Bob KonarskiBurghBets
    +700 (100%)
    Last 6 NBA ML
    New York-118
    Money Line
    Picked May 10 @ 2:15 pm, 1 unit on FanDuel
    WIN
    OG Anunoby is officially ruled out for the game this afternoon. The line is slightly moving back to the Sixers favor for them to keep their season alive. However, if New York wants to legitimately make a run at the title, they have to win today. That would give Anunoby more time to rest for the ECF’s as the Pistons/Cavs could, possibly, go six/seven games. Yeah, make the 6/7 joke. Even without Anunoby, New York is the much deeper team. Paul George starts out hot then fades away as the game progresses and Embiid will get tired which leaves the Sixers with few scoring options. Jalen Brunson is on a mission, biased or not, get the brooms out.

    Bob’s Pick

    1 2 3 4 T

    3 Knicks 4-0

    43 38 41 22 144

    7 76ers 0-4

    24 33 26 31 114
    TOP SCORERS
    M. McBride PG 25PTS 4REB 0AST
    J. Embiid C 24PTS 5REB 4AST
    STARTERS PTS REB AST PF
    M. McBride 25 4 0 0
    J. Brunson 22 4 6 2
    J. Hart 17 9 1 0
    K. Towns 17 4 10 5
    M. Bridges 12 4 6 1
    BENCH PTS REB AST PF
    L. Shamet 12 0 0 2
    J. Clarkson 7 1 3 2
    J. Alvarado 7 3 1 0
    M. Robinson 6 6 0 2
    A. Hukporti 5 4 1 5
    J. Sochan 5 2 2 1
    P. Dadiet 5 3 1 0
    T. Kolek 4 3 2 1
    M. Diawara 0 0 0 1
    Total 144 47 33 22
    STARTERS PTS REB AST PF
    J. Embiid 24 5 4 3
    T. Maxey 17 2 4 2
    K. Oubre Jr. 10 4 0 0
    V. Edgecombe 8 6 7 1
    P. George 7 1 2 2
    BENCH PTS REB AST PF
    D. Terry 9 1 3 2
    J. Edwards 8 1 1 1
    J. Broome 7 1 1 0
    A. Bona 7 2 0 1
    Q. Grimes 6 0 0 2
    D. Barlow 5 1 1 1
    A. Drummond 4 4 0 5
    T. Watford 2 0 1 2
    J. Walker 0 2 0 1
    K. Lowry
    Total 114 30 24 23
  • Janelle Salaun scores 21 points off the bench and Valkyries beat Mercury 95-79 to win home opener

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Janelle Salaun scored 21 points off the bench, Gabby Williams contributed 19 points and five rebounds in her home debut for Golden State after the All-Star forward signed last month, and the Golden State Valkyries beat the Phoenix Mercury 95-79 on Sunday night.

    Kayla Thornton also scored 19 and Veronica Burton added 13 points and 12 assists for the second-year Valkyries, who made history by becoming the first expansion franchise to reach the playoffs in its first season before losing to top-seeded Minnesota 75-74.

    Alyssa Thomas had 19 points, 11 assists and nine rebounds but committed six of the 17 turnovers for the Mercury, who completed a road back-to-back. They routed the defending champion Las Vegas Aces 99-66 on Saturday with Natasha Mack grabbing 15 rebounds – the largest road win in franchise history and a rematch of the 2025 WNBA Finals. Mack managed only two rebounds Sunday.

    Kiana Williams, a former Stanford star whose Hall of Fame college coach Tara VanDerveer was in attendance, made a 3-pointer with 8:03 left that pulled Phoenix within 73-68, and Thomas’ two free throws at the 7:34 mark made it 73-70.

    Then Salaun converted three free throws for Golden State with 5:43 to play before her layup the next time down made it 83-70. That delighted the sellout crowd at 18,064-capacity Chase Center, where the Valkyries sold out all 22 of their home games last year.

    The Valkyries received a rousing ovation from the home crowd shortly before tipoff when Burton spoke on the microphone to “Ballhalla,” as it became known inside the arena in a play on Valhalla – which in Norse mythology is where Valkyries guide the souls of slain Warriors.

    Phoenix went ahead 7-0 before Golden State started the second quarter on a 21-6 burst to take a 38-26 lead and build a 48-31 advantage at intermission.

    Salaun shot 7 of 9 and made all four of her 3-point tries for a Golden State team missing Tiffany Hayes with a left pinky injury and Cecilia Zandalasini because of a concussion.

    Mercury: Host the Lynx on Tuesday night for their home opener.

    Valkryries: Host Chicago on Wednesday night.

    AP WNBA: https://apnews.com/hub/wnba-basketball

    Copyright 2026 STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.

    1 2 3 4 T

    Mercury 1-1

    20 11 31 17 79

    Valkyries 2-0

    17 31 18 29 95
    TOP SCORERS
    25
    A. Thomas F 19PTS 9REB 11AST
    13
    J. Salaun F 21PTS 3REB 2AST
    STARTERS PTS REB AST PF
    A. Thomas 19 9 11 5
    J. Nogic 16 1 1 5
    K. Copper 11 1 4 2
    N. Mack 11 2 1 3
    D. Bonner 5 8 3 1
    BENCH PTS REB AST PF
    N. Brochant 9 1 0 2
    K. Williams 6 1 0 2
    K. Linskens 2 0 0 1
    S. Carter 0 1 0 0
    A. Maley
    Total 79 24 20 21
    STARTERS PTS REB AST PF
    K. Thornton 19 3 0 3
    G. Williams 19 5 3 2
    V. Burton 13 3 12 3
    K. Charles 7 4 1 4
    K. Stokes 1 3 0 3
    BENCH PTS REB AST PF
    J. Salaun 21 3 2 1
    L. Amihere 13 6 5 4
    K. Chen 2 3 2 1
    Total 95 30 25 21
  • 2026 Truist Championship leaderboard, grades: Kristoffer Reitan edges Rickie Fowler for first PGA Tour win

    Just a few weeks ago, Kristoffer Reitan was not even qualified to participate in the PGA Tour’s signature events. Now, he finds himself raising a trophy. Reitan emerged from a crowded leaderboard Sunday at Quail Hollow Club to grab his inaugural victory on the PGA Tour at the 2026 Truist Championship, edging the field by two strokes.

    Reitan fired a final-round 69 to finish the tournament at 15 under and usurp 54-hole leader and playing partner Alex Fitzpatrick. His final tally was enough to push him past Rickie Fowler and Nicolai Højgaard as Fitzpatrick fell off the pace late.

    With the win, Reitan becomes just the second player from Norway to win on the PGA Tour, joining Viktor Hovland. He now stands alongside players like Fowler, Rory McIlroy, Wyndham Clark and Max Homa, who made Quail Hollow the site of their first PGA Tour wins.

    The triumph secures Reitan’s playing privileges on the PGA Tour through the 2028 season and pushes his name all the way up to No. 13 in the FedEx Cup standings.

    For Reitan, this run started at the Zurich Classic, where he finished runner-up to the Fitzpatrick brothers alongside fellow Norwegian Kris Ventura. The result was enough to make him the first alternate at the Cadillac Championship, where he was able to enter the field after Jake Knapp withdrew due to injury.

    Reitan made the most of his opportunity and finished T14, which was enough to get him into the field at the Truist Championship.

    Entering the final round one stroke off the pace of Fitzpatrick, Reitan found himself among a clustered chasing pack attempting to chase down the Englishman. By the time he walked off the fourth green with his first birdie of the afternoon, Reitan had caught Fitzpatrick, but two straight bogeys on his next two holes brought the world back into the tournament.

    Fowler mounted a charge and played his first 10 holes in 6 under just as players like Tommy Fleetwood, J.J. Spaun and Harry Hall all made their way up the leaderboard. Even Fitzpatrick fought hard with birdies on Nos. 10, 12 and 13 to climb back into a share of the lead, but Reitan remained steady.

    An influx of pars infiltrated his scorecard during the middle portion of his round before birdie putts from 6 feet and 7 feet found the bottom of the cup on Nos. 14-15. The lead was his as he entered The Green Mile, and it stayed that way thanks to a clutch par save from inside 12 feet on No. 16.

    While the putter posed as his greatest ally down the stretch, Reitan’s full swing put the tournament on ice across the final two holes as he navigated the ever-lurking danger around Quail Hollow. In doing so, he navigated one of the best fields of the PGA Tour season and nabbed the first win of his PGA Tour career. Grade: A+

    Here are the rest of the notable names on the leaderboard at the 2026 Truist Championship.

    T2. Rickie Fowler (-13): Started the final round seven strokes back of Fitzpatrick and immediately put a charge into the final round. Fowler found eight birdies on his scorecard on Sunday with those on Nos. 14-15 giving him the solo lead heading into the Green Mile. He flagged his approach into No. 16 only to miss his 6-foot birdie bid before missing a 10-foot par attempt on the last to fall back to 6 under for the round and 13 under for the championship. He now has three straight top 10s in signature events and looks primed to get back into the winner’s circle for the first time since 2023. Grade: A

    4. Alex Fitzpatrick (-12): A nervy start turned into a nervy front nine for the younger Fitzpatrick brother. Holding the solo 54-hole lead, Fitzpatrick was immediately punched in the face by carding a double bogey and a bogey across his first three holes. Going from leader to chaser, he started to string together more quality golf shots. Even with three putts on Nos. 7-8, Fitzpatrick climbed back into a share of the lead thanks to long-distance connections for birdies on Nos. 10, 12 and 13. Missed scoring chances on Nos. 14-15 may have cost him his second win in his last three starts, but another week on the PGA Tour and another showing to show that he belongs. Grade: A-

    T5. Tommy Fleetwood (-11): Appeared to be his day when he chipped in for birdie on No. 8, but only then did he run into some trouble. Fleetwood failed to birdie either of the par 5s on the back nine and carded a pair of bogeys in the process — one courtesy of a poor wedge on No. 11 and another because of a poor drive on the difficult 16th. After a fall where he found himself in contention in seemingly every tournament, Fleetwood got the juices flowing for the first time in a while at a convenient time, given next week’s major championship. Grade: B+

    T10. Cameron Young (-9): Was biding his time before a Saturday 63 shot his name onto the first page of the leaderboard. Young was the presence to keep tabs on at the onset of the final round, but his putter ultimately betrayed him early and often. He had a 4-putt double bogey from inside 15 feet on No. 2 and needed three putts for par on the par-5 7th. Even with his issues on the greens, the two-time winner this season still had a chance on the back nine but was unable to score, as the well apparently dried up for him on Saturday. Grade: B

    T19. Rory McIlroy (-5): McIlroy’s week featured a little bit of everything. He nearly experienced a career first on Thursday with 17 straight pars out of the blocks. On Friday, he looked like the McIlroy who has dominated at Quail Hollow his entire career. Then on Saturday, he had one of the worst rounds of his career. He finished his tournament with a 67 that could have been even better as he was 5 under through his first 10 holes. There are some things to tighten up, but all in all, the game remains in solid shape.

    “I hit the ball better. I started to hit it left yesterday with everything,” McIlroy said. “I spent a good bit of time on the range last night just trying to straighten it out. The range this week, the wind is predominantly been off the left, so I think when you hit a lot of balls in a left-to-right wind, you start to aim a little bit left, your club face can get a little bit closed at impact just to try to counteract that wind.

    “So, hitting balls the last five or six days in that left-to-right wind on the range, I just started to miss some left on the course. So I was trying to figure it out a little bit on the range last night, which I felt like I did, and I hit the ball much better today.” Grade: C

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