How Arizona players' halftime talk ended 25 years of March Madness heartbreak

SAN JOSE, CA — “Here we go again.”

It was the collective thought nearly every Arizona fan had when the Wildcats went into halftime of their Elite Eight matchup against Purdue down seven points. One of the best teams in program history was on the verge of a familiar result that had plagued the program for 25 years: falling short of the Final Four.

Athletic director Desireé Reed-Francois was nervous. Mix Master Mike was sweating. Families were stressed.

But while Bear Down nation was anxious, all was calm inside the Wildcats locker room.

Everyone rushed in, awaiting to hear what coach Tommy Lloyd would say to flip the script. The inspirational pep talk made for cinema.

But he didn’t have anything to say.

Instead, he turned the attention to his players. Let them figure out what they need to do to change course.

That conversation changed the entire narrative of Arizona basketball.

The rallying of the Wildcats was the secret ingredient needed to get over the hump, propelling Arizona to a thunderous second half that turned the tension into elation, ending years of misery with the program's first Final Four trip since 2001.

When Lloyd left the microphone open, it was the veterans that grabbed it.

Jaden Bradley, Tobe Awaka, Ivan Kharchenkov and Motiejus Krivas, all players that had experienced the shortcomings and were set on making sure the talented freshmen accompanying them wouldn’t suffer the same fate.

“They all talked to us and just told us to keep going. You know, we've been through adversity this season,” said freshman Koa Peat. “Can't get too high or too low. Just stay even-keeled.”

Lloyd and the coaching staff just listened, and couldn’t be prouder how the veterans addressed the situation. It was something he'd done a few times during the regular season, but the situation absolutely called for it, because they needed to figure it out.

“The most powerful thing in a team sport is a player-led program. The coach, you have to help them navigate it, but when you can get the players to kind of own these moments, you are just so much better,” he said.

By the time the players said their piece, the confidence in the room was beaming. This team was ready to get back on the court. Lloyd had one last message for them.

“Let's go kick their ass,” Lloyd said.

They did.

Arizona Wildcats forward Tobe Awaka (30) and guard Anthony Dell'Orso (3) celebrate during the Elite Eight game against Purdue.

It was a literal tale of two halves as Arizona suffocated Purdue in the final 20 minutes, turning the SAP Center into McKale Center West, the pro-Wildcats crowd rocking the entire arena.

Arizona needed just five minutes to turn a seven-point deficit into a lead it would hold onto the rest of the way, leading by as much as 15 points late to stop any thoughts of a Boilermakers comeback.

The shots were going in, 3-pointers were falling, and the Wildcats got to the foul line just like they wanted to.

But really, the story was the defense.

Purdue got a halftime lead thanks to seven 3-pointers, but the perimeter was closed in the second half. It missed its next seven attempts, only making one 3-pointer, coming with eight seconds left when Arizona was already celebrating. 

In fact, Purdue's shooting was just off. It shot 32.1% in the second half, making just nine shots, just above the seven free throws it made in the same time frame.

The Boilermakers were exceptional at taking care of the ball, with the best assist-to-turnover ratio in the country at 2.22. Arizona forced turnovers, with Purdue turning it over 11 times, resulting in 15 Arizona points that only added to the pressure.

Arizona took Purdue out completely, resulting in a 22-point advantage in the last 20 minutes.

“We had a couple of turnovers here and there, and then obviously missed shots. Then we weren't able to get a couple of stops,” said Purdue guard Braden Smith. “Obviously, credit to Arizona. They're an unbelievable team.”

An unbelievable team that pulled off a result that was starting to seem unachievable.

Arizona has had so many good squads this century that were capable of reaching the Final Four, but it felt like some sort of hex prevented the Wildcats from getting there. Since 2010, Arizona has the fourth-most wins in Division I ... but was the only program in the top five that had not made a Final Four.

That’s why, when the buzzer officially sounded, there was a collective exhale that was 25 years in the making.

“I am speechless,” Reed-Francois told USA TODAY Sports. “Just feels like a sense of joy. It's just pure joy, and look at all these people around here that are just so excited.”

A joy that Lloyd and company can’t wait to soak in; there likely will be quite the crowd awaiting the team when it lands back at Tucson International Airport.

“Making it to the Final Four is big,” Bradley said. “We appreciate Tucson, the supporters and everybody behind the scenes. We just are happy that we get to reward them with this.”

After dominating the regular season and West Region, Arizona has proven this isn’t the same old Arizona. It's no longer a team that chokes in the tournament.

It’s a national power again. And a team not just satisfied with breaking the Final Four drought, but out to win the program’s second national title, and first since 1997.

That’s thanks to a halftime conversation that changed everything for the Wildcats.

“We're still fighting, and we're still fighting to get better and see if we can get a little bit better before next Saturday,” Lloyd said.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Inside halftime talk that lifted Arizona basketball to Final Four

Chicago faces San Antonio, aims to break 3-game slide

Chicago Bulls (29-45, 12th in the Eastern Conference) vs. San Antonio Spurs (56-18, second in the Western Conference)

San Antonio; Monday, 8 p.m. EDT

BOTTOM LINE: Chicago looks to stop its three-game losing streak with a victory over San Antonio.

The Spurs have gone 28-7 at home. San Antonio scores 119.4 points while outscoring opponents by 8.2 points per game.

The Bulls are 11-25 in road games. Chicago is 10-6 in games decided by 3 points or fewer.

The Spurs score 119.4 points per game, 1.6 fewer points than the 121.0 the Bulls allow. The Bulls score 5.2 more points per game (116.4) than the Spurs allow their opponents to score (111.2).

The teams square off for the second time this season. The Spurs won the last matchup 121-117 on Nov. 11, with Victor Wembanyama scoring 38 points in the victory.

TOP PERFORMERS: Wembanyama is scoring 24.2 points per game with 11.3 rebounds and 3.0 assists for the Spurs. De'Aaron Fox is averaging 16.5 points and 3.5 rebounds while shooting 50.0% over the past 10 games.

Matas Buzelis is averaging 16.4 points, 5.7 rebounds and 1.5 blocks for the Bulls. Tre Jones is averaging 17.4 points and 4.5 rebounds while shooting 56.5% over the past 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Spurs: 9-1, averaging 124.3 points, 50.2 rebounds, 31.6 assists, 6.6 steals and 5.5 blocks per game while shooting 49.3% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 109.6 points per game.

Bulls: 3-7, averaging 122.5 points, 47.6 rebounds, 28.3 assists, 7.4 steals and 5.4 blocks per game while shooting 47.6% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 128.3 points.

INJURIES: Spurs: David Jones Garcia: out for season (ankle).

Bulls: Anfernee Simons: day to day (wrist), Jalen Smith: out for season (calf), Noa Essengue: out for season (shoulder), Jaden Ivey: out for season (knee), Nick Richards: day to day (elbow), Zach Collins: out for season (toe), Guerschon Yabusele: day to day (ankle).

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

Utah plays Cleveland, looks to break home slide

Cleveland Cavaliers (46-28, fourth in the Eastern Conference) vs. Utah Jazz (21-54, 14th in the Western Conference)

Salt Lake City; Monday, 9 p.m. EDT

BOTTOM LINE: Utah plays Cleveland looking to stop its three-game home losing streak.

The Jazz are 13-25 in home games. Utah is first in the Western Conference with 29.4 assists per game led by Isaiah Collier averaging 7.2.

The Cavaliers are 22-14 on the road. Cleveland ranks sixth in the Eastern Conference with 11.8 offensive rebounds per game led by Jarrett Allen averaging 2.6.

The Jazz score 117.4 points per game, 2.2 more points than the 115.2 the Cavaliers allow. The Cavaliers average 14.5 made 3-pointers per game this season, 0.9 fewer makes per game than the Jazz allow.

The teams square off for the second time this season. In the last matchup on Jan. 13 the Jazz won 123-112 led by 32 points from Keyonte George, while Donovan Mitchell scored 21 points for the Cavaliers.

TOP PERFORMERS: Kyle Filipowski is averaging 10.9 points and seven rebounds for the Jazz. Brice Sensabaugh is averaging 18.6 points over the last 10 games.

James Harden is scoring 24.0 points per game and averaging 5.0 rebounds for the Cavaliers. Mitchell is averaging 2.0 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Jazz: 1-9, averaging 117.2 points, 41.0 rebounds, 29.2 assists, 10.1 steals and 4.9 blocks per game while shooting 47.5% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 128.8 points per game.

Cavaliers: 7-3, averaging 123.2 points, 44.0 rebounds, 28.3 assists, 6.4 steals and 4.1 blocks per game while shooting 50.6% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 117.5 points.

INJURIES: Jazz: Lauri Markkanen: out (hip), Isaiah Collier: day to day (hamstring), Keyonte George: out (leg), Walker Kessler: out for season (shoulder), Jusuf Nurkic: out for season (nose), Jaren Jackson Jr.: out for season (knee).

Cavaliers: Craig Porter Jr.: day to day (groin), Dean Wade: day to day (ankle), Jaylon Tyson: day to day (toe).

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

Dallas faces Minnesota on 12-game home skid

Minnesota Timberwolves (45-29, fifth in the Western Conference) vs. Dallas Mavericks (24-50, 13th in the Western Conference)

Dallas; Monday, 8:30 p.m. EDT

BOTTOM LINE: Dallas plays Minnesota looking to end its 12-game home slide.

The Mavericks have gone 13-33 against Western Conference teams. Dallas ranks third in the Western Conference with 34.2 defensive rebounds per game led by P.J. Washington averaging 5.5.

The Timberwolves have gone 28-21 against Western Conference opponents. Minnesota has a 6-4 record in games decided by 3 points or fewer.

The Mavericks score 113.9 points per game, 0.5 fewer points than the 114.4 the Timberwolves allow. The Timberwolves are shooting 48.1% from the field, 0.6% higher than the 47.5% the Mavericks' opponents have shot this season.

The teams play for the fourth time this season. In the last matchup on Feb. 21 the Timberwolves won 122-111 led by 40 points from Anthony Edwards, while Khris Middleton scored 18 points for the Mavericks.

TOP PERFORMERS: Cooper Flagg is averaging 20.4 points, 6.6 rebounds and 4.6 assists for the Mavericks. Max Christie is averaging 2.3 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games.

Julius Randle is averaging 20.9 points, 6.8 rebounds and 5.1 assists for the Timberwolves. Bones Hyland is averaging 12.9 points over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Mavericks: 3-7, averaging 119.5 points, 43.3 rebounds, 28.5 assists, 8.2 steals and 4.3 blocks per game while shooting 48.2% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 126.8 points per game.

Timberwolves: 5-5, averaging 113.0 points, 44.3 rebounds, 25.4 assists, 8.0 steals and 6.0 blocks per game while shooting 46.7% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 113.8 points.

INJURIES: Mavericks: Dereck Lively II: out for season (foot), Khris Middleton: day to day (illness), Caleb Martin: day to day (foot), Kyrie Irving: out for season (knee), Daniel Gafford: day to day (shoulder).

Timberwolves: Anthony Edwards: day to day (knee), Ayo Dosunmu: day to day (calf), Jaden McDaniels: day to day (knee).

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

Brooklyn plays Sacramento on home slide

Sacramento Kings (19-56, 15th in the Western Conference) vs. Brooklyn Nets (17-57, 14th in the Eastern Conference)

New York; Sunday, 6 p.m. EDT

BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Nets -1; over/under is 221.5

BOTTOM LINE: Brooklyn is looking to break its four-game home losing streak with a victory against Sacramento.

The Nets are 9-26 in home games. Brooklyn is the worst team in the Eastern Conference recording 39.7 rebounds per game led by Michael Porter Jr. averaging 7.1.

The Kings are 6-31 on the road. Sacramento averages 13.6 turnovers per game and is 13-26 when turning the ball over less than opponents.

The Nets' 13.2 made 3-pointers per game this season are just 0.5 fewer made shots on average than the 13.7 per game the Kings give up. The Kings average 110.9 points per game, 4.8 fewer than the 115.7 the Nets allow to opponents.

The teams square off for the second time this season. The Kings won the last meeting 126-122 on March 22. Malik Monk scored 32 points to help lead the Kings to the victory.

TOP PERFORMERS: Nic Claxton is shooting 57.1% and averaging 11.8 points for the Nets. Josh Minott is averaging 2.4 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games.

DeMar DeRozan is averaging 18.5 points and 4.1 assists for the Kings. Maxime Raynaud is averaging 18.1 points over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Nets: 0-10, averaging 99.9 points, 36.0 rebounds, 22.6 assists, 9.1 steals and 4.2 blocks per game while shooting 42.3% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 116.3 points per game.

Kings: 4-6, averaging 112.5 points, 43.1 rebounds, 27.5 assists, 6.2 steals and 4.0 blocks per game while shooting 49.0% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 121.7 points.

INJURIES: Nets: Danny Wolf: out (ankle), Egor Demin: out for season (foot), Josh Minott: day to day (hip), Day'Ron Sharpe: out for season (thumb), Michael Porter Jr.: out (hamstring).

Kings: Domantas Sabonis: out for season (back), Russell Westbrook: out (foot), De'Andre Hunter: out for season (eye), Zach LaVine: out for season (finger), Drew Eubanks: out for season (thumb), Keegan Murray: out (ankle).

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

Illinois was Brad Underwood's dream job. Now, he has it in the Final Four

Brad Underwood is a Kansas native who has spent much of his lengthy college basketball coaching career in the Great Plains, southeast and southwest.

His dream, though, was to one day find himself where he currently is — as the head coach of the Illinois men’s basketball program.

On Saturday, March 28, Underwood helped lead Illinois to a 71-59 victory against Iowa in the Elite Eight of the 2026 NCAA Tournament, sending the Fighting Illini to their first Final Four since 2005.

After his team’s triumph, Underwood was asked about his career trajectory, which has taken him from the junior-college ranks to the lowest levels of Division I to, ultimately, the Big Ten. Specifically, he was asked about a comment he made more than a decade ago that Illinois was his dream job.

Despite having no obvious ties to the school – he didn’t attend it and had never coached there before he was hired by the Illini in 2017 – Underwood said it was.

“I'm going to get emotional, but I've been doing this 39 years, and you dream about this as a kid, and I dreamt about doing it at Illinois,” Underwood said in his post-game news conference. “Back in the day when my wife bought Tyler, who was maybe two, a Brian Cook jersey, and you knew what a special place this was. And it always has been, and there's been no other thing for me. This is my dream job, and it's very fulfilling to get where we're going.”

Though much of his coaching career has taken place away from the Land of Lincoln, Underwood had experience in the state. For 11 years, from 1992-2003, he was an assistant coach at Western Illinois, about 140 miles west of Illinois’ campus in Champaign, Illinois. The Illini were an NCAA tournament regular for much of that time under Lou Henson, Lon Kruger and Bill Self, opening Underwood’s eyes to the program’s potential.

The experience of watching that from across the state stayed with him. When he was hired as the head coach at Stephen F. Austin in Texas in 2013, he was asked by his secretary to name his dream job. He told her Illinois, which she wrote down on a card, dated and mailed to Underwood when he accepted the position with the Illini four years later.

Though he inherited a program that had gone four-consecutive years without an NCAA tournament appearance, Underwood has restored the Illini to national prominence. Even before it punched its ticket to the Final Four on Saturday, Illinois was in the tournament for the sixth year in a row and advanced as far as the Elite Eight in 2024.

As Underwood will quickly note, he had a lot of helping getting the Illini there, from his coaching staff to the school’s athletic administration.

“I don't want to sound arrogant – I've never doubted us getting to a Final Four would happen,” Underwood said. “I have thought we have had other teams capable. But I also know how doggone hard it is to do it. For that, I just say thank you.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Illinois was Brad Underwood's dream job. Now, he has it in the Final Four

Game Recap: Suns throttle Jazz, 134-109

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - MARCH 28: Devin Booker #1 of the Phoenix Suns handles the ball against Brice Sensabaugh #28 of the Utah Jazz during the first half at Mortgage Matchup Center on March 28, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Suns came into this game off some much-needed rest and took care of business against the Jazz in a much-needed win. Jalen Green and Devin Booker took command in this one, combining for 57 points and dominating throughout. The Suns’ rookies also had a great showing, as Rasheer Fleming and Khaman Malauch both made big impacts on both ends as well. Overall, the Suns came together and pulled this one out, dominating the weak Jazz frontcourt and scoring all over the interior.

The Jazz are unfortunately tanking and not doing great this year. This certainly showed in this one, as even though some players tried to keep them in offensively, the defense was not stopping anything.

Game Flow

First Half

In the first quarter, it got off to a rough start as the Jazz matched the Suns in scoring. Jalen Green, as he does best, started this one on a hot note, bringing some life to the Valley and keeping the fans alive. This would then translate and trickle down the roster as the Suns became involved. Devin Booker started going inside and attacking alongside Green. Then Grayson Allen and Rasheer Fleming started nailing some threes.

The Suns saw a lead of up to 20 and seemed to take command early in a must-win game. After losing six of their last seven, a much-needed bounce back against a weak Western Conference team is needed to shift momentum heading to the playoffs. The Suns understood that and took advantage of this by leading 39-21 after one.

The second quarter was a lot like the first as the Suns continued to dominate against the Jazz. Green and Booker continued to attack and score in the paint. With the Jazz having seven players out and top-tier frontcourt players absent, it was feast time for Oso Ighodaro and Khaman Maluach down low.

The Jazz are tanking, and it’s clear as day. Even with players out, the reserves are just chucking up shots and playing little to no defense. This has allowed the Suns to lead 73-45 at the half and to close this one early. Jalen Green and Devin Booker have 34 of the team’s points and continue to show that they can torch weak defenses. If Phoenix can continue this onslaught into the second half, it will only mean an early night for the starters.

Second Half

Did the Jazz even come to play the second half? You could definitely question that, as Phoenix once again just massacred the Jazz defense. Green and Booker were trading baskets, both attacking the lane and making some tough finishes. The Suns have 91 points, and the game is not even halfway through the third, and the Jazz cannot match the Suns’ offense. Every shot, they continue to make the Suns answer tight back as Booker continues to bring the intensity.

This game seems unfair, and with these injuries and the situation the Jazz are in compared to Phoenix. Kyle Filipowski and Brice Sensabaugh are trying their best to keep Utah in it offensively, but it just does not seem to be enough. Just an absolute tear kept on continuing from Phoenix, as even Maluach had a nice alley oop finish. The Suns, whose biggest lead has been 34, now head into the fourth up 110-83.

The Jazz got off to a hot start here in the fourth with Svi Mykhaholiuk getting hot, with Ace Bailey trying to heat up as well. That being said, the Suns were feeding Ighodaro once again, and he continued to feast inside on the weak Jazz interior defense. Grayson Allen also had a big game off the bench, hitting some big threes and attacking the lane.

This one was over before the second half, even if the Jazz did try to come back in the fourth. The rookies and young guns go to take the floor, and in this game, every rookie scored a point once Kobe Brea made a three-pointer as well. The Suns ended up taking down the Jazz 134-109.

Up Next

The Suns begin a four-game road trip on Monday, as they play another team simply trying to get to the finish line in the Memphis Grizzlies.

David Mirkovic celebrates Illinois' Final Four berth with Texas accessory

HOUSTON — The Illinois men’s basketball team was in the airport in Champaign, Illinois, preparing to board a flight to Houston for the NCAA Tournament regional, when Illini freshman forward David Mirkovic made a prescient purchase.

Mirkovic’s teammate, Keaton Wagler, sent him a link to an artificially generated photo of Mirkovic wearing a black cowboy hat. It was meant as a joke, but Mirkovic found a similar looking hat on Amazon and ordered it for $34. It was delivered to the Illini’s hotel in Houston on Friday, the day before Illinois played Iowa in the Elite Eight.

Mirkovic only intended to wear the hat if the Illini won. They did, 71-59, and after the team celebrated in the locker room by spraying each other with water guns – a program tradition that began two years ago in the NCAA Tournament – Mirkovic proudly donned his new headwear.

Asked if he felt like a cowboy, the Montenegro native paused and replied, “I don’t know. What does it mean, being a cowboy?”

He paused and reconsidered: “Yeah, why not. We’re in Texas.”

Illinois' David Mirkovic wears a cowboy hat in the locker room.

Mirkovic scored nine points and had a team-high 12 rebounds in Illinois’ Elite Eight win, coming just one point shy of his second consecutive double-double. He was still named to the South Regional All-Tournament team and his performance helped Illinois advance to the Final Four, where it will play either Duke or Connecticut.

None of Mirkovic’s Illini teammates joined him in buying cowboy hats, but he retained hope that he could start a new NCAA Tournament tradition.

“Maybe for next season,” he said, smiling.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Illinois' David Mirkovic celebrates Final Four with new accessory

Braves News: Opening Day history, Sean Murphy injury update, more

NORTH PORT, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 20: Sean Murphy #12 of the Atlanta Braves poses for a photo during Spring Training photo day at CoolToday Park on February 20, 2026 in North Port, Florida. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Well the Braves are 2-0, on a breezy complete victory on Opening Day and an epic walk-off grand-slam on Saturday. Before the walk-off, it was reassuring to see Reynaldo Lopez’ velocity back up in the mid-90s and his stuff generally looking good. I remain highly skeptical of his durability, but he looked the part of a solid starter on Saturday. On the offensive side, the bats were a little quieter on Saturday than on Friday, but they got some key contributions from new members of the team, such as Mike Yastrzemski and, of course, Dominic Smith, while also getting production from their incumbent contributors. This has been about everything you could ask for from two games for the Braves.

Braves News

A few Braves achieved some various historical feats on Opening Day, including Ozzie Albies, Chris Sale, and Austin Riley.

Sean Murphy is participating in all baseball activities and may start his rehap assignment soon, per Mark Bowman.

Dominic Smith walked things off in game #2 on Saturday with an epic grand-slam, completing a comeback from a 2-0 deficit in the ninth inning.

MLB News

The Brewers called up top catching prospect Jeferson Quero to make his MLB debut, sending Andrew Vaughn to the IL.

The White Sox and Nationals made a minor depth trade.

The Marlins are placing Christopher Morel on the IL and are expecting him to miss over a month with an oblique strain.

Houston Rockets vs. New Orleans Pelicans

Dec 18, 2025; New Orleans, Louisiana, USA; New Orleans Pelicans guard/forward Saddiq Bey (41) dribbles against the Houston Rockets during the first half at Smoothie King Center. Mandatory Credit: Stephen Lew-Imagn Images | Stephen Lew-Imagn Images

Tonight, the Houston Rockets return to the scene of their second-biggest collapse of the season. Until their demoralizing loss in Minnesota, I figured the New Orleans game in December would stand alone. Of course, this team has surprised me over and over again with ways to frustrate us.

I was at the Smoothie King Center on December 18. I was visiting my brother and the Rockets just so happened to be in town. Houston led by 22 at halftime and 25 early in the second half. The Rockets even held a 16-point lead heading into the final frame. However, turnovers and poor defensive effort would rear their ugly heads. New Orleans scored 38 points in the third quarter and 36 more in the fourth. Houston missed nine free throws, and all of them came from players 6-10 and taller. More than one miss was an airball. The New Orleans crowd, which had had nothing to cheer about for 30 minutes, roared to life for the final 18 minutes of regulation and all of overtime.

I could tell you about how Saddiq Bey had the kind of game that can get players paid a lot of money in free agency. Or how Derik Queen talked trash all night and backed it up. I could talk about how Kevin Durant didn’t miss a shot in the first quarter and dominated until New Orleans sent a second defender at him, which led to six turnovers. Or how Amen Thompson went 11-14 and made some clutch plays to give the Rockets a fighting chance in the fourth.

None of it matters, though. It was the beginning of a disturbing trend for the Rockets that still hasn’t resolved. Houston still struggles defensively. They still turn the ball over a ton. They have found a few answers for the double team, but it’s still mostly a winning strategy against Durant, who is on pace to turn the ball over more times than in any season since turning 25. They still miss free throws. And they continue to struggle in fourth quarters despite bringing in one of the best closers in NBA history.

The other two matchups against New Orleans have been tight affairs, too. In January, the Rockets rode a monster night from Jabari Smith Jr. to win a game where they never really put the Pelicans away. And last week, Houston needed some boneheaded mistakes down the stretch from New Orleans to walk away with the win after blowing a 7-point lead with under four minutes to go. You were shocked, I know.

The Pelicans have cooled off a bit since that game, where they came into Toyota Center on a hot streak. They won their next three but have dropped four straight against four of the top five teams in the East. They’re returning home after a long week on the road against good teams. They’ll be looking for a bounce back.

And in case in needs to be restated, the Pelicans do not own their 2026 first round draft pick. So unlike Memphis, who was happy to let Houston run away with the game in the fourth quarter, New Orleans is here to play spoiler and decide if this core has what it takes to keep them around for another year. And the early returns are that this team is definitely going to be a tougher out next season, especially if they stay healthy.

Tip-off

6pm CT

How To Watch

Space City Home Network

Injury Report

Rockets

Steven Adams: OUT

Fred VanVleet: OUT

Pelicans

Dejounte Muray: GTD

Trey Murphy III: GTD

Bryce McGowens: GTD

The Line (as of this post)

N/A

Check here for updates

Looking ahead because we can

Tuesday night back in Houston against the New York Knicks

From overlooked to overjoyed, Keaton Wagler leads Illinois to Final Four

HOUSTON – Keaton Wagler’s eyes flirted with the rim and his feet appeared to follow suit. The Illinois freshman guard dribbled past the 3-point line and suddenly spun to his left, sending his defender stumbling backward as if propelled by an invisible force.

Iowa guard Isaia Howard scrambled to his feet, but by then Wagler was launching a stepback 3-pointer that gave Illinois a second-half lead.

That misdirection is part of Wagler’s magic: Just when you think you know what to expect, he shapeshifts.  

For the entire second half of Saturday’s NCAA Tournament Elite Eight game, Wagler traded buckets with Iowa star Bennett Stirtz — the Hawkeyes’ well-traveled veteran leader and the Illini’s star freshman, both players who were once undervalued during their basketball careers, delivering for their teams in an Elite Eight throwdown.  

In the end, Wagler won the duel. Behind his 25 points, Illinois downed Iowa, 71-59, and advanced to the program’s first Final Four in 21 years. Wagler was named the South Region’s Most Outstanding Player.

Following an inefficient shooting night in Illinois’ Sweet 16 win over Houston, in which Wagler shot 4-of-14 from the floor but grabbed a career-high 12 rebounds, he transformed back into a scoring machine down the stretch against Iowa.

Illinois outscored Iowa in the second half 43-27 and held the Hawkeyes scoreless for the final two minutes, with Wagler scoring 14 points in the second half alone.

“Once he finds his rhythm, it’s like a flow state,” said Illinois assistant coach Tyler Underwood. “You can always tell when he’s starting to get into it. It takes him a little bit of time but he just has a unique ability to be in the present moment and be able to live with mistakes and live with the outcome because he knows he’s loved, and he knows how hard he works.”

The telltale signs Wagler is about to go off, according to Underwood: Wagler starts patting the ball, getting to his left-to-right crossover, spinning around defenders. Everything he does becomes a little peppier, injected with an intangible yet immediately identifiable swag.

“It just feels like the game is slowing down for me,” Wagler said. “Just everything’s going right, every pass, getting to the rim, finishing, all that stuff.”

The game’s second half, then, must have felt to him like an eternity. As the last few seconds melted away, Wagler dribbled out the clock and raised one hand to beckon cheers from the crowd. That moment was his to savor alone, and then he wasn’t alone any longer. When the sound of an air horn punctuated Wagler’s lifelong dream, he was wrapped in a bear hug by Illinois forward Ben Humrichous and then swarmed by elated teammates.

Illinois Fighting Illini guard Keaton Wagler (23) controls the ball against Iowa Hawkeyes guard Kael Combs (11) in the first half during an Elite Eight game of the South Regional of the men's 2026 NCAA Tournament at Toyota Center.

After the net was cut and a team photo snapped, Wagler weaved through the confetti-strewn court and finally reached the people he sought.

He embraced his mom, Jennifer, first. Then came his dad, Logan, older brother Landon and older sister Brooklyn. Finally, Keaton looked up and saw Victor Williams, his AAU basketball coach with VWBA Elite. Williams and Wagler’s family nurtured Keaton’s skill as well as his ambition.

“I know that they know that this is my dream,” Wagler said. “Every since I was a little kid I’ve always talked about this. To be in this position, to have them here and we’re going to the Final Four, it just means the world.”

His parents, who met while playing basketball at a community college in Kansas, knew their youngest son truly loved the game when he was in first grade and played on a team of third graders but was not dissuaded by being the youngest or one of the smallest.

“He couldn’t hardly get the ball up to the hoop, but he could do everything else,” Logan Wagler said. “I knew he would amount to something. I didn’t know it would lead him here, though.”

Neither did Illinois coach Brad Underwood and his staff. It was Underwood’s son, Tyler, an Illini assistant coach, who first identified Wagler as a prospect out of Shawnee, Kansas. Wagler had won two state championships with Shawnee Mission Northwest High School and was a four-star recruit in the Class of 2025, but according to Tyler Underwood some power-conference programs had reservations about Wagler’s smaller physique.

Keaton Wagler #23 of the Illinois Fighting Illini celebrates cutting down the net after defeating the Iowa Hawkeyes in the Elite Eight of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at Toyota Center on March 28, 2026 in Houston, Texas.

The first time Brad Underwood went to see Wagler play in person was after Illinois had already signed him. Wagler had scored 36 points in a game the night before, but with Underwood present he scored just two points. Nevertheless, Underwood was ecstatic when he left the gym and called his son.

“I said, ‘We just got an incredible talent,’” Brad Underwood recalled. “They blitzed him, they got it out of his hand, he made every right play, he was not selfish, he was not a pig, he wasn't trying to force things. He just let the game come to him. Very, very mature as a senior in high school when you're the guy. And he just played the game, and so I felt great about it. Did I know a 178-pound kid coming in was going to be this? I didn't.”

When Wagler arrived at Illinois, he added 25 pounds of weight and worked on getting stronger. He was in the starting lineup right away but mostly in an off-ball role, with senior guard Kylan Boswell assuming the lion’s share of ball handling responsibilities.

In mid-January, Boswell broke his hand and was sidelined for several weeks. On Jan. 24, Wagler’s breakout game was a 46-point outburst that led Illinois to a road win at No. 4 Purdue — a Big Ten freshman scoring record with a school-record nine 3-pointers. That performance solidified Wagler’s self-confidence.

“The ascension happened so fast, and I think he showed himself, ‘I can do this,’” Underwood said. “And I think his teammates wanted that out of him. Like, I don’t think he gets here without his teammates’ encouragement.”

Keaton Wagler #23 of the Illinois Fighting Illini celebrates after defeating the Iowa Hawkeyes in the Elite Eight of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at Toyota Center on March 28, 2026 in Houston, Texas.

Illinois forward Zvonimir Ivisic, who transferred into the program this season from Arkansas, said his first impression of Wagler was of a player who was overlooked — and who let that fuel him.

“We all know what Keat’s capable of,” Ivisic said. “I was amazed. I didn’t hear a lot about him before, but when I see his playing style, how he handles the ball, how he handles himself, I was like, why a lot of people don’t talk about him enough? Everybody underestimated him. He’s a special player.”

Illinois forward David Mirkovic said that whether it’s a preseason scrimmage or a high-stakes NCAA Tournament game with a Final Four trip on the line, Wagler loves to compete.

“Keat looks like he enjoys every type of game,” Illinois forward David Mirkovic said. “Every type of basketball, every style. He just really whatever pass and challenge they offer him he always plays really good. He always adapts, adjusts to anything that’s in front of him. He’s such a big guy, really, most important player to us. When he adjusts like that we all follow him.”

Wagler relishes being called upon to deliver in big moments, but he won’t ever boast or describe himself with superlatives.

On Stirtz, he said, “He’s a really good player. We knew we had our hands full with him, so I just try to go out there and do what I do every game and if it’s for me to score the ball, then I’ll look to score the ball. But if I need to pass it, then do that. And tonight was more scoring so I just tried to do that.”

Wagler walked back to the locker room clutching his NCAA nameplate, which he said he intends to frame. As soon as he walked through the wooden double doors to the locker room, hands reached out from all sides to clap him on the back and offer handshakes. Wagler accepted and acknowledged each gesture with a nod or a high-five, all the while never breaking his stride.

He’s back to being just another kid with a basketball and a dream, until the next game, when he will become whatever Illinois needs him to be.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Keaton Wagler was unheralded recruit. Now, he has Illinois in Final Four

Will Smith hits go-ahead homer on his birthday

Mar 28, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers catcher Will Smith (16) hits a two-run home run during the eighth inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images | Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

It’s not about how you start it; it’s about how you finish it. Following in the script of Friday’s win, this time with even more drama, the Dodgers waited to take command of the game for the first time in the bottom of the eighth inning. Diamondbacks reliever Juan Morillo came in on the highest possible leverage spot, trying to protect a 2-1 lead with the top of the order up. Morillo retired Shohei Ohtani and Kyle Tucker and appeared in line to survive this gauntlet, but Mookie Betts and Will Smith had other plans. Betts walked on four pitches, and Morillo fed Smith one too many high fastballs until Smith caught the timing of one and knocked it out of the park for a go-ahead two-run bomb.

The birthday boy decided the game felt a tad too cliché, but you won’t hear anyone complaining in the home crowd. Smith, who hit 12 of his 17 home runs last season at Dodger Stadium, already has two in his home park in 2026.

Before the Dodgers could find a way to take the lead in this game, they had to survive for a rather lengthy period despite very little offense, and that went through Tyler Glasnow. For all the control a pitcher has on the mound, his performance and the perception of it can be subject to what those around him will and won’t accomplish. Glasnow delivered, by all accounts, a rather productive game. Through six innings, the Dodgers starter allowed only five baserunners, two of whom came around to score; he struck out eight and walked only one. Glasnow did his part, and still, he most likely left the game with a bitter taste that wasn’t erased until that eighth inning, having trailed from start to finish, only because his offense couldn’t do anything behind him.

Moving to the other half of this pitching match-up, it doesn’t really work that way, but if it did, one might be inclined to argue that Eduardo Rodríguez was due for a good performance at Dodger Stadium—the southpaw had previously known a great struggle when pitching at this ballpark. Rodríguez, who came into this game boasting a 1-3 record in four starts away against the Dodgers, allowing a total of 12 runs in 19 innings, had his best performance at Chavez Ravine.

Kyle Tucker is a terrific player, but Rodríguez sort of showed the blueprint, not that it is a particularly easy one, for left-handers facing this current version of the Dodger lineup. Step one, don’t let Shohei Ohtani beat you—Rodríguez walked him in two out of their three duels—and step two, find a way to take care of business against Tucker. Rodríguez got Tucker the two times he followed an Ohtani walk, and in his third at-bat, the Dodgers’ right fielder reached following an error, thus prompting an end to Rodríguez’s outing. It is the first week of the season, but even with that in mind, Torey Lovullo was quite conservative, removing Rodríguez on 79 pitches after an error allowed Tucker to reach base to lead off the sixth. Sure, the righty-righty matchup against Mookie Betts made sense with Jonathan Loáisiga up next, and Freddie Freeman had been responsible for half of the Dodgers’ four hits up to that point, but Rodríguez had more left in the tank. It turns out that Freeman’s success was about him being Freeman, much more than anything related to Rodríguez. Loáisiga did his job against Betts, but Tucker would eventually score on a Freeman double, his third hit of the game. That run to cut the deficit to 2-1 at the time meant that Smith’s two-run blast could decide the game and not just give the Dodgers new life.

Ultimately, that early hook to Rodríguez meant that the Diamondbacks needed 12 outs from their bullpen to close out this game, and those were a few too many despite all of the Dodgers’ struggles.

While we are on the subject of birthdays, let’s consider Smith’s Homer a special gift to Eric Stephen. True Blue LA’s longtime Managing Editor and fellow birthday boy.

Game particulars
  • Home run— Will Smith (2)
  • WP— Will Klein (1-0): 1 IP, 1 hit, 0 runs, 0 walks, 1 strikeout
  • LP— Juan Morillo (0-1): 0.2 IP, 1 hit, 2 earned run, 1 walk, 0 strikeouts
  • SV— Edwin Diaz (2): 1 IP, 0 hits, 0 runs, 1 walk, 2 strikeouts
Up next

It’s a rare off-day at home for the reigning champs, as they don’t return to action until Monday night, when the Cleveland Guardians roll into town. Roki Sasaki will face Parker Messick; start time at 7:10 p.m (PT).

Padres 3, Tigers 0: Sweepless in San Diego

Mar 28, 2026; San Diego, California, USA; Detroit Tigers manager A.J. Hinch (14) makes a pitching change during the fifth inning against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park. Mandatory Credit: David Frerker-Imagn Images | David Frerker-Imagn Images

The Detroit Tigers took the field on a lovely night in San Diego, looking to complete a road sweep of the Padres to open the season. It didn’t work out that way, though they continued to keep the Padres offense in check. The Tigers hitters were a little too jumpy against Padres’ pitching, with only a handful of hard hit balls, most of them from Colt Keith, to show for it as they fall to 2-1 on the year.

The Tigers were facing a young-ish starter in right-hander Randy Vasquez. Undistinguished in his short career to date, Vasquez earned a starting role via improved velocity and command in spring camp. He gave the Tigers trouble all night by keeping everything around the zone even when he missed, and the Tigers kept chasing a bit too much.

Kerry Carpenter chased a pair of breaking balls to open the game with a strikeout. Gleyber Torres drew a walk, and Colt Keith roped a double down the right field line. Unfortunately, being slow, Torres couldn’t score on the play, and so it was second and third with one out. Riley Greene grounded one to second and Jake Cronenworth fired home to cut down Torres. Spencer Torkelson put together a patient at-bat, but took a called third on a fastball away that was just off the plate. He failed to challenge despite the reasonably high leverage scenario, and that was that.

Jack Flaherty opened his season with a strong 1-2-3 frame. Cronenworth grounded out to McGonigle, playing shortstop in this one, and Flaherty dialed up 95-96 mph to freeze both Fernando Tatis Jr. and Manny Machado on called third strikes.

Kevin McGonigle opened the second inning by also taking a called strike three that was just out of the strike zone. He too decided not to challenge. USE THE CHALLENGES, GUYS! Anyway, Matt Vierling lifted a routine high fly to right, and Gavin Sheets made a nice diving stop to rob Zach McKinstry of a single to send it to the bottom half.

Flaherty popped up Jackson Merrill to open the bottom of the second. Xander Bogearts lined out to Torkelson at first, though there was a missed strike call there that Jake Rogers was probably kicking himself for not challenging. Flaherty showed off several 88-89 mph changeups, continuing a spring trend. He eventually got a soft tapper from Sheets back to him and recorded the out, sending us to the third.

The Tigers went quickly in order, with Jake Rogers and Gleyber Torres striking out swinging on either side of a Carpenter ground out.

Ramon Laureano greeted Flaherty with a drive to the wall in right field. McKinstry, getting a start in right field, went back and made a nice jumping catch on the warning track for the first out of the inning. Flaherty got ahead of Castellanos and got him to ground out to McGonigle for the second out of the third. Freddy Fermin came up with the Padres first hit, lining a single to left, and Cronenworth followed suit, spraying a two-strike fastball that got too much plate for a single to left as well. That brought Tatis Jr. back to the dish, and you don’t love that with two on. A 1-1 slider off the plate was called a strike and then Jack came back with a 1-2 heater that buzzed Tatis Jr.‘s tower to run the count full. Utimately, Tatis anticipated that after coming inside twice, they’d go away, and he got a slider away and lined an RBI single to right field for a 1-0 lead.

Chris Fetter came out for a chat, and Flaherty got ahead in the county, but Tatis broke for second and Gleyber Torres just whiffed on a pretty good throw from Rogers. The ball went into center field, Cronenworth scored, and then Flaherty walked Machado. Merrill lined out to right to end the inning, but it was 2-0 Padres and Flaherty had that bad vibe he gets when he has to pitch out of the stretch a few times and loses his rhythm. He was uncomfortable and his command showed it the rest of his outing.

Colt Keith set the Tigers back to work in the fourth with a leadoff walk. More of this patience, please. Riley Greene took a close strike three call at the top of the zone for the first out. Vasquez was sitting 95-96 mph with sinkers and fourseamers, mixing in his other stuff well. Torkelson got a good pitch to hit and roasted a fastball to the fence in left but not quite high enough. Laureano jumped and hauled it in, and Keith had to retreat to first. McGonigle got a 2-1 breaking ball that hung in the sweep spot down and in, but he jumped it and pulled it foul before grounding out to first on a changeup down to end the top half.

Flaherty’s 60th pitch was a strike to open the bottom of the fourth, and Bogearts grounded the next pitch to Keith at the third. Keith threw a one-hopper but Tork scooped it for the first out. Sheets lined one pretty deep to left, but Riley Greene did Riley Greene things, getting a great jump and laying out in slightly awkward fashion to send Sheets back to the dugout. Laureano got a 1-2 knuckle curve below the zone and flared a single off the bat, but Castellanos lifted a deep fly to left that died at the wall like Torkelson’s for the third out.

The Tigers went in order in the fifth, as Vierling and McKinstry both whiffed at high fastballs and each saw only one strike in the at-bat, and then Rogers flew out to left. Vasquez certainly looked upgraded from his previous seasons, but after some good at-bats early, the Tigers definitely helped him out by failing to take more pitches.

Flaherty by this point wasn’t doing any better a job controlling the zone than his teammates. He went 3-0 to his first two hitters, getting Fermin to pop out to McGonigle, but walking Cronenworth on four pitches. He was over 80 pitches and the hook was brewing as Tatis got to 3-0, and Flaherty yanked another one to walk him. Jake Rogers came out for a mound meeting, but A.J. Hinch didn’t go to the bullpen with Machado up and lefty Brant Hurter ready to enter the game. Machado worked into a 3-2 count and just missed a meatball of a slider right down the middle. Flaherty wasn’t close with another 3-2 slider, issuing his third straight walk, and that was it as Hurter entered for his first appearance of the season with the bases loaded and one out.

Hurter got a quick groundout from Merrill to second base, but it was well placed to avoid the double play and Torres hesitated as Machado hit the brakes right in from of him. He could’ve tagged Machado and maybe gotten the out at first two, but Merrill is quick, and so Torres thought better of it and tossed to second for the out as the run scored. 3-0 Padres. Bogearts smacked a one-hopper to Torres to end the inning. Nice work from Hurter there.

There are three types of Flaherty outing. The ones where he dominates. The ones where he gives up a couple of homers and gets knocked out early, and today’s model, where he’s mostly good but gets rattled out of sync and leaks oil as the lineup turns over the third time.

Vasquez got Carpenter on a deep flyout to center, and then Torres grounded out to open the sixth. Colt Keith lined a single for his second hit of the night, and that left it up to Riley Greene in the sixth. Vasquez looked like he was running out of gas, walking Greene on five pitches to bring up Torkelson with McGonigle looming in the on deck circle. Kid’s already looming, guys. The Padres had a little meet-up at the mound to try and settle their pitcher down for one more hitter. Tork got a good pitch and smoked a one-hopper, but he hit it to Manny Machado for the final out of the inning. Eight strikeouts from Vasquez vs. three walks and two Keith hits allowed, and they really helped him out with most of the punchouts by expanding out of the zone against him.

Hurter tied Sheets into knots with a sinker for a whiff to start the bottom half. Laureano jumped a first pitch sinker for a solid single to right field and Castellanos followed suit. With Fermin coming up Hinch had seen enough of Hurter facing a long stretch of right-handed hitters. Not sure why Drew Anderson or Seabold weren’t up a little earlier in this one anyway against a heavily right-handed hitting team, but it was Seabold entering in a tight spot to make his Tigers debut in the sixth.

Seabold dusted Fermin with a 96 mph heater on the outer edge to start his outing. He then got ahead of Cronenworth 0-2 before fishing a bit to even the count. Cronenworth spoiled a pair of good fastballs, and Seabold tried a cutter and then a changeup that were both fouled off. Seabold nailed the bottom rail with a beaut of a fastball for a called strike three…but Cronenworth wisely challenged and he was correct. So, everyone dug back in with a 3-2 count. Another high fourseamer was fouled off, and Cronenworth was putting together a really good AB. Laureano broke and stole third with Seabold not paying attention, but he managed not to step off for a pitch clock violation and fired a fastball that Cronenworth lined one to McGonigle to end the inning and turn away the threat. Not great, but not a bad first appearance for Mr. Seabold.

So it was 3-0 Padres heading into the seventh, and with Mason Miller lurking in the Padres pen, it was time to get cooking on a comeback.

Lefty Kyle Hart took over in the top of the seventh. McGonigle took a first pitch slider for a strike, but again it was actually just out of the zone. The Tigers know they can’t save up challenges to cash in for prizes later, yes? Either way, Kevin worked his way back into a 3-2 count but then took a slider up and away, just nicking the corner. Finally, the Tigers challenged, and so of course this time they were wrong.

Hart carved up Vierling with some nasty splitters, and so it was up to Jahmai Jones, pinch-hitting against the lefty for Zach McKinstry. He put together a solid AB, but lined out to a sliding Tatis Jr. in right to end the Tigers’ half of the inning.

Seabold punched out Tatis to open the bottom half, with a failed Tatis challenge ended the at-bat. Seabold got ahead of Machado and he grounded out to Torres for the second out. The broadcast discussed Seabold’s higher arm slot with the Blue Jays this spring. His velocity is up a tick, he has a quick arm with a bit of deception perhaps, and he is getting a little more carry on the fourseamer. His changeup is solid. The new slider better but erratic on this night. But, he threw strikes for the most part and the left-handed Merrill flew out to Greene in left to end the inning. We don’t Sea-gold just yet, but a solid effort from the Tigers’ newest reliever.

Hart was still in the game, and he quickly popped out Rogers. Hinch pinch-hit Dillon Dingler for Carpenter, which is interesting, but he flew out to Tatis. Torres waited out Hart into a 3-2 count but whiffed at a cutter, and the Tigers were down to their final three outs.

Seabold stayed out there with his pitch count over 30 pitches in the bottom of the eighth. Bogearts flew out to Vierling. Sheets took a slider up and away for a called strike three, and didn’t challenge it. He would’ve won. Seabold quickly worked ahead of Laureano as well with a pair of well located heaters, but the outfielder battled back and eventually lined a two-out single to right field. That was all for Seabold, but it was a good debut as he collected seven outs in a row with three punchouts before the single ended his night.

Hinch turned to Will Vest to shut this inning down and keep the game close enough for a ninth inning rally with the heart of the lineup due up. Bryce Johnson pinch-ran for Laureano. Castellanos dug into the box, saying hello to old friend Jake Rogers, and then grounded out to Keith, who again got a bad grip and bounced it over to first. Torkelson made another nice scoop, and we were on to the ninth.

It would be a tall task for the Tigers against the flamethrowing Mason Miller. Keith saw a steady diet of sliders and Miller dropped one just on the outer edge for strike three after a worthy challenge from Keith. Greene lifted a slider to left for the second out. Torkelson worked to 2-0, fouled off a high triple digit heater, and then took one away to get to 3-1. Tork fouled off two fastballs and then Miller missed up to walk him. That brought McGonigle to the dish. Miller dropped a pair of sliders in for strikes, and the rookie chased one down to end it.

The Tigers are 2-1 on the year, and they’ll begin their journey back east with a three-game stop in Phoenix to battle the Diamondbacks on Monday through Wednesday.

Mets Notes: David Peterson's strong first start of season; Jorge Polanco, Bo Bichette needing more reps at new positions

After the Mets came from behind twice to beat the Pittsburgh Pirates on Saturday night, manager Carlos Mendoza and starterDavid Petersondiscussed the win...


David Peterson's "good first one"

While New York's bats struggled until extra innings, the left-hander did all he could to give the team a chance by keeping the Pirates off the scoreboard.

Peterson tossed 5.1 scoreless innings, allowing just six hits while striking out three and walking two. After the game, he talked about how things went during his first outing of the 2026 season.

"Felt good,” Peterson said. “Felt like our plan was working and Alvy [catcher Francisco Alvarez] and I were on the same page. Things were running pretty smooth. Nice to be able to get ahead of hitters and have the count in our advantage most of the day. Some really good defense behind us. Good first one.”

In addition to battling the Pirates revamped lineup, Peterson and the Mets dealt with cold, windy weather at Citi Field. Luckily, the lefty didn't let the conditions get to him, simply focusing on each pitch throughout the game.

"It didn’t change anything for me," Peterson said. "We had our plan and I was just trying to execute every single pitch, and whatever happened happened. I didn’t take too much into account. Like I said, I was just trying to focus on executing one pitch at a time and going as deep as I could and giving our team a chance to win.”

Manager Carlos Mendoza noted that Peterson is "at his best" when he's forcing opponents to hit ground balls and not letting runners on base rattle him. Peterson forced nine groundouts in the win and, like Mendoza noted, forced a clutch pop-out against Marcell Ozuna with the bases loaded in the top of the fifth inning to keep the game tied at 0-0.

“I thought he was very good," Mendoza said. "When Peterson is getting ground balls, when he’s keeping the ball in the ground, that’s when he’s at his best. He did that today. He was pitch efficient. I thought he mixed well. He attacked, got strike one, got swing and misses. Kept hitters off-balance.

“And then when they created traffic, that’s what makes Petey who he is. When there’s runners on base, his ability to slow the game down, his ability to make pitches when he needs to. Bases loaded there with Ozuna with two outs. Like I said, he’s got that ability to continue to trust himself and continue to execute pitches, and he was able to do that today.”

Bullpen doing their job

After Peterson's day was done against the Pirates, Mendoza turned to six different relief pitchers in the 11-inning win.

Huascar Brazobán, Luke Weaver, Brooks Raley, and Devin Williams all kept the score 0-0 through the ninth inning to force extras. Luis García allowed one unearned run in the 10th and Richard Lovelady allowed another unearned run in the 11th inning, giving the Mets offense the chance they needed in the bottom of the inning, down 2-1.

“Can you name everyone that pitched today?” Peterson said with a laugh. “I mean we used everybody. The bullpen did an incredible job, every guy was ready for the task. Came in and did their job. Just an overall amazing performance on both sides of the ball.

"Really proud of those guys in the bullpen, just one after another coming in and getting their outs, keeping us in the game, and giving us a chance to win."

More defensive reps for Jorge Polanco, Bo Bichette

It's been talked about all winter and spring training that having two players with little-to-no experience at their position will be a risk for the Mets. Those defensive concerns were on display Saturday night, as both first baseman Jorge Polanco and third baseman Bo Bichette had some struggles at their new positions.

Bichette had a couple of throws run wide on Polanco at first, including one that was ruled an error in the top of the fourth inning. Polanco also dealt with a few tough fielding plays that luckily didn't cost New York.

“Just reps, they got to continue to work,” Mendoza said. “The Polanco ones, especially that error, I think they gave him an error, hard ground ball that came up on him, there’s so much there that you can do. With Bo, we just got to continue to work with him on those routines throws.”

Mendoza was also asked about a play in the top of the 11th inning, when Bryan Reynolds reached first safely on a dribbler down the third base line that somehow stayed fair and allowed the runner from third to score, and if Bichette or Lovelady should've fielded the ball.

“I couldn’t believe that it stayed fair. I don’t think anybody makes that play," Mendoza said. "Off the bat, I thought it was a foul ball. So no, none of them had a chance there."

While none of the miscues cost the Mets the game, they could have easily, and both players will need to continue to work on the little things throughout the year.