Bryce Eldridge to have outfield glove mailed to him

Sep 23, 2025; San Francisco, California, USA; San Francisco Giants designated hitter Bryce Eldridge (78) takes the field before their game against the St. Louis Cardinals at Oracle Park. Mandatory Credit: Eakin Howard-Imagn Images | Eakin Howard-Imagn Images

The buzz out of Spring Training camp today came from the news that Bryce Eldridge will get some work out in left field. The Giants’ San Francisco Chronicle beat writer Shayna Rubin has the full breadth of the story summed up in this social media post:

Well, that’s a sweet capper to the story and I hope there’s a follow-up question in a couple of days asking what treat or gift his mom packed along with the glove.

But the news is not a total shocker. Eldridge began his pro career getting some time in right field for the ACL Giants and San Jose Giants. He was also a pitcher. So, you know, he’s an athlete. And he’s just 21 years old. Trying him around the diamond — especially during Spring Training — just makes a lot of sense.

Rafael Devers ought to be slated as the starting first baseman specifically because he’s just 29 years old. Having lived through my twenties and now thirties, I have to say that people should wring as much physical activity out of their twenties as possible. I am of the belief that Devers’ 1,270 games at third base makes him a great candidate to play most of the time at first base, and while he wasn’t amazing last season in the brief sampling he had with the Giants, he looked physically capable over there. Penciling him in there for the bulk of the work makes all the sense in the world. Rafael Devers isn’t baseball young and not nearly as young Eldridge, but he’s still young, so use the youth!

The Devers situation makes the Giants’ decision to callup Bryce Eldridge at the end of 2025 all the more questionable. He was already struggling at first base in the minor leagues. The team didn’t put him in the outfield after 2023. On top of that, he didn’t need to be added to the 40-man roster until after the 2027 season. So now, the Giants find themselves with the unenviable task of having to develop a 21-year old position player.

Developing position players of any age has been tough for the franchise since their move to San Francisco and it’s not a scenario any reasonable person should expect to work out well, even if you are feeling generous towards the Giants. Most prospects don’t pan out. There are already whispers that Eldridge isn’t going to be close to the player the Giants had hoped for — unless you want to discount Eno Sarris entirely.

There was already a lot of hype for and pressure on Eldridge, but with the September callup it would appear the Giants have transferred that pressure from the player and onto themselves. Maybe almost entirely. The Giants are tying up a roster spot on a 21 year old DH/1B unless Tony Vitello college coaches him up to being a good enough defender to be flexible for left field, too. That doesn’t seem like a guarantee, not only because Vitello has a whole roster to worry about, but because he’s aware that Eldridge is still very much a prospect. In response to a question about him being on the Opening Day roster, Vitello said of Eldridge:

It’s amazing that he was able to accomplish what he did last year but for right now I think he’s just got to mature as a player. He’s incredibly mature as a kid. But repetitions and conversations and just maturing so that he’s a complete player I think is the key to him becoming the best version of himself. And if he becomes the best version of himself […] he’s around the Giants pretty danged often and maybe even Opening Day.

So, now the Giants have to find field time for him to keep him in the lineup to see if he’ll hit his way onto the Opening Day roster. If he does, then that means the Giants have a meaningful power threat in their lineup. They also set themselves up for an extra draft pick through the Prospect Promotion Incentive. If it doesn’t work out it might become a reflection on the player down the road (especially if Eno Sarris’s prediction proves correct), but let’s not forget that the Giants have rushed him along because he’s the one prospect in several years that the industry has mostly agreed is a good one and has the type of (theoretical) power the lineup has sorely lacked since the championship era.

The other part of this that I think is worth exploring is what happens if Eldridge does stick and proves capable in left field. What happens with the outfield then? Does Jung Hoo Lee get more time in center than Buster Posey envisioned when they signed Harrison Bader? Does Heliot Ramos DH a lot more? All of that would seem to fall in “good problem to have” territory, but I can’t imagine Eldridge’s defensive ceiling being enough to supplant any of the current options, even if the bat plays. But at the same time, an outfield of Eldridge, Lee, and Ramos sounds, uh, pretty good — if all three hit to their expectations. I would hope that the Giants are trying to see if there’s something to Eldridge in the outfield that can actually stick, because making a 6’7” left-handed power hitter some sort of utility player strikes me as something that would’ve been condemned by most of the fandom had it been the plan of the previous front office, and it doesn’t seem like making a prospect positionless puts a prospect in the best position to succeed.

Eldridge could wind up as a left-handed Aaron Judge, who didn’t become AARON JUDGE until his age-25 season. So, development isn’t linear and it usually takes a decent amount of time. I’m not sure where “finding extra playing time for a prospect who has been rushed through the minors” falls, exactly. Is it evidence of desperation and they’re just trying to find something that makes him fit on the roster or are they simply trying to give him as many reps against major league competition as possible to aid in his development?

Well, that’s why we true baseball sickos watch Spring Training: to find out.

AL East offseason grades: Are the Yankees and Blue Jays set to repeat as the AL’s best? Can the Red Sox and Orioles keep up?

No division spent more money on free-agent contracts this winter than the AL East, which, as a quintet, committed more than $900 million. That’s an impressive figure, considering Tampa Bay’s frugality and Boston’s bevy of trade acquisitions. It’s the rich getting richer, as this division has represented the American League in the World Series the past two years.

But which teams spent well, and which teams spent weirdly? And what exactly were the Rays up to, finagling their way into all those three-way deals? Let’s run through the richest division in baseball and grade their offseasons.

Significant outgoing free agents: SS Bo Bichette, SP Chris Bassitt, SP Max Scherzer, RP Seranthony Domínguez, INF Isiah Kiner-Falefa, INF Ty France

Major moves:

  • Signed SP Dylan Cease to a 7-year deal

  • Signed SP Cody Ponce to a 3-year deal

  • Signed RP Tyler Rogers to a 3-year deal

  • Retained SP Shane Bieber on a 1-year player option

  • Signed 3B Kazuma Okamoto to a 4-year deal

  • Traded RP Matt Strahm to the Royals for RP Jonathan Bowlan

  • Signed RP Zach Pop to a 1-year deal

Toronto kicked off the winter with a bang, jumping the market to sign Cease on the largest deal for a pitcher in franchise history. They followed that by inking Ponce and Rogers to bolster their pitching depth. It was a show of force, a sign of intent, a celebratory continuation of Toronto’s historic October run. Their hot pursuit of Kyle Tucker, the market’s consensus top player, only served to reinforce the franchise’s rise to behemoth status.

Ultimately, Tucker chose the Dodgers, leaving the Jays second-best once again. That development, alongside the departure of Bichette, makes this lineup definitively worse than the one that took the field for World Series Game 7. That’s not a slight toward Okamoto — he could well be an impact bat while providing Toronto the international stardom it’s been wanting for years — as much as a reminder of Bichette’s legacy up north.

The club’s complete disinterest in retaining the franchise icon, whose Game 7 homer was two outs away from immortality, was fascinating. Perhaps the singular focus on Tucker played a factor. Perhaps both parties were ready to move on. Either way, the Jays will enter 2026 with a worse lineup and an improved infield defense, with Okamoto at third, Ernie Clement at second and Andrés Giménez at short.

Had they landed Tucker, this would be an easy A, but Toronto failed to land a top-tier offensive partner for Vladimir Guerrero Jr.

Can the Yankees and Blue Jays repeat as the American League’s top two teams? Can the Red Sox and Orioles bounce back into the mix?
Grant Thomas/Yahoo Sports

Significant outgoing free agents: RP Devin Williams, RP Luke Weaver, OF Austin Slater

Major moves:

  • Re-signed OF Cody Bellinger on a 5-year deal

  • Retained OF Trent Grisham via qualifying offer

  • Acquired SP Ryan Weathers from the Marlins for four prospects

  • Re-signed INF Amed Rosario on a 1-year deal

  • Re-signed 1B Paul Goldschmidt on a 1-year deal

  • Re-signed RP Paul Blackburn on a 1-year deal

  • Re-signed SP/RP Ryan Yarbrough on a 1-year deal

The epitome of running it back, New York’s offseason was the transactional equivalent of reheating leftovers. That’s not an egregious strategy, considering how good the 2025 Yankees were, but the sheer scale of the continuity here is striking. In all, the Yankees retained six (!!) free agents from last year’s club and made just one significant external addition.

Keeping Bellinger in pinstripes was downright massive. He’s a perfect fit for the current roster, with his stellar outfield defense a real asset in Yankee Stadium’s spacious left field. Bellinger’s bat isn’t what it once was, but he finished second in WAR among Yankees last year, behind only Aaron Judge, for a reason. He’s a valuable player, one who helps give the 2026 Yankees one of the best lineups in baseball.

Beyond that, it was a generally underwhelming winter in the Bronx. GM Brian Cashman is clearly comfortable banking on another strong year from his offense to go with a returning-from-injury Gerrit Cole and a full season of young flamethrower Cam Schlittler. But it’s hard to give a team with only one new face anything higher than a B. Besides, this bullpen still feels … under-addressed, with Williams and Weaver leaving via free agency.

Significant outgoing free agents: 3B Alex Bregman, SP Lucas Giolito, RP Steven Matz, RP Justin Wilson, OF Rob Refsnyder, SP Dustin May, RP Liam Hendriks

Major moves:

  • Signed SP Ranger Suárez to a 5-year deal

  • Acquired SP Sonny Gray from the Cardinals for SP Richard Fitts and a pitching prospect

  • Acquired 1B Willson Contreras from the Cardinals for SP Hunter Dobbins and two pitching prospects

  • Acquired INF Caleb Durbin, INF Andruw Monasterio, INF Anthony Seigler and a 2026 Competitive Balance Round B pick from the Brewers for SP Kyle Harrison, INF David Hamilton and SP Shane Drohan

  • Acquired SP Johan Oviedo, a pitching prospect and a catching prospect from the Pirates for OF Jhostynxon Garcia and a pitching prospect

  • Traded RP Jordan Hicks and a pitching prospect to the White Sox for a pitching prospect and salary relief

  • Signed INF Isiah Kiner-Falefa to a 1-year deal

  • Nontendered 1B Nathaniel Lowe

The rotation is better, the lineup is worse, and we are tired. Boston’s winter was exhausting to follow. I can only imagine how chief baseball officer Craig Breslow feels.

Opting to let Alex Bregman walk after spending all of 2025 lauding his leadership qualities and offensive reliability was a questionable choice. The immediate pivot to Ranger Suárez was odd but should push this rotation from good to excellent. The same is true for the additions of Sonny Gray and Johan Oviedo.

But the Red Sox didn’t exit October prematurely last season because they couldn’t prevent runs. No, they fell to the Yankees in the wild-card round because the offense lacked a difference-maker. Roman Anthony, who was hurt for the playoffs, might end up blossoming into that character, but that’s quite a lot to put on the shoulders of a 21-year-old. Willson Contreras is a proven commodity, but he’s closer to good than great. This corner outfield kitchen still has too many cooks between Anthony, Jarren Duran and Wilyer Abreu. Acquiring Caleb Durbin was a cheeky way to upgrade the infield, but he’s unlikely to compete for MVP votes.

This winter also served to put a bow on last year’s Rafael Devers blockbuster, as two more pieces from that move, Jordan Hicks and Kyle Harrison, were traded away. Jose Bello, a 20-year-old with seven appearances in Low-A, is the only player left in Boston’s organization who was acquired in the Devers deal. It’s yet another reminder that the decision to trade the star was effectively a salary dump and little more. Some of the money saved will go into the pockets of Contreras, Gray, Suárez and others, but it’s difficult to look at this roster and not wonder how much better it would be with Devers in it.

Significant outgoing free agents: SP Adrian Houser

Major moves:

  • Signed OF Cedric Mullins to a 1-year deal

  • Signed SP Nick Martinez to a 1-year deal

  • Signed RP Steven Matz to a 2-year deal

  • Signed OF Jake Fraley to a 1-year deal

  • Acquired five prospects from the Orioles for SP Shane Baz 

  • Acquired UTL Gavin Lux in from the Cincinnati Reds as part of a three-team trade in which they sent Josh Lowe to the Angels

  • Acquired 3B Ben Williamson from the Mariners as part of a three-team trade in which they sent a prospect and a draft pick to the Cardinals

  • Acquired OF Jacob Melton and a pitching prospect from the Astros as part of a three-team trade in which they sent 2B Brandon Lowe, OF Jake Mangum and RP Mason Montgomery to the Pirates

  • Acquired RP Steven Wilson from the White Sox for OF Everson Pereira and a prospect

Tampa Bay’s carousel to nowhere continues. This franchise, renowned for both its penny-pinching ways and its ability to uncover hidden value, appears to be taking a small step back entering 2026. Thankfully, the Rays went about it in a fun way, inserting themselves into three different three-way deals.

Quite a bit of talent left town among Baz, Montgomery and both Lowes, with mostly prospects arriving in return. Mullins, Martinez and Matz are all worthwhile additions — a sign that even though the Rays are doubtful to contend, the door is still open just in case.

In the main, this franchise is in something of a holding pattern until its stadium situation is resolved. That has been the case for some time now, though the new ownership group should help push the process forward. Until then, it’ll be more nibbling at the margins and hoping the farm system produces another star to pair with Junior Caminero.

Significant outgoing free agents: SP Tomoyuki Sugano, C Gary Sánchez

Major moves:

  • Signed 1B Pete Alonso to a 5-year deal

  • Acquired SP Shane Baz from the Rays for four prospects and a Competitive Balance Round A draft pick

  • Acquired OF Taylor Ward from the Angels for SP Grayson Rodriguez

  • Signed RP Ryan Helsley to a 2-year deal

  • Re-signed SP Zach Eflin on a 1-year deal

  • Acquired INF/OF Blaze Alexander from the Diamondbacks for RP Kade Strowd and two prospects

  • Signed OF Leody Taveras to a 1-year deal

After years of frugality, the Orioles finally broke out the checkbook for a top-tier free agent, inking Alonso to a paradigm-shifting, five-year deal. He’ll provide the type of dependable offensive production Baltimore desperately lacked throughout its immensely disappointing 2025. More importantly, his signing was a signal of a new day in Charm City; new owner David Rubenstein is willing to spend at levels the previous leadership group was not.

The two biggest trades of Baltimore’s winter were also significant departures in strategy for president of baseball operations Mike Elias, who has helmed the club since the 2018-19 offseason. Dealing Rodriguez and his four years of control for an impending free agent in Ward was an uncharacteristically aggressive maneuver for the typically calculating Elias. The same is true of the Baz trade, in which Baltimore parted with a cornucopia of prospects to land a potential frontline arm.

This was not a perfect offseason for the O’s — the bullpen could have used another boost, the rotation didn’t get a true ace — but it was a massive step forward. There’s an argument that no team in baseball improved as much as the one in Baltimore.

AL East offseason grades: Are the Yankees and Blue Jays set to repeat as the AL’s best? Can the Red Sox and Orioles keep up?

No division spent more money on free-agent contracts this winter than the AL East, which, as a quintet, committed more than $900 million. That’s an impressive figure, considering Tampa Bay’s frugality and Boston’s bevy of trade acquisitions. It’s the rich getting richer, as this division has represented the American League in the World Series the past two years.

But which teams spent well, and which teams spent weirdly? And what exactly were the Rays up to, finagling their way into all those three-way deals? Let’s run through the richest division in baseball and grade their offseasons.

Significant outgoing free agents: SS Bo Bichette, SP Chris Bassitt, SP Max Scherzer, RP Seranthony Domínguez, INF Isiah Kiner-Falefa, INF Ty France

Major moves:

  • Signed SP Dylan Cease to a 7-year deal

  • Signed SP Cody Ponce to a 3-year deal

  • Signed RP Tyler Rogers to a 3-year deal

  • Retained SP Shane Bieber on a 1-year player option

  • Signed 3B Kazuma Okamoto to a 4-year deal

  • Traded RP Matt Strahm to the Royals for RP Jonathan Bowlan

  • Signed RP Zach Pop to a 1-year deal

Toronto kicked off the winter with a bang, jumping the market to sign Cease on the largest deal for a pitcher in franchise history. They followed that by inking Ponce and Rogers to bolster their pitching depth. It was a show of force, a sign of intent, a celebratory continuation of Toronto’s historic October run. Their hot pursuit of Kyle Tucker, the market’s consensus top player, only served to reinforce the franchise’s rise to behemoth status.

Ultimately, Tucker chose the Dodgers, leaving the Jays second-best once again. That development, alongside the departure of Bichette, makes this lineup definitively worse than the one that took the field for World Series Game 7. That’s not a slight toward Okamoto — he could well be an impact bat while providing Toronto the international stardom it’s been wanting for years — as much as a reminder of Bichette’s legacy up north.

The club’s complete disinterest in retaining the franchise icon, whose Game 7 homer was two outs away from immortality, was fascinating. Perhaps the singular focus on Tucker played a factor. Perhaps both parties were ready to move on. Either way, the Jays will enter 2026 with a worse lineup and an improved infield defense, with Okamoto at third, Ernie Clement at second and Andrés Giménez at short.

Had they landed Tucker, this would be an easy A, but Toronto failed to land a top-tier offensive partner for Vladimir Guerrero Jr.

Can the Yankees and Blue Jays repeat as the American League's top two teams? Can the Red Sox and Orioles bounce back into the mix?
Can the Yankees and Blue Jays repeat as the American League’s top two teams? Can the Red Sox and Orioles bounce back into the mix?
Grant Thomas/Yahoo Sports

Significant outgoing free agents: RP Devin Williams, RP Luke Weaver, OF Austin Slater

Major moves:

  • Re-signed OF Cody Bellinger on a 5-year deal

  • Retained OF Trent Grisham via qualifying offer

  • Acquired SP Ryan Weathers from the Marlins for four prospects

  • Re-signed INF Amed Rosario on a 1-year deal

  • Re-signed 1B Paul Goldschmidt on a 1-year deal

  • Re-signed RP Paul Blackburn on a 1-year deal

  • Re-signed SP/RP Ryan Yarbrough on a 1-year deal

The epitome of running it back, New York’s offseason was the transactional equivalent of reheating leftovers. That’s not an egregious strategy, considering how good the 2025 Yankees were, but the sheer scale of the continuity here is striking. In all, the Yankees retained six (!!) free agents from last year’s club and made just one significant external addition.

Keeping Bellinger in pinstripes was downright massive. He’s a perfect fit for the current roster, with his stellar outfield defense a real asset in Yankee Stadium’s spacious left field. Bellinger’s bat isn’t what it once was, but he finished second in WAR among Yankees last year, behind only Aaron Judge, for a reason. He’s a valuable player, one who helps give the 2026 Yankees one of the best lineups in baseball.

Beyond that, it was a generally underwhelming winter in the Bronx. GM Brian Cashman is clearly comfortable banking on another strong year from his offense to go with a returning-from-injury Gerrit Cole and a full season of young flamethrower Cam Schlittler. But it’s hard to give a team with only one new face anything higher than a B. Besides, this bullpen still feels … under-addressed, with Williams and Weaver leaving via free agency.

Significant outgoing free agents: 3B Alex Bregman, SP Lucas Giolito, RP Steven Matz, RP Justin Wilson, OF Rob Refsnyder, SP Dustin May, RP Liam Hendriks

Major moves:

  • Signed SP Ranger Suárez to a 5-year deal

  • Acquired SP Sonny Gray from the Cardinals for SP Richard Fitts and a pitching prospect

  • Acquired 1B Willson Contreras from the Cardinals for SP Hunter Dobbins and two pitching prospects

  • Acquired INF Caleb Durbin, INF Andruw Monasterio, INF Anthony Seigler and a 2026 Competitive Balance Round B pick from the Brewers for SP Kyle Harrison, INF David Hamilton and SP Shane Drohan

  • Acquired SP Johan Oviedo, a pitching prospect and a catching prospect from the Pirates for OF Jhostynxon Garcia and a pitching prospect

  • Traded RP Jordan Hicks and a pitching prospect to the White Sox for a pitching prospect and salary relief

  • Signed INF Isiah Kiner-Falefa to a 1-year deal

  • Nontendered 1B Nathaniel Lowe

The rotation is better, the lineup is worse, and we are tired. Boston’s winter was exhausting to follow. I can only imagine how chief baseball officer Craig Breslow feels.

Opting to let Alex Bregman walk after spending all of 2025 lauding his leadership qualities and offensive reliability was a questionable choice. The immediate pivot to Ranger Suárez was odd but should push this rotation from good to excellent. The same is true for the additions of Sonny Gray and Johan Oviedo.

But the Red Sox didn’t exit October prematurely last season because they couldn’t prevent runs. No, they fell to the Yankees in the wild-card round because the offense lacked a difference-maker. Roman Anthony, who was hurt for the playoffs, might end up blossoming into that character, but that’s quite a lot to put on the shoulders of a 21-year-old. Willson Contreras is a proven commodity, but he’s closer to good than great. This corner outfield kitchen still has too many cooks between Anthony, Jarren Duran and Wilyer Abreu. Acquiring Caleb Durbin was a cheeky way to upgrade the infield, but he’s unlikely to compete for MVP votes.

This winter also served to put a bow on last year’s Rafael Devers blockbuster, as two more pieces from that move, Jordan Hicks and Kyle Harrison, were traded away. Jose Bello, a 20-year-old with seven appearances in Low-A, is the only player left in Boston’s organization who was acquired in the Devers deal. It’s yet another reminder that the decision to trade the star was effectively a salary dump and little more. Some of the money saved will go into the pockets of Contreras, Gray, Suárez and others, but it’s difficult to look at this roster and not wonder how much better it would be with Devers in it.

Significant outgoing free agents: SP Adrian Houser

Major moves:

  • Signed OF Cedric Mullins to a 1-year deal

  • Signed SP Nick Martinez to a 1-year deal

  • Signed RP Steven Matz to a 2-year deal

  • Signed OF Jake Fraley to a 1-year deal

  • Acquired five prospects from the Orioles for SP Shane Baz 

  • Acquired UTL Gavin Lux in from the Cincinnati Reds as part of a three-team trade in which they sent Josh Lowe to the Angels

  • Acquired 3B Ben Williamson from the Mariners as part of a three-team trade in which they sent a prospect and a draft pick to the Cardinals

  • Acquired OF Jacob Melton and a pitching prospect from the Astros as part of a three-team trade in which they sent 2B Brandon Lowe, OF Jake Mangum and RP Mason Montgomery to the Pirates

  • Acquired RP Steven Wilson from the White Sox for OF Everson Pereira and a prospect

Tampa Bay’s carousel to nowhere continues. This franchise, renowned for both its penny-pinching ways and its ability to uncover hidden value, appears to be taking a small step back entering 2026. Thankfully, the Rays went about it in a fun way, inserting themselves into three different three-way deals.

Quite a bit of talent left town among Baz, Montgomery and both Lowes, with mostly prospects arriving in return. Mullins, Martinez and Matz are all worthwhile additions — a sign that even though the Rays are doubtful to contend, the door is still open just in case.

In the main, this franchise is in something of a holding pattern until its stadium situation is resolved. That has been the case for some time now, though the new ownership group should help push the process forward. Until then, it’ll be more nibbling at the margins and hoping the farm system produces another star to pair with Junior Caminero.

Significant outgoing free agents: SP Tomoyuki Sugano, C Gary Sánchez

Major moves:

  • Signed 1B Pete Alonso to a 5-year deal

  • Acquired SP Shane Baz from the Rays for four prospects and a Competitive Balance Round A draft pick

  • Acquired OF Taylor Ward from the Angels for SP Grayson Rodriguez

  • Signed RP Ryan Helsley to a 2-year deal

  • Re-signed SP Zach Eflin on a 1-year deal

  • Acquired INF/OF Blaze Alexander from the Diamondbacks for RP Kade Strowd and two prospects

  • Signed OF Leody Taveras to a 1-year deal

After years of frugality, the Orioles finally broke out the checkbook for a top-tier free agent, inking Alonso to a paradigm-shifting, five-year deal. He’ll provide the type of dependable offensive production Baltimore desperately lacked throughout its immensely disappointing 2025. More importantly, his signing was a signal of a new day in Charm City; new owner David Rubenstein is willing to spend at levels the previous leadership group was not.

The two biggest trades of Baltimore’s winter were also significant departures in strategy for president of baseball operations Mike Elias, who has helmed the club since the 2018-19 offseason. Dealing Rodriguez and his four years of control for an impending free agent in Ward was an uncharacteristically aggressive maneuver for the typically calculating Elias. The same is true of the Baz trade, in which Baltimore parted with a cornucopia of prospects to land a potential frontline arm.

This was not a perfect offseason for the O’s — the bullpen could have used another boost, the rotation didn’t get a true ace — but it was a massive step forward. There’s an argument that no team in baseball improved as much as the one in Baltimore.

No longer losers, the Clippers still host NBA All-Star weekend amid a season of vintage team chaos

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) — The Los Angeles Clippers’ days as the biggest losers in professional sports are long gone, and this NBA All-Star weekend was supposed to be a time to celebrate it.

The team that spent its first four decades of existence as a punch line and a purgatory has now had 14 consecutive winning seasons with a succession of basketball greats wearing its uniform. After decades of playing in dingy gyms from Buffalo to San Diego to downtown Los Angeles, the Clippers now hold court in a lavish, futuristic new arena built by the richest owner in professional sports, Steve Ballmer.

Yet perhaps it’s cosmically appropriate for this crowning All-Star moment to arrive in the middle of a profoundly chaotic season for the Clippers, whose newer fans have been getting a taste of the bad old days from a team that once spent almost every year mired in some kind of mess.

“We’ve dealt with a lot this year,” Clippers guard Kris Dunn said last week. “Our whole mentality throughout the year has just been to try to find a way. It’s been tough.”

The season began under the cloud of an NBA investigation into a suspicious endorsement deal for superstar Kawhi Leonard which might have been a way for the team to circumvent the salary cap — and which infuriated front offices around the sport, no matter what the league eventually decides. Leonard, Ballmer and president of basketball operations Lawrence Frank all deny wrongdoing, but the Clippers could face penalties if the league disagrees.

The Clippers then got off to a shambolic 6-21 start during which they shockingly kicked franchise icon Chris Paul off the team just six weeks into the 40-year-old point guard’s much-anticipated farewell season.

A couple of weeks after Paul’s banishment, coach Tyronn Lue’s Clips improbably started winning again, with James Harden and longtime center Ivica Zubac stepping up alongside Leonard to lead a 16-3 surge back into the playoff race.

But then Frank blew up his roster last week, trading Harden to Cleveland and Zubac to Indiana. The moves likely improved the long-term outlook for a team that began the season with the NBA’s oldest roster, but they might have ended an era.

“As hard as these moves are, we’re extremely excited about where we’re going,” Frank said. “We want to win now. We believe we are going to win now, and we’re going to do it by getting younger.”

The Clippers’ current streak of 14 winning seasons was pretty much unthinkable only 15 years ago, when this franchise had managed only six winning seasons in 40 years. They’ve made the playoffs 12 times and won their first three Pacific Division titles in this stretch.

But the Clippers’ past five months have contained enough drama for a decade around many clubs, and the All-Star weekend will be a welcome opportunity for the team and its fans to catch their breath.

This is the first All-Star weekend hosted solely by the Clippers, who shared the honor three times previously with their eternal older brothers, the 17-time champion Los Angeles Lakers. The Clippers once had to cover up the Lakers’ banners when they both played at the former Staples Center, but they don’t have those problems in their new $2 billion palace that puts the Lakers’ aging arena to shame.

And at least Clippers fans won’t have the bittersweet experience of watching Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, who is injured and won’t play in Inglewood. The reigning league MVP and NBA Finals MVP began his career with the Clippers in 2018, only to be traded to Oklahoma City a year later along with a jaw-dropping bounty of draft picks for Paul George.

The Clippers acquired Leonard and George together that summer, but both stars struggled to stay healthy. Although they made the Western Conference finals in 2021, the Clippers are still the oldest team in North American pro sports never to reach its league’s championship game or title series.

The Clippers added Harden, Russell Westbrook and Bradley Beal in attempts to push them over the top, but it never quite worked. Just two players are now left on the roster from the end of the 2023-24 season: Leonard and backup guard Jordan Miller.

Leonard has been healthy and outstanding in recent weeks, and he will be the Clippers’ only All-Star in their hometown game. He said the trade of Zubac “was like losing a brother,” but he understands why the moves “make sense.”

The Clippers’ fundamental change of course actually began well before last week: They allowed George to walk in the summer of 2024 instead of locking themselves into another massive contract extension. They traded dependable scorer Norman Powell last summer despite his excellent play, and they also declined to give more guaranteed money to Harden, effectively encouraging his departure.

While the trades of Harden and Zubac were painful, Frank believes they took the Clippers out of second-tier contender status — good enough to win, but not good enough to win it all — and replenished their stock of draft capital.

What that means for Leonard is unclear, but Frank said he can see a future with the two-time NBA champion beyond this season, if Leonard wants it. Leonard said he isn’t thinking beyond this season.

The entire future beyond All-Star weekend is murky for the Clippers, between the looming investigation and uncertainty across the roster. But after the league marvels at the wonders of Intuit Dome, Frank and the respected Lue will continue working to keep the good times going.

“Yes, this is where I want to be,” Lue said. “Having an owner like Mr. Ballmer, who’s unbelievable, it does so many things for me. I trust everything we do, everything we decide to do. It’s a partnership. I want to be here.”

___

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

Naz Reid, Mouhamed Gueye fined $35K each after fight in Timberwolves’ win over Hawks

The NBA fined both Atlanta Hawks forward Mouhamed Gueye and Minnesota Timberwolves center Naz Reid on Wednesday after their fight Monday night.

Gueye and Reid were fined $35,000 each for the incident, which was the second fight across the league on Monday night. Neither player was suspended.

Early in the fourth quarter of the Timberwolves’ 138-116 win over the Hawks, Reid and Gueye started getting into it after Gueye was called for a foul for shoving Reid near the wing. Things escalated very quickly, and it took several assistants and other players to actually separate the two after they latched on to each other’s jerseys.

Both Reid and Gueye were ejected from that contest at the Target Center. Gueye had 10 points and seven rebounds off the bench when he was thrown out. Reid had seven points and six rebounds for the Timberwolves.

The fight in this game was largely overshadowed by the massive brawl that took place in the matchup between the Detroit Pistons and Charlotte Hornets on Monday night. That incident resulted in four players getting ejected and a number of suspensions being handed down from the league on Wednesday. Isaiah Stewart received the harshest punishment and will be suspended for seven games.

The Timberwolves hold a 33-22 record entering Wednesday night’s matchup with the Portland Trail Blazers. The Hawks, who have now lost back-to-back games, sit at 26-29. They’ll take on the Hornets on Wednesday night.

Naz Reid, Mouhamed Gueye fined $35K each after fight in Timberwolves’ win over Hawks

The NBA fined both Atlanta Hawks forward Mouhamed Gueye and Minnesota Timberwolves center Naz Reid on Wednesday after their fight Monday night.

Gueye and Reid were fined $35,000 each for the incident, which was the second fight across the league on Monday night. Neither player was suspended.

Early in the fourth quarter of the Timberwolves’ 138-116 win over the Hawks, Reid and Gueye started getting into it after Gueye was called for a foul for shoving Reid near the wing. Things escalated very quickly, and it took several assistants and other players to actually separate the two after they latched on to each other’s jerseys.

Both Reid and Gueye were ejected from that contest at the Target Center. Gueye had 10 points and seven rebounds off the bench when he was thrown out. Reid had seven points and six rebounds for the Timberwolves.

The fight in this game was largely overshadowed by the massive brawl that took place in the matchup between the Detroit Pistons and Charlotte Hornets on Monday night. That incident resulted in four players getting ejected and a number of suspensions being handed down from the league on Wednesday. Isaiah Stewart received the harshest punishment and will be suspended for seven games.

The Timberwolves hold a 33-22 record entering Wednesday night’s matchup with the Portland Trail Blazers. The Hawks, who have now lost back-to-back games, sit at 26-29. They’ll take on the Hornets on Wednesday night.

Jazz Chisholm Jr. defends Yankees running it back in 2026: ‘I don’t see a problem’

Yankees general manager Brian Cashman recently pushed back on the popular notion of “running it back” in 2026, arguing their latest roster — fully stocked with familiar names and faces from a brief ALDS exit last season — has the requisite makeup of a championship contender.

But the months-long argument about Cashman’s architectural work and attitude means very little to Jazz Chisholm Jr. Whether or not the club is truly starting fresh with a rotten plan, he’s on board with the group assembled and unbothered by the front office direction.

“We’re running it back because, at the halfway point, we thought we built a team that was going to go to the World Series,” the Yankees infielder said on Wednesday down in Tampa. “We still believe that, wholeheartedly. I don’t see a problem with running it back with four MVPs on your team.”

Not too long ago, Chisholm’s future with the Yankees was somewhat in doubt. He was mentioned in base-level trade rumors during the offseason, and while he avoided arbitration last month with a one-year, $10.2 million contract, he’s currently slated for free agency after the 2026 season.

It’s still unclear if the Yankees envision a long-term relationship with Chisholm, but the two-time All-Star is coming off a highlight year. As their primary second baseman, he slashed .242/.332/.481 with a career-high 31 home runs and 31 stolen bases in 130 games, finishing as one of just seven players to produce a 30-30 campaign in 2025. He also earned Silver Slugger honors.

When asked about his personal goals for 2026, Chisholm set the bar rather high — with his own twist on the “running it back” topic.

“Basically, the same personal goals I have every season. Go out there, win MVP, and go win a World Series,” he said. “I can make as much money as I want, but if I don’t have the MVP, I’m not going to be satisfied. That’s more important than that.”

Yankees pitchers and catchers officially reported to camp on Wednesday, and the first full-squad workout of spring training is scheduled for Thursday. 

Joel Embiid to miss second straight for right knee, Quentin Grimes also out vs. Knicks

(Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Philadelphia 76ers will be shorthanded again on Wednesday night hosting the New York Knicks.

After being listed as questionable throughout the day, Joel Embiid has been downgraded to out for the contest due to right knee injury management. Embiid was also sidelined for this reason on Monday when the Sixers fell to the Portland Trail Blazers to close their road trip out west.

ESPN’s Tim Bontemps reported on social media Wednesday evening that Embiid had reported soreness in the knee after the Sixers’ win over the Suns this past Saturday. He adds that the soreness has decreased but treatments would continue through the upcoming All-Star break.

This is the first time since Dec. 19 and 20, 2025, that Embiid has missed two games in a row. He hasn’t missed a game other than to rest one leg of each back-to-back since Dec. 28 and has been playing tremendous ball in that time, averaging 30.1 points, 8.2 rebounds and 4.7 assists across 18 games.

Before the game, head coach Nick Nurse said that he reported soreness in the right knee after their win over the Phoenix Suns on Feb. 7.

“It’s bothering him enough that he’s not playing, I think it is improving a little bit,” Nurse said, “but just not quite there enough to get out there tonight.”

Nurse also went on to say that there isn’t a ton of concern over this, but clumped Embiid in with the group of guys it will be good to have a week off with the impending All-Star break.

Quentin Grimes has also been downgraded to out for Wednesday after being listed as questionable throughout the day for illness. Dominick Barlow, however, is good to go after being listed as questionable for illness earlier alongside Grimes. Both Grimes and Barlow were sidelined for the loss to the Trail Blazers.

Another shorthanded one for the Sixers… this time against the no. 3 team in the Eastern Conference. Should be fun!

The Sixers and Knicks tip off from South Philadelphia at 7:30 p.m. ET.