Reds 3B Eugenio Suarez uses ABS challenge to counter back-to-back blown calls from umpire C.B. Bucknor

Eugenio Suárez likely held the envy of every MLB player on Saturday. The Cincinnati Reds third baseman put the new ABS challenge system to use in a game against the Boston Red Sox, wiping out back-to-back erroneous strike three calls from home plate umpire C.B. Bucknor, one of the least popular umps in MLB.

With a 1-2 count and two outs against Red Sox reliever Ryan Watson, Suárez challenged a strike call that wound up being down and in, then another call on a strike that turned out to be a couple inches inside. Bucknor had made both strike calls with vigor, only to be overruled by camera and computer.

The Great American Ballpark crowd was loving it.

The two reprieves wound up not helping Suárez, who grounded out to shortstop on the next pitch. The Reds went on to win the game 5-3, though.

Those overruled strikes were two of six pitches that had Bucknor’s call overturned, out of eight challenges. This is the kind of stuff fans and players have dreamed of with the introduction of ABS.

One area where ABS did not help, though, was an inning-ending at-bat for Red Sox shortstop Trevor Story, who struck out on a check swing call. That call also appeared wrong, though check swings are officially a judgement call by the umpires and therefore not challengeable.

Where it gets weird, however, is that Bucknor didn’t do what 99% of umpires do in that situation and appeal to the umpire with the better view to make the call. Story was irate, and Red Sox manager Alex Cora wound up getting ejected after stepping in to protect his player.

Cora’s take on Bucknor’s day, via The Athletic:

“He has one job to do, it’s [to] call balls and strikes,” said manager Alex Cora, who was ejected in the eighth. “It wasn’t his best day. That’s what the system does. It’s out there, everybody sees it, and he’ll be the first one to accept it. I saw him putting his head down after one of the challenges. And we’re all human. It’s not easy, what we do and what he does.”

The Reds’ win evens the series after Boston’s 3-0 win on Thursday, with Red Sox pitcher Connelly Early and the Reds’ Rhett Lowder slated to start for the rubber game on Sunday.

NBA playoff picture March 28: All of the scenarios and stakes for postseason contenders down the stretch run

The NBA playoff picture will come into clearer view each day between now and the end of the regular season on April 12. In the meantime, we will provide detailed daily updates on the landscape, including magic numbers, remaining schedules and the stakes for every day’s slate of games. And for those teams not in the postseason hunt, we also breakdown the “race” for the pole position in the upcoming NBA Draft lottery.

Jump to:Eastern ConferenceWestern Conference


(7) Philadelphia 76ers vs. (8) Orlando Magic
(9) Charlotte Hornets vs. (10) Miami Heat

(7) Phoenix Suns vs. (8) LA Clippers
(9) Portland Trail Blazers vs. (10) Golden State Warriors


(1) Detroit Pistons vs. (8) play-in winner
(2) Boston Celtics vs. (7) play-In winner
(3) New York Knicks vs. (6) Atlanta Hawks
(4) Cleveland Cavaliers vs. (5) Toronto Raptors

(1) Oklahoma City Thunder vs. (8) play-In winner
(2) San Antonio Spurs vs. (7) play-In winner
(3) Los Angeles Lakers vs. (6) Houston Rockets
(4) Denver Nuggets vs. (5) Minnesota Timberwolves


In the Eastern Conference, the Detroit Pistons, Boston Celtics, New York Knicks and Cleveland Cavaliers, in some order, appear bound for the top four playoff seeds and home-court advantage in the opening round. The Pistons, who hold a four-game lead on the Celtics, are almost certain to capture the East’s No. 1 seed, barring a complete meltdown in the absence of injured Cade Cunningham (collapsed lung).

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Who, exactly, those four teams will play in the opening round is entirely up for grabs, as just two wins separate the fifth seed from the 10th seed. The Toronto Raptors, Atlanta Hawks, Philadelphia 76ers, Orlando Magic, Charlotte Hornets and Miami Heat are all jockeying for position down the stretch of a season that has surpassed 70 games.

Technically, the Milwaukee Bucks and Chicago Bulls are still alive for postseason contention, though they are locked in a different kind of race — one for lottery odds.



Record: 53-20 | Net rating: 8.0 (2nd)

  • Clinched playoff berth

  • Magic number for No. 1 seed: 5

  • Remaining schedule: @MIN, @OKC, TOR, MIN, @PHI, @ORL, MIL, @CHA, @IND

  • Highest possible finish: No. 1 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 4 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 1 seed and home-court advantage throughout the Eastern Conference playoffs.



Record: (49-24) | Net rating: 7.8 (4th)

  • Magic number for No. 2 seed: 8

  • Remaining schedule: @CHA, @ATL, @MIA, @MIL, TOR, CHA, @NYK, NOP, ORL

  • Highest possible finish: No. 1 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 7 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 2 seed and home-court advantage in the Eastern Conference semifinals.

Record: 48-26 | Net rating: 6.6 (5th)

  • Magic number for No. 3 seed: 7

  • Remaining schedule: @OKC, @HOU, @MEM, CHI, @ATL, BOS, TOR, CHA

  • Highest possible finish: No. 1 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 7 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 2 seed and home-court advantage in the Eastern Conference semifinals.

Record: 46-28 | Net rating: 4.2 (8th)

  • Magic number for No. 4 seed: 5

  • Remaining schedule: @UTA, @LAL, @GSW, IND, @MEM, ATL, @ATL, WAS

  • Highest possible finish: No. 1 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 10 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 4 seed and home-court advantage in the first round.

Record: 41-32 | Net rating: 1.8 (12th)

  • Magic number for No. 5 seed: 9

  • Remaining schedule: ORL, @DET, SAC, @MEM, @BOS, MIA, MIA, @NYK, BKN

  • Highest possible finish: No. 2 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 10 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 5 or 6 seed and a guaranteed playoff berth.

Record: 41-33 | Net rating: 1.5 (13th)

  • Magic number for No. 6 seed: 8

  • Remaining schedule: SAC, BOS, @ORL, @BKN, NYK, @CLE, CLE, @MIA

  • Highest possible finish: No. 2 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 10 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 5 or 6 seed and a guaranteed playoff berth.

Record: 40-33 | Net rating: -0.3 (19th)

  • Magic number for No. 7 seed: 9

  • Remaining schedule: @CHA, @MIA, @WAS, MIN, DET, @SAS, @HOU, @IND, MIL

  • Highest possible finish: No. 3 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 10 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 5 or 6 seed and a guaranteed playoff berth.

Record: 39-34 | Net rating: 4.8 (6th)

  • Magic number for No. 7 seed: 9

  • Remaining schedule: PHI, BOS, @BKN, PHX, IND, @MIN, @BOS, DET, @NYK

  • Highest possible finish: No. 3 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: Out of the postseason

What’s at stake: The No. 5 or 6 seed and a guaranteed playoff berth.

Record: 39-34 | Net rating: 0.8 (17th)

  • Magic number for No. 9 seed: 8

  • Remaining schedule: @TOR, PHX, ATL, @DAL, @NOP, DET, MIN, @CHI, @BOS

  • Highest possible finish: No. 3 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: Out of the postseason

What’s at stake: The No. 5 or 6 seed and a guaranteed playoff berth.

Record: 39-35 | Net rating: 2.3 (11th)

  • Magic number for No. 10 seed: 1

  • Remaining schedule: @IND, PHI, BOS, WAS, @TOR, @TOR, @WAS, ATL

  • Highest possible finish: No. 3 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: Out of the postseason

What’s at stake: The No. 5 or 6 seed and a guaranteed playoff berth.



Record: 29-43 | Net rating: -5.9 (25th)


Bucks will be eliminated from postseason with a loss to Spurs or Heat win over Hawks

Hornets can clinch postseason berth with win over Sixers or Bucks loss to Spurs

Heat can clinch postseason berth with win over Hawks or Bucks loss to Spurs


Out West, the Oklahoma City Thunder and San Antonio Spurs are bound for the top two seeds, with OKC holding a two-game lead for the league’s No. 1 overall seed.

The Los Angeles Lakers, with their recent nine-game winning streak, moved in as heavy favorites to capture the conference’s No. 3 seed. Beyond them is anyone’s guess.

The Denver Nuggets, Minnesota Timberwolves and Houston Rockets, who are all but guaranteed the West’s final three guaranteed playoff spots, with just one loss separating them. Only one of those three teams will earn home-court advantage in the first round.

The four teams for the conference’s play-in tournament field is almost set with the Memphis Grizzlies’ elimination on Wednesday. The Phoenix Suns, Los Angeles Clippers, Portland Trail Blazers and Golden State Warriors appear headed for the Nos. 7-10 seeds.



Record: 58-16 | Net rating: 11.0 (1st)

  • Clinched playoff berth

  • Magic number for No. 1 seed: 8

  • Remaining schedule: NYK, DET, LAL, UTA, @LAL, @LAC, @DEN, PHX

  • Highest possible finish: No. 1 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 2 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 1 seed and home-court advantage throughout the playoffs.

Record: 55-18 | Net rating: 8.0 (3rd)

  • Clinched playoff berth

  • Magic number for No. 2 seed: 1

  • Remaining schedule: @MIL, CHI, @GSW, @LAC, @DEN, PHI, POR, DAL, DEN

  • Highest possible finish: No. 1 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 3 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 2 seed and home-court advantage in the Western Conference semifinals.



Record: 48-26 | Net rating: 1.5 (14th)

  • Magic number for No. 3 seed: 6

  • Remaining schedule: WAS, CLE, @OKC, @DAL, OKC, @GSW, PHX, UTA

  • Highest possible finish: No. 2 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 7 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 3 seed and home-court advantage in the first round.

Record: 47-28 | Net rating: 4.4 (7th)

  • Magic number for No. 4 seed: 7

  • Remaining schedule: GSW, @UTA, SAS, POR, MEM, OKC, @SAS

  • Highest possible finish: No. 3 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 7 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 4 seed and home-court advantage in the first round.

Record: 45-28 | Net rating: 3.6 (10th)

  • Magic number for No. 5 seed: 9

  • Remaining schedule: DET, @DAL, @DET, @PHI, CHA, @IND, @ORL, @HOU, NOP

  • Highest possible finish: No. 3 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 8 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 4 seed and home-court advantage in the first round.

Record: 44-29 | Net rating: 4.0 (9th)

  • Magic number for No. 5 seed: 9

  • Remaining schedule: @MEM, @NOP, NYK, MIL, UTA, @GSW, @PHX, PHI, MIN, MIN

  • Highest possible finish: No. 3 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 10 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 4 seed and home-court advantage in the first round.

Record: 40-33 | Net rating: 1.0 (16th)

  • Magic number for No. 7 seed: 7

  • Remaining schedule: UTH, @MEM, @ORL, @CHA, @CHI, HOU, DAL, @LAL, @OKC

  • Highest possible finish: No. 3 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 10 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 7 seed and home-court advantage against the No. 8 seed in their opening game of the play-in tournament.

Record: 38-36 | Net rating: 1.3 (15th)

  • Magic number for No. 8 seed: 7

  • Remaining schedule: @MIL, POR, SAS, @SAC, DAL, OKC, @POR, GSW

  • Highest possible finish: No. 5 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 10 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 8 seed and two chances to secure a playoff berth.

Record: 37-38 | Net rating: -1.3 (20th)

  • Magic number for No. 8 seed: 8

  • Remaining schedule: WAS, @LAC, NOP, @DEN, @SAS, LAC, SAC

  • Highest possible finish: No. 6 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 10 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 8 seed and two chances to secure a playoff berth.

Record: 36-38 | Net rating: 0.3 (18th)

  • Magic number for No. 10 seed: 1

  • Remaining schedule: @DEN, SAS, CLE, HOU, SAC, LAL, @SAC, @LAC

  • Highest possible finish: No. 6 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 10 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 8 seed and two chances to secure a playoff berth.

Spurs can clinch Western Conference’s No. 2 seed with a win over the Bucks

NBA tanking picture March 28: Daily look at the race to the draft lottery

The NBA tanking picture will come into clearer view each day between now and the end of the regular season on April 12. In the meantime, we will provide detailed daily updates on the landscape, lotto odds, remaining schedules and the stakes for every day’s slate of games. We also break down the league’s playoff races each day.


Record: 16-58 | Streak: L-2

  • Current odds for No. 1 pick: 14%

  • Remaining schedule: MIA, @CHI, @CHA, @CLE, MIN, @BKN, PHI, DET

What’s at stake: Clinching one of the three-worst records in the NBA to ensure the highest odds at the No. 1 pick. Due to the Ivica Zubac trade with the Clippers, if the Pacers’ pick lands between the 5-9 spots on lotto night, it will go to L.A.

Record: 17-57 | Streak: L-10

  • Current odds for No. 1 pick: 14%

  • Remaining schedule: SAC, CHA, ATL, WAS, MIL, IND, @MIL, @TOR

What’s at stake: Clinching one of the three-worst records in the NBA to ensure the highest odds at the No. 1 pick.

Record: 17-56 | Streak: L-1

  • Current odds for No. 1 pick: 14%

  • Remaining schedule: @POR, @LAL, PHI, @MIA, @BKN, CHI, CHI, @CLE

What’s at stake: Clinching one of the three-worst records in the NBA to ensure the highest odds at the No. 1 pick. If the Wizards’ pick falls out of the top-8, it will go to the New York Knicks.

Record: 19-55 | Streak: L-2

  • Current odds for No. 1 pick: 12.5%

  • Remaining schedule: @ATL, @BKN, @TOR, NOP, LAC, @GSW, GSW, @POR

What’s at stake: Clinching one of the three-worst records in the NBA to ensure the highest odds at the No. 1 pick.

Record: 21-53 | Streak: L-4

  • Current odds for No. 1 pick: 10.5%

  • Remaining schedule: @PHX, CLE, DEN, @HOU, @OKC, @NOP, MEM, @LAL

What’s at stake: Clinching one of the three-worst records in the NBA to ensure the highest odds at the No. 1 pick. If the Jazz’s pick falls outside of the top-8, it will go to the Oklahoma City Thunder.

Record: 24-50 | Streak: W-1

  • Current odds for No. 1 pick: 9%

  • Remaining schedule: @POR, MIN, MIL, ORL, LAL, @LAC, @PHX, SAS, @CHI

What’s at stake: Clinching one of the three-worst records in the NBA to ensure the best odds at the No. 1 pick. The Mavs don’t control their future first-rounders from 2027-2030.

Record: 24-49 | Streak: L-5

  • Current odds for No. 1 pick: 7.5%

  • Remaining schedule: CHI, PHX, NYK, TPR, @MIL, CHI, @DEN, @UTH, @HOU

What’s at stake: Clinching one of the three-worst records in the NBA to ensure the best odds at the No. 1 pick.

Record: 25-50 | Streak: L-4

  • Current odds for No. 1 pick: 6%

  • Remaining schedule: HOU, @POR, @SAC, ORL, UTH, @BOS, @MIN

What’s at stake: The Pelicans have no incentive to lose; they owe their unprotected first-round pick to the Atlanta Hawks.

Record: 29-43 | Streak: L-2

  • Current odds for No. 1 pick: 3.8%

  • Remaining schedule: SAS, LAC, DAL, @HOU, BOS, MEM, @BKN, @DET, BKN, @PHI

What’s at stake: Moving “above” the Pelicans for better lottery odds.

Record: 29-44 | Streak: L-2

  • Current odds for No. 1 pick: 3.7%

  • Remaining schedule: LAC, MIA, @CHI, @CHA, @CLE, MIN, @BKN, PHI, DET

Record: 36-38 | Streak: W-3

  • Current odds for No. 1 pick: 2%

  • Remaining schedule: @DEN, SAS, CLE, HOU, SAC, LAL, @SAC, @LAC

What’s at stake: The Warriors are currently in the play-in tournament.

Record: 37-38 | Streak: L-1

  • Current odds for No. 1 pick: 1.5%

  • Remaining schedule: DAL, WAS, @LAC, NOP, @DEN, @SAS, LAC, SAC

What’s at stake: The Trail Blazers are currently in the play-in tournament.

Record: 39-35 | Streak: L-1

  • Current odds for No. 1 pick: 0.8%

  • Remaining schedule: @CLE, @IND, PHI, BOS, WAS, @TOR, @TOR, @WAS, ATL

What’s at stake: The Heat are currently in the play-in tournament.

Record: 39-34 | Streak: W-5

  • Current odds for No. 1 pick: 0.7%

  • Remaining schedule: PHI, BOS, @BKN, PHX, IND, @MIN, @BOS, DET, @NYK

What’s at stake: The Hornets are currently in the play-in tournament.



Stephen Curry will miss at least 2 more games for Warriors as postseason nears: ‘We are running out of games’

Stephen Curry’s recovery from a knee injury will extend at least into next week, the Golden State Warriors announced Friday night.

And Warriors coach Steve Kerr admitted the team doesn’t have much time left to get him up to speed ahead of the postseason.

The Warriors said on Saturday, March 21, that Curry — who has missed nearly two months with patella-femoral pain syndrome and bone bruising in his right knee — had been evaluated and will be incorporated into live action and team practices in the coming days. Curry, however, was unable to scrimmage according to ESPN’s Shams Charania and will now be re-evaluated next week.

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That means Curry is scheduled to miss Sunday’s game in Denver against the Nuggets after not playing in Friday’s home win against the Washington Wizards. That will bring his total to 25 straight missed games since he left Golden State’s Jan. 30 game against the Detroit Pistons with soreness in his knee.

The Warriors will have only seven games left in the regular season after Sunday. They almost certainly will begin the postseason in the Western Conference play-in tournament.

“We’re not bringing him back [only] for the play-in game,” Kerr said, according to ESPN’s Anthony Slater. “He’d need to play some games. We need to give him a runway if this is going to work. And we are running out of games.”

With Jimmy Butler and Moses Moody already out for the season, the Warriors are facing another disappointing year with their aging core. The team currently holds the final play-in spot of the Western Conference at 36-38 and is in no danger of falling lower, while being a half-game back from the eighth-place Portland Trail Blazers for the better play-in game.

Even if the Warriors make it through the play-in tournament, their reward would either be the Oklahoma City Thunder or San Antonio Spurs in the first round of the playoffs. That has left them with little incentive to push Curry more than needed for the rest of the season.

The NBA’s top All-Defensive candidates? Here’s your guide to a doozy of an awards race

As we get closer to the end of the regular season, it’s only natural that award chatter will perk up. The narrative pendulum has swung quite a few times in the MVP race for example; Shai Gilgeous-Alexander vs. Nikola Jokić turned into an SGA unanimous shout, which led to Cade Cunningham and Jaylen Brown shouts, which set the table for Luka Dončić and Victor Wembanyama to make their presence (and strong cases) felt.

Are you excited yet? Are you tired yet? Don’t answer either of those out loud; I know you’re nodding, it’s fine.

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I always have a fun-yet-stressful time sorting through the various awards and related cases, even more so with the 65-game minimum to (officially) factor in, at least for now. 

The All-Defensive teams are especially a doozy. Teams have different schemes, roles, and assignments to sort through. While it can be easy (though kinda irresponsible) to stack a bunch of numbers together to glean offensive value and impact, you can’t really do that to the same degree on the defensive end.

You should be watching games to put numbers into their proper context anyway, but you really have to do it to put together coherent thoughts defensively. We went in-depth on this on Tuesday’s episode of The Dunker Spot.

This article serves as my attempt to highlight the top (eligible) candidates for this year’s All-Defensive teams, and ultimately list what my two teams would be as of March 27. First, let’s get some disclaimers out of the way.

  • As a reminder, to qualify for the major awards — Sixth Man of the Year, Clutch Player of the Year, Rookie of the Year, and the All-Rookie teams are exempt — a player must appear in 65 eligible games out of 82, or roughly 79% of a team’s games. By eligible, I mean a player must log at least 20 minutes in a game for it to count toward the total. The rule allows for two “freebies” — games where a player doesn’t hit 20 minutes, but logs at least 15 — that’ll count toward the total. 

  • To that end, here is a list of notable players who are either ineligible now or, as of this writing, are below the 79% threshold and are on pace to be ineligible: Ausar Thompson (minutes; will be an easy First Team selection if he qualifies), Alex Caruso, Isaiah Stewart, Jarrett Allen, Isaiah Hartenstein, Dillon Brooks, Jalen Suggs, Ron Holland (minutes), Jrue Holiday, Herb Jones.

  • My work is always a mix of film and numbers — particularly tracking and on-off data. All tracking data below, aside from the rim defense (NBA.com) comes courtesy of Second Spectrum. The on-off data comes from Cleaning the Glass. Defensive Estimated Plus-Minus (D-EPM) is courtesy of DunksAndThrees.

  • In terms of the filtering used, I wanted a minimum of 50 games played generally to build out the list. As for the tracking data, the minimum thresholds were as follows: Drives defended (200; 245 players), pick-and-rolls defended (500; 85 players defending ball-handlers, 72 players defending the screener), dribble handoffs (DHOs) defended (150; 100 players), isolations defended (100, 201 players), off-ball screens defended (300; 101 players), rim FG% allowed (200 attempts; 75 players), on/off differential (1,500 minutes played; 127 players)

With all of that out of the way, here are my top candidates by position groups. I like to split things into four: guards (1s and 2s), wings (2s and 3s), forwards (3s and 4s), and bigs (5s). 

All stats are updated through games played on Thursday, March 26.



Key Stats: 2nd in on/off differential (-11.2), 7th in D-EPM (+2.8), 11th in rim defense (54.5% FG), 14th in blocks (1.4, leads all guards), T-15th in charges taken (7), 18th in drive defense (0.91), 20th in PnR BH defense (0.92), 43rd in steals (1.2), 46th in ISO defense (0.89)

White has been the best defender on an elite defense across the board: 4th in transition defense, 6th in half-court defense, 4th in defensive rating overall, per Cleaning The Glass. His screen navigation has been superb, and his recovery skills have shined when he does get clipped. The blocked jumpers, both on rearview contests and 3-point closeouts (he’s blocked nine), are incredibly impressive. The fact that he provides legitimate, consistent value as a rim protector is icing on an already-delicious cake.

Key Stats: 2nd in steals (2.0), 25th in PnR BH defense (0.93) + off-ball screen defense (0.91) + DHO D (0.91), 36th in on/off differential (-2.2)

On a defense this good, it can sometimes be difficult to suss through who deserves the most credit. Wallace’s activity, in light of his role and minute load increasing, has made that assignment easier for me.

He’s a graduate of the Kawhi Leonard School of Chain Snatching — he doesn’t just blindside you with poke-aways or jump passing lanes, he’ll flat-out snatch the ball from you. He and Lu Dort have taken turns picking up the top perimeter assignment this year, and I’ve remained impressed with Wallace’s ability to navigate screens and recover against bigger matchups at times. 

Key Stats: 5th in steals (1.9), 9th in PnR BH defense (0.88), 14th in D-EPM (+2.2), 20th in off-ball screen defense (0.89), 24th in DHO defense (0.91), 39th in on/off differential (-2.0), 46th in drive defense (0.95)

Daniels’ role has shifted some this year. He doesn’t always get the top billing assignment, though that’s more about the Hawks wanting to weaponize his off-ball prowess — and his teammate Nickeil Alexander-Walker (more on him shortly) affording them the flexibility to do so — more than any slippage on Daniels’ end.

He’s still an incredibly annoying defender to deal with, using quick, strong hands to harass ball-handlers and take advantage of shaky handles. It’s no surprise he’s among the steal leaders again, but I’ve gotten a kick out of the amount of times Daniels has timed-out when his assignment would throw a pass and he’d deflect or outright steal a pass meant for someone behind him.

Key Stats: 2nd in charges taken (20), 5th in on-off differential (-8.5), 18th in D-EPM, 22nd in PnR BH defense (0.93) & DHO defense (0.9), 23rd in steals (1.4), 29th in off-ball screen defense (0.92)

The Smart case was something that’s been on my periphery. When the Lakers were a mess defensively, he was one of the few positives: guarding any and everyone, mucking things up on the back end with timely rotations, and barking out instructions for his teammates, whether they took heed or not.

As the Lakers’ defense has rounded into form (12th since the All-Star break), Smart has remained incredibly important to their operation. It’s the same matchup versatility and difficulty, the same off-ball work, the same communication — especially important in light of the Lakers’ uptick in zone this year. 

I saw and felt the impact, but transparently, the numbers were so much better than I was expecting them to be. It went from “Smart deserves further inspection” to “Hey, man, Smart probably needs to be on the team right now” — but, hey, that’s precisely why you dig deeper.

Key Stats: 9th in steals (1.6), 34th in D-EPM (+1.4), 40th in on/off diff (-1.9)

It’s a bit cruel that this is the year that Dunn has logged enough 20-plus minute games to qualify for All-Defensive honors. The field is tough so he’s on the outside for me right now, but it’s been another season of Dunn being an absolute menace on the ball — hounding guards and bigger wings alike. 

Key Stats: 14th in PnR BH defense (0.91), 33rd in drive defense (0.94), 43rd in DHO defense (0.96)

The career arc for NAW has been a fun one: he went from bucket-getter that needed to carve out a role to stick, to carving out that role as a defensive specialist in Minnesota that could dabble in the bucket-getting when needed, to averaging 20 points a night while also taking on the toughest perimeter assignment at times to further unlock Dyson Daniels off the ball. Funny enough, NAW’s off-ball defense is probably the biggest thing holding me back with his case this year, but I’ve enjoyed him overall.



Key Stats: 7th in PnR BH defense (0.88), 16th in on/off differential (-5.3), 25th in D-EPM, 26th in ISO defense (0.84), 44th in steals (1.2)

Victor Wembanyama is obviously the biggest reason why the Spurs are elite defensively, but the importance of Castle shouldn’t be slept on. He will guard anybody. He will fly around — even if it gets him in trouble sometimes. But to the flying around — his film is littered with (chasedown) blocks and steals that he should have no business thinking about, much less actually getting. There’s room to grow in terms of his pre-screen prep and off-ball discipline — again, having Wemby behind him helps — but he’s legitimately very good and versatile in his own right. Assuming refinement comes, he could be a mainstay on these teams.

Key Stats: 17th in steals (1.4), 28th in PnR BH defense (0.93), 33rd in off-ball screen defense (0.92) & DHO defense (0.94), 41st in D-EPM (+1.3)

Like Daniels and others that have been mentioned, it hasn’t felt like Thompson has been guaranteed to guard the #TopDawg every night — Tari Eason and, earlier in the year, Josh Okogie were/are getting some of those reps. 

(With Reed Sheppard’s recent insertion into the starting lineup, we’ve seen those duties ramp back up in Thompson’s favor.)

Like the others, this is more about deployment elsewhere — weaponizing his speed and instincts off the ball, but also saving some wear-and-tear in light of his heightened on-ball responsibility this year — than any on-ball slippage. 

Thompson still mirrors guys in space as well as anyone in the league. He’s able to teleport from one spot to the other, leading to some jaw-dropping challenges at the rim or pick-6s of errant passes. The Rockets are lucky to have him.

Key Stats: 13th in DHO defense (0.86), 22nd in ISO defense (0.83), 34th in PnR BH defense (0.94)

It’s been an odd year for Dort — he’s been more banged up than usual, and the minute count (27.6) is the lowest it’s been since becoming a full-time starter back in the 2020-21 season. There’s been a little slippage as a screen navigator, but he remains very good at it overall. The Thunder still need his physicality, and it’s gone underrated just how often he has to shift between shifty guard and bulkier wing when taking on top assignments (on the nights Wallace doesn’t). 



Key Stats: 10th in blocks (1.5), 12th in on/off differential (-5.9), 22nd in D-EPM (+1.9), 24th in PnR BH D (0.93), 25th in steals (1.4), 36th in rim defense (62.0%), 55th in PnR screener defense (0.98)

Versatility and situational impact is the case for Barnes. I know I’ve dropped some variation of “he’ll defend anyone” a couple times in this piece already, but Barnes is one of the rare 1-through-5 defenders we have in the league. Once again, the Raptors have not been shy about giving him guard assignments at times this year, in addition to some of the late-clock-switch stuff he’s had to dabble in. 

I remain more impressed with what he does when defending 3-through-5. You can’t power through him, and he’s so good at recovery angles that he’ll pin your shot or send it to Row C even if you do beat him. His work against centers this year has been both impressive and kinda unfair to him, in light of what they need (more of) from him offensively. I’d also argue that nobody has made more clutch defensive plays than Barnes this year: 13 clutch stocks (4 steals, league-leading 9 blocks) would make the case.

Key Stats: 7th in steals (1.6), 33rd in D-EPM (+1.4), 23rd in on/off differential (-3.9), 28th in DHO defense (0.94), 41st in off-ball screen defense (0.93), 43rd in ISO defense (0.88)

It’s hard for anything to truly go under the radar considering how often the Knicks are discussed (positively or negatively), but, like, hey the Knicks are 7th in defensive rating in 2026 after a lot of (well-earned) hand-wringing earlier in the season. It hasn’t been as tidy of a screen navigation season from Anunoby, but he remains a monster on-ball defender that will ruin your night if you aren’t ready for him.

Key Stats: 10th in off-ball screen defense (0.86, 1st in volume), 15th in rim defense (55.1%), 18th in DHO defense (0.88), 30th in blocks (1.0) & D-EPM (+1.6), 45th in PnR BH defense (0.96)

We talked about McDaniels’ case on Tuesday’s episode of The Dunker Spot, it’s worth repeating just how tough his job is. Only two players (Daniels, Amen Thompson) have defended more ball screens, and neither player has to guard them higher up the floor on average (28.3 feet, 3rd) than McDaniels. Gobert is an elite security blanket, but you feel that blanket less when it’s on the other side of the house.

His work as a secondary rim protector and, as my esteemed cohost Steve Jones Jr. has pointed out, the center of a wonky Wolves zone has been cool to witness. His best on-ball moments rival just about any perimeter player in the league; some navigation slippage and issues with foul trouble (3.4 per game, four foul-outs) is what ultimately keeps him out for me.

Key Stats: 4th in charges taken (15), 7th in DHO defense (0.84), 26th in drive defense (0.92), 34th in off-ball screen defense (0.92, 3rd in volume)

It starts with the pressure from Camara. The Blazers dabbled in a ton of full-court pressure this year, and Camara ranks first by a mile in backcourt pickups — the only player to defend over 2,000 touches in the backcourt this season. Because of that extended pressure, he’s one of two players (Camara, 28.5 feet; Daniss Jenkins, 28.4 feet) that has to navigate screens higher on the floor than McDaniels. He’s physical, rangy, and an important part of a Blazers defense that very quietly has been a top-10 half-court unit this year, and a top-10 unit overall in 2026.



Key Stats: 1st in blocks (3.1) + D-EPM (+4.7) + on/off diff (-13.5), 3rd in PnR screener defense (0.86), 4th in rim defense (52.4%)

Do we really need to spend much time here? 

We’ve never seen anything like this: 7-foot-4 with an 8-foot wingspan, always lurking, rarely defeated. Norm Powell using the rim as a shield with a reverse layup, a textbook avoid-the-big move, and still getting his shot blocked with relative ease is all the evidence you need.

Of course, it’s not just about the blocks for Wemby, of which there are plenty. He’s grown as a communicator and traffic director, a necessary development with how the Spurs attempt to keep him low on the floor. The late switches can be an adventure, but because of his length and timing, he’s still able to turn the water off for opponents. His presence alone makes his teammates better, allows them to breathe easier. The film and the numbers scream “this is already one of the greatest defenders of all time” — he just has to stay healthy enough to prove it.

Key Stats: 2nd in blocks (1.9) & rim defense (48%), 3rd in D-EPM (+3.4), 8th in PnR screener defense (0.89), 9th in drive defense (0.89) & on/off differential (-7.1), 36th in ISO defense (0.87)

The Thunder have a deep cast of high-level defenders, but Holmgren stands out as their best and arguably most unique one. His interior presence takes the Thunder from “elite” to “what on earth are we supposed to do with this?” The shot-blocking is loud and valuable, but it’s his necessary growth as a rebounder, not-so-quiet growth as a communicator (OKC likes to keep him low on the floor, too), and increased comfort in late-switch situations that rings louder for me in a broader sense.

He was my if-Wemby-doesn’t-qualify DPOY pick before the year, and I feel pretty good about that right now.

Key Stats: 16th in drive defense (0.91), 19th in on/off differential (-4.7), 20th in D-EPM (+1.9), 28th in PnR screener defense (0.94), 31st in ISO defense (0.86), 47th in steals (1.2) & rim defense (64.3%)

Everyone that’s been discussed in this space has some element of “you gotta watch it to truly get it” about them — I’m not sure if that platitude rings louder for anyone than Bam.

He’s never going to be a Wemby-like shot-blocker; and because the Heat don’t often blitz ball screens or deploy wings on centers to let him roam, I doubt you’ll ever get a demonstrably high steal season from him either. He’s also graduated from “High Volume Switch Defender with Tons of Stops” to “Yeah, let’s get him to switch then move him waaaay over there” — but that respect is the point. 

It’s the proof. 

It’s why, almost regardless of the personnel, the Heat keep pumping out top-10 defenses like they are this year. Bam, as he always does, executes whatever coverage is asked, guard whoever he needs to (he is still an insane switch defender, after all), and single-handedly save the Heat’s bacon on the defensive glass.

Key Stats: 3rd in on-off differential (-11.0), 5th in blocks (1.7), 9th in rim defense (54.2%) & D-EPM (+2.6), 10th in drive defense (0.89), 11th in ISO defense (0.79), 13th in PnR screener defense (0.92)

Another year, another campaign filled with high-level rim protection, way-better-than-you-think iso and switch numbers, and incredibly loud on/off splits that highlight both how important he is to the ecosystem, and a jarring need for the Wolves to figure out some kind of consistent contingency plan when he sits or isn’t available. 

We’ve had all of the Gobert conversations before: you either think he’s an All-Time Defender with a Hall-of-Fame resume, or you think he’s food when it matters while the offense (and especially the hands) continue to baffle you. I’m not here to change your mind — we’re enough words into this thing — but this kind of defensive impact, year after year after year, should be commended.

Key Stats: 4th in blocks (1.8), 19th in rim defense (55.9), 24th in ISO defense (0.83) & on/off differential (-3.9), 42nd in PnR screener defense (0.97), 48th in D-EPM (+1.1)

I’ve spent all year trying to get a beat on the Cavs, and on the Mobley season overall. I’ve largely landed here: because Mobley hasn’t made the leap, what he hasn’t done has largely overshadowed what he has.

To use a 2K example: Mobley not going from an 87 to a 93 has a lot of people forgetting that being an 87, at age 24, is still pretty darn good!

Mobley has still protected the rim well, and can still hang in space — on switches or natural matchups. Scheme-versatile defenders at his size don’t grow on trees. 

Key Stats: 4th in on-off differential (-9.2), 7th in ISO defense (0.77), 10th in D-EPM, 16th in blocks (1.3), 19th in PnR screener defense (0.93), 23rd in rim defense (58.0%)

Queta’s going to factor pretty heavily in Most Improved Player talks, and rightfully so. While I’d love to wax poetic about his screening, we’re here to talk about his defense. 

He’s taken such a step forward in terms of his timing; that discipline is the biggest reason why we’ve seen his rate of fouls drop. To that end, this is the first time in his career he’s averaging under six fouls per 100 possessions (5.7).

The Celtics have largely kept him in a deep drop, though I remain intrigued by the rare occasions he’s tasked with coming up higher on the floor. He’s altered his fair share of shots this year, and his growth as a rebounder has been important for a Celtics group that struggled mightily early on (29th in defensive rebound rate through November) before finding its way (2nd since Dec. 1).

First Team
Victor Wembanyama
Chet Holmgren
Rudy Gobert
Bam Adebayo
Derrick White

Second Team
Cason Wallace
Stephon Castle
Dyson Daniels
Scottie Barnes
Marcus Smart

Is LeBron James now the NBA’s best third option?

Each week during the 2025-26 NBA season, we will take a deeper dive into some of the league’s biggest storylines in an attempt to determine whether trends are based more in fact or fiction moving forward.

Last week: The list of NBA title contenders is longer than you think


You know what’s fun? Watching film of Los Angeles Lakers superstar LeBron James. Seeing him carve up the Miami Heat’s zone defense from the jump was chef’s kiss.

He’s so freaking smart and so freaking strong — and so freaking talented — that he can still make an incredible impact, even at 41 years old, when he’s a step slower (and lower) than he was when he was working as a perennial MVP candidate for a couple decades.

Draft your Yahoo Fantasy Baseball team for the 2026 MLB Season

He’s playing different now, mostly as a third option. He once was, of course, always his team’s leader in usage, facilitating nearly every possession one way or another. Even earlier this season, he was orchestrating the second-most plays on the Lakers, trailing only 27-year-old Luka Dončić, and the gap was not as sizable as you would like it to be.

After all, (and I don’t know if we mentioned this but) LeBron is 41 years old. It seems only natural that you would want to increasingly take the ball out of his hands and give it to Dončić, an MVP candidate in his prime, or Austin Reaves, another in-his-prime star.

But it’s not always that easy. This is LeBron James, who for 20 years controlled every aspect of his career, including about a third of his team’s possessions — the load of a superstar. It was as if he needed to hear the criticism that the Lakers were performing better without him, and they were, in order for him to accept a role as a tertiary option.

The Lakers began a recent nine-game win streak with three victories without James, running their performance in non-LeBron minutes to +0.6 points per 100 possessions. Meanwhile, they had fallen to -0.4 points per 100 possessions with him on the court.

James has flipped that on its face in eight games since returning from a left elbow contusion, as the Lakers have outscored opponents by 8.5 points per 100 possessions in his 35 minutes per game on the court, and they have been outscored by 5.4 points per 100 possessions in his 13 minutes a night on the bench. What prompted a change?

Well, for starters, James has completely committed to the bit as a third option.

USG% (first 65 games)

USG% (last 8 games)

Luka Doncic

36.2

39.3

LeBron James

27.1

20.3

Austin Reaves

26.6

22.5

Deandre Ayton

16.7

14.0

Marcus Smart

15.3

12.7

As Dončić’s usage has risen to near-historic levels, LeBron’s usage has fallen from 27.1%, similar to ball-dominant stars like Paolo Banchero, Kevin Durant and Jalen Johnson, to 20.3%, akin to Payton Pritchard, VJ Edgecombe or OG Anunoby. Or league average (19.9%). That’s right: LeBron James is being used as a league-average player.

And it’s going great. Mostly because Dončić is playing incredible as a ball-dominant superstar, and when he’s doing that we have seen him lead a team to the NBA Finals.

You know what helps? Having Reaves and James, two more brilliant ballplayers, as second and third options, respectively, and having them in that order, specifically.

Consider what Reaves can do as a secondary creator, playing off of Dončić, and then have your mind blown by what James can accomplish as a third option. Remember: He is now mostly being guarded by a defense’s third option, too. As that happens, he can usually work his way onto Indiana Pacers center Jay Huff on the perimeter or Detroit Pistons wing Javonte Green in the midrange or Miami Heat guard Davion Mitchell in the post. It’s fascinating watching him still create mismatches, only off the ball now.

After all, LeBron James, the cutter, is lethal.

LeBron James, the screener, is deadly.

And LeBron James, the release valve, is a monster.

Just for fun, here are a few more minutes of LeBron doing cool, complementary stuff:

He can still get downhill. He’s still a god in transition. And he can still isolate in the right spots. But he is at his best now — or, more importantly, the Lakers are at their best now — when James is leveraging the weak side of a defense so focused on Dončić and, to a degree, Reaves. James is constantly putting pressure on the defense without the ball.

If you thought, You know what would be cool? LeBron James being LeBron James, only as a third option, chances are he did, too, in his brief three-game stint on the bench. If there is one thing he has learned in his 23rd season, it is this: He can trust Dončić and Reaves as basketball intellectuals on his level who will reward him when he does all the necessary work off the ball to bend a defense — cutting, screening, spotting up, etc.

At his peak, his effort on the ball was always noticed, but his effort off of it often went unrewarded, and one fed into the other. He wanted what was best for his offense, and all too much it was him doing everything, until he learned to trust Dwyane Wade, Kyrie Irving or Anthony Davis as creators on his level, and that is when he did his winning.

Well, something similar is happening now in Los Angeles, only for the first time in his career James is ceding control of the offense to two teammates, both Doncic and Reaves. When he finds trust in someone, it usually works out pretty well for his team.

We will see what becomes of LeBron James, The Tertiary Option, after this season, when he becomes a free agent, but this is what the rest of his career should look like — and who knows how much longer he could keep this up as a role player. Yup: LeBron James has found a role as a third option, and as it turns out, he’s the league’s best at it.

Determination: Fact.You taking LeBron or Chet Holmgren (our top third option entering the season, who has been more of a second option for the Oklahoma City Thunder this season)? Closer than you thought, right? When in doubt, go with the G.O.A.T.

Indoor Football League: Max Meylor’s five TDs lead Arizona Rattlers to 49-21 rout over San Diego Strike Force

Arizona quarterback Max Meylor accounted for five touchdowns and 233 of his team’s 292 total yards as the Rattlers slithered to a 49-21 season-opening win over the San Diego Strike Force on Saturday. 

Indoor Football League schedule, standings | Full box score

Meylor found Arland Bruce for the first of his three passing touchdowns for a 32-yard score three minutes into the first quarter to open the scoring. 

The Rattlers would not trail from there. San Diego answered with a score of its own for a 7-7 tie, but never overtook Arizona as the Rattlers rattled off 21 unanswered points in the second quarter to break the game open. 

San Diego quarterback Nate Davis completed 14 of 26 passes for 160 yards, 2 touchdowns and 2 interceptions. Edward Vander caught five passes for 40 yards added seven rushes for 34 yards. Dallas Daniels tied Vander for the game-high five catches and added a touchdown in the losing effort. 

The win puts the Rattlers atop the Western Conference as it was the team’s first game of the season, while San Diego, which opened with a win Monday over Northern Arizona Wranglers, dropped to 1-1.

March Madness 2026: How to watch the UConn vs. Notre Dame Elite 8 game in the women’s NCAA basketball tournament

No. 1 UConn will play No. 6 Notre Dame in Sunday’s Elite 8 game during the 2026 women’s NCAA tournament. The UConn vs. Notre Dame game will air at 1 p.m. ET this Sunday on ABC and will stream on ESPN Unlimited (and other live TV streaming services). 

For a complete breakdown of key dates and how to watch every Elite 8 game of the women’s NCAA tournament, we’ve got you covered.

Date: Sunday, March 29, 2026

Time: 1 p.m. ET

TV channel: ABC

Streaming: ESPN Unlimited, DirecTV and more

The UConn vs. Notre Dame game is on Sunday, March 29. Tipoff is at 1 p.m. ET.

The UConn vs. Notre Dame March Madness game will air on ABC. Don’t have access to live TV? You can catch the game with an ESPN Unlimited subscription, or check out a free trial for a live TV streaming service

Every game of the 2026 women’s March Madness Tournament will stream on ESPN Unlimited, including those on ABC. You’ll also be able to access every game on live TV services like DirecTV.

The following is the Elite 8 schedule for all teams participating in this year’s March Madness tournament.

All times Eastern.

Sunday, March 29 (Elite Eight)

  • No. 1 UConn vs. No. 6 Notre Dame: 1 p.m. (ABC)

  • No. 1 UCLA vs. No. 3 Duke: 3 p.m. (ABC)

The schedule and locations for the women’s tournament:

  • Selection Sunday: 8 p.m. ET Sunday, March 15 on ESPN

  • First Four: March 18-19

  • First round: March 20-21

  • Second round: March 22-23

  • Sweet 16: March 27-28 in Fort Worth, TX and Sacramento, CA

  • Elite Eight: March 29-30 in Fort Worth, TX and Sacramento, CA

  • Final Four: Friday, April 3, Mortgage Matchup Center in Phoenix, AZ

  • NCAA championship game: Sunday, April 5, Mortgage Matchup Center in Phoenix, AZ

Demetrious Johnson joins 2026 UFC Hall of Fame

The greatest flyweight to ever grace the octagon will be immortalized when Demetrious Johnson joins the 2026 UFC Hall of Fame class.

UFC officials announced during Saturday’s UFC Fight Night 271 broadcast that former longtime 125-pound titleholder Johnson (25-4-1 MMA, 15-2-1 UFC) will be enshrined into the modern wing during the International Fight Week ceremony this summer.

Johnson, who made a UFC record 11 consecutive title defenses from January 2013 to October 2017, will become the first flyweight fighter to get a place in the UFC Hall of Fame.

At 39, “Mighty Mouse” hasn’t competed since his final MMA bout in October 2023, which came under the ONE Championship banner. He made his final octagon appearance in August 2018 when his title reign came to an end in a split decision defeat to Henry Cejudo at UFC 227.

Johnson’s UFC tenure came to a shocking end in October 2018 when he was “traded” to ONE Championship for Ben Askren in a landmark deal between the organizations.

Since retirement, Johnson has maintained a presence in the MMA space through his YouTube channel, collaborations with other fighters, and more.

In addition to his record number of title defenses, Johnson’s list of notable victories included Cejudo, Kyoji Horiguchi, John Dodson (twice), Joseph Benavidez (twice), and more.

Johnson is the second announced induction for the 2026 UFC Hall of Fame class, alongside Zhang Weili vs. Joanna Jedrzejczyk from UFC 248, which joins the fight wing.

This article originally appeared on MMA Junkie: Demetrious Johnson joins 2026 UFC Hall of Fame

Where Bruins Stand With Less Than 10 Games Left In Regular Season

Where Bruins Stand With Less Than 10 Games Left In Regular Season originally appeared on NESN.
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The Boston Bruins are winning games when it counts, and it continued on Saturday afternoon with one of the biggest wins of the season over the Western Conference powerhouse Minnesota Wild. 

The Bruins suffered back-to-back heartbreaking losses to the New Jersey Devils and the Montreal Canadiens in mid-March. Since then, they have won four of the last five. All four wins came against playoff opponents, with the lone loss coming to a 31-29-13 Toronto Maple Leafs team.

Boston barely scraped past the Atlantic Division’s first-place Buffalo Sabres, with an overtime winner on Wednesday night. But they left no doubt on Saturday night, thumping the Wild 6-3 on Boston’s home ice. 

Andrew Peeke got the scoring started just over 60 seconds into the contest. Later in the first period, Pavel Zacha stayed red hot, potting his 25th of the season. 

Viktor Adrvidsson gave the Bruins a 3-0 lead in the second period, and Elias Linholm put it out of reach early in the third, scoring his 15th of the season.

The Wild were able to snug it up late in the third period, drawing within one. But it was Zacha proving he is the hottest player in the NHL, putting the final nail in the coffin with 3:10 to play in the third period. Lindholm put the cherry on top with an empty net goal to cap it off.

Jeremy Swayman made 31 saves in the victory and improved his March record to 7-2 in net.

The Bruins earned their 90th point on the season, gaining some breathing room in the Eastern Conference wild card position and snugging up to the Canadiens, who hold the third and final spot in the Atlantic Division playoff picture. 

The Bruins are back in action on Sunday, travelling to Columbus to play the Blue Jackets with just nine games remaining in the regular season.

More NHL: Don Sweeney Gives Update On Future Of Bruins Prospect Dean Letourneau