MLB scores: Marlins 4, Mets 3—Walked off

Feb 17, 2026; Port St. Lucie, FL, USA; New York Mets pitcher David Peterson (23) pitches during spring training at Clover Park. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images | Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

The Mets lost their final spring training game 4-3, holding the lead from the fourth inning until the Marlins scored two runs in the ninth to win the game.

  • David Peterson threw 76 pitches over five innings, giving up one run on five hits and a walk, while striking out four.
  • Luke Weaver got just one out, giving up a run without giving up a hit, but instead walking three batters.
  • Zach Peek and Ben Simon both had scoreless outings, going 0.2 innings and 1.0 inning respectively. SImon also struck out two batters and walked one.
  • Parker Carlson picked up the blown save and the loss, giving up the tying and go-ahead run in the ninth, but overall he went 1.2 innings and struck out three.
  • Bo Bichette went 1-for-2 with a double and a walk, driving in a run and scoring a run as well.
  • Brett Baty went 1-for-3 with an RBI, and Jorge Polanco collected an RBI of his own on a sacrifice fly.
  • Francisco Lindor and Juan Soto each collected a hit as well, and both came around to score.

The Mets don’t play again until Thursday, when they’re back in Citi Field and taking on Paul Skenes and the Pittsburgh Pirates on Opening Day. It’s a 1:15 PM ET start, and will be broadcast on NBC and Peacock, so you’ll have to wait a little longer to hear Gary, Keith, and Ron’s dulcet tones.

Postgame comments following a 6-5 Rockies win over the Athletics

TEMPE, ARIZONA – MARCH 15: Manager Warren Schaeffer #4 of the Colorado Rockies looks on after the fifth inning of the spring training game against the Los Angeles Angels at Tempe Diablo Stadium on March 15, 2026 in Tempe, Arizona. (Photo by Jeremy Chen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Today the Colorado Rockies wrapped up their spring training games by defeating The Athletics 6-5. See game highlights here.

First, here are manager Warren Schaeffer’s postgame thoughts:

Starting pitcher Michael Lorenzen discussed his day:

And, finally, Edouard Julien discussed being named to the Rockies Opening Day roster:

The Rockies finish spring training games with a 14-14 record. For the next two days, they will welcome the Detroit Tigers to Salt River Fields.


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Kentucky paid for a Final Four. Not this. Mark Pope’s bluegrass honeymoon is over

ST. LOUIS – On the same afternoon Iowa State overcame the loss of an All-American to stamp its ticket to the Sweet 16 with a 19-point win, Mark Pope lamented the injuries that in his view kept his Kentucky team from realizing its promise this winter.

“I think we were disappointed we never got to run with the roster that we thought we had,” Pope, Kentucky’s second-year coach, said Sunday, following the Wildcats’ 82-63 season-ending second round NCAA Tournament loss. “These guys did an amazing job adjusting.”

Given the juxtaposition, that argument — however fair — will probably fall on deaf ears close to home. Because what might be the most expensively assembled roster in college basketball is going to spend the business end of its postseason watching. And Pope’s bluegrass honeymoon is probably over.

Punishing the Wildcats purely because of their price tag is unfair. There’s nothing wrong with an expensive roster.

It isn’t cheating, and it isn’t unimaginative. In the modern landscape, it’s a choice. A way to win. As much a means to the ultimate end as playing zone defense.

But it comes with greater expectation. When your base invests so directly in your success, its demand for return on that investment is magnified. And if that demand is not met, sympathy tends to be in short supply.

Kentucky offers promise early

For a while, anyway, Sunday did not look like going quite that way. Kentucky (22-14) began the game well. Gave itself hope. Flashed the idea of what it might be, before reverting to form to confirm just what it was.

Early on, Iowa State (29-7) looked like a team without two-way star Joshua Jefferson (ankle), sluggish offensively and a little disoriented at the other end. Like a band trying to play the song after naming someone else lead guitar.

“I credit these guys, they really paced our offense and made sure early that we didn’t score too many points and we didn’t make too many shots,” Iowa State coach T.J. Otzelberger said, tongue planted firmly in cheek.

Kentucky, meanwhile, appeared in the mood early to make the tough ones necessary to win. Denzel Aberdeen (20 points) led the way, Collin Campbell trailing behind him with two corner 3s.

But the Cyclones didn’t need Jefferson to sustain their pressure. Intensity underpins their identity. The erratic basketball forced out of the Wildcats — as has been the case far too often this season — is theirs.

“Iowa State was terrific,” Pope said. “They exert a ton of pressure. They’re very disruptive, and certainly they were very disruptive with us.”

Iowa State’s intensity turned the game around

The further the game drifted away from Kentucky, the more ragged its performance became.

The early flow of turnovers did not stop — Kentucky finished with an eye-watering 20 for the game, the Wildcats’ 30.8% turnover rate basically double their season average. Just as damaging, as the game slipped away and a frustrating season wound down, there were aimless, unimaginative offensive possessions marked by a lack of ball movement and a perceptible loss of faith in the wider plan.

The tighter Iowa State squeezed, the more Kentucky came apart, first with sloppy offense and then with deconstructed defense. Otzelberger’s team shot 19 of 30 in the second half, averaging an even 1.5 points per possession after the break.

Where the Wildcats’ early punches seemed to harden undermanned Iowa State, the Cyclones’ response put Kentucky on its heels. Pope’s team never really got back on the front foot.

“We got a little disoriented the last eight or 10 minutes of the first half, and that’s what Iowa State does,” Pope said. “Their defense ratcheted up in the second half, and we had a tough time finding baskets, and more importantly, we had a tough time getting a stop.”

Otega Oweh finished with 18 points but did too much of his scoring once Iowa State led by double digits for his performance to really influence the game. Disparities in fouls and free throws told the story of which team was more aggressive. The sharper Iowa State became, the deeper that cut into whatever confidence and belief Kentucky had left.

Kentucky must find consistency, identity Iowa State enjoys

This was not entirely an indictment of the Wildcats. Iowa State served notice yet again that so long as Otzelberger walks their sideline — All-Americans be damned — the Cyclones are going to deliver these kinds of ruthless, relentless performances.

That’s what Kentucky expects, annually. And at least to a reasonable extent, it has the right to. At times, these Wildcats flirted with delivering something closer to it.

This was the team that swept Tennessee. That beat St. John’s and won at Arkansas. It was also the team that lost at home to Missouri, lost at Auburn and in the aggregate looked like its level would eventually even out roughly where it did.

The Wildcats were competent at many things but excellent at precious few. Per Bart Torvik, they were 9-12 against top-50 competition this season, with pedestrian adjusted offensive and defensive efficiency numbers. That’s about right for a 22-win team that doesn’t get out of the first weekend.

Time might prove Pope able to build the same sort of success in Lexington. But it’s possible to ask questions of why this season never really achieved lift-off, without that turning into a scathing and unanswerable indictment of his stewardship of his alma mater.

For example, whatever Iowa State’s concerns by comparison, Pope’s injury complaints aren’t entirely unfair.

Jayden Quaintance only appeared in four games this season. For Jaland Lowe, so good at Pitt in 2025, that number stopped at nine in 2026.

Lowe scored 13 points in Kentucky’s best win of the season, the 12-point victory over St. John’s in late December. But neither Lowe nor Quaintance has appeared in a game since Jan. 10.

“We didn’t get to play the way we planned to,” Pope said. “We didn’t get to play with the personnel we planned to. All of that changed, and I think our guys raised up and they made the very, very best of a complicated, difficult situation.”

Injuries won’t change expectations in Lexington

It’s perfectly reasonable to accept the Kentucky team Pope built in his mind was never the one he got to put on the floor. That won’t change the proverbial indigestion resulting from a season that might have cost Kentucky as much as $22 million, just to end well short of the Final Four.

Tagging Pope with that reported number — one he did not accept but also did not necessarily refute Sunday afternoon — opts for lazy analysis when something sharper isn’t that hard to achieve. No amount of money could speed up Lowe’s recovery from a shoulder injury, but it also does not matter what costs what when the solutions to the problems that arise deliver little better than a team this limited.

Maybe Pope is right about his team’s alternate future. Maybe this roster, and by extension this season, would have been flawed anyway. Whatever the truth, none of it wins the argument with reality.

Kentucky fades into the offseason among college basketball’s big disappointments. And Pope, who provided such fresh air to the stale climate that preceded him in Lexington, enters that offseason fully informed about the weight of expectation on his job, and the price of failing to rise to meet it.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Kentucky basketball spent big on its roster, but Mark Pope came up short

Samsung Now Officially Supports AirDrop, but Only for These Devices

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Back in November, Google made a stunning announcement: Quick Share was suddenly compatible with Apple’s AirDrop. At the time, the compatibility was limited to the Pixel 10, but no matter: Google had just made history, transforming the sharing features from platform-specific to cross-platform.

While AirDrop and Quick Share have long been the most convenient ways to share large files between devices, it only worked if you and your friend were on the same OS. That limitation introduces some inconvenient friction, but, as support cross-platform expands, that friction is easing up. Google first announced plans for greater AirDrop compatibility in Quick Share last month, when Android Vice President of Engineering Eric Kay noted, “[i]n 2026, we’re going to be expanding [Airdrop support] to a lot more devices.”

While there’s no official timeline on which devices will gain support and when, Nothing has said it is “exploring” adding it, while Qualcomm “can’t wait” to add the feature to its Snapdragon chips. However, we do now know one Android device that will support AirDrop very soon: the Samsung Galaxy S26.

AirDrop support comes to the Galaxy S26 series

Samsung made the news official on March 22 (technically Monday, March 23 in Korea). At launch, AirDrop support will only work on the Galaxy S26 series, including the Galaxy S26, Galaxy S26 Plus, and Galaxy S26 Ultra. That’s a bummer for Galaxy S25 users and earlier, but it is possible Samsung will expand support in time. After all, Google started rolling out AirDrop support for Pixel 9 devices late last month.

If you do have a Galaxy S26 device, this feature is live right now—if you live in Korea. Samsung says the feature will be rolling out to the U.S. later this week, but as of this writing, the update is only available to Galaxy users in Korea. (I’ll update this piece when Samsung releases the update for those of us in the U.S.)

How to enable AirDrop support in Quick Share on Galaxy


Credit: Images courtesy of Samsung

If you have an S26, and the update has rolled out to you, you just need to head to Settings > Software update (or System updates), then hit “Download and install,” “Check for system updates,” or “Check for software updates,” depending on your device.

Then, once your phone has the update, you’ll need to manually enable AirDrop support for Quick Share—it won’t just appear on your phone. To do so, head to Settings > Connected devices > Quick Share, then toggle on the new “Share with Apple devices” option.

If you tap the option itself, you’ll find a full description of the feature, which you may or may not already know: The recipient needs to have their iPhone’s AirDrop settings set to “Everyone,” and when you want to receive a file, you need to open Quick Share on your end. Samsung says your phone may temporarily disconnect from wifi when looking for or sharing to other iPhones.

Yankees’ Luis Gil not in Opening Day starting rotation, could begin season in minors

The 2024 American League Rookie of the Year may not be in the New York Yankees’ Opening Day starting rotation.

Luis Gil will not be part of the Yankees’ starting staff to open the season, MLB.com’s Bryan Hoch reported. The team is currently discussing whether or not Gil should begin the season in the minor leagues so he can make starts on a regular turn.

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The Yankees will go with a four-man rotation of Max Fried, Cam Schlittler, Will Warren and Ryan Weathers to open the season.

Gil, 27, struggled during spring training, allowing 10 runs and 20 hits (six of them home runs) in 19 1/3 innings. However, he did notch 24 strikeouts in Grapefruit League play. And he pitched well in his final start of the spring on Friday, giving up only one hit in five scoreless innings with seven strikeouts against the Baltimore Orioles.

“That was 2024 Luis Gil right there,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said after the game. “It was great to see.”

Gil earned AL Rookie of the Year honors in 2024, compiling a 3.50 ERA and 15-7 record with 171 strikeouts in 151 2/3 innings. Yet he struggled through injuries in 2025, including tightness in his right shoulder during the spring and an eventual lat strain that sidelined him for the first four months of the season. He made 11 starts, finishing with a 3.32 ERA but struck out only 6.5 batters per nine innings.

Whether Gil begins the season in the bullpen or in the minors to maintain a starter’s workload, the Yankees’ schedule will likely require him to join the rotation early in the season. After three off days during the first two weeks on their schedule, the Yankees face 13 straight games from April 7-19.

Weathers also struggled this spring, allowing 16 runs and 23 hits over 12 1/3 innings for an 11.68 ERA. Yet he also registered 17 strikeouts. Boone attributed the numbers to “a couple rough first innings” and said his overall performance were strong.

“I don’t feel like Weathers has been that far off, and better than his line,” Boone said, via the New York Daily News.

“But a couple rough first innings where they’ve hit the ball around on him a little bit,” he added. “I feel like he is throwing the ball well. I don’t make that much of it. His stuff is in a good place. It’s just getting it into some better spots where he’s gotten hit around.”

Boone went on to indicate that Weathers being healthy, getting the right movement on his pitches and throwing with good velocity are why the Yankees aren’t worried about him.

The Yankees open the 2026 MLB season on Wednesday, facing the San Francisco Giants in an 8:05 p.m. ET game that will stream exclusively on Netflix.

Phillies reliever Daniel Robert ‘stable and alert’ after suffering cardiac event during spring training

Philadelphia Phillies reliever Daniel Robert is stable after suffering a cardiac event during spring training on Sunday, the team told multiple reporters. Robert, 31, collapsed during a bullpen session at the Phillies’ facility in Clearwater, Florida.

He was tended to by medical personnel and taken to a local hospital, with the team saying that he is “stable and alert.” Per The Philadelphia Inquirer, Robert was able to exit the field under his own power, and did not appear to lose consciousness during the event.

Robert, who suffered a similar cardiac event last year, has an implanted cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD), which was “triggered” during the event, per the team. The ICD data will be reviewed by doctors at the hospital.

Robert signed a minor-league contract with the Phillies last month, joining the team as a non-roster invitee for spring training. Sunday was his first bullpen of the spring after his return to play was delayed by medical tests, per The Philadelphia Inquirer.

The ICD was placed after Robert collapsed on the mound during a bullpen session last October. The right-handed reliever told NBC Sports last month he credits the Phillies medical staff, who performed CPR and used an external defibrillator, with saving his life. Robert said that his heartbeat’s rhythm was “very irregular”; per doctors, Robert did not suffer a heart attack, but rather a “unknown cardiovascular event.”

Robert joined the Phillies’ bullpen in 2025 after one year with the Texas Rangers, with whom he made his MLB debut in 2024. He played in 15 games with Philadelphia last season, ending with a 4.15 ERA.

Ajay Mitchell, Justin Champagnie each suspended 1 game without pay for fighting in Thunder-Wizards matchup

Oklahoma City Thunder guard Ajay Mitchell and Washington Wizards forward Justin Champagnie each received one-game suspensions from the NBA for their roles in Saturday’s brawl between the two teams.

The league announced the penalties on Sunday. In addition to the suspensions, Oklahoma City’s Jaylin Williams and Cason Wallace were fined $35,000, while Washington’s Anthony Gill was docked the same amount.

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The on-court altercation ignited with 27 seconds left in the second quarter when Champagnie and Williams shoved each other under the basket. Several players from each team subsequently joined the scuffle, including Mitchell, who was near the two players on the baseline.

The tangle of players quickly involved a cameraman, who was positioned near the basket stanchion and got knocked over. The melee eventually spilled among fans sitting in the rows behind the basket.

Gill and Wallace joined the fracas, and Thunder star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander pulled Mitchell from the mass of bodies tussling.

“I’ve never seen him like that,” Gilgeous-Alexander said about Mitchell after the game, via The Athletic. “But at the same time, I’m not really surprised by his reaction… He’s as tough as they come, so I knew there’d be no back down when he’s involved in anything.”

After the incident calmed down, Champagnie and Williams were both assessed double technical fouls and removed from the game. Mitchell and Wallace received single technicals and were also ejected “for not acting as peacemakers and escalating the altercation,” as crew chief John Goble explained to a pool reporter after the game.

Gill stayed in the game because he didn’t demonstrate any unsportsmanlike conduct that warranted an ejection, according to Goble.

Following the game, Thunder coach Mark Daigneault told reporters that he disagreed with three of his players being ejected from the game while only one Wizards player was tossed out.

“I disagreed with their judgement after talking to them and watching it at halftime, Daigneault said. “I’ve worked with John Goble a long time, and he worked through it with me. We ended up agreeing to disagree and both moved on.”

The Thunder eventually won, 132-111, earning their 11th straight victory and boosting their NBA-best record to 56-15. The Wizards lost their 15th consecutive game with the defeat, competing for the league’s worst record at 16-54 as they pursue the No. 1 overall pick in the NBA Draft Lottery.

Oklahoma City continues its Eastern road trip on Monday at the Philadelphia 76ers. Washington plays Sunday night, visiting the New York Knicks.