Amid a nine-game losing streak, the New York Mets have placed designated hitter Jorge Polanco on the 10-day injured list with a right wrist contusion, the team announced Saturday.
Polanco, 32, sustained the injury during Tuesday’s 2-1 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers. He went 0-for-4 in the game with two strikeouts.
“When doctors first took a look at him, it looked like he got hit by a pitch when he didn’t,” Mendoza continued. “In talking to him, it was just a couple of swings that he took [Tuesday] night. … It just got worse the following day.”
Polanco has also been dealing with bursitis in his left Achilles tendon, but that condition was improving, according to Mendoza. That injury has contributed to the veteran’s slow start to the 2026 season after signing a two-year, $40 million deal with the Mets. He’s played in 14 of the team’s 20 games.
In 61 plate appearances, Polanco has a .179/.246/.286 slash line with three doubles, one home run and two RBI. Though it’s early in the season, that production is far below the 26 homers, 30 doubles and 78 RBI he compiled last year for the Seattle Mariners, batting .265/.326/.495 in 524 PAs.
To take Polanco’s spot on the major-league roster, catcher Hayden Senger was called up from Triple-A Syracuse. In 12 games this season, he has five home runs and 11 RBI to go with a .257/.316/.714 slash line. Mendoza told reporters he wanted Senger as another right-handed catcher who can allow him to use Luis Torrens as a pinch-hitter or put Francisco Alvarez at DH.
The Mets have lost nine consecutive games going into Saturday’s matinee, the team’s longest losing streak since 11 straight defeats in 2004. At 7-13, the Mets are currently last in the National League East, 1.5 games behind the fourth-place Philadelphia Phillies.
Oscar Schmidt turned down an opportunity to pursue an NBA career, instead prioritizing his time with the Brazilian national team, yet still became one of the most prolific scorers in basketball history.
Buda Mendes via Getty Images
Oscar Schmidt authored a 46-point performance in the final of the 1987 Pan American Games, leading Brazil to a historic victory over the United States in a game that partly precipitated the formation of the “Dream Team.”
Schmidt, a 6-foot-9 forward with a 3-point stroke that was ahead of its time, earned the nickname the “Holy Hand,” or “Mão Santa” in Portuguese. The late Kobe Bryant idolized him growing up in Italy, where Schmidt played against Bryant’s father.
A Basketball Hall of Famer with international influence despite never playing in the NBA, Schmidt’s legacy is undeniable. It’s being rightfully echoed this weekend after Schmidt died Friday at the age of 68.
Naismith Basketball Hall of Famer and Brazilian icon Oscar Schmidt has died at age 68.
Schmidt debuted for the Brazilian national team at 19 and made 326 appearances over his career. pic.twitter.com/GpqY2PoOpI
Schmidt’s family said in a statement that he battled a brain tumor for 15 years “with courage, dignity and resilience … while remaining a role model of determination, generosity and love of life. Oscar leaves a legacy that transcends sport and inspires generations of athletes and admirers in Brazil and worldwide.”
That message was relayed by members of the basketball community on Friday.
“I always admired Oscar and considered him a friend, he was, without a doubt, one of the greatest players to ever play the game,” said fellow Hall of Famer Larry Bird in a statement circulated by the NBA.
“It was an honor of a lifetime when Oscar asked me to present him at his well deserved induction into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. My sincere condolences to Oscar’s family.”
Schmidt was inducted into the Hall in 2013. He played in a record-tying five straight Olympics, appearing in every Summer Games from 1980-1996. He’s responsible for seven of the 10 highest-scoring outings in Olympic men’s basketball history. Fittingly, he’s the Games’ all-time leading scorer.
By the time he retired in 2003, he was 45 years old and was unofficially considered the top scorer in basketball history with 49,737 points across his club and national team appearances. LeBron James surpassed him in that category in 2024.
Oscar Schmidt, the leading scorer in world basketball history, was drafted by the Nets in 1984.
He explains the reason why he turned down the contract … and it’s incredible. 😂😭
The then-New Jersey Nets selected Schmidt in the sixth round of a 1984 NBA Draft that was headlined by Hakeem Olajuwon, Michael Jordan and Charles Barkley.
At the time, Schmidt explained that, despite his frustration about dropping that far in the draft, he showed up to Nets training camp with something to prove: that he belonged. He felt like he accomplished that goal in preseason competition.
“I go there and said to the coach, ‘Coach, here’s one point a minute,’” Schmidt recalled. “If you give me 20 minutes, I’ll give you 20 points. We played five games … . They gave me 25 minutes, I gave him 25 points. They become crazy about me.”
Back then, there was a FIBA rule that prevented NBA players from representing their national team.
“For me, national team was first one,” Schmidt said emphatically in the interview with Torre. “National team, you represent a country.”
Later, Schmidt humorously made something clear to the camera: “I never played in the NBA because I didn’t want to play in the NBA — because New Jersey Nets drafted me in the sixth round. Choice 131. That’s why I never played in the NBA. Because I got offended with that.”
There’s a world where international basketball catches up far quicker if Oscar Schmidt plays in the NBA.
International players weren’t populating NBA rosters like they are today. Schmidt’s dominance overseas, and especially in the Olympics, cast a more luminous light on foreign players and their NBA-caliber skill sets.
Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr, who lent a smooth-shooting hand to five NBA championship teams before coaching the league’s all-time leading 3-point marksman, discussed Schmidt on Friday before the Warriors’ play-in tournament loss to the Phoenix Suns.
“I want to give my condolences to Oscar Schmidt’s family,” Kerr said pregame, via The Athletic.
“ … He was one of the greatest shooters I’ve ever seen in my life. Just no conscience, a little bit of the Steph Curry mentality. Never, ever thought twice about letting it fly. Just a beautiful player with an incredible mentality.”
Kerr shared a story about him tearing an ACL in 1986. Kerr sustained the injury in the semifinals of the FIBA world championships in Madrid that year. Kerr was playing for Team USA against Brazil.
Schmidt came to his assistance.
“He literally picked me up, carried me off the floor,” Kerr said, per The Athletic. “It was an incredible gesture on his part, and over the next few years, he really exploded.”
Schmidt put up video-game numbers in international play. In between, he starred in Europe and South America. His star shone so bright it was, and will always be, seen by the NBA.
The Toronto Raptors will be without starting point guard Immanuel Quickley as they begin their first-round NBA playoff series versus the Cleveland Cavaliers.
Quickley is out for Saturday’s Game 1 with a strained right hamstring he suffered in Toronto’s final regular-season game last Sunday against the Brooklyn Nets. He did not play the second half of that matchup after playing 17 minutes in the first half.
The six-year veteran missed eight games from late March to early April due to plantar fasciitis in his right foot. There’s no indication the foot condition led to his hamstring injury, though it’s a possibility.
Quickley, 26, was the Raptors’ leading 3-point shooter this season with 476 attempts. His 37% rate was second among Toronto scorers to Brandon Ingram’s 38% (on 353 attempts). He was the team’s fourth-leading scorer, averaging 16.4 points per game with 5.9 assists, 4 rebounds and 1.4 steals.
As it applies to the matchup with the Cavaliers, Quickley would have been the primary defender on Donovan Mitchell. Jamal Shead will replace Quickley in the Toronto starting lineup and thus draw the defensive assignment on Mitchell, who led Cleveland in scoring with 27.9 points per game.
Scottie Barnes is regarded as the Raptors’ best defensive player, but will likely be occupied with checking James Harden (20.5 points per game) throughout the series.
The Los Angeles Dodgers are calling up outfielder/first baseman Ryan Ward from Triple-A Oklahoma City and are expected to activate him this weekend, according to The Athletic.
Ward, 28, earned Pacific Coast League MVP honors last season and had a slash line of .290/.380/.557 with 36 home runs, 31 doubles, 122 RBI and 16 stolen bases in 652 plate appearances.
The Dodgers’ 2019 eighth-round draft pick came into this year ranked as the team’s No. 19 prospect by MLB.com and just outside the organization’s top 20 minor-leaguers by The Athletic. This season, he’s batting .324/.432/.588 with 4 homers, 6 doubles, 14 RBI and 3 steals in 18 games.
While Ward’s production warrants a call-up to the majors, it’s unclear as to where he’ll play in the Dodgers’ lineup. Shohei Ohtani is entrenched as the designated hitter and Freddie Freeman mans first base. Teoscar Hernández doesn’t need a left-handed bat to platoon with him (he’s batting .313/. 306/.604 versus right-handed pitching this season), and Kyle Tucker bats left-handed in right field.
As a team, the Dodgers lead MLB with a .289 average and .864 OPS against right-handers, powered by the likes of Ohtani, Freeman, Tucker (who’s off to a slow start) and Max Muncy.
However, Ward would provide a left-handed power bat off the bench for a Dodgers roster that only has Dalton Rushing to bat from that side of the plate. Last season, Ward batted .319/.402/.636 in 463 PAs against right-handed pitching.
“The thing I like about Ryan is he’s performed,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts told the California Post during spring training. “We’ve asked him to do certain things, whether it’s positional versatility or cutting back on the strikeouts, hit for a little more power. He’s done all that.”
The Dodgers have not yet officially announced Ward’s call-up and thus haven’t revealed a corresponding roster move to open a spot for him. One possibility could be infielder Miguel Rojas going on the bereavement list after his father died on April 7. Rojas stayed with the team afterward.
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The Dyson V15 Detect Extra cordless vacuum is on sale for $339.99 on StackSocial, a notable discount from its usual price. This is a refurbished model of Dyson’s top-tier cordless vacuum from a few years ago. It adjusts suction based on what it picks up, shows you what it is collecting on a small LCD screen, and even uses a laser on the cleaner head to highlight dust you would normally miss on hard floors. It sounds like a gimmick until you see how much fine dust shows up under that green light.
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