Where to watch San Diego Padres vs. Los Angeles Angels: Live stream, TV channel, odds for Friday, April 17

The San Diego Padres (13-6) open their series with the Los Angeles Angels (10-10). The Padres have won eight in a row and 11 of their past 12. The Angels just split a four-game series with the New York Yankees in which Mike Trout homered in all four games. Starting pitchers are Matt Waldron for San Diego and José Soriano for Los Angeles.

  • Date: Friday, April 17

  • Time: 9:38 p.m. ET / 6:38 p.m. PT

  • Where: Angel Stadium, Anaheim, CA

  • TV Channels: FanDuel Sports Network West, Padres.TV Presented by UC San Diego Health

  • Live Stream:ESPN+, MLB.TV | Follow on Yahoo Sports

  • San Diego Padres: 13-6 (No. 2 in NL West)

  • Los Angeles Angels: 10-10 (No. 3 in AL West)

  • Spread: Los Angeles Angels -1.5

  • Moneyline: Los Angeles Angels -145 (56.6%) / San Diego Padres +120 (43.4%)

  • Over/Under: 8.5

San Diego Padres: Matt Waldron (0-1, ERA: 7.71, K: 3, WHIP: 2.57)
Los Angeles Angels: José Soriano (4-0, ERA: 0.33, K: 31, WHIP: 0.67)

Weather: 76°F at first pitch

Ballpark: Capacity: 45,517 | Roof: Open | Surface: Grass

ABS challenge system takeaways: What we’ve learned through 3 weeks of MLB play

It has been only three weeks, but Major League Baseball’s ABS challenge system has ushered in a whole new genre of statistics in a sport that was already known for the treasure trove of numbers and data points that help us understand what’s happening on the field. With players now having the option to challenge umpires’ strike-zone judgment — but with just two challenges per game and only successful challenges retained — we have a fascinating, new way to compare teams’ successes, failures and tendencies.

We’re still in the earliest stages of comprehending how the ABS challenge system is best utilized — and so are the teams. Even so, it hasn’t taken long for some intriguing trends to emerge, so here are a few takeaways from what we’ve seen so far.

Through three weeks of MLB play, there have been 1,143 challenges issued. Of those, 619 have been successful, meaning players have been right more often than not when challenging an umpire’s ball or strike call, with a 54% overturn rate. But not all teams are succeeding at this clip. Some have been much better, and some have been much worse: Nine clubs have a success rate above 60%, with the Reds comfortably ahead of the pack at a whopping 72%, while three teams — the Braves (39%), Guardians (39%) and Nationals (34%) — fall below 40%.

There’s also a pretty wide range in how often teams are challenging. Cincinnati’s league-best mark comes with only 29 challenges, tied with Washington for third-fewest of any team. Meanwhile, the Twins are tapping their heads all the time, having already challenged 61 calls this season — nine more than the second team, Colorado at 52 — with a 57% overturn rate. This makes basic sense; teams retain challenges if they are correct, and thus can rack up a larger raw total by overturning more calls. On the flip side, it’s been harder for teams such as Washington to challenge more frequently when the Nats have so often been incorrect early in games, thus running out of opportunities to protest calls.

Before we look at some more team-specific trends, here’s an overview of the game situations in which challenges have been utilized most. Entering the season, it stood to reason that teams would try to save challenges for higher-leverage moments later in games, but so far, that hasn’t really been the case. Here’s a breakdown of challenges by inning:

  • 1st inning: 111

  • 2nd inning: 101

  • 3rd inning: 111

  • 4th inning: 103

  • 5th inning: 118

  • 6th inning: 138

  • 7th inning: 159

  • 8th inning: 148

  • 9th inning: 138

  • Extras: 16

Among this sample, there is a slight lean toward the later frames, but so far — whether or not teams are explicitly green-lighting this behavior — players have been happily tapping their heads early in games.

So far this season, 252 batters have challenged at least one called strike. But there are some holdouts who haven’t tried MLB’s new toy, for whatever reason. Here are the hitters who have seen the most called strikes without issuing a single challenge:

1. Chase Meidroth: 77 strikes
2. Brice Turang: 68
3. José Ramírez: 63
4. Masyn Winn: 60
5. Mike Yastrzemski: 58
T-6. Matt McLain: 57
T-6. TJ Friedl: 57
T-6. Jung Hoo Lee: 57
9. Will Smith: 56
T-10. Francisco Lindor: 54
T-10. Drake Baldwin: 54

This is not to say these players saw many horrific calls by the umpires that deserved to be protested. And perhaps there have been times when they would’ve liked to challenge, but their teams didn’t have any left. At the same time, it’s not hard to watch some of the called strikes for these hitters and wonder: What are you waiting for?!

Still, we can be patient as hitters around the league settle into the new system. And having two catchers on this leaderboard makes sense; Smith and Baldwin would probably rather save their challenges for when they’re behind the dish. As for the rest of this group, it’ll be interesting to track how long some of these guys go without challenging and whether this is merely early-season hesitation or a conscious choice to neglect their new privilege.

Of the challenges issued, 611 (53%) have been by the fielding team (with the vast majority of those issued by catchers) and 532 (47%) by the batting team. But certain teams have demonstrated more significant splits. Here’s a breakdown of which teams’ challenges have leaned most heavily toward one side of the ball:

Highest percentage of challenges on defense:

  1. Dodgers: 73% (24 of 33 challenges issued while pitching)

  2. White Sox: 72% (31 of 43)

  3. Marlins: 71% (35 of 49)

  4. D-backs: 66% (21 of 32)

  5. Brewers: 65% (28 of 43)

Highest percentage of challenges on offense:

  1. Tigers: 64% (25 of 39 challenges issued while batting)

  2. Yankees: 63% (29 of 46)

  3. Orioles: 59% (22 of 37)

  4. Guardians: 58% (21 of 36)

  5. Blue Jays: 57% (21 of 37)

This is one indicator of teams’ strategic preferences that’ll be worth monitoring as the season unfolds. It stands to reason that if overturn rates continue to heavily favor catchers, as they have at every interval leading up to the challenge system’s introduction, teams would move toward saving their challenges for the purposes of run prevention on the mound, rather than rally preservation at the plate. But there’s also value in being able to keep an inning alive on offense with a well-used challenge late in games, so don’t expect clubs to completely abandon that option anytime soon. There is an ideal balance that all the teams are still searching for. — Shusterman

No team has tapped less often on offense than the two-time defending champs. Entering play Friday, Dodgers hitters had used just nine challenges, two fewer than any other club and 22 behind the league-leading Twins. For a team that does nothing by accident, well, this can’t be an accident.

Los Angeles’ strategy appears to revolve around reserving its challenges for its catchers. Will Smith, the club’s every-day backstop, has issued the fourth-most challenges (21) of any catcher in the league. On a rate basis, Smith has been just OK; his 62% overturn rate is right around average for catchers. But he’s letting it fly, in part because he almost always has a challenge or two in the chamber.

Things get even more interesting when you break down when exactly Dodgers hitters have deployed their challenges. Of their nine taps, seven came in the seventh inning or later (77%). That’s a stark contrast to the rest of the league; which is using just 39.7% of its challenges in those frames. 

The two exceptions to this Dodgers rule? One was an awful, easily overturned, strike-three call on Alex Call in a game Los Angeles was leading by five runs in the third inning. The other was a bizarre, emotionally charged, early-game mistake challenge by Hyeseong Kim. L.A.’s young utility infielder clearly regretted his decision immediately, staring off toward his dugout with a guilty look on his face. Moral of the story: If you’re a hitter and you end up on the Dodgers, probably don’t challenge unless you absolutely have to.

Boston is dead-stinkin’-last in MLB in both attempted and successful challenges. That hesitancy has been particularly striking on the defensive side; Red Sox catchers have challenged only nine times. Every other club is in double digits. 

Notably, Boston’s backstop tandem of Carlos Narvaez and Connor Wong has gotten more passive over time. They tapped five times in the club’s first four games but have tapped just four times in April thus far. By contrast, White Sox backstop Edgar Quero challenged five times against Tampa Bay on Thursday alone. 

So why are the Red Sox so skittish? It’s tough to say. Their lack of hitter challenges (11, tied for second-last) feels like a small-sample size mirage, something that should even out over the long haul. 

But the hands-off approach behind the dish feels like something bigger. Could it be related to Narvaez’s disciplinary benching on April 1, the day the Sox reduced their challenge rate? Narvaez catches the bulk of Boston’s games, so maybe this is more about him than it is about a grander strategy. Either way, the Red Sox declining to engage with ABS feels like a mistake.

Probably bad, but it’s hard to be certain because they’re hardly ever challenging: Thus far, pitchers are 11-for-22.

Minor-league and spring training data told us that pitchers, for a number of reasons, aren’t good at this. The numbers are a bit hazy, but the overturn rate for hurlers was around 41%. That’s because most hurlers end up in a poor physical position to actually see the ball cross the plate. More importantly, they’re emotionally invested in each particular pitch in a way that makes it impossible for them to view the umpire’s call objectively. 

Accordingly, a handful of teams admitted that they would heavily discourage their pitchers from challenging. And that has played out in the data. Thirteen teams have yet to use a single pitcher challenge. Only three teams — Baltimore, Pittsburgh and Philadelphia — have had multiple pitchers challenge. No single pitcher has challenged twice.

The higher-than-expected 50% success rate for pitchers is likely a product of small-sample size. But it might also be a sign that some pitchers are challenging only blatantly obvious misses.

Pitchers are giving away free passes right now like it’s an episode of Oprah. The league-wide walk rate entering play Thursday was 9.9%, nearly a full point higher than it was during March/April 2025. This is notable; the league-wide walk rate hasn’t finished above 9.0% in a full season since 2000.

Is ABS to blame? It’s complicated — more balls are being challenged into strikes than strikes into balls, for instance — but it’s certainly part of the story.

The most telling nugget is that walk rates rose in the minor leagues after ABS was implemented. Something similar is probably happening in the bigs right now. A dive into the data shows that the top of the zone, in particular, has become less fruitful for hurlers. Remember, the new zone is the same horizontally as the old zone (the width of the plate), but it changed vertically (now it’s according to player height).

That generally means a lower top rail, giving pitchers less leeway at the letters. Considering how much emphasis in recent years has been placed on peppering elevated fastballs, this trend of more walks shouldn’t come as a huge shock. Our guess is that MLB wants pitchers to gradually adjust how they pitch; more balls in the zone, fewer high-effort high heaters, more balls in play, more action, etc. What we’re seeing now, in the early going of this new era, are growing pains. We expect that teams and pitchers will react to this shift, understand they now have a smaller box to throw in and adapt accordingly. For now, though, walks are plentiful. — Mintz

This Android Setting Makes It Easy to Manage All Your App Permissions

If you haven’t thought recently about which Android apps have access to your device’s location, camera, microphone, or other features, now is a good time to do a privacy audit and ensure these permissions are up to date. There’s another permission type that allows apps access to system-wide resources, so while you’re at it, you should check these too.

Android’s various types of app permissions

Android devices have a dedicated privacy dashboard through which you can choose how apps access private data, like your camera, microphone, call logs, location, files, calendar, and contact list (to name a few). If you go to Settings > Security & Privacy > Privacy > Permission manager, you can see every app that has these permissions and change them if needed. For apps with location, camera, and microphone permissions, you can choose whether to allow access all the time, only when using the app, or not at all—you can also force apps to ask permission every time you open them.

But there’s another type of app permissions known as special permissions, which include the ability to modify system settings, display and draw over other apps, gather usage data, or access and modify any file or folder on your device, among others. In many cases, these are useful, or even essential for app functionality. For example, Display over other apps permits one app to display its UI over another, which may include notifications or a pop-up for an incoming call. Picture-in-picture permissions allow apps like YouTube or TikTok to continue playing while you’re using another app.

For legitimate apps, these permissions generally aren’t a problem, though not all apps need all of these system-level permissions to function, and you may not want every app to be able to access things like system settings and usage data. There are also cases where these permissions could be used maliciously, such as screen overlays designed to steal your login credentials or sensitive information collected from device and app notifications.

Audit your special permissions on Android

Android apps should request special permissions in context (meaning only when you try to use a feature that requires this type of access) and they should clearly explain why the permission is needed before redirecting you to your device’s system settings. However, if you are accustomed to granting access whenever it is requested, you may have given apps more permissions than they really need without realizing it. As always, you should be especially cautious of permissions requested by apps downloaded from outside the Google Play Store (though even apps vetted and approved by Google can be malicious).

Special permissions live in a different section of your device settings from the privacy dashboard, so even if you regularly audit your apps’ privacy settings, you may not come across these system-level permissions. Go to Settings > Apps > Special app access (this may be hidden behind a three-dot menu) and click on the permission type to see which apps have been granted access. You can then choose to disable permissions for any apps that don’t really need them.

Where to watch Kansas City Royals vs. New York Yankees: Live stream, TV channel, odds for Friday, April 17

The Kansas City Royals (7-12) and New York Yankees (10-9) open a three-game series. The Royals were just swept in three games by the Detroit Tigers. The Yankees just split a four-game series with the Los Angeles Angels.

  • Kansas City Royals: 7-12 (No. 4 in AL Central)

  • New York Yankees: 10-9 (No. 2 in AL East)

  • Spread: New York Yankees -1.5

  • Moneyline: New York Yankees -190 (62.5%) / Kansas City Royals +154 (37.5%)

  • Over/Under: 8.5

Kansas City Royals: Michael Wacha (2-0, ERA: 0.43, K: 17, WHIP: 0.71)
New York Yankees: Cam Schlittler (2-1, ERA: 2.49, K: 30, WHIP: 0.74)

Weather: 71°F at first pitch

Ballpark: Capacity: 47,309 | Roof: Open | Surface: Grass

Where to watch Los Angeles Dodgers vs. Colorado Rockies: Live stream, TV channel, odds for Friday, April 17

The Los Angeles Dodgers (14-4) face the Colorado Rockies (7-12) in the opener of a four-game series. The Dodgers are coming off a three-game sweep of the New York Mets while the Rockies just ended a six-game losing streak with a win over the Houston Astros. Starting pitchers are Tyler Glasnow for the Dodgers and Tomoyuki Sugano for the Rockies.

  • Date: Friday, April 17

  • Time: 8:40 p.m. ET / 5:40 p.m. PT

  • Where: Coors Field, Denver, CO

  • TV Channels: Rockies.TV, SportsNet LA

  • Live Stream:ESPN+, MLB.TV | Follow on Yahoo Sports

  • Los Angeles Dodgers: 14-4 (No. 1 in NL West)

  • Colorado Rockies: 7-12 (No. 4 in NL West)

  • Spread: Colorado Rockies +2.5

  • Moneyline: Colorado Rockies +260 (26.6%) / Los Angeles Dodgers -325 (73.4%)

  • Over/Under: 9.5

Los Angeles Dodgers: Tyler Glasnow (1-0, ERA: 4.00, K: 22, WHIP: 0.94)
Colorado Rockies: Tomoyuki Sugano (1-0, ERA: 2.16, K: 12, WHIP: 0.78)

Weather: 30°F at first pitch

Ballpark: Capacity: 50,144 | Roof: Open | Surface: Grass

How to watch the 2026 NBA Playoffs with DIRECTV: Full game schedule, where to stream and more

The 2026 NBA playoffs tip off this weekend with eight games across Saturday, April 18, and Sunday, April 19. You can catch NBA playoff games on ABC, NBC, ESPN, and Amazon Prime Video. Looking to watch the tournament with just one streaming service? We’ve (almost) got you covered. With DIRECTV’s MySports® Genre Pack®, you’ll have everything you need to tune in, apart from Prime Video — but who doesn’t have access to an Amazon account these days, anyway?

Here’s what you need to know so you won’t miss a single game of the 2026 NBA Playoffs. 

Dates: April 18 – June, 2026

TV channels: NBC, ESPN, ABC

Streaming: DIRECTV

The 2026 NBA playoffs officially get underway on April 18. The Eastern Conference finals are scheduled to begin May 19, and the Western Conference finals are scheduled for May 20. The NBA finals are set to begin on June 3, 2026.

 NBA playoff games will be broadcast across Prime Video, NBC, ABC, and ESPN. 

NBA playoff games that air on NBC, ABC and ESPN are all available to stream with DIRECTV’s MySports® Genre Pack®, which includes access to ESPN (and the ESPN Unlimited streaming tier), local ABC and NBC.

Cancel anytime. Local channels vary by market. Blackout restrictions apply. Select sales channels only.

This will not replace any existing Disney+, Hulu, ESPN, or Disney bundle subscription you may already have. All other accounts must be managed separately. You must remain on an eligible plan to retain your offer.

Note: You’ll still need Amazon Prime access to catch the Prime Video-exclusive NBA playoff games — but who doesn’t have Amazon Prime access these days?

As Senior Yahoo Tech writer Rick Broida puts it, DIRECTV is the “polished and likable” cable alternative that cord-cutters have been searching for. Miss flipping through endless channels on the hunt for a gem to tune into? DIRECTV’s got one of the best channel guides out there. And in terms of content diversity, DIRECTV has you covered there, too, with packages ranging from hyper-specific Genre Packs for sports fans and reality TV zealots to full-coverage options for TV fans who want it all. Sports fans, meanwhile, will appreciate that ESPN Unlimited is included with many DIRECTV plans to boot. And don’t worry about missing your favorite shows, either: In addition to live channels, DIRECTV offers a full range of on-demand programming and unlimited DVR, too. That’s why we called DIRECTV the best cable TV replacement in the streaming world.

April 18

  • 1 p.m.: Toronto Raptors vs. Cleveland Cavaliers (Prime Video)

  • 3:30 p.m.: Minnesota Timberwolves vs. Denver Nuggets (Prime Video)

  • 6 p.m.: Atlanta Hawks vs. New York Knicks (Prime Video)

  • 8:30 p.m.: Houston Rockets vs. Los Angeles Lakers (ABC)

April 19

  • 1 p.m.: Boston Celtics vs. Philadelphia 76ers (ABC)

  • 3:30 p.m.: Oklahoma City Thunder vs. TBD (ABC)

  • 6:30 p.m.: Detroit Pistons vs. TBD (NBC/Peacock)

  • 9 p.m.: San Antonio Spurs vs. Portland Trail Blazers (NBC/Peacock)

  • May 4: Conference Semifinals begin (can move up to May 2 or 3)

  • May 19: Eastern Conference Finals begin on ESPN/ABC (can move up to May 17)

  • May 20: Western Conference Finals begin on NBC/Peacock (can move up to May 18)

  • June 3: NBA Finals 2026 – Game 1 on ABC, 8:30 p.m. ET

  • June 5: NBA Finals 2026 – Game 2 on ABC, 8:30 p.m. ET

  • June 8: NBA Finals 2026 – Game 3 on ABC, 8:30 p.m. ET

  • June 10: NBA Finals 2026 – Game 4 on ABC, 8:30 p.m. ET

  • June 13: NBA Finals 2026 – Game 5 on ABC, 8:30 p.m. ET (if necessary)

  • June 16: NBA Finals 2026 – Game 6 on ABC, 8:30 p.m. ET (if necessary)

  • June 19: NBA Finals 2026 – Game 7 on ABC, 8:30 p.m. ET (if necessary)

Where to watch Golden State Warriors vs. Phoenix Suns NBA play-in tournament: Live stream, start time, TV channel, odds for Friday, April 17

The Golden State Warriors and the Phoenix Suns meet in an elimination play-in game with a trip to the playoffs on the line. The winner will get the Western Conference’s No. 8 playoff seed and a first-round series with the Oklahoma City Thunder. The loser’s season ends.

  • Golden State Warriors: Beat Los Angeles Clippers 126-121 in play-in tournament.

  • Phoenix Suns: Lost to Portland Trail Blazers 114-110 in play-in tournament.

  • Spread: Phoenix Suns -3.5

  • Moneyline: Phoenix Suns -160 (59.1%) / Golden State Warriors +135 (40.9%)

  • Over/Under: 219.5

Where to watch Charlotte Hornets vs. Orlando Magic NBA play-in tournament: Live stream, start time, TV channel, odds for Friday, April 17

The Charlotte Hornets and Orlando Magic in the NBA’s play-in tournament. The winner gets the Eastern Conference’s No. 8 playoff seed and a first-round matchup with the Detroit Pistons. The loser’s season ends. The Hornets beat the Miami Heat in a thrilling OT game while the Magic lost to the Philadelphia 76ers to set up Friday’s game.

  • Charlotte Hornets: Beat Miami Heat 127-126 in OT in play-in tournament.

  • Orlando Magic: Lost to Philadelphia 76ers 109-97 in play-in tournament.

  • Spread: Orlando Magic +3.5

  • Moneyline: Orlando Magic +140 (39.8%) / Charlotte Hornets -170 (60.2%)

  • Over/Under: 218.5