Lakers center Deandre Ayton (5) and Rockets center Clint Capela (30) battle for a rebound during a game last month in Houston. Ayton leads the Lakers in rebounding at 8.0 per game. (David J. Phillip / Associated Press)
Rebounding was not a strength of the Lakers over the course of the regular season. Rebounding was a strength of the Houston Rockets during the 2025-26 campaign.
So, on their first day of practice Tuesday for Game 1 of the first round Saturday at Crypto.com Arena, the Lakers worked diligently on rebounding drills, knowing full well that will be one of the keys against the Rockets.
The Lakers were the fourth-worst rebounding team in the NBA, averaging 41.0 per game. The Rockets were the top rebounding team in the league, getting 48.1 overall and 15.0 on the offensive end.
And one of the Lakers’ better rebounders, Luka Doncic, won’t be available because he’s dealing with a Grade 2 left hamstring strain that he went to Spain for treatment. Doncic is second on the Lakers in rebounding at 7.7 per game. His starting backcourt mate, Austin Reaves, also is a good rebounder but he also won’t play because of a Grade 2 left oblique strain. Reaves is averaging 4.7 rebounds per game.
“They’re out indefinitely,” Lakers coach JJ Redick said about Doncic and Reaves.
Redick then gave a simple answer for how the Lakers have to deal with the Rockets in the best-of-seven series.
“Again, taking care of the basketball and boxing out. That’s the series,” Redick said. “Scheme, personnel, obviously important, but if we don’t take care of the ball and we don’t box out, we’re not gonna win the series.
“They were No. 4 in scoring opportunities. We were No. 23, so we don’t have the luxury with Luka and AR out of getting drilled in scoring opportunities every single game. We gotta box out. We’re going to place an emphasis on every drill in practice. We started practice with boxing out today. You gotta put it in their minds. That’s literally the only thing we said about Houston today. Today was about us having a practice, getting sharp with our stuff. Tomorrow, we’ll introduce [Rockets] personnel. Thursday we’ll do our scout, as we would. Friday will be a reinforcement of that scout. Saturday we’ll be good to go. Only thing we did today was box out.”
Lakers 7-foot backup center Jaxson Hayes will be counted to get rebounds. He’ll also spend time dealing with Rockets All-Star center Alperen Sengun, who averages 20.4 points and 8.9 rebounds (3.0 on offense) per game.
Hayes missed the last four games because of left foot soreness, but he was back at practice Tuesday.
“Feeling a lot better,” Hayes said. “It’s nice getting a few days off. Especially with my job, I jump a lot and I run a lot, so it’s hard for me to rest something like that. Getting those days off was very much needed. Very helpful.”
When asked about the box-out drills the Lakers did at practice, Hayes recalled the last time he did such a thing.
“Definitely college, for sure,” Hayes said. “College days with those Texas bigs. Coaches start off the practice where you got to smack somebody. Obviously, we weren’t trying to murder each other out on the boards, but definitely practicing that stuff. Houston is, I think, one of the best offensive rebounding teams in the past 20 years. So, just making sure we’re ready for that.”
The Rockets are a physical team that also plays smothering defense.
Houston allowed 110.0 points per game during the regular season, the fourth-best defensive mark in the league, and held teams to 46.0% shooting, the sixth-best mark in the league.
For Lakers guard Marcus Smart, there is one way to compete with the Rockets on the backboards.
“Will. Willpower,” Smart said. “We’re competitors. We’ve been doing this for a while. We’re doing that at the highest level, right? And they’re going to try to come in and punk us. And if you will allow that, you will be punked. And I don’t think we have any guys that are going to be punked on this team. So, we might not be the most athletic and strongest, but we got to have the most heart.”
The MVP award is one of the most prestigious honors in professional basketball—and one of the most debated. But how is the MVP actually chosen?
🗳️ MVP Voting Process
The MVP is determined by a panel of 100 sportswriters and broadcasters from the U.S. and Canada, as well as a fan vote that counts as one ballot. Each voter selects five players, ranked from first to fifth place. The point system is as follows:
1st place vote: 10 points
2nd place: 7 points
3rd place: 5 points
4th place: 3 points
5th place: 1 point
The player with the highest total point tally at the end of voting is crowned NBA MVP.
📊 What Do Voters Consider?
While there’s no official checklist, MVP voters typically weigh several key factors:
Individual statistics: Points, assists, rebounds, efficiency, advanced metrics like PER or Win Shares
Team success: MVPs are rarely chosen from losing teams and Top 3 seeds are the norm
Narrative and storyline: Voters often reward players overcoming adversity or carrying a franchise
Consistency and availability: Games played, durability, and clutch performance matter
👀 Voter Biases and Trends
Some unofficial trends also influence MVP outcomes:
“Voter fatigue”: Players who’ve already won may need to outperform their own past seasons to win again
New blood bias: Voters sometimes prefer rising stars over repeat winners
Position favoritism: Guards and forwards tend to dominate MVP voting, although that trend has been changing in recent years
📈 NBA MVP trends
Here are some trends you may want to consider before placing a bet on the NBA MVP:
Repeat winners are somewhat common. Jokic’s 2022 win marked the 12th different player to have won the award two (or more) years in a row.
The MVP usually comes from an elite team. Since 1985, only seven MVP winners have come from a team that didn’t finish first or second in its conference.
The award is usually given to a player with a few years of experience. A rookie hasn’t won MVP since Wes Unseld in 1969, and only two MVPs have been 22 or younger (Wes Unseld and Derrick Rose).
Centers have historically dominated the MVP award. While they went on a two-decade drought between Shaquille O’Neal (2000) and Nikola Jokic (2021), centers have now won four of the last five MVPs.
📜NBA MVP betting history
A quick look at recent NBA MVPs and their opening odds.
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2026 NBA Playoffs matchups and results
First Round – East
(1) Detroit Pistons vs. (8) TBD
Game 1: April 19
(2) Boston Celtics vs. (7) TBD
Game 1: April 19
(3) New York Knicks vs. (6) Atlanta Hawks
Game 1: April 18
(4) Cleveland Cavaliers vs. (5) Toronto Raptors
Game 1: April 18
First Round – West
(1) Oklahoma City Thunder vs. (8) TBD
Game 1: April 19
(2) San Antonio Spurs vs. (7) TBD
Game 1: April 19
(3) Denver Nuggets vs. (6) Minnesota Timberwolves
Game 1: April 18
(4) Los Angeles Lakers vs. (5) Houston Rockets
Game 1: April 18
2026 NBA Playoffs schedule
Event
Date
NBA Play-In Tournament
April 14-17
NBA Playoffs begin
April 18
NBA Conference Semifinals
TBD
NBA Conference Finals
TBD
NBA Finals Game 1
June 3
NBA Finals Game 2
June 5
NBA Finals Game 3
June 8
NBA Finals Game 4
June 10
NBA Finals Game 5 (if necessary)
June 13
NBA Finals Game 6 (if necessary)
June 16
NBA Finals Game 7 (if necessary)
June 19
NBA playoff format
The NBA playoffs adopt a format designed to favor successful teams while giving underdogs a shot at the championship. Here’s a brief look at the structure:
The postseason begins with a Play-In Tournament featuring the 7th through 10th-ranked teams in each conference. This extends from April 14 to 17.
The NBA Playoffs kick off with the first round on April 18, where the top one to six teams in each conference join the winners of the Play-In.
The matchups are set as No. 1 vs. No. 8 seed, No. 2 vs. No. 7 seed, No. 3 vs. No. 6 seed, and No. 4 vs. No. 5 seed.
Each playoff round, including the Conference Semifinals, Conference Finals, and NBA Finals, features a seven-game series.
In these series, the higher-seeded team hosts Games 1, 2, 5 (if necessary), and 7 (if necessary) following a 2-2-1-1-1 format.
The NBA Finals start on June 3.
Looking for more intel? Our NBA Championship odds breaks down the clubs with the best odds of winning the NBA Finals. And be sure to check out our NBA Finals MVP odds page to see which player is most likely to hoist the Bill Russell Trophy when the dust settles.
Washington Wizards forward Anthony Davis told reporters that he plans to play for the team next season.
“Yeah, I’m under contract,” Davis said with a laugh. “I love my money.”
While playing for the Wizards may be obvious to Davis, he has yet to make his debut since joining the team before the NBA trade deadline in February. Davis played only 20 games this season and last appeared on Jan. 8 as a member of the Dallas Mavericks.
The Wizards finished with a league-worst 17-65 record, good for last in the Eastern Conference. They also ended the season on a 10-game losing streak and finished their third consecutive season with 64 or more losses.
Davis said the team is not what people make it seem and that he expects to compete.
“They know that I want to win,” he said. “I’m sure that they want to win as well. Nobody wants to lose. I know we have a lot of young guys, but like I said, I mentioned it about the young guys — how talented they are.”
One of the players Davis expects to help bring a winning culture to the Wizards is Trae Young. Young was also added before this year’s trade deadline in a deal with the Atlanta Hawks. He has also struggled with injuries this season, playing five games for the Wizards and 15 games total before being shut down.
While Davis is optimistic about the Wizards’ future, he understands the difficulty of turning a losing team into a championship contender.
Now sidelined until at least late April, the right-hander spoke to reporters via interpreter on Tuesday and has some rather interesting things to say when discussing his arm fatigue. Per The Athletic’s Chandler Rome, Imai admitted having trouble adjusting to the American lifestyle in baseball and outside of baseball.
When asked for an example, Imai reportedly pointed to when and where the players eat compared to how teams in Japan operate.
Asked what has been difficult outside of baseball, Imai replied through an interpreter: “For example, the travel is different from Japan. The timing when the players eat. In Japan, when they get back to the hotel, they eat their dinner. Here, the players eat at the stadium.” https://t.co/K3YV83NMrF
It’s unclear how eating in the Astros clubhouse can cause excess arm fatigue. It’s also quite possible something is being lost in translation here as well.
That’s a long list of issues for a player to have 2 1/2 weeks into his MLB career. There are, of course, adjustments that every player needs to make while moving from Japan to the U.S., but this is also stuff they should be aware of while considering teams and preparing accordingly.
The biggest adjustment for Japanese pitchers is usually the schedule, where Nippon Professional Baseball starters usually pitch once a week while MLB arms are asked to go one out every five days. The Astros have so prevented Imai from having to pitch on less than five days rest.
Imai is on a contract that guarantees him $54 million through the 2028 season, though he can also opt out after 2026 or 2027.
As much as he’s struggled, his injury was still bad news for a Houston organization that has already seen fellow starting pitchers Hunter Brown (shoulder strain) and Cristian Javier (shoulder strain) hit the IL this season. It’s unclear when any of these pitchers will return, which isn’t ideal considering the Astros have lost eight straight games and are in last place in the AL West with a 6-11 record.
Albernaz, who returned to the dugout from the scary scene Monday night, revealed that he did not come away from the incident unscathed. Per Albernaz, he has “at least” seven facial fractures and a broken jaw.
But he doesn’t need surgery or his jaw wired shut. And the first-year manager appears ready to move forward with business as usual — outside of a a soft diet.
He also looks remarkably OK for a guy who just had the right side of his face fractured into pieces.
#Orioles manager Craig Albernaz says that he has 7 total fractures in his orbital area and a broken jaw after getting hit with a foul ball. He says he doesn’t need surgery or his jaw wired shut but has to eat soft foods for 6 weeks. #Orioles#Birdland@wjzpic.twitter.com/uPNOmizEOl
“I feel good actually, I mean, considering everything,” he said at a pregame news conference Tuesday afternoon. “… Ball hit me pretty flush in the cheek. Feel good, luckily no surgery. I think all-in-all, it’s at least seven fractures in my cheek area — orbital. And then a broken jaw.
“But luckily it doesn’t have to be wired, no surgery. I just have to eat baby food for six weeks.”
Craig Albernaz was back at work Tuesday, a day after his jaw was broken and face fractured in seven places due to a line drive. (File photo)
Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
In case you missed it, here’s the line drive that hit Albernaz on the cheek during Monday’s game against the Arizona Diamondbacks. Orioles second baseman Jeremiah Jackson hit a line-drive foul ball in the fifth inning that made a beeline for the dugout.
Albernaz was standing on the top step of the dugout away from the protective netting, and the ball caught him squarely on the cheek at 70.6 mph.
Albernaz immediately left the dugout to receive medical attention.
He said Tuesday that his first thought after being hit was to cover up his face “because if it was really bad, I didn’t want my family to see it on TV.”
He said he then went through and cleared concussion protocol and tried to return to the dugout, but the medical team insisted that he undergo a CT scan.
While he was waiting to have the scan, he FaceTimed his family to let them know that he was OK. And in the sixth inning, he heard commotion from the crowd around a home run — that was hit by Jackson.
Jackson hit a sixth-inning grand slam that cut Baltimore’s then 7-2 deficit to 7-6. The home run ultimately sparked the Orioles to rally for a 9-7 win to move into a first-place tie with the New York Yankees in the AL East at 9-7.
Albernaz was then ordered by the medical team to return to the clubhouse for his CT scan. But he ended up with a souvenir from the ordeal.
Jackson autographed his grand-slam ball and gave it Albernaz, along with an inscribed apology for hitting him him in the face with his line drive: “Sorry homie.”
With about 10 percent of the MLB season behind us, the standings are a comical mess, with the fitting exception of the Los Angeles Dodgers, owners of the best record in baseball and apparently impervious to small-sample chaos.
Nevertheless, our semi-regular exercise of regular-season power rankings must proceed, with our first attempt of the season to sort through the 30 big-league ballclubs and assess their relative quality, no matter how bunched up they are in the standings. These rankings shine the spotlight on the best individual performers for each club in the early going, ranging from expected superstars to rookie standouts to out-of-nowhere surprises and everything in between.
In a lineup overflowing with veteran superstars in their 30s, 25-year-old Andy Pages has emerged as an unlikely driving force for the Dodgers’ offense, despite batting near the bottom of the order in the bulk of his starts. Pages was a steady source of slugging during his first two seasons before he sunk into an all-time slump last October, but now he’s back to mashing, with an all-time heater to open 2026: Pages not only leads Los Angeles in nearly every offensive category but also is tops in MLB in hits, RBI, batting average and fWAR through 16 games. Finally, something is going right for the Dodgers!
2. Atlanta Braves (10-7)
His NL Rookie of the Year award is already old news; it’s time to start considering where Drake Baldwin ranks among the best catchers in baseball. All he has done since arriving in the majors is hit, and now he’s catching the lion’s share of innings for a Braves team that, despite an avalanche of arm injuries, currently boasts the lowest ERA in MLB. Atlanta has a rich history of developing homegrown stars, and Baldwin looks like the next in line.
3. New York Yankees (9-7)
In a relative blink, Ben Rice has evolved from “what a great story” to “he’s a pretty good hitter” to “wait a second, his OPS is what?!” The Yankees’ first baseman — if you’re wondering, Rice has caught zero innings this season, and that’s perfectly fine — has been unbelievable with the bat, blending his serious left-handed raw power with a disciplined approach that has unlocked a truly outlandish statline: .362/.508/.745, good for a 246 wRC+ that is tops in MLB. He’s still doing nearly all of his damage against right-handed pitching, but we won’t stress too much about his platoon splits as long as his triple slash resembles that of peak Barry Bonds.
4. Milwaukee Brewers (8-7)
A five-game skid suggests the Brewers do have some things to sort out, but Brice Turang is doing his part. There was real buzz during Turang’s time with Team USA that another leap could be in store for the 26-year-old second baseman after his breakout 2025, and so far this season, he has done nothing to dampen that hype, providing ample power (.617 SLG%) and speed (5 SB) as the temporary leadoff man while Jackson Chourio works his way back from injury. Turang is a star.
5. San Diego Padres (10-6)
What Mason Miller is doing right now is downright absurd. He has struck out 19 of the 24 batters he has faced this season, and he has allowed just two baserunners (a Luis Arraez single and a Spencer Torkelson walk). Most people in the industry would tell you that in the grand scheme of things, it probably wasn’t a good idea for the Padres to trade an elite infield prospect in Leo De Vries (and several other pieces) for a reliever, but that reliever was Miller, someone evidently capable of unthinkable levels of dominance.
6. Cleveland Guardians (10-7)
Make no mistake: Chase DeLauter’s blistering start to his career is the story of the Guardians’ season so far, and he has single-handedly altered the complexion of Cleveland’s offense. But Cleveland’s other Cactus League standout hasn’t cooled off much, either, and that’s Angel Martinez. The switch-hitting outfielder has been Cleveland’s second-best bat behind DeLauter, with a stellar .895 OPS (158 wRC+), a huge uptick from last year’s healthy sample of poor production (74 wRC+ in 484 plate appearances).
7. Seattle Mariners (8-9)
The highest strikeout rate in the vaunted Seattle rotation? That belongs to Emerson Hancock, of course. The former sixth overall pick had one of the lowest strikeout rates in baseball the previous two seasons due to his sinker-forward approach and lack of a swing-and-miss weapon, but this season Hancock has reemphasized his four-seamer and added a nasty sweeper that has unlocked a new level of effectiveness. He’s making the most of his opportunity with incumbent No. 5 starter Bryce Miller on the injured list.
8. Texas Rangers (9-7)
Both of Texas’ biggest offseason additions have made fantastic first impressions. Brandon Nimmo has been an ideal table-setter atop the lineup, leading MLB with nine multi-hit games. And MacKenzie Gore gives Texas a left-handed element atop a rotation that has two impact right-handers in Jacob deGrom and Nathan Eovaldi; his 39.7% strikeout rate ranks third among qualified starting pitchers.
9. Philadelphia Phillies (8-8)
Bryce Harper has gotten off to a nice start in his unofficial quest to prove to president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski that he’s still elite. Harper is one of just 15 qualified hitters who have walked more than they’ve struck out so far this season, and of that cohort, only Yordan Alvarez (.714) and Sal Stewart (.600) have higher slugging percentages than Harper’s .517.
10. Detroit Tigers (7-9)
After a poor second half and a rough October at the plate, Detroit did little in the offseason to change its position-player group, trusting that its core — with the addition of top prospect Kevin McGonigle — is good enough to form a postseason-worthy offense. It has been a mixed bag for the holdovers so far, but at age 21, McGonigle already looks like the Tigers’ best bat. After batting sixth in the first four games of his career, McGonigle vaulted to the top of the Detroit lineup, where he has continued to rake as the leadoff man or No. 2 hitter while playing stellar defense at third base and shortstop.
Somewhat surprisingly, Andy Pages and Ben Rice have been the standout performers for the Dodgers and Yankees thus far. Less surprisingly, Yordan Alvarez, Drake Baldwin and Brice Turang have been leading the way in Houston, Atlanta and Milwaukee.
Bruno Rouby/Yahoo Sports
11. Pittsburgh Pirates (10-6)
A proven master of the pulled fly ball, Brandon Lowe just keeps doing his thing as a key contributor in Pittsburgh’s new-look lineup, smashing six homers (all pulled, of course) in 14 games while running a career-best 15.4% walk rate. Lowe is firmly on pace to become just the seventh second baseman ever with three 30-plus-homer seasons, a fascinating group that includes Hall of Famers Rogers Hornsby and Jeff Kent, soon-to-be-Cooperstown-bound Chase Utley, Alfonso Soriano, Rougned Odor (!) and, of course, Dan Uggla (who did it five times).
12. Baltimore Orioles (9-7)
Here’s an early-season statistical quirk: Taylor Ward is leading MLB in doubles with 10 but has zero homers, and his 75 plate appearances are third-most among all MLB hitters without a home run this season. That first long ball is surely coming soon, but even without leaving the yard, Ward has been a nice addition to the top of Baltimore’s lineup after eight years with the Angels. His .427 OBP is Baltimore’s best on-base mark and is rooted in his top-notch plate discipline; Ward’s 13.8% chase rate is second-lowest in MLB among qualified hitters.
13. Cincinnati Reds (9-7)
Sal Stewart was not shy during spring training about his goal of winning NL Rookie of the Year, and he has backed up those bold ambitions with a spectacular showing at the plate to begin his season. The 22-year-old slugger is hitting .309/.435/.600, leads all NL rookies in fWAR and recently put on a show for a horde of family and friends when the Reds were in his hometown. The Reds’ offense has been atrocious thus far outside of Elly De La Cruz and Stewart, who have hit third and fourth in all 16 of Cincinnati’s games, but that duo promises to be a headache for opposing pitchers for the foreseeable future.
14. Chicago Cubs (7-9)
It’s a subtle difference, but based on the discrepancy in his performance between his rookie and sophomore seasons — and how sharp he has looked so far in Year 3 — Shota Imanaga’s fastball sitting at 92 mph instead of 91 might be a pretty big deal. The lefty’s four-seamer has looked much crisper in 2026, as he’s already hit 93 mph more times through three starts this season (19) than he did all of last year (18). Fly balls will always be an issue for him, but even a tick more heat like he has shown thus far could be the key to returning Imanaga to something resembling his stellar rookie form.
15. Arizona Diamondbacks (9-8)
Remember when D-backs spring training began with the disappointing news that Corbin Carroll needed surgery to address a broken hamate bone in his right hand, rendering him unavailable for the World Baseball Classic? Well, we can’t undo his absence from Team USA, but Carroll has emphatically quashed any concerns that the preseason injury would cause him to start slow. The Snakes’ right fielder has been dynamite, slashing .321/.403/.623 with a team-leading 10 runs scored and 11 RBI. And even in an abbreviated sample, Carroll — the National League leader in triples the previous three seasons — is the only player with three triples so far in 2026.
16. Minnesota Twins (10-7)
The Twins’ return for Griffin Jax at last year’s trade deadline, 25-year-old right-hander Taj Bradley has been one of the most encouraging developments of Minnesota’s surprisingly strong start to the season. He has surrendered just three earned runs in 21 ⅔ innings of work, and only Max Fried (105) has faced more batters than Bradley (93) without allowing a home run. Bradley flashed terrific stuff early in his career with Tampa Bay but struggled with walks and hard contact. If he can dial in the command and identify the ideal mix of secondaries beyond his high-90s fastball — the splitter has looked excellent thus far — the Twins might have found a rotation fixture for years to come.
17. New York Mets (7-10)
After swatting 25 homers as a 21-year-old in 2023, Francisco Alvarez looked on track to become the next great slugging catcher. But injuries completely derailed his past two seasons, dampening the hype he earned as a rookie and leaving his status as a core piece for the Mets somewhat in question. Now healthy and reestablished as New York’s starting backstop, Alvarez is raking to start 2026, with sterling underlying metrics to support his gaudy surface-level stats — a much-needed silver lining within a badly scuffling Mets lineup.
18. Toronto Blue Jays (6-9)
The injured list is getting more crowded by the day, putting the Blue Jays in a precarious position in the standings while they navigate this slew of absences. To help steady the ship, they’ll lean on Kevin Gausman and Dylan Cease, the team’s top two starters who are, appropriately, two of the most durable pitchers of this era. Cease has made a strong first impression, with 26 strikeouts across his first 14 ⅔ innings as a Blue Jay, while Gausman (2.08 ERA, 17 ⅓ IP, 28 K, 2 BB) has shined to begin what could be his final season in Toronto, potentially priming himself for another sizable payday in free agency.
19. Boston Red Sox (6-10)
It’s a toss-up between Willson Contreras and Wilyer Abreu for most impactful hitter amid an otherwise woeful collective start for the Red Sox’s offense. Fresh off their WBC triumph with Team Venezuela, they have been consistent forces in the middle of Boston’s lineup. Contreras is providing exactly the kind of right-handed power and patience the Red Sox sought when they acquired him, and Abreu is validating Boston’s conviction that he could shed his longstanding platoon label and become a reliable every-day player.
20. Tampa Bay Rays (8-7)
Chandler Simpson’s first attempt to prove that his otherworldly speed could be more than just a gimmick in the big leagues was underwhelming, as he struggled to reach base consistently and struggled mightily on defense in the outfield. Sophomore Simpson has been far more promising. Even as a total nonthreat to slug, he has weaponized his tremendous bat-to-ball skills and freaky wheels to rack up a whopping 23 hits (21 singles, two triples) in 15 games while swiping seven bags. Early metrics also indicate improved competence in left field, making Simpson an ultra-fun, down-order role player in support of Tampa Bay’s more traditional sluggers such as Yandy Diaz and Junior Caminero.
21. Kansas City Royals (7-9)
While Bobby Witt Jr. is searching for his power stroke in the early going (.322 SLG%), Maikel Garcia has surged out of the gate with some impressive pop, racking up seven extra-base hits to go with his outstanding defense at the hot corner. Few players are as well-rounded as Garcia, who excels in nearly every aspect of the sport and could reach an even higher level of impact if he can turn more of his doubles into homers. Maybe the moved-in fences at Kauffman Stadium will help.
22. Athletics (8-8)
The other Max Muncy looked overwhelmed as a rookie last season, posting a .259 OBP across 220 plate appearances. But the A’s remained confident that their 2021 first-round pick could be Plan A at third base, and so far in 2026, he has rewarded them with a team-leading 19 hits and 12 runs scored, with a 68.4% hard-hit rate that ranks third among qualified hitters behind only Fernando Tatis Jr. and Ben Rice. Shaky defense and poor plate discipline (22 strikeouts to just two walks) remain red flags, but this is a promising start for Muncy nonetheless.
23. Los Angeles Angels (8-9)
In prior seasons, José Soriano had demonstrated an elite ability to coax ground balls, but his poor control and inability to find enough whiffs with his sinker-heavy repertoire limited his overall effectiveness. This year, an uptick in four-seam fastball usage looks to have unlocked a more unpredictable and overwhelming arsenal, and Soriano has been one of MLB’s best starters in the early going. He set the tone by throwing the first six innings of the Angels’ 3-0 win over the Astros on Opening Day — Houston’s high-powered offense has not been held scoreless in any game since — and flourished across his next three outings against the Cubs, Braves and Reds. For years, the Angels have been starved for impact starting pitching: The last rotation member not named Shohei Ohtani to clear 4.0 bWAR was Garrett Richards in 2014. Soriano — with 1.8 bWAR through four starts — could be the ace this team has been looking for.
24. Miami Marlins (9-8)
Miami might have the most underrated middle infield in baseball. Neither shortstop Otto Lopez nor second baseman Xavier Edwards is going to be invited to any home run derbies anytime soon, but both are well-rounded in so many other facets of the game. They make a boatload of contact, play reliable defense at key positions and impact the game on the basepaths. The Marlins can find slug elsewhere on the diamond; having these two up the middle is a boon.
25. St. Louis Cardinals (8-8)
If the season ended today, if not Pages, the NL MVP would be … Jordan Walker?! After flashing star potential as a 21-year-old rookie in 2023, Walker’s career seemed to be going sideways, as he ranked as quite literally the least valuable position player in MLB last season (min. 350 PAs) at a ghastly minus-1.2 fWAR. But the outlier physical tools, headlined by elite bat speed, have remained intact, and the patience is starting to pay off for both Walker and St. Louis, as the right fielder is pummeling the ball to an outrageous degree to start 2026. He leads MLB with eight home runs, already surpassing his 2025 total of six. He’s one of the best stories of the season so far.
26. Houston Astros (6-11)
The Astros are a complete mess on the mound, and that’s the driving factor behind their poor record and troubling spot in these rankings. But Houston’s offense has been outstanding, and the headliner has been no surprise: Yordan Alvarez is simply ridiculous. Durability questions and defensive limitations will always remove him from Best Player In Baseball conversations, but focus solely on the bat, and it’s difficult to name many superior hitters on the planet. And right now, there’s no one better: Alvarez leads MLB in fWAR, and his underlying metrics are unrivaled. Most promising of all is that he has been in the starting lineup for every game, with Houston’s plan to put him in the outfield only on occasion (four out of 16 starts) working so far.
27. Washington Nationals (7-9)
The Nationals are a lower-stakes version of the Astros, an offensive juggernaut unfortunately outweighed by an undermanned pitching staff. With James Wood and CJ Abrams, the Nats are one of just three teams with multiple hitters who have already hit five home runs, along with the Dodgers (Pages, Ohtani) and Pirates (Oneil Cruz, Lowe). The two position-player gems acquired in the Juan Soto trade, Wood and Abrams are ideal pillars to build around, though Abrams — under team control through 2028, compared to Wood through 2030 — could reemerge as an ultra-valuable trade candidate, depending on how Washington’s new front office regime views its rebuild timeline.
28. San Francisco Giants (6-10)
There isn’t a ton to feel warm and fuzzy about when it comes to San Francisco’s offense, but Willy Adames is quietly off to a rock-solid start at the plate, a refreshing change of pace from the ice-cold opening to his Giants tenure a year ago, when his OPS sat at .592 at the end of April. This time around, Adames leads the National League with nine doubles and is running a career-low 21.9% chase rate and a career-high 83.2% contact rate.
29. Colorado Rockies (6-10)
The longest-tenured Rockie, Antonio Senzatela, who debuted one day before Kyle Freeland in April 2017,has reinvented himself as a high-octane reliever after years as a middling starter. Riding a fastball that now averages 97 mph (as opposed to the 94 mph heat he delivered in the rotation) and a newly introduced cutter, the new-look Senzatela has allowed just two hits across nine scoreless innings of relief, with 12 strikeouts. He’s one of several intriguing members of a suddenly stout Colorado bullpen.
30. Chicago White Sox (6-10)
Grant Taylor boasts the enviable combination of elite extension (how far down the mound a pitcher gets before releasing the ball) and elite velocity, meaning his heater is particularly daunting for hitters, and his breaking balls play up in turn. He isn’t the closer — in fact, he has served as the “opener” in four of his seven appearances — but Tayloralready has a strong case as Chicago’s best bullpen arm, no matter how much the White Sox are paying Seranthony Dominguez to pitch the ninth.
The Eastern Conference’s third-seeded New York Knicks will take on the sixth-seeded Atlanta Hawks in the first round of the 2026 NBA playoffs. The two franchises last faced off in the postseason in 2021, with the Hawks slicing up New York’s defense en route to a 4-1 opening-round win, punctuated with a perfectly villainous Trae Young bow at center court in Madison Square Garden.
Only one person who played in that series will play in this one, though: Hawks big man Onyeka Okongwu, who logged a grand total of 31 minutes. So it’s probably not THAT predictive. (Knicks fans hope it isn’t, at least.)
What we know about the Knicks
The Knicks return the core of last year’s Eastern Conference finals squad, led by All-Star bookends Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns, 3-and-D+ wings OG Anunoby and Mikal Bridges, and dirty-work difference-makers Josh Hart, Mitchell Robinson and Deuce McBride. They have been something like the fifth-best team in the NBA this season; whether you believe that’s cause for celebration or an existential crisis likely depends on how many phone numbers with 718, 212 and 917 area codes are saved in your contacts.
Mike Brown was brought in to squeeze more toothpaste out of the tube than Tom Thibodeau did — and, broadly speaking, so far, so good. The Knicks’ 53 wins are the franchise’s most since 2013, and heading into a season finale where they rested everybody besides Bridges (who played 23 seconds), they had a better offensive rating, defensive rating and net rating than the previous season, while generating 3-pointers and free throws at a higher rate, getting out in transition more and grabbing a higher share of available rebounds. Brown managed that while reducing the minutes workload for every starter save Brunson; providing increased opportunities for the likes of McBride, Landry Shamet and youngsters Tyler Kolek and Mohamed Diawara; and navigating a (voice hushes to a whisper) load-management plan (back to full volume) for Robinson that has kept the offensive-rebounding goliath healthier than he’s been in years.
New York is balanced and experienced, with stars and shooting, physicality and poise, and arguably the best fourth-quarter and crunch-time résumé in the league. This is a team that doesn’t back down from a fight … which is good, because it’s about to get one.
After dealing Young, the Hawks went 28-15, a 53-win pace, with the NBA’s No. 12 offense and No. 6 defense. Their shuffled-up starting lineup — Jalen Johnson, Nickeil Alexander-Walker, Dyson Daniels, Onyeka Okongwu and new arrival CJ McCollum, the primary piece returning in the Young trade — went 14-4 and blitzed opponents by more than 20 points per 100 possessions, the second-highest mark among big-minute lineups, behind only the Charlotte Hornets’ starting five. (On the other hand, New York’s high-priced, much-ballyhooed starting five has — for the second straight season — posted an underwhelming net rating for the full season and has actually been outscored since the trade deadline.)
Today’s Hawks place more scoring and playmaking responsibility in the hands of Johnson, who may well earn his first All-NBA selection after averaging a career-best 22.5 points, 10.3 rebounds and 7.9 assists per game, and Alexander-Walker, a Most Improved Player candidate who averaged 22 points per game on scorching 50/44/95 shooting splits after the trade deadline. It’s a more multifaceted attack, predicated on moving the ball and their bodies — the Hawks led the league in assists and points created via assist, and finished fourth in total distance traveled on offense per game and third in average speed traveled on offense per game — that leverages the fact that virtually every member of their rotation can serve as either the ball-handler or screener in the pick-and-roll to tax opposing defenses and drag vulnerable defenders into the action, no matter where they might be hiding.
You don’t have to apologize for winning the games you’re supposed to win. Beating a healthy high-end opponent four times in seven games, though, represents a steeper challenge.
Head-to-head
New York won the season series, 2-1. The Knicks, yet to plunge into their post-NBA Cup swoon, came away with a 128-125 win on Dec. 27, spurred by Brunson and Towns combining for 70 points:
The Hawks returned serve the following week, notching a 111-99 win on Jan. 2 behind a balanced effort, with six players scoring in double-figures and Johnson turning in 18 points, 10 rebounds and 11 assists — one of his 13 triple-doubles on the season, more than anybody besides Nikola Jokić:
As ever, though, your mileage may vary on how much to take from those first-half contests. For starters, both came before the Young trade. Hart and Shamet missed both games for the Knicks, and both Towns and Robinson missed the loss. For Atlanta, Young and Kristaps Porziņģis — both since dealt — each appeared in one of those games, and Zaccharie Risacher and Asa Newell both played rotation minutes in both; neither’s likely to play significant minutes in Round 1.
The one time the teams have played since Atlanta’s midstream reformation, and with both teams at roughly full strength, came last week, with the Knicks eking out a 108-105 win, thanks largely to a monster close from Brunson, who scored 17 of his 30 points in the fourth quarter …
The book on how best to deal with Towns — and to defang the Brunson-Towns two-man game, which has shown promise at times since Leon Rose paired them, but hasn’t been nearly as ubiquitous as Knicks fans hoped — has been to juggle the defensive matchups, stationing a smaller wing defender on Towns and your center “on” (but, really, a considerable distance off) Hart.
Do that, and you put yourself in position to prevent Towns from getting a steady diet of pick-and-pop looks against a big man playing drop coverage, and to switch the Brunson-KAT pick-and-roll without granting Brunson a mismatch against a lumbering center. You also might induce the Knicks to funnel more shots to Hart, a 35% career 3-point shooter whom you’d much rather see firing than New York’s two All-NBA offensive aces. (Expect the Knicks to pull a similar “ghost coverage” gambit with Daniels, who shot just 18.8% from 3-point range on 1.5 attempts per game this season — though he did make at least one 3 in seven of his final 10 appearances.)
Atlanta, though, has largely eschewed such cross-matching, preferring instead to keep starting center Okongwu on Towns while putting its weakest starting-lineup defender elsewhere — Young on Bridges back in December, McCollum on Hart last week — and otherwise playing things straight. Towns has mostly torched that coverage, scoring 57 points in 62 minutes on 63% shooting against Atlanta and routinely either getting clean looks beyond the arc or free releases on rolls to the basket with little-to-no secondary rim protection behind Okongwu:
If New York is able to punish straight-up coverage on Towns in a way that proves untenable for Atlanta — whether by KAT finishing himself or by Brunson getting going off the ball in a two-man game that’s looked better and better of late …
Among the topics we covered on today’s show was the two-man game of Brunson and KAT, which has had a significant uptick in efficiency over the last couple of months https://t.co/P0mxq3Errjpic.twitter.com/XhlOSthKzv
… how will Hawks coach Quin Snyder respond? Does he want to chance entrusting Johnson with that defensive responsibility while also needing him to serve as Atlanta’s top creator and finisher? He surely wants to keep Daniels on Brunson at every opportunity; if Towns is on fire, though, does he gamble on sliding his best defender into the matchup, cycling Alexander-Walker over to Brunson, and daring the Knicks to make the likes of Anunoby, Bridges and Hart beat them?
Or does he just stay the course, trusting that even if Towns goes off, the Hawks will be able to make it up on the other end — where they’ve scored a scorching 123.3 points-per-100 against New York in KAT’s minutes this season?
Key question
Can the Hawks turn this into a track meet?
The Hawks finished the regular season fifth in possessions per 48 minutes; the Knicks were 25th. The Hawks were second in the NBA in average time to shot, according to Inpredictable; the Knicks were 24th. The Hawks had the second-quickest average offensive possession, according to PBP Stats; the Knicks had the fourth slowest. The Hawks were fourth in the league in transition frequency, with nearly 17% of their offensive plays coming on the fast break, according to Cleaning the Glass; the Knicks were 16th, at just over 15%.
It all tracks, from a “styles make fights” perspective. With Brunson at the controls of the offense, and Anunoby, Bridges and Hart to turn perimeter assignments into a wrestling match, New York prefers a half-court game. With all the length and athleticism that Atlanta has on the wing — Johnson, NAW, Daniels, newcomer Jonathan Kuminga off the bench — playing uptempo before an opponent can get its defense set favors the Hawks. Whichever team sets the speed limit has the best chance of setting the terms of engagement for what ought to be a tough, hard-fought series.
(One X-factor to watch there: The possession-controlling play of Robinson, who rebounded an absurd 23.9% of New York’s missed shots during his floor time this season, and whose length and quick hands make him a shot-blocking and steal-grabbing menace. Across two matchups with the Hawks this season, Robinson grabbed eight offensive rebounds, four blocks and four steals in 38 total minutes, which New York won by 14 points; his physicality could overwhelm an Atlanta front line that really lacks size, especially if reserve Jock Landale isn’t ready to go after suffering a right high ankle sprain against the Magic two weeks ago.)
The Hawks are tough, talented, versatile and athletic, with enough experience (McCollum, Alexander-Walker, Gabe Vincent, et al.) that it’s unlikely they’ll wilt in the postseason hothouse, despite it being this core’s first trip as a unit. But these Knicks have won at least one road game in the opening round in each of the last three postseasons — and, in fact, eliminated the Cavaliers, 76ers and Pistons all away from MSG. I expect the trend to continue, with Brunson and Towns having big series en route to New York’s fifth series win in the last four postseasons.
Series schedule (all times Eastern)
Game 1: Atlanta at New York on Saturday, April 18 (6 p.m., Prime Video)
The Milwaukee Brewers placed three-time All-Star and former MVP Christian Yelich on the injured list Tuesday with a second-degree adductor strain that’s expected to sideline him for at least a month.
The Brewers replaced Yelich in the lineup for his scheduled third at-bat on Sunday. The severity of his injury wasn’t initially clear, but manager Pat Murphy wasn’t optimistic in his postgame news conference.
“We’re most likely to get some bad news on Yelich,” Murphy told reporters.
It turns out that he was right to be concerned.
Brewers will look to break slump without Yelich
The injury is a blow to a reeling Brewers team that lost its fifth straight game on Sunday to drop to 8-7. The loss completed a three-game sweep at the hands of the Nationals.
Milwaukee had Monday off and starts a three-game series against the reigning AL champion Toronto Blue Jays on Tuesday in third place in the NL Central, 1.5 games behind the first-place Pittsburgh Pirates (10-6). The Blue Jays are off to their own poor start at 6-9.
Yelich, 34, is playing his 14th MLB season and his ninth with the Brewers. The 2018 NL MVP, Yelich is a three-time All-Star, three-time Silver Slugger winner and one-time Gold Glove winner.
Yelich made his most recent All-Star team in 2024. He didn’t make the All-Star team in 2025, but finished the season with 29 home runs, his highest tally since he hit 44 in 2019.
Yelich was off to a strong start prior to his injury. Through 15 games, Yelich is slashing .314/.375/.451 with 1 home run, 10 RBI and 3 stolen bases. The Brewers will have to look to break out of their slump without him.