Where to watch Los Angeles Lakers vs. Houston Rockets Game 4 NBA playoffs: Live stream, start time, TV channel, odds for Sunday, April 26

The Los Angeles Lakers will try to sweep the Houston Rockets in their first-round playoff series. The Lakers will advance to the second round with one more victory. Kevin Durant will be sidelined in Game 4 for the Rockets — the third game he has missed in the series.

  • Spread: Houston Rockets +4.5

  • Moneyline: Houston Rockets -185 (61.9%) / Los Angeles Lakers +150 (38.1%)

  • Over/Under: 207.5

Game 1:Lakers 107, Rockets 98
Game 2:Lakers 101, Rockets 94
Game 3:Lakers 112, Rockets 108 (OT)
Game 4: Sun., April 26 at Houston (9:30 p.m., NBC)
Game 5: Wed., April 29 at Los Angeles (TBD)
Game 6: Fri., May 1 at Houston (TBD)
*Game 7: Sun., May 3 at Los Angeles (TBD)

*if necessary

‘It was a big shocker:’ Red Sox players begin to process Alex Cora’s firing as front office tries to turn the page

BALTIMORE — It was impossible to ignore the furry, neon-green, detached mascot head resting by itself, perched upright on the leather clubhouse sofa.

As Boston Red Sox players filtered in and out of the mostly empty, grim visiting locker room at Camden Yards on Sunday morning, the club’s “Wally” home run celebration totem acted as something of a comedic constant. Its fuzzy orange eyebrows raised, its pearl-white peepers three-quarters open, its enormous, empty mouth completely ajar in what can only be described as a look of surprise.

All the animate, sentient, decidedly less green beings around the Red Sox were similarly stunned.

That’s because Alex Cora, the club’s longtime manager, was fired Saturday. Chief baseball officer Craig Breslow, team president Sam Kennedy and owner John Henry — none of whom had previously been on the club’s road trip — flew in from Boston to deliver the news. Five other members of Cora’s staff, including hitting coach Peter Fatse and gameplanning coach and franchise icon Jason Varitek, were also relieved of their duties.

The timing was blindsiding. Cora, resoundingly considered one of the game’s top skippers, was under contract through the 2027 season. Even though Boston had gotten off to a disappointing 10-17 start, few believed his job to be in immediate jeopardy. 

Perhaps if the losing continued, the thinking went, Breslow would make a change come summertime. But an April firing? 

Nobody — not Cora or his now-former players — saw that coming.

“It was a big shocker,” veteran reliever Garrett Whitlock said.

On Sunday, shock was indeed the prevailing sentiment among the players. Connelly Early and Garrett Crochet both referenced it. Whitlock said “shock,” “shocked” or “shocker” four times. Second-year star outfielder Roman Anthony got up to seven. 

But Trevor Story, an 11-year veteran in his fifth season with Boston, was the player most outwardly peeved by the circumstances.

“They’re some of the best coaches in the world, and they care more than anybody, and just felt like they didn’t get a fair shot,” he said of the jettisoned group.

Asked whether he was comfortable with the explanation provided by Breslow during a team meeting that morning, the 33-year-old shortstop answered resoundingly in the negative.

“There just has to be more conversations,” Story said. “I wouldn’t say it was satisfactory.”

That not-so-veiled criticism contrasted sharply with the rosy, future-oriented outlook presented by Breslow and Kennedy during their news conference earlier in the morning. The pair — who, bizarrely, spoke in front of an Orioles-branded backdrop — were predictably skittish when it came to specifics, opting for optimistic platitudes and surface-level word salads.

“I don’t think it’s productive to get into the merits of an individual decision,” Breslow replied evasively when asked why he thought firing Cora was necessary. “We believe in the group of players that we have in the clubhouse down the hallway, and we believe that a new direction is warranted.”

Both framed the timing of the decision as a show of faith in the roster, arguing that providing new interim manager Chad Tracy with a longer runway gives the team a better chance to turn things around. Kennedy, meanwhile, put the responsibility for Cora’s firing squarely on Breslow’s shoulders.

“Craig leads our baseball operation, and he’s made several bold decisions and recommendations, and this is one of them, and we fully support it,” he said. “That’s why we took the action we took yesterday.”

Conspicuously absent from the proceedings was principal owner John Henry. The 76-year-old businessman, who has run the Red Sox since 2001, was the subject of “SELL THE TEAM” and “F*** JOHN HENRY” chants outside Fenway Park just last week, following the club’s series loss to the New York Yankees. While Henry was present at Camden Yards on Sunday — he was spotted on an elevator — he did not address the media or the team.

During Breslow’s and Tracy’s pregame remarks to the team, Henry was a silent observer in the clubhouse. But while he didn’t utter a meaningful word Sunday, his fingerprints are all over this thunderstorm of dysfunction. Cora’s ousting marks the second messy power struggle under Henry’s watch in the past three years, following the firing of top baseball exec Chaim Bloom in September 2023.

Henry’s unwillingness to speak publicly about his franchise makes the entire situation worse. He is a rich ghost, terrified of the spotlight, scared off by the consequences of his actions, happy to throw his underlings in front of the camera and into the fire. Accountability, it appears, is not in Henry’s vocabulary. Frankly, his absenceSundaywas entirely unbecoming of the leader of an organization that clearly considers itself to be a critical American institution.

“John, Bres[low] and I have been together for the past 48, 72 hours and have been working on this process together,” Kennedy offered when asked if he thought Henry should take on a more forward-facing role. “l’ll leave that at that.”

Technically speaking, the Red Sox won on Sunday, defeating the Orioles 5-3. Accordingly, the postgame scene was a lively one. Tracy was bombarded with beer, shaving cream and various other liquids in a ceremony to celebrate his first big-league victory. Rap music blared in the visiting clubhouse as relieved players munched on pizza and packed their belongings for a night flight to Toronto. Normalcy, for at least a moment, reigned supreme.

But beneath the surface, a sense of unease lingered. As is often the case when a manager is fired, a number of players felt responsible for Cora’s departure, believing that their poor play had precipitated his exit. That guilt, given the clubhouse’s fondness for their old skipper, will take time to expunge. 

“It’s a grieving process,” Crochet said after the game, “It’s going to take some time for us to get over it mentally, but when we’re out there between the lines, it’s just ball.”

Yankees’ Jazz Chisholm Jr. fines himself $1,000 for bad ABS challenges

Major League Baseball appears to be benefiting from the ABS challenge system implemented this season. Fans at the ballpark enjoy having incorrect ball and strike calls reviewed on the scoreboard and for all to see.

Yet some MLB players are struggling with determining which calls should be challenged. New York Yankees second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. is one of the worst. He’s 1-for-7 after challenging a called strike during Sunday’s 7-4 loss to the Houston Astros that was upheld after ABS determined that a cutter from pitcher Spencer Arrighetti was completely inside the strike zone.

At least that pitch was on the outside part of the strike zone. In Friday’s 12-4 win over the Astros, Chisholm challenged a fastball from Houston’s Bryan Abreu that was called for a third strike. ABS showed that the pitch was fully in the lower middle of the zone.

Chisholm acted surprised by the ABS ruling, but his misjudgment seemed particularly egregious on a pitch that was clearly in the strike zone. With the Yankees winning by eight runs, he could make light of the bad challenge after the game and laugh at himself.

The seven-year MLB veteran punctuated his poor strike zone perception by saying he would fine himself $1,000 to appease his teammates. The Yankees already had a self-imposed policy among the players that fined them $500 for poor challenges. Chisholm held himself accountable by doubling the fine on himself.

“If it’s a whole ball in the zone, you should know it’s a strike,” reserve catcher J.C. Escarra told the New York Daily News’ Gary Phillips. (Escarra is 3-for-4 on successful challenges as a catcher, by the way.)

While Chisholm appears to be the clubhouse leader in fines paid for bad ABS challenges, shortstop José Caballero might be competing with him for the top spot. Caballero has lost five of his 10 challenges, according to Baseball Savant. He’s shown enough poor judgment with ABS that Yankees manager Aaron Boone has had “firm” conversations with him about it.

Boone also acknowledged the possibility that players who were especially bad with ABS challenges might lose the privilege of disputing calls. But no one has gotten to that point yet.

Poor challenges could hurt a team during a game. MLB allows clubs to have only two challenges per game. They can be retained with a successful review. But if the challenge is wrong, a team loses that opportunity.

Among individual players, Teoscar Hernandez of the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Athletics’ Nick Kurtz have been the best at ABS challenges thus far, each going 4-for-4. Besides Chisholm, the Baltimore Orioles’ Gunnar Henderson and James Wood of the Washington Nationals have been the worst, losing five of six challenges.

The Washington Nationals (39%) and Cleveland Guardians (42%) have been the worst at challenges as a team — counting batters, pitchers and catchers — thus far. The best have been the New York Mets and Chicago Cubs, both at 63%, according to ESPN.

Cavaliers-Raptors Game 4 takeaways: Toronto evens series with boost from rookie; James Harden has turnover issues

You can make a reasonable case that Game 4 between the Cleveland Cavaliers and Toronto Raptors was on its way to being the biggest stinker of the 2026 playoffs so far, with both the teams combining for some record-setting shooting futility. But then it was saved by a late-game surge by both teams, resulting in several clutch buckets and an intensity level that could rival the actual Finals. 

Twelve lead changes and six clutch free throws by Scottie Barnes closed it out, with Toronto winning 93-89 and evening the series at 2-2. The series moves back to Cleveland for Game 5 on Tuesday.

Let’s break down a few takeaways from Game 4.

There was no question the 6-foot-7 rookie was NBA ready from Day 1. He has been active on both sides of the floor, has ridiculous defensive upside and has seemingly found his playoff feet much quicker than anticipated. 

Murray netted 15 points and 10 rebounds off the bench in Game 4 and was a constant threat on the interior, scoring against the entire Cavs frontline, despite being several inches shorter than both Jarrett Allen and Evan Mobley.

His performance in this series underlines his potential, which is vast and can yet be molded in many different ways. However you slice it, the Raptors got a good one. 

Entering Game 4, the former MVP was averaging 5.7 turnovers per game this series. Somehow he managed to increase that average. 

Harden, who had seven turnovers in Game 4, has historically had an issue hanging on to the ball. In the playoffs, that issue is all the more difficult to overcome, especially the further you manage to go.

What’s curious about his mishaps in this series is that a fair bunch of them were entirely preventable. It’s lazy entry passes, forced outlets and a general lack of focus. 

It ponders the question of whether Donovan Mitchell should take over more ball-handling duties until Harden has adjusted himself. 

With Immanuel Quickley unavailable, the Raptors have tried out both Jamal Shead and Ja’Kobe Walter at lead guard. While both have applied themselves in some manner, neither has succeeded in stringing together periods where things have clicked. 

Poor shooting efficiency, in particular, has plagued both. And while Shead is simply a better playmaker than Walter, he is short in stature and gives up size defensively. (Walter, a strong, physical defender, went 0-for-9 from the field in Game 4.)

It’s not a problem the Raptors can fix right now, so they’re going to have to make due. But if they proceed to the second round, they’re going to have to think up an alternative game plan. 

Where to watch Boston Celtics vs. Philadelphia 76ers Game 4 NBA playoffs: Live stream, start time, TV channel, odds for Sunday, April 26

The Boston Celtics and Philadelphia 76ers meet in Game 4 of their first-round playoff series. The Celtics took a 2-1 lead in the series after winning Game 3 108-100. Boston is 7.5-point favorites for Game 4. The over/under for the matchup is set at 213.5.

  • Spread: Philadelphia 76ers +7.5

  • Moneyline: Philadelphia 76ers +240 (28.2%) / Boston Celtics -300 (71.8%)

  • Over/Under: 213.5

Game 1:Celtics 123, 76ers 91
Game 2:76ers 111, Celtics 97
Game 3:Celtics 108, 76ers 100
Game 4: Sun., April 26 at Philadelphia (7 p.m., NBC)
Game 5: Tue., April 28 at Boston (TBD)
*Game 6: Thu., April 30 at Philadelphia (TBD)
*Game 7: Sat., May 2 at Boston (TBD)if necessary

Kevin Durant reportedly expected to miss Lakers-Rockets Game 4, Austin Reaves ruled out

Houston Rockets All-Star Kevin Durant is expected to miss Sunday’s Game 4 against the Los Angeles Lakers with a bone bruise in his sprained left ankle, ESPN’s Shams Charania reports.

The Los Angeles Lakers, meanwhile, ruled Austin Reaves out before tip-off. If confirmed, Durant will miss his third game of the series. He missed Game 1 with a knee injury, then missed Game 3 with his sprained ankle.

Per the report, the bone bruise is an injury that would typically sideline a player 2-to-3 weeks during the regular season, putting Durant’s availability in question moving forward if the Rockets manage to extend the series Sunday night. The Lakers have a 3-0 series lead and can close it out with a win in Game 4.

The Rockets have struggled with and without Durant on the floor during this series and are now faced with trying to become the first NBA team to ever rally from a 3-0 deficit to win a series or face elimination in the first round. Playing without Durant in Game 4, obviously, makes their task that much tougher.

Durant scored 20 points in the first half of Game 2. But the Lakers limited him to three points after halftime en route to a 101-94 win. The Rockets then blew a six-point lead in the final 30 seconds of Game 3 before going on to lose in overtime Friday night.

The Lakers have built their 3-0 lead despite playing without their top two scorers, Luka Dončić and Reaves. LeBron James has led the Lakers’ effort while Los Angeles’ role players have stepped up in Reaves’ and Dončić’s absence.

Reaves has reportedly been nearing a return and has been upgraded to questionable for the last two games. But he’ll remain out of the Lakers’ lineup through at least Game 4.

Victor Wembanyama returns from concussion, helps lead Spurs from 19 down past Trail Blazers for 3-1 lead

Victor Wembanyama was cleared from concussion protocol just before Sunday’s Game 4 between the San Antonio Spurs and Portland Trail Blazers.

He looked little worse for wear from his injury and helped lead the Spurs to a 114-93 win. The victory didn’t initially come easy for San Antonio, which trailed 58-39 in the first half and went into the break behind 58-41.

But the Spurs dominated the second half with a 73-35 advantage as De’Aaron Fox took over on offense and Portland’s offense broke down against a smothering San Antonio defense.

The Spurs scored 13 straight points to start the third quarter to spark the comeback. They took a 76-74 lead early in the fourth quarter on a Wembanyama alley-oop from Stephon Castle and never relinquished it.

With the win, the Spurs take a 3-1 lead in the series. They’ll return home to San Antonio for Game 5 on Tuesday with a chance to close out the series and advance to the second round of the NBA playoffs.

Tensions boiled over late, and Castle and Portland’s Deni Avdija traded shoves after a late Spurs bucket.

Each player was assessed a technical foul, and the game moved forward without further incident.

Wembanyama finished with 27 points, 11 rebounds, 7 blocks, 4 steals and 3 assists. His defensive presence helped shut down Portland’s offense after halftime.

Fox, meanwhile, finished with a game-high 28 points alongside 7 assists, 6 rebounds, 2 blocks and 1 steal. He shot 11 of 17 from the field and 4 of 8 from 3.

Wembanyama sustained a concussion after hitting his chin hard on the floor during San Antonio’s Game 2 loss on Tuesday. He was placed in concussion protocol during the game and was later diagnosed with a concussion.

Wembanyama traveled with the Spurs to Portland, but watched in street clothes as San Antonio secured a 120-108 win in Game 3 on Friday to take a 2-1 series lead. His status for Game 4 wasn’t clear until the Spurs announced it in the hour before tipoff.

Clearing the NBA’s concussion protocol requires a player to have completed a number of steps, including demonstrating that he is symptom-free during a return-to-participation workout process, then being cleared by a doctor to play.

A two-time All-Star and the the Defensive Player of the Year, Wembanyama is key to San Antonio’s hopes of advancing through the playoffs. In 64 regular-season games, Wembanyama averaged 25 points, 11.5 rebounds, 3.1 assists and an NBA-best 3.1 blocks per game while shooting 51.2% from the field and 34.9% from 3.

Red Sox exec Craig Breslow says he wants ‘stabilizing’ voice after Alex Cora firing, but players aren’t happy

Boston Red Sox chief baseball officer Craig Breslow and team CEO Sam Kennedy met with reporters on Sunday morning in Baltimore following Saturday’s firing of manager Alex Cora and five coaches.

Kennedy said the decision was made to dismiss Cora and the coaches on Saturday morning, after which he and Breslow traveled to Baltimore to inform them of the change.

Breslow took responsibility for the Red Sox’s disappointing performance thus far with a 10-17 record and last-place standing in the American League East, saying it falls upon him and acknowledged that he gave Cora “a challenging roster to manage,” particularly with the everyday lineup.

However, Breslow stated his belief in the players on the roster and hinted that Cora may have had difficulty communicating with a young team, praising new interim manager Chad Tracy for being a “consistent, stabilizing voice” for the players.

As manager of the team’s Triple-A affiliate in Worcester since 2022, Tracy worked with several of the young players now on Boston’s major-league roster, including Roman Anthony, Jarren Duran, Wilyer Abreu, Marcelo Mayer and Brayan Bello.

“He’s familiar with meaningful relationships with the majority of our roster, given the young players that we do have,” Breslow said. “He’s demonstrated an ability to get the most out of that group.”

Kennedy called the Red Sox “a front office-led baseball operation,” indicating that Breslow drove the decision to fire Cora and the coaches. Breslow viewed making the change now as a “fresh start,” with 135 games remaining, giving the team “almost a full season’s worth of run.”

Breslow said he will stay with the Red Sox to meet with players during the remainder of their road trip, which concludes Wednesday in Toronto. However, when he and Tracy met with the team on Sunday morning, there were no opportunities for players to ask questions and that didn’t sit well with experienced veterans.

“They made it very clear that we get paid to play baseball and we need to just focus on playing baseball,” pitcher Garrett Whitlock said, via the Boston Herald’s Tim Healey.

Shortstop Trevor Story was even more outspoken on the lack of explanation from team executives, saying “it’s up in the air what the true direction of the franchise is.”

“I wouldn’t say it was satisfactory,” he added, via Yahoo Sports’ Jake Mintz.

“They’re some of the best coaches in the world and they care more than anybody, and just felt like they didn’t get a fair shot,” Story said.

The shortstop was not in Tracy’s first lineup as Red Sox manager for Sunday’s game, but he’s currently dealing with an abductor injury. Story clarified that no grudges would be held against the new coaching staff.

The dissatisfaction with Red Sox management and the managerial shake-up apparently extends outside the current clubhouse as well.

“It’s like s***ting your pants and changing your shirt,” the former player told WEEI’s Rob Bradford regarding the changes made.

Breslow, 45, has been the Red Sox’s chief baseball officer since October 2023, when he replaced Chaim Bloom (now the St. Louis Cardinals’ president of baseball operations). Prior to joining the Boston front office, he spent five years with the Chicago Cubs, eventually becoming assistant general manager.