2026 NBA playoff picture: April 10 clinching scenarios, tiebreakers for postseason contenders

The NBA playoff picture will come into clearer view each day between now and the end of the regular season on April 12. In the meantime, we will provide detailed daily updates on the landscape, including magic numbers, remaining schedules and the stakes for every day’s slate of games. For those teams not in the postseason hunt, we also break down the “race” for pole position in the upcoming NBA Draft lottery.

Jump to:Eastern ConferenceWestern Conference


(7) Orlando Magic vs. (8) Philadelphia 76ers
(9) Charlotte Hornets vs. (10) Miami Heat

(7) Phoenix Suns vs. (8) LA Clippers
(9) Portland Trail Blazers vs. (10) Golden State Warriors


(1) Detroit Pistons vs. (8) play-in winner
(2) Boston Celtics vs. (7) play-In winner
(3) New York Knicks vs. (6) Atlanta Hawks
(4) Cleveland Cavaliers vs. (5) Toronto Raptors

(1) Oklahoma City Thunder vs. (8) play-In winner
(2) San Antonio Spurs vs. (7) play-In winner
(3) Denver Nuggets vs. (6) Minnesota Timberwolves
(4) Los Angeles Lakers vs. (5) Houston Rockets


In the Eastern Conference, the Detroit Pistons have locked up the No. 1 seed, and the Boston Celtics, New York Knicks and Cleveland Cavaliers appear bound for the next three seeds, in some order, and home-court advantage in the opening round.

Who, exactly, those four teams will play in the opening round is still up for grabs, as just two losses separate the fifth seed from the ninth seed. The Atlanta Hawks, Toronto Raptors, Philadelphia 76ers, Charlotte Hornets, Orlando Magic and Miami Heat are all jockeying for position in the final days of the season.



Record: 58-22 | Net rating: 8.3 (3rd)

  • Clinched No. 1 seed and Central Division title

  • Remaining schedule: @CHA, @IND

What’s at stake: First-round matchup against No. 8 seed



Record: 54-26 | Net rating: 8.2 (4th)

  • Clinched playoff berth; clinches the Atlantic Division title and the No, 2 seed with a win over the Pelicans or a Knicks loss to the Raptors

  • Loses head-to-head tiebreaker with Knicks

  • Magic number for No. 2 seed: 1

  • Remaining schedule: NOP, ORL

  • Highest possible finish: No. 2 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 3 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 2 seed and home-court advantage in the Eastern Conference semifinals.

Record: 52-28 | Net rating: 6.5 (5th)

  • Clinched playoff berth; clinches no worse than the No. 3 seed with a win over the Raptors or a Cavaliers loss to the Hawks

  • Holds head-to-head tiebreakers over Celtics and Cavaliers

  • Magic number for No. 3 seed: 1

  • Remaining schedule: TOR, CHA

  • Highest possible finish: No. 2 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 4 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 2 seed and home-court advantage in the Eastern Conference semifinals.

Record: 51-29 | Net rating: 4.1 (9th)

  • Clinched playoff berth; locked into the No. 4 seed with a loss to the Hawks or a Knicks win over the Raptors

  • Loses head-to-head tiebreaker with Knicks

  • Remaining schedule: @ATL, WAS

  • Highest possible finish: No. 3 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 4 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 3 seed and home-court advantage in the first round.



Record: 45-35 | Net rating: 2.2 (12th)

  • Clinches playoff berth with win over the Knicks or with losses by the Magic, 76ers and Hornets

  • Holds head-to-head tiebreaker over Hawks, Hornets, Magic and Heat; loses head-to-head tiebreaker with 76ers

  • Magic number for No. 5 seed: 2

  • Remaining schedule: @NYK, BKN

  • Highest possible finish: No. 5 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 8 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 5 or 6 seed and a guaranteed playoff berth.

Record: 45-35 | Net rating: 2.5 (11th)

  • Clinches playoff berth and the Southeast Division title with win over Cavaliers or with losses by Magic and Hornets

  • Holds tiebreakers over 76ers and Magic; loses head-to-head tiebreakers to Raptors and Hornets

  • Magic number for No. 6 seed: 1

  • Remaining schedule: CLE, @MIA

  • Highest possible finish: No. 5 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 9 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 5 or 6 seed and a guaranteed playoff berth.

Record: 44-36 | Net rating: 0.0 (17th)

  • Locked into play-in tournament with loss to Bulls or with wins by Raptors and Hawks

  • Holds head-to-head tiebreaker over Heat; loses head-to-head tiebreaker with Hawks, Raptors, 76ers and Hornets

  • Magic number for No. 8 seed: 2

  • Remaining schedule: @CHI, @BOS

  • Highest possible finish: No. 5 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 9 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 5 or 6 seed and a guaranteed playoff berth.

Record: 43-37 | Net rating: -0.2 (18th)

  • Locked into the play-in tournament with a loss to Pacers or Raptors win over Knicks

  • Holds head-to-head tiebreaker over Raptors, Hornets and Magic; loses head-to-head tiebreaker with Hawks and Heat

  • Magic number for No. 7 seed: 3

  • Remaining schedule: @IND, MIL

  • Highest possible finish: No. 5 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 10 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 5 or 6 seed and a guaranteed playoff berth.

Record: 43-37 | Net rating: 5.3 (6th)

  • Locked into play-in tournament with loss to Pistons or with wins by Raptors and Hawks

  • Holds head-to-head tiebreaker over Hawks and Magic; loses head-to-head tiebreaker to Raptors, 76ers and Heat

  • Magic number for No. 9 seed: 2

  • Remaining schedule: DET, @NYK

  • Highest possible finish: No. 5 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 10 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 5 or 6 seed and a guaranteed playoff berth.



Record: 41-39 | Net rating: 2.1 (13th)

  • Locked into play-in tournament; locked into No. 10 seed with loss to Wizards or wins by Hornets and 76ers

  • Holds head-to-head tiebreaker over Hornets and 76ers; loses head-to-head tiebreaker to Magic and Raptors

  • Magic number for No. 9 seed: Does not control own destiny

  • Remaining schedule: @WAS, ATL

  • Highest possible finish: No. 8 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 10 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 8 seed.


Out West, the Oklahoma City Thunder have secured the league’s No. 1 overall seed while the San Antonio Spurs are locked into the West’s No. 2 seed.

The Los Angeles Lakers have slipped behind the Denver Nuggets for the West’s No. 3 seed and are in danger of falling behind the Houston Rockets to No. 5.

The Phoenix Suns, Portland Trail Blazers, Los Angeles Clippers and Golden State Warriors are locked into the West’s play-in tournament with the Suns guaranteed the No. 7 seed and the Warriors No. 10.



Record: 64-16 | Net rating: 11.6 (1st)

  • Clinched No. 1 overall seed, Northwest Division title and home-court advantage throughout playoffs

  • Remaining schedule: @DEN, PHX

What’s at stake: Will face No. 8 seed (Suns, Clippers, Trail Blazers or Warriors) after play-in tournament.

Record: 61-19 | Net rating: 8.4 (2nd)

  • Clinched No. 2 seed and Southwest Division title

  • Remaining schedule: DAL, DEN

What’s at stake: Will face No. 7 seed (Suns, Clippers or Trail Blazers) after play-in tournament.

Record: 47-33 | Net rating: 3.1 (10th)

  • Locked into No. 6 seed

  • Remaining schedule: @HOU, NOP

What’s at stake: Will face No. 3 seed (Nuggets, Lakers or Rockets) in first round of playoffs.



Record: 52-28 | Net rating: 4.8 (8th)

  • Clinched playoff berth; clinches home-court advantage with win over Thunder or Rockets loss to Timberwolves; clinches No. 3 seed with win over Thunder and Lakers and Rockets losses

  • Holds head-to-head tiebreaker over Rockets; loses head-to-head tiebreaker with Lakers

  • Magic number for No. 3 seed: 2

  • Magic number for No. 4 seed: 1

  • Remaining schedule: OKC, @SAS

  • Highest possible finish: No. 3 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 5 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 3 seed and home-court advantage in the first round.

Record: 51-29 | Net rating: 1.2 (16th)

  • Clinched playoff berth and Pacific Division title; clinches home-court advantage with win over Suns and Rockets loss to Timberwolves

  • Holds tiebreaker over Nuggets and Rockets

  • Magic number for No. 4 seed: 2

  • Remaining schedule: PHX, UTA

  • Highest possible finish: No. 3 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 5 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 3 seed and home-court advantage in the first round.

Record: 51-29 | Net rating: 5.0 (7th)

  • Clinched playoff berth; locked into No. 5 seed with loss to Timberwolves and Lakers win over Suns

  • Loses tiebreaker to Nuggets and Rockets

  • Magic number for No. 3 seed: Does not control own destiny.

  • Magic number for No. 4 seed: Does not control own destiny.

  • Remaining schedule: MIN, MEM

  • Highest possible finish: No. 3 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 5 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 3 seed and home-court advantage in the first round.



Record: 44-36 | Net rating: 1.5 (14th)

  • Remaining schedule: @LAL, @OKC

  • Highest possible finish: No. 7 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 8 seed

What’s at stake: Will face No. 8 seed (Clippers or Blazers) in first game of play-in tournament at 10 p.m. ET, Tuesday, April 14.

Record: 37-43 | Net rating: -0.3 (19th)

  • Remaining schedule: @SAC, @LAC

What’s at stake: Will face No. 9 seed (Clippers or Blazers) in second game of play-in tournament at 10 p.m. ET, Wednesday, April 15.



Record: 41-39 | Net rating: 1.5 (15th)

  • Locked into No. 8 seed with win over Trail Blazers; loses head-to-head tiebreaker with loss to Trail Blazers

  • Magic number for No. 8 seed: 2

  • Remaining schedule: @POR, GSW

  • Highest possible finish: No. 8 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 9 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 8 seed and two chances to secure a playoff berth.

Record: 40-40 | Net rating: -0.6 (20th)

  • Locked into No. 9 seed with loss to Clippers; wins head-to-head tiebreaker with win over Clippers

  • Magic number for No. 8 seed: Does not control own destiny

  • Remaining schedule: LAC, SAC

  • Highest possible finish: No. 8 seed

  • Lowest possible finish: No. 9 seed

What’s at stake: The No. 8 seed and two chances to secure a playoff berth.


Tigers’ Parker Meadows lands on 10-day IL with arm fracture, concussion after collision sent OF to hospital

A day after the frightening outfield collision that hospitalized Parker Meadows, the Detroit Tigers placed the center fielder on the 10-day injured list. That said, Meadows will need significantly more recovery time while working his way back from a left arm fracture and a concussion.

Meadows also received five stitches in his left cheek, according to MLB.com. As for the fracture, Meadows is dealing with a broken radius bone in his left arm, near his wrist.

“We don’t know if anything more is going to be required — surgery or anything like that,” Tigers manager A.J. Hinch said Friday ahead of a three-game series against the Miami Marlins, per the Detroit Free Press. “He needs multiple appointments to figure out what’s next for him, but he has a long road to recovery.”

The Tigers recalled Wenceel Pérez from Triple-A Toledo to take Meadows’ spot. Early last season, when Meadows was out due to a nerve issue in his right arm, Pérez played a good bit of center field in his place. Now he has a chance to reprise that role and help Matt Vierling and even shortstop Javier Báez fill Meadows’ void.

Meadows was carted off the field Thursday after he collided with left fielder Riley Greene while trying to track down a Josh Bell fly ball in the eighth inning of a 3-1 loss to the Minnesota Twins.

Meadows was sent to a hospital, where he was kept for overnight observation, according to The Associated Press.

While Greene made the catch, it came at a cost. Bell’s flyout shot toward left-center field. Meadows came charging in for the putout, but Greene was already in position to make the catch in the alley.

Meadows bumped heads with Greene. Both of their caps went flying as they hit the ground. Greene braced the fall with his right knee and got right back up, whereas Meadows dropped to the ground. He lay on his back with his arms up and blood on his face.

Eventually, Meadows returned to his feet, albeit with assistance from the Tigers’ athletic training staff and the medical personnel at Target Field, per The Athletic. Then he got on a cart that took him off the diamond.

After the game, according to The Athletic, Meadows was taken on a stretcher to a local hospital. He was reportedly fully conscious and had his left arm in a sling.

“It’s a terrible feeling. I still feel terrible,” Greene said postgame, per the AP. “He hit my head. I don’t know where I hit him, to be honest, but I just really hope he’s OK.”

Greene and Meadows overlapped in the Tigers’ farm system while on their journeys to the bigs and remain close. Meadows, 26, is in his fourth MLB season after making his major-league debut in 2023. He started 11 of Detroit’s first 13 games this season in center field. He has hit a pair of extra-base hits and tallied two RBI while batting .250.

“That was an ugly, scary one, and there’s a lot of concern for him,” Hinch said of the collision on Thursday, per MLB.com. “When we got out there, it looked like he had bit his lip or inside his mouth, so there was some blood, and he was pretty out of it. …

“Those are scary collisions. You don’t know what you’re going to get when you get there. Obviously, we’re going to get him checked out for everything, but this one worries me.”

Now 4-9 after a 2-0 start to the season, Detroit has lost nine of its past 11 games. The Tigers are stomaching a four-game sweep at the hands of a 7-6 Twins squad. And they’re dealing with an injury to their primary center fielder.

Fortunately, Meadows was reportedly traveling back from Minnesota on Friday after a night in the hospital.

Tigers back in the win column, blank Marlins in opener

Detroit — Behind a sterling start from Keider Montero and just enough offense, the Tigers got back in the win column on Friday in a return to Comerica Park, besting the Miami Marlins, 2-0. 

Montero, filling in for an injured Justin Verlander, controlled the game from the mound from the get go and finished with a scoreless six innings, striking out seven and walking one batter on two hits.

The win snaps a five-game losing streak for Detroit, which entered Friday after getting swept in four games by Minnesota. 

Montero’s biggest moment of peril came almost immediately, as he navigated his way around a one-out triple in the top of the first inning. The first out following that triple came via a called strike three on the bottom rail of the zone that stood after being challenged via ABS. 

Montero got one other looking strikeout on Friday, freezing Owen Caissie in the top of the fifth, setting him up and freezing him on a 3-2 fastball that was comfortably in the zone. 

The starter gave way to Brant Hurter for the seventh inning, and the lefty retired the Marlins in order, as did Kyle Finnegan in the top of the eighth inning. Kenley Jansen came on for the ninth inning and got the save.

On offense, facing a familiar arm in Chris Paddack — who pitched for Detroit during the second half of last season — the Tigers produced some offensive pressure in the second inning, stringing together a series of singles. 

First Dillon Dingler got aboard, then went from first to third by making a good read on a single by Kerry Carpenter, the following batter. That set the table for Spencer Torkelson with no outs and runners on the corners. 

He quickly got a pitch he could handle and roped a single into left field over the reach of shortstop Otto Lopez for a 1-0 lead. 

The Tigers kept the pressure on Paddack, with rookie Kevin McGonigle working from two strikes to a walk to load the bases and get the Marlins starter over 40 pitches. Detroit couldn’t really make Paddack pay, though, as Gleyber Torres lined out to right field on a sliding catch by Owen Caissie. 

Offense, generally, was hard to come by for both teams, with Montero dealing and Paddack settling in after his second-inning hiccup. 

Detroit only added a second run by virtue of Javy Báez putting a clean swing on a 2-2 sweeper that Paddack tried to leave low and away, hopefully getting a chase and miss. 

Instead, the pitch caught a little bit too much of the zone and Báez managed to reach down and get around it, smashing a home run into the Tiger bullpen to lead off the bottom of the fifth inning.

And going up 2-0 proved to be enough of a margin on a night where Montero shone for six innings and the bullpen had his back.

This article originally appeared on The Detroit News: Detroit Tigers blanked Miami Marlins to end 5-game skid

Max Plante, Detroit Red Wings prospect, wins Hobey Baker Award

LAS VEGAS – If Detroit Red Wings fans need another reason to be excited about 2024 second-round draft pick Max Plante, here’s another one right here.

Plante, the sophomore forward out of Minnesota Duluth, was named the 2026 Hobey Baker Memorial Award recipient as the top player in college hockey. Plante registered 52 points over 40 games for the Bulldogs and was named the 2026 NCHC Player of the Year.

Plante’s win gives Minnesota Duluth its seventh Hobey Baker Award winner, which leads all schools.

Plante beat out Michigan senior forward T.J. Hughes and Denver junior defenseman Eric Pohlkamp for the award, winning over players from two Frozen Four teams. Plante and the Bulldogs lost to Michigan 4-3 in the second round of the 2026 NCAA Hockey Tournament, knocking Minnesota Duluth out of title contention.

Hughes finished the regular season with 56 points in 39 games, second in Division 1 only to Quinnipiac’s Ethan Wyttenbach (59 in 40 games). Hughes was also the team captain for a Michigan team that entered the NCAA Tournament as the consensus No. 1 team in the nation, though the top-overall seed Wolverines fell to 2-seed Denver 4-3 in double-overtime in the Frozen Four national semifinal game on Thursday, April 9.

Pohlkamp led the Pioneers in points on the season (39) as Denver advanced to the national championship game against Wisconsin on Saturday, April 11, following its national semifinal win over Michigan. The San Jose Sharks drafted Pohlkamp in the fifth round of the 2023 NHL Draft at 132nd overall.

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You can reach Christian at cromo@freepress.com.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Max Plante, Detroit Red Wings prospect, wins Hobey Baker Award

Wings prospect Max Plante voted Hobey Baker winner as top NCAA player

Las Vegas — Red Wings draft pick Max Plante earned some heavy hardware Friday.

Plante received the Hobey Baker Award as college hockey’s top men’s player, announced in a ceremony at the Park MGM in Las Vegas. Plante, a 2024 second round draft pick of Detroit, scored 52 points in 40 games as a sophomore for Minnesota-Duluth.

Michigan center T.J. Hughes and Denver defenseman Eric Pohlkamp were the other two finalists for the award. Hughes is expected to sign an NHL contract in the coming days as a graduating senior and top undrafted prospect on the market. After knocking out Hughes and the Wolverines on Thursday, Pohlkamp and Denver will play Wisconsin for the national championship at T-Mobile Arena on Saturday.

Injury woes set Plante back in his freshman season, a 28-point campaign that flashed the abilities that made him a top prospect in his class as he won a gold medal with the United States World Junior Championship team. 

Healthy this season, 20-year-old Plante was the leading force behind a strong season for Minnesota-Duluth alongside his older brother, Zam, and close friend Ty Hanson. The Bulldogs lost to Michigan in the Albany regional final, though the appearance broke a three-year drought since Plante’s father, journeyman NHLer Derek, left to coach in the NHL.

Plante is the first Hobey Baker winner at Minnesota-Duluth since Scott Perunovich in 2020. Seven Bulldogs have won the award since it first went to Neal Broten in 1981, including Jack Connolly (2012), Junior Lessard (2004), Chris Marinucci (1994), Bill Watson (1985) and Tom Kurvers (1984).

Plante is expected to return to Duluth next season for his junior year. His NHL rights expire in 2028.

MSU’s Augustine named top collegiate goaltender

Add one more piece of hardware to the cabinet for Trey Augustine, who won the Mike Richter Award as college hockey’s top goaltender Friday at an awards ceremony at the Park MGM in Las Vegas. He couldn’t make it, however, because it was the same day he made his professional hockey debut with the AHL’s Grand Rapids Griffins.

Augustine, who signed his entry-level contract with the Detroit Red Wings on March 31, finished the season with a career-best .929 save percentage and 2.11 goals against average, his 24-9-1 junior season the best of his three-year stint with Michigan State. He backstopped the Spartans to a third straight Big Ten championship and No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament.

In the NCAA Tournament, Augustine made 75 saves over two games, including a 2-1 escape against UConn in the opening round. But he let in three goals in a five-minute span to lose the Worcester regional final to Wisconsin, ending his college career without ever making it to the Frozen Four.

Augustine finished his NCAA career with 99 games played, 10th most among all Michigan State goaltenders. His 66 career wins rank sixth all-time. His nine shutouts tie John Lethemon for sixth most by a Spartan. His 2.40 goals against average ranks fifth. Only Hobey Baker winner and 18-year NHLer Ryan Miller (.941) finished with a higher career save percentage than Augustine’s .922 mark. 

cearegood@detroitnews.com

@ConnorEaregood

This article originally appeared on The Detroit News: NCAA hockey handed out Hobey Baker award for top player

Record-breaking McIlroy plans to keep ‘foot on gas’

Defending champion Rory McIlroy says he plans to keep his “foot on the gas” after building a record six-shot halfway lead with a devastating second-round 65 at the Masters.

Sharing the overnight lead with Sam Burns, Northern Ireland’s McIlroy made a hat-trick of birdies from the second hole to open up a three-shot advantage before bogeys at the fifth and 10th gave the chasing pack renewed hope.

But the world number two surged clear of the field down Augusta National’s iconic closing stretch. Birdies on six of his last seven holes, including a sensational chip-in on the 17th, took him to 12 under par.

The seven under par round opened a huge lead over Americans Burns and Patrick Reed, with Ryder Cup team-mates Justin Rose, Tommy Fleetwood and Shane Lowry a shot further back.

“I’ve built up a nice cushion at this point. I guess my mindset is just trying to keep playing well and keeping my foot on the gas,” said the 36-year-old, who will head out alongside Burns in the final pairing at 19:50 BST on Saturday.

“There are so many different ways to skin a cat. I’ve shot 12 under par for the first two rounds here. I’ve played well, I’ve hit good shots, but it hasn’t all been amazing.

“I’ve relied on my short game when I’ve needed it, and I’ve certainly hit enough good wedges into those par fives to build the score that I have.”

No plans to merely ‘protect lead’

McIlroy, who is hoping to become just the fourth player after Jack Nicklaus, Nick Faldo and Tiger Woods to win back-to-back Masters titles has held a six-shot lead at this point in a major before.

He went on to win the 2011 US Open by eight shots – claiming the first of his five majors – and also spreadeagled the field with an eight-shot victory at the 2012 US PGA Championship.

And he plans to maintain an aggressive approach around Augusta National over the weekend as he bids to match Faldo, Phil Mickelson and Lee Trevino’s haul of six majors.

“Don’t protect it. Go out and play freely, keep swinging,” he said when asked what advice his 2011 self would have for him before Saturday.

McIlroy led that year’s Masters by four shots going into the final round, but carded an eight-over-par 80 to tumble down the leaderboard.

“A big part of the lesson from the 2011 Masters to the 2011 US Open was don’t get protective,” he added. “Go out there and keep playing, keep trying to make birdies, stay as trusting and as committed as possible.”

McIlroy also said he plans to watch tennis and spend time with his daughter Poppy to take his mind off the third round.

“That distraction is usually a good thing for me, especially with a late tee time and the lead,” he explained.

“There are two really good semi-finals at Monte Carlo in the tennis. So I’ll watch those.

“We’ve been watching the tennis early in the mornings. And then hopefully spend some time with Poppy. I think we’re about halfway through Zootopia 2.”

With no rain forecast over the weekend, Augusta’s famously undulating greens are expected to become increasingly fiery as the tournament nears its conclusion.

With that in mind, McIlroy – who missed six fairways and five greens on Friday – is under no illusion about the scale of the task as he alluded to his previous Masters struggles.

“There’s still a lot of work to do,” he stressed to BBC NI.

“I’ve put myself in the best position possible going into the weekend but I know more than probably anyone else what this golf course can do to you.

“I need to keep my wits about me and play the weekend like I played the past two days.”

Magical 90 minutes tightens McIlroy’s grip on the Masters

When Rory McIlroy chatted to the great Jack Nicklaus for advice about defending the best way to defend his Masters title, he was given a succinct piece of advice.

“He told me ‘no double bogeys’,” laughed McIlroy.

An obvious tip maybe, but it is easier said than done at Augusta National. Just ask the 36-year-old from Northern Ireland, who has opened up a record six-shot lead at the halfway stage thanks to a stunning finish to Friday’s second round.

On his way to golfing utopia last year, McIlroy carded four double bogeys over the week – a tally which nobody had ever recorded and still managed to don the Green Jacket.

So far, with McIlroy holding a commanding advantage in his pursuit of a rare back-to-back Masters win, there haven’t been any.

Instead of costly doubles threatening to derail his progress, there was a flurry of birdies late in a sensational second round which helped McIlroy accelerate away from the chasing pack.

He converted six in the final seven holes of his second round – including a glorious chip in from 30 yards on the 17th – to finish 12 under following a spell which ranks among the finest of his career.

The run enabled the five-time major champion to set a record 36-hole lead going into the weekend, with American pair Sam Burns and Patrick Reed closest behind on six under.

“I’ve always loved the tournament and loved this golf course, even when I felt it didn’t love me back,” said McIlroy, who is bidding to follow Jack Nicklaus, Nick Faldo and Tiger Woods as only the fourth player to defend.

“Now when I miss fairways it’s fine, when I miss greens it’s fine. I feel like I’m playing with the house’s money.”

McIlroy has rarely done anything conventionally in a career packed with as many bitter lows as there have been exhilarating highs.

This week,his progress has been uncharacteristically serene as he swung what had been a wide open tournament heavily into his favour.

With 36 holes still to play at a fickle Augusta which has the capacity to bite back, it is far from game over. A host of big names behind McIlroy are ready to pounce on any slips which he may make over the weekend.

But, judging by the evidence of the first two days, it does not feel like there will be any blips.

The relaxation which McIlroy has developed since finally becoming the sixth man to complete the career Grand Slam has allowed him to play with freedom around Augusta National.

“I haven’t panicked when I’ve hit it off line and into trees, I’ve layed up and relied on wedges and those scoring clubs,” he told Sky Sports.

“This course enables you to get on runs, although I certainly didn’t imagine birdieing six of the last seven.

“I’ve always felt when you’re feeling it around here you can get momentum, the crowd gets on your side and you keep it rolling.”

Patience the key for majestic McIlroy – but others lie in wait

It seems bizarre to say now given his dominant position, but there was a spell on Friday where you felt McIlroy was still not playing close to his best.

When McIlroy bogeyed the 10th, he dropped back alongside 2018 champion Reed on six under and his general untidiness put his place at the top of the leaderboard under pressure.

Some drives were being sprayed, some approaches were not precise.

At the end of his round, the statistics showed McIlroy ranked 90th in the 91-man field for accuracy off the tee.

Ultimately, it didn’t matter. His exceptional short game held his round together and when things did click into place on the tees and fairways, he motored through the back half in fabulous fashion.

After winning last year, there is no longer a melodrama every time he makes a bad shot. McIlroy has learned how to be patient around Augusta.

That seems to spell bad news for the rest of a leaderboard stacked with Green Jacket wearers, major title holders and Ryder Cup stars.

Rory McIlroy is the first Masters champion since Ian Woosnam in 1992 to start his defence with two consecutive rounds in the 60s [Getty Images]

Staying even-tempered at the most famously punishing golf course in the world is a trait which two of the big names hoping to unseat McIlroy also recognise is necessary to succeed there.

Three-time runner-up Justin Rose, who is tied fourth, is targeting his own redemptive win after losing to McIlroy in last year’s sudden-death play-off and credits his own patience for his back-nine climb up the leaderboard.

“Early on things were tough out there. But I settled down and built the round back up,” said Rose, who is seven behind McIlroy after a three-under 69 on Friday.

“It’s a continuation of being on the leaderboard from last year and keeping the dream alive. I need to keep it as free as I can.”

Ireland’s Shane Lowry had a run of 14 successive pars before two birdies in the final three holes moved him alongside English pair – and victorious Ryder Cup team-mates – Rose and Tommy Fleetwood on five under par.

“I was hitting good shots and just wasn’t converting but I was patient out there,” said Lowry, whose sole major win came at the 2023 Open.

But there is another contender, also part of that European band of brothers bonded by Bethpage, who hopes a lack of patience will not stop him landing the Green Jacket.

Tyrrell Hatton knocked in seven birdies on the way to a six-under par 66, seemingly carding the round of the day only to be bettered by McIlroy.

“I definitely don’t stay calmer or more patient this week. If anything, I am probably more on edge,” said the 34-year-old Englishman.

“I will just take each shot as it comes and see what we end up with.”

Is Hatton starting to fall in love with Augusta?

Discussion had started to build once again about why the big-name LIV golfers were continuing to struggle at the majors as Jon Rahm and Bryson DeChambeau toiled at the Masters.

The conversation was cut short when Hatton, who continues to play on the breakaway Saudi-backed tour, started making eyes at Augusta National.

Up to this point he had formed an uneasy relationship with the Masters, regularly squabbling with the unrelenting undulations of the famed course.

Hatton had unsuccessfully tried to befriend the old place on nine previous visits and, after starting with a two-over par 74 on Thursday, finally managed to ingratiate himself on Friday.

After seven birdies in 16 holes, Hatton had the course record of 63 – set in 1986 by Nick Price and matched in 1996 by Greg Norman – in his sights, but ultimately had to make do with a 66 which featured seven birdies.

Hatton was only the third player in the past 30 years to hit all 18 greens in regulation, demonstrating how he is continuing to improve with each year

But, after a bogey on the last stopped him moving alongside then-clubhouse leader Rose, he still was not completely happy.

“I’ve clearly not learned enough seeing as I three-putted the last,” he told Sky Sports.

Clay Holmes exits Mets’ game Friday with apparent lower body injury

Clay Holmes left the Mets’ game on Friday against the Athletics in the top of the sixth inning under the guidance of a trainer.

Holmes appeared to be stretching his leg in the middle of the frame before giving up a single to Jacob Wilson and leaving the game. He was replaced by Tobias Myers despite throwing 81 pitches.

The veteran right-hander had kept the A’s largely at bay in his third start of the season. He had limited them to one earned run on five hits and three walks before his departure.

Holmes has been one of the team’s most dependable starters early in the season. He entered Friday’s game with a 2-0 record and lowered his ERA to 1.50 and WHIP to 1.11 across 18 innings with his latest outing.

If Holmes needs to miss time, the Mets could elect to add Sean Manaea back to the rotation, stretch out Myers or look into the minor leagues where Christian Scott and Jonah Tong are each coming off strong outings.

Check back for more updates on Clay Holmes’ exit from Friday’s game.

This article originally appeared on NorthJersey.com: NY Mets’ Clay Holmes exits Friday with apparent lower body injury

Mason Howell says how Rory McIlroy treated him during the first two rounds at The Masters

Photo by Kieran Cleeves/Augusta National/Getty Images

Mason Howell may have missed the cut at The Masters, but playing alongside Rory McIlroy for two rounds at Augusta National clearly provided an experience he will not forget.

Howell certainly did not disgrace himself on his Masters debut this week. The 18-year-old finished nine over par for the week, five shots away from making the cut.

Of course, he ended up having the best seat in the house for one of the most impressive performances Augusta National has ever seen.

Mason Howell reacts to playing alongside Rory McIlroy at The Masters

Rory McIlroy now boasts the largest 36-hole lead in Masters history after moving to 12 under par on Friday. The Northern Irishman made six birdies in seven holes to conclude his round.

There was a special moment on the 18th green, with McIlroy spending a little longer to have a word with Howell. It was quite clear that he was providing words of encouragement.

Photo by Andrew Redington/Getty Images

And speaking after the round, Howell explained what McIlroy said to him, as well as how the defending champion treated him during the tournament.

“Yeah, we chatted a decent amount, and he’s such a nice guy. Yeah, I mean, that was such a special moment for me to play with my idol. I mean, yeah, other than making the cut for me, that was everything I dreamed it would be,” he said.

“Rory was awesome. He said, ‘I hope to see you down the line’. We’ll play some practice rounds coming up. So couldn’t have been more thankful to be paired with Rory this week and how much I learned from his game.”

What impressed Howell most about Rory McIlroy

McIlroy could have hardly been more impressive over the first two rounds at The Masters.

There was a question over how he would fare with the pressure of winning the Career Grand Slam now off. The job is not done, but he has put himself in a phenomenal position.

And Howell suggested what impressed him most about McIlroy’s game after playing alongside him.

“He bandages his game really well. He has like a six-shot lead, I think. So that’s crazy. He just knows where to miss it around here,” he said.

“I mean, now he has all the weight off his shoulders. He’s playing so carefree, and I’ll be shocked if he doesn’t get it done this weekend.”

As things stand, it is extremely difficult to imagine anyone stopping McIlroy retaining his title. He is six shots clear of an outstanding chasing pack.

There are likely to be some bumps in the road before he gets across the line for a second time in as many years. But McIlroy is clearly relishing the spotlight this time around.

He is proving why many would pick McIlroy out as the most talented player of his generation.

2026 NFL draft: 6 potential difference-makers connected to Cardinals

In every draft, teams hope to land stars. The truth is that even first-round picks can simply be nice players. The Arizona Cardinals have the third overall pick in the draft, and they have the opportunity to hopefully select an absolute difference-maker.

NFL.com analyst Bucky Brooks believes there are 26 true difference-makers in the draft, with seven who project as All-Pros.

The Cardinals have been connected to a few.

Three players the Cardinals could select at No. 3 or in a trade down project as All-Pros.

  1. Notre Dame RB Jeremiyah Love
  2. Ohio State EDGE/LB Arvell Reese
  3. Utah OL Spencer Fano

Another three are potential Pro Bowlers, says Brooks:

  1. Texas Tech EDGE David Bailey
  2. Miami EDGE Rueben Bain
  3. Miami OL Francis Mauigoa

It would seem that the Cardinals will be in good shape whether they end up with Bailey or Reese, the two most likely players they take third overall.

Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire’s Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on SpotifyYouTube or Apple podcasts.

This article originally appeared on Cards Wire: 2026 NFL draft: 6 potential difference-makers connected to Cardinals