Here Are 4 Must-Watch TV Shows And Movies For This Weekend, Plus More TV And Movie News
Well, that's all I've got for this week's edition of Screen Time. Come back every…
Well, that's all I've got for this week's edition of Screen Time. Come back every…
Apr 4, 2026; San Antonio, Texas, USA; Alex Smalley watches his shot on the first hole during the third round of the Valero Texas Open golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Daniel Dunn-Imagn Images Alex Smalley and Hayden Springer turned in a 14-under-par 58 on the first day of the Zurich Classic of New Orleans, earning a one-shot lead at the PGA Tour’s only team event at TPC Louisiana in Avondale, La.
Smalley’s birdie-eagle-birdie start to the round ignited the pair, and Springer closed the day strong, responsible for birdies at Nos. 15-18. They weren’t the only team to go low, as Davis Thompson and Austin Eckroat are on their tails following a 13-under 59.
Seventy-four teams entered the unique event, where teams of two play four-ball (best ball) in the first and third rounds and foursomes (alternate shot) in the second and fourth rounds. The top 33 teams and ties will make the cut after 36 holes.
Sam Stevens/Zach Bauchou, Nick Dunlap/Gordon Sargent and Eric Cole/Hank Lebioda are tied for third at 12 under. Billy Horschel/Tom Hoge were among a large group tied at 61. Meanwhile, the first-time pairing of Brooks Koepka and Irishman Shane Lowry settled for a 6-under 66, outside the top 50 as play wound down late Thursday.
Thompson and Eckroat pulled off a 10-under-par run in a span of nine holes. Eckroat eagled the par-5 seventh, and the duo combined to birdie each of the next eight.
–Field Level Media
Apr 4, 2026; San Antonio, Texas, USA; Alex Smalley watches his shot on the first hole during the third round of the Valero Texas Open golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Daniel Dunn-Imagn Images Alex Smalley and Hayden Springer turned in a 14-under-par 58 on the first day of the Zurich Classic of New Orleans, earning a one-shot lead at the PGA Tour’s only team event at TPC Louisiana in Avondale, La.
Smalley’s birdie-eagle-birdie start to the round ignited the pair, and Springer closed the day strong, responsible for birdies at Nos. 15-18. They weren’t the only team to go low, as Davis Thompson and Austin Eckroat are on their tails following a 13-under 59.
Seventy-four teams entered the unique event, where teams of two play four-ball (best ball) in the first and third rounds and foursomes (alternate shot) in the second and fourth rounds. The top 33 teams and ties will make the cut after 36 holes.
Sam Stevens/Zach Bauchou, Nick Dunlap/Gordon Sargent and Eric Cole/Hank Lebioda are tied for third at 12 under. Billy Horschel/Tom Hoge were among a large group tied at 61. Meanwhile, the first-time pairing of Brooks Koepka and Irishman Shane Lowry settled for a 6-under 66, outside the top 50 as play wound down late Thursday.
Thompson and Eckroat pulled off a 10-under-par run in a span of nine holes. Eckroat eagled the par-5 seventh, and the duo combined to birdie each of the next eight.
–Field Level Media
Apr 4, 2026; San Antonio, Texas, USA; Alex Smalley watches his shot on the first…
Official Trailer for Twisted Family Games Film 'Best Boy' from Canada by Alex Billington April…
Two stoppage-time goals in the space of three minutes engineered a late turnaround as Sreenidi Deccan FC snatched a 2-1 win over 10-man Rajasthan United FC in its I-League 2025-26 Championship Phase match at the Namdhari Football Stadium.
The result helped the Deccan Warriors move to second place, while Rajasthan United was left to rue Shafeel PP’s red card that shifted the momentum. It remained fourth with its title hopes dented.
The match began scrappily, with both sides taking time to settle in the heat. Sreenidi Deccan enjoyed more of the early possession, but Rajasthan United gradually found control in midfield after the first quarter.
Rajasthan United took the lead in the 54th minute when Isaac Nortey struck from a free-kick 40 yards out, finding the top corner with a left-footed effort.
ALSO READ: India spots restricted to Asian Champions League 2, despite increase in berths in ACL Elite
The turning point came in the 60th minute when Shafeel PP was sent off for a push on Deepak, leaving Rajasthan United to play with 10 men for the remainder of the match.
Despite the numerical disadvantage, Rajasthan United defended deep and held its lead for long periods, but Sreenidi Deccan found the breakthrough in stoppage time.
Habib Idrissou equalised in the second minute of added time, heading in from a long throw-in.
Three minutes later, Castaneda completed the turnaround with a right-footed free-kick from distance, sealing the win.
Published on Apr 24, 2026
Two stoppage-time goals in the space of three minutes engineered a late turnaround as Sreenidi Deccan FC snatched a 2-1 win over 10-man Rajasthan United FC in its I-League 2025-26 Championship Phase match at the Namdhari Football Stadium.
The result helped the Deccan Warriors move to second place, while Rajasthan United was left to rue Shafeel PP’s red card that shifted the momentum. It remained fourth with its title hopes dented.
The match began scrappily, with both sides taking time to settle in the heat. Sreenidi Deccan enjoyed more of the early possession, but Rajasthan United gradually found control in midfield after the first quarter.
Rajasthan United took the lead in the 54th minute when Isaac Nortey struck from a free-kick 40 yards out, finding the top corner with a left-footed effort.
ALSO READ: India spots restricted to Asian Champions League 2, despite increase in berths in ACL Elite
The turning point came in the 60th minute when Shafeel PP was sent off for a push on Deepak, leaving Rajasthan United to play with 10 men for the remainder of the match.
Despite the numerical disadvantage, Rajasthan United defended deep and held its lead for long periods, but Sreenidi Deccan found the breakthrough in stoppage time.
Habib Idrissou equalised in the second minute of added time, heading in from a long throw-in.
Three minutes later, Castaneda completed the turnaround with a right-footed free-kick from distance, sealing the win.
Published on Apr 24, 2026
Two stoppage-time goals in the space of three minutes engineered a late turnaround as Sreenidi…
Apr 12, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Minnesota Twins starting pitcher Taj Bradley (26) pitches to the Toronto Blue Jaysduring the first inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images Minnesota right-hander Taj Bradley, once regarded as the Tampa Bay Rays’ No. 1 prospect, will face his old team for the first time since getting sent to the Twins at last year’s trade deadline when the two teams open a three-game series on Friday night in St. Petersburg, Fla.
Bradley (3-0, 1.63 ERA), who went 19-25 with a 4.70 ERA over 69 games (67 starts) with the Rays, was shipped to the Twins last July 31 for reliever Griffin Jax.
“It will be weird being on the field in a different dugout,” Bradley told mlbbro.com. “I’m excited to be pitching in Tropicana Field for the first time in a year. I get to face teammates of mine and friends. I’ll just have fun with it.”
Bradley, a fifth-round pick of Tampa Bay in the 2018 MLB Draft, had an up-and-down three seasons with the Rays. He was the American League Pitcher of the Month in July of 2024 after going 3-1 with a 1.45 ERA in five starts, but from July 31 through Sept. 10, he went 0-6 with an 8.27 ERA.
He was 6-6 with a 4.61 ERA in 21 starts for the Rays in 2025 before the trade to Minnesota, where he went 0-2 in six starts, with a 6.61 ERA.
Bradley, 25, has bounced back to be one of baseball’s best starters in 2026, ranking third in the American League in ERA (1.63) and striking out 34 batters in 27 2/3 innings. He outdueled two-time American League Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal of Detroit in a 4-2 victory on April 7 at Target Field, allowing one run on six hits over 6 1/3 innings while striking out 10.
“Taj is a really talented pitcher,” Rays manager Kevin Cash told the Tampa Bay Times. “Happy for the success, want to see him perform well, want to see him have a great career.
“Hopefully, we don’t get the best version of Taj, because we’ve seen it when he’s been in our dugout, that when he’s on he is very tough and very talented, can create a lot of strikeouts.”
Bradley has never faced the Rays, and Minnesota stumbles into the series having lost six of its last seven games, including a 10-8 defeat on Thursday night to the Mets in New York.
Ryan Jeffers hit a grand slam in the top of the eighth to tie it at 7-7, but Bo Bichette answered with a three-run double in the bottom half to win it for the Mets.
Veteran right-hander Drew Rasmussen (1-0, 2.75 ERA) will start the series opener for Tampa Bay, which had a day off Tafter snapping a three-game losing streak with a 6-1 win over the Cincinnati Reds on Wednesday. Rasmussen is 1-1 with a 4.15 ERA in six appearances (three starts) against the Twins.
Nick Martinez, who had pitched for the Reds the previous two seasons, picked up his first win with the Rays, allowing one run on five hits over eight innings while striking out six. Junior Caminero hit his sixth homer and Yandy Diaz raised his average to .340, which ranks second in the majors, by going 3-for-4 with an RBI and a run.
“I love it, man. It’s a lot of fun,” Martinez said. “Obviously, they know what I do well, and they know that I love to compete. … It’s always fun competing against your buddies.”
The Rays have dropped three of their last four games.
–Field Level Media
Apr 12, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Minnesota Twins starting pitcher Taj Bradley (26) pitches to the Toronto Blue Jaysduring the first inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images Minnesota right-hander Taj Bradley, once regarded as the Tampa Bay Rays’ No. 1 prospect, will face his old team for the first time since getting sent to the Twins at last year’s trade deadline when the two teams open a three-game series on Friday night in St. Petersburg, Fla.
Bradley (3-0, 1.63 ERA), who went 19-25 with a 4.70 ERA over 69 games (67 starts) with the Rays, was shipped to the Twins last July 31 for reliever Griffin Jax.
“It will be weird being on the field in a different dugout,” Bradley told mlbbro.com. “I’m excited to be pitching in Tropicana Field for the first time in a year. I get to face teammates of mine and friends. I’ll just have fun with it.”
Bradley, a fifth-round pick of Tampa Bay in the 2018 MLB Draft, had an up-and-down three seasons with the Rays. He was the American League Pitcher of the Month in July of 2024 after going 3-1 with a 1.45 ERA in five starts, but from July 31 through Sept. 10, he went 0-6 with an 8.27 ERA.
He was 6-6 with a 4.61 ERA in 21 starts for the Rays in 2025 before the trade to Minnesota, where he went 0-2 in six starts, with a 6.61 ERA.
Bradley, 25, has bounced back to be one of baseball’s best starters in 2026, ranking third in the American League in ERA (1.63) and striking out 34 batters in 27 2/3 innings. He outdueled two-time American League Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal of Detroit in a 4-2 victory on April 7 at Target Field, allowing one run on six hits over 6 1/3 innings while striking out 10.
“Taj is a really talented pitcher,” Rays manager Kevin Cash told the Tampa Bay Times. “Happy for the success, want to see him perform well, want to see him have a great career.
“Hopefully, we don’t get the best version of Taj, because we’ve seen it when he’s been in our dugout, that when he’s on he is very tough and very talented, can create a lot of strikeouts.”
Bradley has never faced the Rays, and Minnesota stumbles into the series having lost six of its last seven games, including a 10-8 defeat on Thursday night to the Mets in New York.
Ryan Jeffers hit a grand slam in the top of the eighth to tie it at 7-7, but Bo Bichette answered with a three-run double in the bottom half to win it for the Mets.
Veteran right-hander Drew Rasmussen (1-0, 2.75 ERA) will start the series opener for Tampa Bay, which had a day off Tafter snapping a three-game losing streak with a 6-1 win over the Cincinnati Reds on Wednesday. Rasmussen is 1-1 with a 4.15 ERA in six appearances (three starts) against the Twins.
Nick Martinez, who had pitched for the Reds the previous two seasons, picked up his first win with the Rays, allowing one run on five hits over eight innings while striking out six. Junior Caminero hit his sixth homer and Yandy Diaz raised his average to .340, which ranks second in the majors, by going 3-for-4 with an RBI and a run.
“I love it, man. It’s a lot of fun,” Martinez said. “Obviously, they know what I do well, and they know that I love to compete. … It’s always fun competing against your buddies.”
The Rays have dropped three of their last four games.
–Field Level Media
Apr 12, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Minnesota Twins starting pitcher Taj Bradley (26) pitches to…
I’m a Victorian Strongwoman and I Have Some Questions About Your Gym Membership | Points…
It’s not that Simpson is bad, or even that the Rams taking him wasn’t on the cards. In fact, for a long time there was speculation the team would take Simpson in the 1st round, just at No. 29, until Los Angeles traded the pick for Trent McDuffie. The confusion around the selection is aimed more at the fact that taking a quarterback to prepare for the eventuality of Matthew Stafford’s retirement was too cute, and too smart for its own good — especially when the Rams are a team built to win right now.
This only got worse following the draft when coach Sean McVay looked flat-out annoyed while hearing GM Les Snead wax poetic about Ty Simpson.
“We’ve talked about the importance of Jimmy [Garoppolo]. To be able to add somebody that you can evaluate a body of work where he was asked to play the position and a lot of things that do translate in terms of concepts, reading with his feet, some of the different things in the drop back in the play-action game and the movement game. There are a lot of things that [Alabama offensive coordinator Ryan] Grubb did that’s very similar to how we operate, so it made it an easier evaluation to be able to say, ‘Alright, what would that look like if he did translate it to our level?’”
Here’s another clip from McVay’s post-draft presser:
The most generous reading of these comments is that McVay is fine with the pick. His verbiage is more akin to how coaches talk about day three picks, not someone you take No. 13 overall. This is especially notable considering the board at the time, which could have landed the Rams someone like Makai Lemon or Kenyon Sadiq, either of whom would have bolstered the Rams passing attack — or even safety Dillon Thieneman, who would have been an upgrade to the secondary.
It’s going to be at least two years before we learn whether or not picking Simpson was a genius move or not, but there are more questions about the pick after people learned that Snead had personal entanglements with the Simpson family.
It’s only natural to question whether or not Snead had tunnel vision for Simpson throughout this process. One would think that a general manager and head coach’s vision naturally aligns, but this is a case where it might not. Snead’s job is to be more forward-looking at the overall health of the franchise, while McVay’s is to get the most out of the guys he has in front of him. There very well could have been friction about seeing the Falcons’ pick (which they obtained in 2025) as a means to land a quarterback, with the expectation that they’ll otherwise be picking in the back-end of the 20s, or hopefully 32 — while McVay didn’t want to put the cart in front of the horse, and instead get someone that would help prevent the Rams from flaming out in the playoffs.
What makes this all so interesting is that the Rams are typically an organization held up as a paragon of vision and smart decision-making. Selecting Simpson could end up being genius, or a bizarrely desperate move to get a second-round QB talent too early in the draft, just to correct a problem that doesn’t exist yet.
When Simpson does eventually take over for the Rams at QB, he’ll have barely played football at all since leaving high school:
One thing is certain: If the Rams fail to make it to the Super Bowl this season, then everyone will be looking at who could have helped the team with this No. 13 pick — and it won’t be Ty Simpson.
It’s not that Simpson is bad, or even that the Rams taking him wasn’t on the cards. In fact, for a long time there was speculation the team would take Simpson in the 1st round, just at No. 29, until Los Angeles traded the pick for Trent McDuffie. The confusion around the selection is aimed more at the fact that taking a quarterback to prepare for the eventuality of Matthew Stafford’s retirement was too cute, and too smart for its own good — especially when the Rams are a team built to win right now.
This only got worse following the draft when coach Sean McVay looked flat-out annoyed while hearing GM Les Snead wax poetic about Ty Simpson.
“We’ve talked about the importance of Jimmy [Garoppolo]. To be able to add somebody that you can evaluate a body of work where he was asked to play the position and a lot of things that do translate in terms of concepts, reading with his feet, some of the different things in the drop back in the play-action game and the movement game. There are a lot of things that [Alabama offensive coordinator Ryan] Grubb did that’s very similar to how we operate, so it made it an easier evaluation to be able to say, ‘Alright, what would that look like if he did translate it to our level?’”
Here’s another clip from McVay’s post-draft presser:
The most generous reading of these comments is that McVay is fine with the pick. His verbiage is more akin to how coaches talk about day three picks, not someone you take No. 13 overall. This is especially notable considering the board at the time, which could have landed the Rams someone like Makai Lemon or Kenyon Sadiq, either of whom would have bolstered the Rams passing attack — or even safety Dillon Thieneman, who would have been an upgrade to the secondary.
It’s going to be at least two years before we learn whether or not picking Simpson was a genius move or not, but there are more questions about the pick after people learned that Snead had personal entanglements with the Simpson family.
It’s only natural to question whether or not Snead had tunnel vision for Simpson throughout this process. One would think that a general manager and head coach’s vision naturally aligns, but this is a case where it might not. Snead’s job is to be more forward-looking at the overall health of the franchise, while McVay’s is to get the most out of the guys he has in front of him. There very well could have been friction about seeing the Falcons’ pick (which they obtained in 2025) as a means to land a quarterback, with the expectation that they’ll otherwise be picking in the back-end of the 20s, or hopefully 32 — while McVay didn’t want to put the cart in front of the horse, and instead get someone that would help prevent the Rams from flaming out in the playoffs.
What makes this all so interesting is that the Rams are typically an organization held up as a paragon of vision and smart decision-making. Selecting Simpson could end up being genius, or a bizarrely desperate move to get a second-round QB talent too early in the draft, just to correct a problem that doesn’t exist yet.
When Simpson does eventually take over for the Rams at QB, he’ll have barely played football at all since leaving high school:
One thing is certain: If the Rams fail to make it to the Super Bowl this season, then everyone will be looking at who could have helped the team with this No. 13 pick — and it won’t be Ty Simpson.
There were a lot of surprises in the first round of the NFL Draft on Thursday night. The Titans taking Carnell Tate at No. 4? Unexpected. Caleb Downs, Rueben Bain, and Makai Lemon all sliding? Shocking — but it was what the Los Angeles Rams did with the No. 13 overall pick that was truly jaw-dropping, selecting Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson to be their signal caller of the future. We gave the pick a C+ grade.
It’s not that Simpson is bad, or even that the Rams taking him wasn’t on the cards. In fact, for a long time there was speculation the team would take Simpson in the 1st round, just at No. 29, until Los Angeles traded the pick for Trent McDuffie. The confusion around the selection is aimed more at the fact that taking a quarterback to prepare for the eventuality of Matthew Stafford’s retirement was too cute, and too smart for its own good — especially when the Rams are a team built to win right now.
This only got worse following the draft when coach Sean McVay looked flat-out annoyed while hearing GM Les Snead wax poetic about Ty Simpson.
“We’ve talked about the importance of Jimmy [Garoppolo]. To be able to add somebody that you can evaluate a body of work where he was asked to play the position and a lot of things that do translate in terms of concepts, reading with his feet, some of the different things in the drop back in the play-action game and the movement game. There are a lot of things that [Alabama offensive coordinator Ryan] Grubb did that’s very similar to how we operate, so it made it an easier evaluation to be able to say, ‘Alright, what would that look like if he did translate it to our level?’”
Here’s another clip from McVay’s post-draft presser:
The most generous reading of these comments is that McVay is fine with the pick. His verbiage is more akin to how coaches talk about day three picks, not someone you take No. 13 overall. This is especially notable considering the board at the time, which could have landed the Rams someone like Makai Lemon or Kenyon Sadiq, either of whom would have bolstered the Rams passing attack — or even safety Dillon Thieneman, who would have been an upgrade to the secondary.
It’s going to be at least two years before we learn whether or not picking Simpson was a genius move or not, but there are more questions about the pick after people learned that Snead had personal entanglements with the Simpson family.
It’s only natural to question whether or not Snead had tunnel vision for Simpson throughout this process. One would think that a general manager and head coach’s vision naturally aligns, but this is a case where it might not. Snead’s job is to be more forward-looking at the overall health of the franchise, while McVay’s is to get the most out of the guys he has in front of him. There very well could have been friction about seeing the Falcons’ pick (which they obtained in 2025) as a means to land a quarterback, with the expectation that they’ll otherwise be picking in the back-end of the 20s, or hopefully 32 — while McVay didn’t want to put the cart in front of the horse, and instead get someone that would help prevent the Rams from flaming out in the playoffs.
What makes this all so interesting is that the Rams are typically an organization held up as a paragon of vision and smart decision-making. Selecting Simpson could end up being genius, or a bizarrely desperate move to get a second-round QB talent too early in the draft, just to correct a problem that doesn’t exist yet.
When Simpson does eventually take over for the Rams at QB, he’ll have barely played football at all since leaving high school:
One thing is certain: If the Rams fail to make it to the Super Bowl this season, then everyone will be looking at who could have helped the team with this No. 13 pick — and it won’t be Ty Simpson.
There were a lot of surprises in the first round of the NFL Draft on…
Toronto has reversed its plan to charge fans to attend its World Cup fan festival, with the city council approving a revised model that includes a free general admission option after some councillors objected that the proposed $10 fee broke an earlier promise.
City staff had proposed a plan last week to introduce $10 general admission tickets for the event. The festival, which is set to include live match broadcasts, food and entertainment, was originally promoted by the city last year as a “free and inclusive space” for fans to enjoy games during the June 11 to July 19 World Cup.
However, after objections from some councillors, who raised concerns about affordability for residents, Toronto mayor Olivia Chow asked staff this week to revisit the ticketing proposal.
City staff issued a report on Wednesday proposing that, of the 20,000 general admission tickets available each day, 15,600 will be free and 500 will be reserved for community groups at no cost. There will also be 3,900 premium tickets available daily, priced between $100 and $ 300.
ALSO READ: Injured Yamal will come back stronger at World Cup: Barcelona’s Flick
In the original report last week, staff said the ticketing plan was required as a crowd-control measure and to help cover costs related to an “enhanced fan experience”.
“Fan Fest should be free for general admission,” Chow told reporters this week before council voted 18-3 to approve the revised plan. “We can offer VIP packages for those who want them, but the gates should be open for everyone.”
Toronto, one of 16 cities across Canada, the United States and Mexico hosting matches for the 48-team World Cup, will stage six games.
Published on Apr 24, 2026
Toronto has reversed its plan to charge fans to attend its World Cup fan festival, with the city council approving a revised model that includes a free general admission option after some councillors objected that the proposed $10 fee broke an earlier promise.
City staff had proposed a plan last week to introduce $10 general admission tickets for the event. The festival, which is set to include live match broadcasts, food and entertainment, was originally promoted by the city last year as a “free and inclusive space” for fans to enjoy games during the June 11 to July 19 World Cup.
However, after objections from some councillors, who raised concerns about affordability for residents, Toronto mayor Olivia Chow asked staff this week to revisit the ticketing proposal.
City staff issued a report on Wednesday proposing that, of the 20,000 general admission tickets available each day, 15,600 will be free and 500 will be reserved for community groups at no cost. There will also be 3,900 premium tickets available daily, priced between $100 and $ 300.
ALSO READ: Injured Yamal will come back stronger at World Cup: Barcelona’s Flick
In the original report last week, staff said the ticketing plan was required as a crowd-control measure and to help cover costs related to an “enhanced fan experience”.
“Fan Fest should be free for general admission,” Chow told reporters this week before council voted 18-3 to approve the revised plan. “We can offer VIP packages for those who want them, but the gates should be open for everyone.”
Toronto, one of 16 cities across Canada, the United States and Mexico hosting matches for the 48-team World Cup, will stage six games.
Published on Apr 24, 2026
Toronto has reversed its plan to charge fans to attend its World Cup fan festival,…
[original_title Raffia is a summer staple for a reason. It adds texture, works across day…
Apr 23, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Philadelphia Phillies manager Rob Thomson (49) makes a pitching change against the Chicago Cubs during the sixth inning at Wrigley Field. Mandatory Credit: David Banks-Imagn Images The surging Atlanta Braves will try to compound Philadelphia’s recent struggles when they open a three-game series against the visiting Phillies on Friday night.
The Braves just took three of four games from the host Washington Nationals, capped by a 7-2 victory on Thursday, and have won eight of their last nine.
The Phillies have lost nine straight games after falling 8-7 in 10 innings to the host Chicago Cubs on Thursday to complete a four-game sweep. Philadelphia has the worst record in the National League and is tied with the Kansas City Royals for the worst mark in the majors.
The weekend set will be the second series between the teams this year. Atlanta swept a three-game set in Philadelphia last weekend.
Philadelphia manager Rob Thomson tried to find a silver lining in the losing streak, the team’s longest since a nine-game skid in September 2018. The Phillies last had a double-figure losing streak when they dropped 11 in a row in September 1999.
“Did we lose? Yeah. Do you feel bad about that? Yeah,” Thomson said. “But they fought and hopefully it carries over into tomorrow.”
The series opener will feature a rematch between two right-handers who faced each other on Sunday, Philadelphia rookie Andrew Painter (1-1, 4.42 ERA) and Atlanta’s Grant Holmes (1-1, 3.42). The Braves won that game 4-2.
Painter, the Phillies’ first-round draft pick in 2021, looks fully recovered from Tommy John surgery performed in July 2023. He made 26 minor league starts last year and made his major league debut this year on March 31.
Painter took his first loss last week against the Braves. He pitched four-plus innings and allowed three runs on five hits, one walk and had four strikeouts.
Holmes lasted 4 2/3 innings against the Phillies, permitting two runs on four hits and one walk while fanning four. Holmes, who has not allowed more than three runs in any appearance this season, is 1-1 with a 2.19 ERA in five career games (two starts) against Philadelphia.
Philadelphia’s Bryce Harper needs one extra-base hit to become the 27th player to reach 800 before turning 34 years old. In 203 career games against Atlanta, Harper has 37 doubles, one triple and 46 homers.
Atlanta center fielder Michael Harris II left the Thursday game in the eighth inning because of left quad tightness but hopes to be in the lineup on Friday.
“That’s the plan,” he said, according to MLB.com. “I’m going to go home, make sure I do everything right and then come in and see how I’m feeling.”
In his past seven games, Harris is hitting .565 (13-for-23) with four homers and nine RBIs. He went 3-for-4 with two RBIs before exiting on Thursday.
The Braves placed left-hander Dylan Dodd on the 15-day injured list because of a left thoracic spine infection on Thursday and optioned right-hander Didier Fuentes to Triple-A Gwinnett. Atlanta promoted right-handers Carlos Carrasco and JR Ritchie from Gwinnett, with Ritchie throwing seven strong innings to win his major league debut on Thursday. He gave up two runs and five hits over seven innings.
The Phillies recalled right-hander Nolan Hoffman from Triple-A Lehigh Valley, optioned right-hander Alan Rangel to Lehigh Valley and released right-hander Taijuan Walker.
–Field Level Media
Apr 23, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Philadelphia Phillies manager Rob Thomson (49) makes a pitching change against the Chicago Cubs during the sixth inning at Wrigley Field. Mandatory Credit: David Banks-Imagn Images The surging Atlanta Braves will try to compound Philadelphia’s recent struggles when they open a three-game series against the visiting Phillies on Friday night.
The Braves just took three of four games from the host Washington Nationals, capped by a 7-2 victory on Thursday, and have won eight of their last nine.
The Phillies have lost nine straight games after falling 8-7 in 10 innings to the host Chicago Cubs on Thursday to complete a four-game sweep. Philadelphia has the worst record in the National League and is tied with the Kansas City Royals for the worst mark in the majors.
The weekend set will be the second series between the teams this year. Atlanta swept a three-game set in Philadelphia last weekend.
Philadelphia manager Rob Thomson tried to find a silver lining in the losing streak, the team’s longest since a nine-game skid in September 2018. The Phillies last had a double-figure losing streak when they dropped 11 in a row in September 1999.
“Did we lose? Yeah. Do you feel bad about that? Yeah,” Thomson said. “But they fought and hopefully it carries over into tomorrow.”
The series opener will feature a rematch between two right-handers who faced each other on Sunday, Philadelphia rookie Andrew Painter (1-1, 4.42 ERA) and Atlanta’s Grant Holmes (1-1, 3.42). The Braves won that game 4-2.
Painter, the Phillies’ first-round draft pick in 2021, looks fully recovered from Tommy John surgery performed in July 2023. He made 26 minor league starts last year and made his major league debut this year on March 31.
Painter took his first loss last week against the Braves. He pitched four-plus innings and allowed three runs on five hits, one walk and had four strikeouts.
Holmes lasted 4 2/3 innings against the Phillies, permitting two runs on four hits and one walk while fanning four. Holmes, who has not allowed more than three runs in any appearance this season, is 1-1 with a 2.19 ERA in five career games (two starts) against Philadelphia.
Philadelphia’s Bryce Harper needs one extra-base hit to become the 27th player to reach 800 before turning 34 years old. In 203 career games against Atlanta, Harper has 37 doubles, one triple and 46 homers.
Atlanta center fielder Michael Harris II left the Thursday game in the eighth inning because of left quad tightness but hopes to be in the lineup on Friday.
“That’s the plan,” he said, according to MLB.com. “I’m going to go home, make sure I do everything right and then come in and see how I’m feeling.”
In his past seven games, Harris is hitting .565 (13-for-23) with four homers and nine RBIs. He went 3-for-4 with two RBIs before exiting on Thursday.
The Braves placed left-hander Dylan Dodd on the 15-day injured list because of a left thoracic spine infection on Thursday and optioned right-hander Didier Fuentes to Triple-A Gwinnett. Atlanta promoted right-handers Carlos Carrasco and JR Ritchie from Gwinnett, with Ritchie throwing seven strong innings to win his major league debut on Thursday. He gave up two runs and five hits over seven innings.
The Phillies recalled right-hander Nolan Hoffman from Triple-A Lehigh Valley, optioned right-hander Alan Rangel to Lehigh Valley and released right-hander Taijuan Walker.
–Field Level Media
Apr 23, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Philadelphia Phillies manager Rob Thomson (49) makes a pitching…