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IPL 2026: RCB sheds old inhibitions to emerge as modern T20 behemoth  In 2025, Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) finally shed its Indian Premier League (IPL) title drought. Rajat Patidar’s men have since begun the 2026 season with similar assurance, winning three of their first four matches.Their 18-run win against Mumbai Indians at the Wankhede Stadium on Sunday was further evidence that a side long associated with on-field struggles has quietly transformed itself into a clinical and well-rounded T20 team.Lessons from the pastIt is easy to say in retrospect, but there were signs that RCB could turn its fabled fortunes around. The 2025 title win came after a mega-auction reset, but in the five preceding seasons (2020 to 2024), RCB qualified for the playoffs four times, building a base of consistency even without silverware.The last of those playoff appearances, in 2024, came on the back of a borderline miraculous run. The side recovered from losing seven of its first eight league matches by winning its next six in a row to sneak into the final qualification spot, before losing the Eliminator to Rajasthan Royals.That turnaround was driven by a clear shift in approach with the bat. Over that run, its run rate rose from 9.16 in the first eight matches to 10.23 in the final seven, while scoring rates across all three phases increased significantly.More importantly, the middle-overs slowdown disappeared almost entirely, with batters continuing to attack and maintaining a far more even scoring pattern through the innings.Life in the fast laneSince 2025, the personnel have changed entirely, barring Virat Kohli and Patidar, but the attacking intent has not waned. RCB has struck at 9.63 with the bat and maintained a consistent scoring rate throughout the innings.
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			While none of its phase-wise run rates — 9.36 in the PowerPlay, 9.04 in the middle overs, and 11.42 at the death — are the very best in the league, they all rank in the top half, underlining the consistency of the batting unit.Leading the way is the opening pair of Phil Salt and Kohli. Salt, picked for Rs. 11.50 crore after his performances in Kolkata Knight Riders’ 2024 title-winning campaign, is one of the most aggressive PowerPlay batters in world cricket. He complements the more measured Kohli, who has nevertheless found an extra gear.Together, the pair has put on 731 runs (the third-most of any opening pair) at an average of 43 and a run rate of 10.34 since the start of 2025, combining volume with tempo to give RCB a strong platform.Unlike the RCB sides of the past, the burden of run-scoring has not rested on a handful of players. Over the 2025 season, 10 different batters have scored half-centuries for the team.Equally impressively, among frontline batters who have faced at least 10 balls since the start of the 2025 season, all but two have struck at over 140.
													(insert – )


			RCB’s batting line-up has thus been remodelled into one that bats deep, scores quickly, and produces contributions across the order. Perhaps more significantly, RCB has shown early signs of correcting a key weakness. In 2025, it won seven of eight matches while chasing, compared to five in eight batting first; in 2026, two of its three wins have already come while setting a target.The early bird gets the wormIf the batting has been solid without being exceptional, the bowling in the PowerPlay has been dominant. No team has taken more wickets in the first six overs than RCB’s 34. It also leads in average (30.94), strike rate (20.1), and dot-ball percentage (45.1%), while ranking second in economy (9.22).This dominance is driven by the pairing of Josh Hazlewood and Bhuvneshwar Kumar, who account for 20 of those 34 wickets. Interestingly, for two bowlers known for extracting movement with the new ball, their best work has come in the latter half of the PowerPlay.
													(insert – )


			Twelve of those wickets have come in that phase, and the team’s 18 wickets between overs four and six are comfortably the best in the league.Those early breakthroughs have often dented top-heavy batting units and set the stage for the spinners through the middle overs. While RCB’s spinners take relatively fewer wickets, they have been effective, as seen in Krunal Pandya’s three-wicket haul in the 2025 final against Punjab Kings.Sharing the experience aroundAfter the 2025 mega-auction, RCB released videos outlining its strategy. In one of them, Director of Cricket Mo Bobat spoke about prioritising spending on the starting XII and building a strong Indian core.That approach aligned with a broader trend: experienced teams tend to win IPL finals. Since 2022, only two players in their maiden IPL season have featured for a title-winning side in a final.RCB also identified a lack of experience in its Indian contingent in 2024, with Kohli and Dinesh Karthik accounting for 65 per cent of the IPL caps among Indian players.The auction strategy reflected that insight. The franchise invested heavily in an Indian core, bringing in Bhuvneshwar (Rs. 10.75 crore), Krunal (Rs. 5.75 crore), Jitesh Sharma (Rs. 11 crore), and Devdutt Padikkal (Rs. 2 crore).None of them dominated pre-auction chatter, and even the most expensive among them went for less than half of what Rishabh Pant commanded. Despite entering the auction with the second-highest purse (Rs. 83 crore), RCB signed just one marquee player.Yet, this group proved crucial in raising the team’s floor, using experience and clarity to bridge the gap between its best and worst performances, a long-standing issue for the franchise. Each also delivered match-winning contributions at key moments.A well-constructed T20 teamEverything came together on that night at the Narendra Modi Stadium. The planning, clarity, and execution aligned as RCB emerged as IPL champion for the first time.Beyond the narrative of a drought ending, this is also a story of how a well-constructed team, built on sound principles and a clear understanding of modern T20 cricket, came into being.Published on Apr 13, 2026  #IPL #RCB #sheds #inhibitions #emerge #modern #T20 #behemoth

IPL 2026: RCB sheds old inhibitions to emerge as modern T20 behemoth

In 2025, Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) finally shed its Indian Premier League (IPL) title drought. Rajat Patidar’s men have since begun the 2026 season with similar assurance, winning three of their first four matches.

Their 18-run win against Mumbai Indians at the Wankhede Stadium on Sunday was further evidence that a side long associated with on-field struggles has quietly transformed itself into a clinical and well-rounded T20 team.

Lessons from the past

It is easy to say in retrospect, but there were signs that RCB could turn its fabled fortunes around. The 2025 title win came after a mega-auction reset, but in the five preceding seasons (2020 to 2024), RCB qualified for the playoffs four times, building a base of consistency even without silverware.

The last of those playoff appearances, in 2024, came on the back of a borderline miraculous run. The side recovered from losing seven of its first eight league matches by winning its next six in a row to sneak into the final qualification spot, before losing the Eliminator to Rajasthan Royals.

That turnaround was driven by a clear shift in approach with the bat. Over that run, its run rate rose from 9.16 in the first eight matches to 10.23 in the final seven, while scoring rates across all three phases increased significantly.

More importantly, the middle-overs slowdown disappeared almost entirely, with batters continuing to attack and maintaining a far more even scoring pattern through the innings.

Life in the fast lane

Since 2025, the personnel have changed entirely, barring Virat Kohli and Patidar, but the attacking intent has not waned. RCB has struck at 9.63 with the bat and maintained a consistent scoring rate throughout the innings.

(insert – )

While none of its phase-wise run rates — 9.36 in the PowerPlay, 9.04 in the middle overs, and 11.42 at the death — are the very best in the league, they all rank in the top half, underlining the consistency of the batting unit.

Leading the way is the opening pair of Phil Salt and Kohli. Salt, picked for Rs. 11.50 crore after his performances in Kolkata Knight Riders’ 2024 title-winning campaign, is one of the most aggressive PowerPlay batters in world cricket. He complements the more measured Kohli, who has nevertheless found an extra gear.

Together, the pair has put on 731 runs (the third-most of any opening pair) at an average of 43 and a run rate of 10.34 since the start of 2025, combining volume with tempo to give RCB a strong platform.

Unlike the RCB sides of the past, the burden of run-scoring has not rested on a handful of players. Over the 2025 season, 10 different batters have scored half-centuries for the team.

Equally impressively, among frontline batters who have faced at least 10 balls since the start of the 2025 season, all but two have struck at over 140.

(insert – )

RCB’s batting line-up has thus been remodelled into one that bats deep, scores quickly, and produces contributions across the order. Perhaps more significantly, RCB has shown early signs of correcting a key weakness. In 2025, it won seven of eight matches while chasing, compared to five in eight batting first; in 2026, two of its three wins have already come while setting a target.

The early bird gets the worm

If the batting has been solid without being exceptional, the bowling in the PowerPlay has been dominant. No team has taken more wickets in the first six overs than RCB’s 34. It also leads in average (30.94), strike rate (20.1), and dot-ball percentage (45.1%), while ranking second in economy (9.22).

This dominance is driven by the pairing of Josh Hazlewood and Bhuvneshwar Kumar, who account for 20 of those 34 wickets. Interestingly, for two bowlers known for extracting movement with the new ball, their best work has come in the latter half of the PowerPlay.

(insert – )

Twelve of those wickets have come in that phase, and the team’s 18 wickets between overs four and six are comfortably the best in the league.

Those early breakthroughs have often dented top-heavy batting units and set the stage for the spinners through the middle overs. While RCB’s spinners take relatively fewer wickets, they have been effective, as seen in Krunal Pandya’s three-wicket haul in the 2025 final against Punjab Kings.

Sharing the experience around

After the 2025 mega-auction, RCB released videos outlining its strategy. In one of them, Director of Cricket Mo Bobat spoke about prioritising spending on the starting XII and building a strong Indian core.

That approach aligned with a broader trend: experienced teams tend to win IPL finals. Since 2022, only two players in their maiden IPL season have featured for a title-winning side in a final.

RCB also identified a lack of experience in its Indian contingent in 2024, with Kohli and Dinesh Karthik accounting for 65 per cent of the IPL caps among Indian players.

The auction strategy reflected that insight. The franchise invested heavily in an Indian core, bringing in Bhuvneshwar (Rs. 10.75 crore), Krunal (Rs. 5.75 crore), Jitesh Sharma (Rs. 11 crore), and Devdutt Padikkal (Rs. 2 crore).

None of them dominated pre-auction chatter, and even the most expensive among them went for less than half of what Rishabh Pant commanded. Despite entering the auction with the second-highest purse (Rs. 83 crore), RCB signed just one marquee player.

Yet, this group proved crucial in raising the team’s floor, using experience and clarity to bridge the gap between its best and worst performances, a long-standing issue for the franchise. Each also delivered match-winning contributions at key moments.

A well-constructed T20 team

Everything came together on that night at the Narendra Modi Stadium. The planning, clarity, and execution aligned as RCB emerged as IPL champion for the first time.

Beyond the narrative of a drought ending, this is also a story of how a well-constructed team, built on sound principles and a clear understanding of modern T20 cricket, came into being.

Published on Apr 13, 2026

#IPL #RCB #sheds #inhibitions #emerge #modern #T20 #behemoth

In 2025, Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) finally shed its Indian Premier League (IPL) title drought. Rajat Patidar’s men have since begun the 2026 season with similar assurance, winning three of their first four matches.

Their 18-run win against Mumbai Indians at the Wankhede Stadium on Sunday was further evidence that a side long associated with on-field struggles has quietly transformed itself into a clinical and well-rounded T20 team.

Lessons from the past

It is easy to say in retrospect, but there were signs that RCB could turn its fabled fortunes around. The 2025 title win came after a mega-auction reset, but in the five preceding seasons (2020 to 2024), RCB qualified for the playoffs four times, building a base of consistency even without silverware.

The last of those playoff appearances, in 2024, came on the back of a borderline miraculous run. The side recovered from losing seven of its first eight league matches by winning its next six in a row to sneak into the final qualification spot, before losing the Eliminator to Rajasthan Royals.

That turnaround was driven by a clear shift in approach with the bat. Over that run, its run rate rose from 9.16 in the first eight matches to 10.23 in the final seven, while scoring rates across all three phases increased significantly.

More importantly, the middle-overs slowdown disappeared almost entirely, with batters continuing to attack and maintaining a far more even scoring pattern through the innings.

Life in the fast lane

Since 2025, the personnel have changed entirely, barring Virat Kohli and Patidar, but the attacking intent has not waned. RCB has struck at 9.63 with the bat and maintained a consistent scoring rate throughout the innings.

(insert – )

While none of its phase-wise run rates — 9.36 in the PowerPlay, 9.04 in the middle overs, and 11.42 at the death — are the very best in the league, they all rank in the top half, underlining the consistency of the batting unit.

Leading the way is the opening pair of Phil Salt and Kohli. Salt, picked for Rs. 11.50 crore after his performances in Kolkata Knight Riders’ 2024 title-winning campaign, is one of the most aggressive PowerPlay batters in world cricket. He complements the more measured Kohli, who has nevertheless found an extra gear.

Together, the pair has put on 731 runs (the third-most of any opening pair) at an average of 43 and a run rate of 10.34 since the start of 2025, combining volume with tempo to give RCB a strong platform.

Unlike the RCB sides of the past, the burden of run-scoring has not rested on a handful of players. Over the 2025 season, 10 different batters have scored half-centuries for the team.

Equally impressively, among frontline batters who have faced at least 10 balls since the start of the 2025 season, all but two have struck at over 140.

(insert – )

RCB’s batting line-up has thus been remodelled into one that bats deep, scores quickly, and produces contributions across the order. Perhaps more significantly, RCB has shown early signs of correcting a key weakness. In 2025, it won seven of eight matches while chasing, compared to five in eight batting first; in 2026, two of its three wins have already come while setting a target.

The early bird gets the worm

If the batting has been solid without being exceptional, the bowling in the PowerPlay has been dominant. No team has taken more wickets in the first six overs than RCB’s 34. It also leads in average (30.94), strike rate (20.1), and dot-ball percentage (45.1%), while ranking second in economy (9.22).

This dominance is driven by the pairing of Josh Hazlewood and Bhuvneshwar Kumar, who account for 20 of those 34 wickets. Interestingly, for two bowlers known for extracting movement with the new ball, their best work has come in the latter half of the PowerPlay.

(insert – )

Twelve of those wickets have come in that phase, and the team’s 18 wickets between overs four and six are comfortably the best in the league.

Those early breakthroughs have often dented top-heavy batting units and set the stage for the spinners through the middle overs. While RCB’s spinners take relatively fewer wickets, they have been effective, as seen in Krunal Pandya’s three-wicket haul in the 2025 final against Punjab Kings.

Sharing the experience around

After the 2025 mega-auction, RCB released videos outlining its strategy. In one of them, Director of Cricket Mo Bobat spoke about prioritising spending on the starting XII and building a strong Indian core.

That approach aligned with a broader trend: experienced teams tend to win IPL finals. Since 2022, only two players in their maiden IPL season have featured for a title-winning side in a final.

RCB also identified a lack of experience in its Indian contingent in 2024, with Kohli and Dinesh Karthik accounting for 65 per cent of the IPL caps among Indian players.

The auction strategy reflected that insight. The franchise invested heavily in an Indian core, bringing in Bhuvneshwar (Rs. 10.75 crore), Krunal (Rs. 5.75 crore), Jitesh Sharma (Rs. 11 crore), and Devdutt Padikkal (Rs. 2 crore).

None of them dominated pre-auction chatter, and even the most expensive among them went for less than half of what Rishabh Pant commanded. Despite entering the auction with the second-highest purse (Rs. 83 crore), RCB signed just one marquee player.

Yet, this group proved crucial in raising the team’s floor, using experience and clarity to bridge the gap between its best and worst performances, a long-standing issue for the franchise. Each also delivered match-winning contributions at key moments.

A well-constructed T20 team

Everything came together on that night at the Narendra Modi Stadium. The planning, clarity, and execution aligned as RCB emerged as IPL champion for the first time.

Beyond the narrative of a drought ending, this is also a story of how a well-constructed team, built on sound principles and a clear understanding of modern T20 cricket, came into being.

Published on Apr 13, 2026

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Deadspin | Lakers empty the bench in lopsided win over lowly Jazz <div id=""><section id="0" class=" w-full"><div class="xl:container mx-0 !px-4 py-0 pb-4 !mx-0 !px-0"><img src="https://images.deadspin.com/tr:w-900/28717972.jpg" srcset="https://images.deadspin.com/tr:w-900/28717972.jpg" alt="NBA: Utah Jazz at Los Angeles Lakers" class="w-full" fetchpriority="high" loading="eager"/><span class="text-0.8 leading-tight">Apr 12, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Lakers forward Rui Hachimura (28) shoots the ball against Utah Jazz guard John Konchar (55) in the first half at Crypto.com Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images<!-- --> <!-- --> </span></div></section><section id="section-1"> <p>Rui Hachimura and Deandre Ayton each posted 22-point, 10-rebound double-doubles on Sunday to help the Los Angeles Lakers earn a 131-107 victory over the visiting Utah Jazz in the regular-season finale.</p> </section><section id="section-2"> <p>LeBron James completed his 23rd regular season, finishing with 18 points in 17 minutes for the Lakers (53-29), who will be the No. 4 seed in next week’s Western Conference playoffs and face the Houston Rockets in the first round. Dalton Knecht scored 17 points, Nick Smith Jr. added 12 and Bronny James chipped in 11 for Los Angeles, which finished with its most victories in a season since the 2010-11 campaign (57). </p> </section><section id="section-3"> <p>Marcus Smart had five points and 10 assists as the Lakers won their third straight.</p> </section><section id="section-4"> <p>Oscar Tshiebwe led Utah (22-60) with 29 points and 17 rebounds, while Ace Bailey and Brice Sensabaugh added 15 points apiece. Cody Williams and Bez Mbeng both scored 14 points and Blake Hinson had 10 for the Jazz, who recorded their second 60-loss season in franchise history and their second in as many years.</p> </section><section id="section-5"> <p>Utah trimmed its 17-point halftime deficit to 12 when Tshiebwe and Mbeng combined for a 7-0 Jazz spurt.</p> </section><br/><section id="section-6"> <p>The Lakers finished the third with seven straight points, including Bronny James’ 3-pointer to send Los Angeles into the fourth with a 95-74 advantage.</p> </section> <section id="section-7"> <p>After Williams’ layup cut Utah’s deficit to 19, Knecht buried consecutive triples and Jarred Vanderbilt dunked to extend the lead to 107-80 with 8:22 remaining. Reserve Chris Manon’s layup with 3:30 left ensured that all 14 Los Angeles players scored in the lopsided win.</p> </section><section id="section-8"> <p>Los Angeles grabbed its first double-digit lead midway through the first quarter, as LeBron James’ layup gave the Lakers a 21-10 edge. James had 10 first-quarter points to help Los Angeles take a 32-22 lead into the second.</p> </section><section id="section-9"> <p>Mbeng’s 3-pointer pulled Utah within nine, before Smith and Jake LaRavia each drilled triples to stamp a 9-2 Los Angeles run, pushing the lead to 54-38.</p> </section><section id="section-10"> <p>Hachimura’s third trey of the opening half was followed by James’ layup, giving the Lakers a 62-45 halftime lead. Hachimura and James each scored 18 points apiece in the first half, while Sensabaugh’s 15 paced Utah.</p> </section><section id="section-11"> <p>–Field Level Media</p> </section></div> #Deadspin #Lakers #empty #bench #lopsided #win #lowly #Jazz

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Deadspin | Suns rout Thunder as reserves take center stage in finale   Apr 12, 2026; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA; Phoenix Suns forward Ryan Dunn (0) drives down the court beside Oklahoma City Thunder guard Jared McCain (3) during the first half at Paycom Center. Mandatory Credit: Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images   Jamaree Bouyea scored a career-high 27 points to help the Phoenix Suns close the regular season with a 135-103 road win over the Oklahoma City Thunder on Sunday.  With their playoff positions secure going into the game, both teams sat the majority of their starters and major rotational players.  The Thunder’s Luguentz Dort was the only player in the starting lineup from either side who had started more than 23 games this season. He didn’t make much of an impact, with just six points and two steals in just more than 20 minutes of action.  Dort needed to play at least 20 minutes in the finale to qualify for any post-season awards.  Oklahoma City has led plenty of teams from wire to wire this season but Sunday, it was the Suns who took control from the jump and never let the lead get away with an early 21-0 run.  The Thunder missed 13 consecutive shots during the stretch, going more than six minutes without a score as Phoenix grabbed a 26-5 lead.  Ryan Dunn scored 10 of his season-high 20 points during the stretch. He finished 8 for 11 with a career-high tying 11 rebounds and a career-high five assists.  Koby Brea added 20 points off the bench for Phoenix. Brea had scored just 25 points total in his first 11 NBA games. Khaman Maluach had a career-high 18 points and tied his career high with 14 rebounds off the bench as well.   After that early outburst, the game was never closer than 13 points the rest of the way.  Oklahoma City cut the deficit to 14 early in the third quarter before an 11-2 run by Phoenix put the game out of reach for good.  The Suns’ 135 points was the most scored against the Thunder in a regulation game this season and the most scored by Phoenix this season.  Branden Carlson tied his career high with 26 points to lead the Thunder (64-18). He also had 10 rebounds. Payton Sandfort added 23 points off the bench.  Oklahoma City is the top overall seed in the NBA playoffs.  Phoenix (45-37) is the No. 7 seed and will open the Play-In Tournament at home Tuesday against eighth-seeded Portland.  The winner will advance as the No. 7 seed to take on San Antonio while the loser will take on the winner of the other West play-in matchup — the Clippers hosting the Warriors on Friday — for a chance to play the Thunder in the first round.  –Field Level Media    #Deadspin #Suns #rout #Thunder #reserves #center #stage #finaleApr 12, 2026; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA; Phoenix Suns forward Ryan Dunn (0) drives down the court beside Oklahoma City Thunder guard Jared McCain (3) during the first half at Paycom Center. Mandatory Credit: Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images

Jamaree Bouyea scored a career-high 27 points to help the Phoenix Suns close the regular season with a 135-103 road win over the Oklahoma City Thunder on Sunday.

With their playoff positions secure going into the game, both teams sat the majority of their starters and major rotational players.

The Thunder’s Luguentz Dort was the only player in the starting lineup from either side who had started more than 23 games this season. He didn’t make much of an impact, with just six points and two steals in just more than 20 minutes of action.

Dort needed to play at least 20 minutes in the finale to qualify for any post-season awards.

Oklahoma City has led plenty of teams from wire to wire this season but Sunday, it was the Suns who took control from the jump and never let the lead get away with an early 21-0 run.

The Thunder missed 13 consecutive shots during the stretch, going more than six minutes without a score as Phoenix grabbed a 26-5 lead.

Ryan Dunn scored 10 of his season-high 20 points during the stretch. He finished 8 for 11 with a career-high tying 11 rebounds and a career-high five assists.


Koby Brea added 20 points off the bench for Phoenix. Brea had scored just 25 points total in his first 11 NBA games. Khaman Maluach had a career-high 18 points and tied his career high with 14 rebounds off the bench as well.

After that early outburst, the game was never closer than 13 points the rest of the way.

Oklahoma City cut the deficit to 14 early in the third quarter before an 11-2 run by Phoenix put the game out of reach for good.

The Suns’ 135 points was the most scored against the Thunder in a regulation game this season and the most scored by Phoenix this season.

Branden Carlson tied his career high with 26 points to lead the Thunder (64-18). He also had 10 rebounds. Payton Sandfort added 23 points off the bench.

Oklahoma City is the top overall seed in the NBA playoffs.

Phoenix (45-37) is the No. 7 seed and will open the Play-In Tournament at home Tuesday against eighth-seeded Portland.

The winner will advance as the No. 7 seed to take on San Antonio while the loser will take on the winner of the other West play-in matchup — the Clippers hosting the Warriors on Friday — for a chance to play the Thunder in the first round.


–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Suns #rout #Thunder #reserves #center #stage #finale">Deadspin | Suns rout Thunder as reserves take center stage in finale   Apr 12, 2026; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA; Phoenix Suns forward Ryan Dunn (0) drives down the court beside Oklahoma City Thunder guard Jared McCain (3) during the first half at Paycom Center. Mandatory Credit: Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images   Jamaree Bouyea scored a career-high 27 points to help the Phoenix Suns close the regular season with a 135-103 road win over the Oklahoma City Thunder on Sunday.  With their playoff positions secure going into the game, both teams sat the majority of their starters and major rotational players.  The Thunder’s Luguentz Dort was the only player in the starting lineup from either side who had started more than 23 games this season. He didn’t make much of an impact, with just six points and two steals in just more than 20 minutes of action.  Dort needed to play at least 20 minutes in the finale to qualify for any post-season awards.  Oklahoma City has led plenty of teams from wire to wire this season but Sunday, it was the Suns who took control from the jump and never let the lead get away with an early 21-0 run.  The Thunder missed 13 consecutive shots during the stretch, going more than six minutes without a score as Phoenix grabbed a 26-5 lead.  Ryan Dunn scored 10 of his season-high 20 points during the stretch. He finished 8 for 11 with a career-high tying 11 rebounds and a career-high five assists.  Koby Brea added 20 points off the bench for Phoenix. Brea had scored just 25 points total in his first 11 NBA games. Khaman Maluach had a career-high 18 points and tied his career high with 14 rebounds off the bench as well.   After that early outburst, the game was never closer than 13 points the rest of the way.  Oklahoma City cut the deficit to 14 early in the third quarter before an 11-2 run by Phoenix put the game out of reach for good.  The Suns’ 135 points was the most scored against the Thunder in a regulation game this season and the most scored by Phoenix this season.  Branden Carlson tied his career high with 26 points to lead the Thunder (64-18). He also had 10 rebounds. Payton Sandfort added 23 points off the bench.  Oklahoma City is the top overall seed in the NBA playoffs.  Phoenix (45-37) is the No. 7 seed and will open the Play-In Tournament at home Tuesday against eighth-seeded Portland.  The winner will advance as the No. 7 seed to take on San Antonio while the loser will take on the winner of the other West play-in matchup — the Clippers hosting the Warriors on Friday — for a chance to play the Thunder in the first round.  –Field Level Media    #Deadspin #Suns #rout #Thunder #reserves #center #stage #finale

Deadspin | MLB roundup: Braves pound out 19 hits in 13-1 thrashing of Guardians  Apr 12, 2026; Cumberland, Georgia, USA; Atlanta Braves right fielder Ronald Acuna Jr. (13) and third baseman Austin Riley (27) react after defeating the Cleveland Guardians at Truist Park. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-Imagn Images   Dominic Smith homered and Jorge Mateo collected four hits as the Atlanta Braves rolled to a 13-1 win over the visiting Cleveland Guardians on Sunday night.  Atlanta starter Chris Sale (3-1) pitched six solid innings. The left-hander scattered eight hits, gave up one run, walked one and struck out six as the Braves won two of three games from the Guardians. Atlanta is the only team in Major League Baseball that hasn’t lost a series this year.  The Braves pounded out 19 hits as second baseman Ozzie Albies was 3-for-4 with two runs and an RBI. Center fielder Mauricio Dubon was 3-or-4 with two runs and two RBIs. Right fielder Ronald Acuna Jr had two hits and an RBI and third baseman Austin Riley also cranked out two hits, with a run and two RBIs. Left-hander Dylan Dodd went three scoreless innings in earning his first save of the season.  Cleveland starter Tanner Bibee (0-2) was saddled with the loss. He lasted 4 2/3 innings and gave up eight runs, 11 hits and one walk while fanning four.  Orioles 6, Giants 2  Baltimore Orioles starter Cade Povich, pitching on his 26th birthday, allowed just five hits and one run while fanning five in his 6 2/3-inning outing.  For Baltimore, Pete Alonso, Leody Taveras, and Taylor Ward had two hits apiece, while Samuel Basallo blasted a two-run homer.  Casey Schmitt hit a home run and two singles for the San Francisco Giants. Starter Adrian Houser (0-2) lasted 4 2/3 innings and allowed four runs on five hits with two walks and three strikeouts.  Diamondbacks 4, Phillies 3  Corbin Carroll, James McCann, and rookie Jose Fernandez had two hits apiece for Arizona in a win over host Philadelphia.  Pinch-hitter Adrian Del Castillo singled in the go-ahead run in a two-run eighth inning. Taylor Clarke (1-0) pitched a scoreless seventh, and Paul Sewald pitched a 1-2-3 ninth for his fifth save.  Andrew Painter, the second Phillies pitcher, gave up three hits and one run in five innings. The scheduled starter, Painter did not open because of a migraine headache, the Phillies announced, before entering in the third. Trea Turner had two hits, including his first homer of the season.  Twins 8, Blue Jays 2  Tristan Gray hit a three-run home run and visiting Minnesota defeated Toronto.  Kody Clemens added a solo home run and Taj Bradley (3-0) went five innings to pick the win for the Twins, who have won six of their last seven. Minnesota scored three times in the second inning and added five more in the third.  Daulton Varsho and Ernie Clement each had three hits for the Blue Jays, who finished a 2-4 homestand. The Blue Jays had a 12-8 advantage in hits, but were 2-for-14 with runners in scoring position. Max Scherzer (1-2) allowed eight runs, five hits and two walks and hit a batter while striking out three in 2 1/3 innings.  Angels 9, Reds 6  Jose Soriano continued his hot start with 10 strikeouts over seven shutout innings and Oswald Peraza homered to lead Los Angeles over host Cincinnati.   Soriano (4-0) allowed two singles and walked three, while lowering his ERA to 0.33, tops in the majors. Mike Trout went 2-for-4 with a double, a walk, three runs and an RBI and Nolan Schanuel had two hits, two walks and three RBIs for the Angels. Logan O’Hoppe and Jo Adell each added two hits and an RBI.  Elly De La Cruz hit a three-run homer and had two hits for Cincinnati, which lost for the fourth time in the last five games. Andrew Abbott (0-2) suffered the loss, allowing seven runs on eight hits in three-plus innings.  Marlins 8, Tigers 2  Dillon Dingler hit a three-run home run, Kevin McGonigle blasted his first career homer and host Detroit completed a three-game sweep of Miami.  McGonigle reached base four times, including three hits, and scored two runs while Kerry Carpenter supplied a two-run shot for the Tigers. Tigers ace Tarik Skubal didn’t allow a hit until Austin Slater’s bloop single to center in the sixth. Skubal (2-2) allowed one run and two hits while walking two and striking out seven in 6 2/3 innings.  Marlins starter Sandy Alcantara (2-1) gave up seven runs and 10 hits in six innings. Alcantara had allowed just two earned runs in his first three starts. Otto Lopez had both Miami RBIs with a solo homer and a sacrifice fly.  Rays 5, Yankees 4  Chandler Simpson collected three hits and two runs, and Tampa Bay hung on to beat New York and complete a three-game sweep in St. Petersburg, Fla.  Simpson singled and scored in the first inning, hit an RBI single in the second and tripled in the seventh inning before coming home on a sacrifice fly. Cedric Mullins also tripled and scored for the Rays, while starter Drew Rasmussen (1-0) allowed one hit, struck out seven and walked none in six scoreless innings.  Aaron Judge hit a two-run homer with nobody out in the ninth inning to cut the deficit to one run before the Rays’ Mason Englert completed his first career save. Yankees starter Cam Schlittler (2-1) allowed three runs on seven hits over five innings, striking out eight.  Athletics 1, Mets 0  Aaron Civale tossed 5 2/3 solid innings and combined with four relievers on a four-hitter for the red-hot Athletics, who completed a three-game sweep of host New York.  Civale (2-0) gave up four hits and walked none while striking out three. Nick Kurtz homered in the third for the Athletics, who won the final five games of a six-game road trip to New York against the Yankees and Mets.   Francisco Lindor recorded a pair of singles for the Mets, who lost the last five games of their six-game homestand. Freddy Peralta (1-1) took the hard-luck loss for the Mets after allowing the one run on four hits and three walks while striking out six over six innings.  White Sox 6, Royals 5  Dustin Harris roped a pinch-hit double and scored the go-ahead run on a wild pitch in the seventh inning, then made a late potential home run-robbing catch, as Chicago edged host Kansas City.  Tanner Murray and Colson Montgomery each hit two-run homers and the White Sox used nine pitchers to win a contest that started after a three-hour rain delay and salvaged their split of this four-game set.  With the score 5-5, the little-used Harris opened the seventh with a double, and eventually scored from third via a wild pitch by John Schreiber (0-2). Then in the eighth, Kansas City’s Michael Massey sent a Lucas Sims pitch deep to right field, but Harris reached up and snagged the ball at the top of the wall.  Nationals 8, Brewers 6  Keibert Ruiz singled in the go-ahead runs in the eighth inning and Washington completed a sweep with victory over host Milwaukee, which has lost five consecutive games.  James Wood hit his fifth home run of the season for the Nationals. PJ Poulin (2-0) got the win with 1 1/3 scoreless innings in relief. Gus Varland finished with a perfect ninth for his first save.  Gary Sanchez brought the Brewers even at 6-all with a three-run homer in the seventh. Brice Turang homered twice with solo shots in third and fifth innings. Jake Bauers hit his fourth homer. Milwaukee designated hitter Christian Yelich left in the fifth inning with left hamstring tightness, the team announced.  Red Sox 9, Cardinals 3  Willson Contreras had four hits, including a two-run home run, and drove in three runs to lead Boston past host St. Louis.  Jarren Duran also collected three RBIs for the Red Sox, who received four hits and two RBIs from Trevor Story. Brayan Bello (1-1) limited the Cardinals to two runs on six hits in 6 2/3 innings.   Jordan Walker and Alec Burleson each hit a solo home run and a single for the Cardinals, who trailed 7-1 after four innings. Walker’s home run was his MLB-leading seventh of the season. He homered six times in 363 at-bats during the 2025 season. St. Louis starter Andre Pallante (1-1) gave up seven runs on 10 hits in five innings and took the loss.   Cubs 7, Pirates 6  Carson Kelly drove in pinch runner Scott Kingery with one out in the ninth inning to give host Chicago a walk-off win over Pittsburgh.  Kelly’s RBI single delivered the Cubs’ first lead of the day as they rallied from deficits of 5-0 and 6-2 to avoid being swept. Cubs closer Daniel Palencia (1-0) tossed a scoreless ninth.  The Pirates wasted two home runs by Brandon Lowe. The second baseman drove in five runs with a grand slam in the second and a solo shot in the fifth. Jose Urquidy (0-1) was responsible for the ninth-inning rally.  Rangers 5, Dodgers 2  Jacob deGrom overcame allowing a leadoff homer to Shohei Ohtani by striking out nine batters, helping Texas defeat host Los Angeles, which lost for just the second time in its last nine games.  Right-hander deGrom (1-0) yielded one run on four hits in six innings. Evan Carter homered to lead off the third and Josh Smith had an RBI single later in the inning for the Rangers, who notched their fourth win in six games. Brandon Nimmo drove in his second run of the day with an RBI single in the eighth and Josh Jung had two hits and reached base four times.  For the second straight day, Ohtani homered to lead off the Dodgers’ half of the first inning. The homer was his fifth of the season. Kyle Tucker had an RBI single in the seventh inning to cut Texas’ lead to 3-2.  Padres 7, Rockies 2  Ty France, Ramon Laureano and Jackson Merrill each homered San Diego finished off a four-game sweep of visiting Colorado in a game where both starting pitchers went down with injuries.  France went 3-for-3, scoring three runs and finishing a triple shy of the cycle. Laureano and Manny Machado drove in two runs apiece, as San Diego extended its winning streak to five games, outscoring the Rockies 28-12 in the series. David Morgan (2-0) was awarded his second win of the series after throwing 1 2/3 hitless innings.  The Padres got some bad news in the fourth inning when Nick Pivetta, who retired the first nine men he faced, exited in the top of the fourth due to right elbow stiffness. Colorado’s scheduled starter, Kyle Freeland, didn’t even make it to the post. He was scratched during warmups with what the Rockies termed left posterior shoulder soreness.  Mariners 6, Astros 1  Logan Gilbert pitched seven strong innings for his first victory of the season as Seattle defeated visiting Houston.  Randy Arozarena and Luke Raley, the Nos. 5-6 batters in Seattle’s lineup, both had three hits. Raley had two doubles and two RBIs. Yainer Diaz hit a solo homer for the Astros’ lone run. The Mariners have won the first three games in the four-game series between the American League West rivals. Gilbert (1-2), the Mariners’ opening day starter, allowed one run on four hits.  With two starters going on the injured list last week and another sent back to Houston for further evaluation, the Astros were forced to go with a bullpen day. Right-hander Cody Bolton (0-1) served as the opener and allowed two runs on one hit in one-plus innings.  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #MLB #roundup #Braves #pound #hits #thrashing #GuardiansApr 12, 2026; Cumberland, Georgia, USA; Atlanta Braves right fielder Ronald Acuna Jr. (13) and third baseman Austin Riley (27) react after defeating the Cleveland Guardians at Truist Park. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-Imagn Images

Dominic Smith homered and Jorge Mateo collected four hits as the Atlanta Braves rolled to a 13-1 win over the visiting Cleveland Guardians on Sunday night.

Atlanta starter Chris Sale (3-1) pitched six solid innings. The left-hander scattered eight hits, gave up one run, walked one and struck out six as the Braves won two of three games from the Guardians. Atlanta is the only team in Major League Baseball that hasn’t lost a series this year.

The Braves pounded out 19 hits as second baseman Ozzie Albies was 3-for-4 with two runs and an RBI. Center fielder Mauricio Dubon was 3-or-4 with two runs and two RBIs. Right fielder Ronald Acuna Jr had two hits and an RBI and third baseman Austin Riley also cranked out two hits, with a run and two RBIs. Left-hander Dylan Dodd went three scoreless innings in earning his first save of the season.

Cleveland starter Tanner Bibee (0-2) was saddled with the loss. He lasted 4 2/3 innings and gave up eight runs, 11 hits and one walk while fanning four.

Orioles 6, Giants 2

Baltimore Orioles starter Cade Povich, pitching on his 26th birthday, allowed just five hits and one run while fanning five in his 6 2/3-inning outing.

For Baltimore, Pete Alonso, Leody Taveras, and Taylor Ward had two hits apiece, while Samuel Basallo blasted a two-run homer.

Casey Schmitt hit a home run and two singles for the San Francisco Giants. Starter Adrian Houser (0-2) lasted 4 2/3 innings and allowed four runs on five hits with two walks and three strikeouts.

Diamondbacks 4, Phillies 3

Corbin Carroll, James McCann, and rookie Jose Fernandez had two hits apiece for Arizona in a win over host Philadelphia.

Pinch-hitter Adrian Del Castillo singled in the go-ahead run in a two-run eighth inning. Taylor Clarke (1-0) pitched a scoreless seventh, and Paul Sewald pitched a 1-2-3 ninth for his fifth save.

Andrew Painter, the second Phillies pitcher, gave up three hits and one run in five innings. The scheduled starter, Painter did not open because of a migraine headache, the Phillies announced, before entering in the third. Trea Turner had two hits, including his first homer of the season.

Twins 8, Blue Jays 2

Tristan Gray hit a three-run home run and visiting Minnesota defeated Toronto.

Kody Clemens added a solo home run and Taj Bradley (3-0) went five innings to pick the win for the Twins, who have won six of their last seven. Minnesota scored three times in the second inning and added five more in the third.

Daulton Varsho and Ernie Clement each had three hits for the Blue Jays, who finished a 2-4 homestand. The Blue Jays had a 12-8 advantage in hits, but were 2-for-14 with runners in scoring position. Max Scherzer (1-2) allowed eight runs, five hits and two walks and hit a batter while striking out three in 2 1/3 innings.

Angels 9, Reds 6

Jose Soriano continued his hot start with 10 strikeouts over seven shutout innings and Oswald Peraza homered to lead Los Angeles over host Cincinnati.

Soriano (4-0) allowed two singles and walked three, while lowering his ERA to 0.33, tops in the majors. Mike Trout went 2-for-4 with a double, a walk, three runs and an RBI and Nolan Schanuel had two hits, two walks and three RBIs for the Angels. Logan O’Hoppe and Jo Adell each added two hits and an RBI.

Elly De La Cruz hit a three-run homer and had two hits for Cincinnati, which lost for the fourth time in the last five games. Andrew Abbott (0-2) suffered the loss, allowing seven runs on eight hits in three-plus innings.

Marlins 8, Tigers 2

Dillon Dingler hit a three-run home run, Kevin McGonigle blasted his first career homer and host Detroit completed a three-game sweep of Miami.

McGonigle reached base four times, including three hits, and scored two runs while Kerry Carpenter supplied a two-run shot for the Tigers. Tigers ace Tarik Skubal didn’t allow a hit until Austin Slater’s bloop single to center in the sixth. Skubal (2-2) allowed one run and two hits while walking two and striking out seven in 6 2/3 innings.

Marlins starter Sandy Alcantara (2-1) gave up seven runs and 10 hits in six innings. Alcantara had allowed just two earned runs in his first three starts. Otto Lopez had both Miami RBIs with a solo homer and a sacrifice fly.

Rays 5, Yankees 4

Chandler Simpson collected three hits and two runs, and Tampa Bay hung on to beat New York and complete a three-game sweep in St. Petersburg, Fla.

Simpson singled and scored in the first inning, hit an RBI single in the second and tripled in the seventh inning before coming home on a sacrifice fly. Cedric Mullins also tripled and scored for the Rays, while starter Drew Rasmussen (1-0) allowed one hit, struck out seven and walked none in six scoreless innings.

Aaron Judge hit a two-run homer with nobody out in the ninth inning to cut the deficit to one run before the Rays’ Mason Englert completed his first career save. Yankees starter Cam Schlittler (2-1) allowed three runs on seven hits over five innings, striking out eight.

Athletics 1, Mets 0

Aaron Civale tossed 5 2/3 solid innings and combined with four relievers on a four-hitter for the red-hot Athletics, who completed a three-game sweep of host New York.


Civale (2-0) gave up four hits and walked none while striking out three. Nick Kurtz homered in the third for the Athletics, who won the final five games of a six-game road trip to New York against the Yankees and Mets.

Francisco Lindor recorded a pair of singles for the Mets, who lost the last five games of their six-game homestand. Freddy Peralta (1-1) took the hard-luck loss for the Mets after allowing the one run on four hits and three walks while striking out six over six innings.

White Sox 6, Royals 5

Dustin Harris roped a pinch-hit double and scored the go-ahead run on a wild pitch in the seventh inning, then made a late potential home run-robbing catch, as Chicago edged host Kansas City.

Tanner Murray and Colson Montgomery each hit two-run homers and the White Sox used nine pitchers to win a contest that started after a three-hour rain delay and salvaged their split of this four-game set.

With the score 5-5, the little-used Harris opened the seventh with a double, and eventually scored from third via a wild pitch by John Schreiber (0-2). Then in the eighth, Kansas City’s Michael Massey sent a Lucas Sims pitch deep to right field, but Harris reached up and snagged the ball at the top of the wall.

Nationals 8, Brewers 6

Keibert Ruiz singled in the go-ahead runs in the eighth inning and Washington completed a sweep with victory over host Milwaukee, which has lost five consecutive games.

James Wood hit his fifth home run of the season for the Nationals. PJ Poulin (2-0) got the win with 1 1/3 scoreless innings in relief. Gus Varland finished with a perfect ninth for his first save.

Gary Sanchez brought the Brewers even at 6-all with a three-run homer in the seventh. Brice Turang homered twice with solo shots in third and fifth innings. Jake Bauers hit his fourth homer. Milwaukee designated hitter Christian Yelich left in the fifth inning with left hamstring tightness, the team announced.

Red Sox 9, Cardinals 3

Willson Contreras had four hits, including a two-run home run, and drove in three runs to lead Boston past host St. Louis.

Jarren Duran also collected three RBIs for the Red Sox, who received four hits and two RBIs from Trevor Story. Brayan Bello (1-1) limited the Cardinals to two runs on six hits in 6 2/3 innings.

Jordan Walker and Alec Burleson each hit a solo home run and a single for the Cardinals, who trailed 7-1 after four innings. Walker’s home run was his MLB-leading seventh of the season. He homered six times in 363 at-bats during the 2025 season. St. Louis starter Andre Pallante (1-1) gave up seven runs on 10 hits in five innings and took the loss.

Cubs 7, Pirates 6

Carson Kelly drove in pinch runner Scott Kingery with one out in the ninth inning to give host Chicago a walk-off win over Pittsburgh.

Kelly’s RBI single delivered the Cubs’ first lead of the day as they rallied from deficits of 5-0 and 6-2 to avoid being swept. Cubs closer Daniel Palencia (1-0) tossed a scoreless ninth.

The Pirates wasted two home runs by Brandon Lowe. The second baseman drove in five runs with a grand slam in the second and a solo shot in the fifth. Jose Urquidy (0-1) was responsible for the ninth-inning rally.

Rangers 5, Dodgers 2

Jacob deGrom overcame allowing a leadoff homer to Shohei Ohtani by striking out nine batters, helping Texas defeat host Los Angeles, which lost for just the second time in its last nine games.

Right-hander deGrom (1-0) yielded one run on four hits in six innings. Evan Carter homered to lead off the third and Josh Smith had an RBI single later in the inning for the Rangers, who notched their fourth win in six games. Brandon Nimmo drove in his second run of the day with an RBI single in the eighth and Josh Jung had two hits and reached base four times.

For the second straight day, Ohtani homered to lead off the Dodgers’ half of the first inning. The homer was his fifth of the season. Kyle Tucker had an RBI single in the seventh inning to cut Texas’ lead to 3-2.

Padres 7, Rockies 2

Ty France, Ramon Laureano and Jackson Merrill each homered San Diego finished off a four-game sweep of visiting Colorado in a game where both starting pitchers went down with injuries.

France went 3-for-3, scoring three runs and finishing a triple shy of the cycle. Laureano and Manny Machado drove in two runs apiece, as San Diego extended its winning streak to five games, outscoring the Rockies 28-12 in the series. David Morgan (2-0) was awarded his second win of the series after throwing 1 2/3 hitless innings.

The Padres got some bad news in the fourth inning when Nick Pivetta, who retired the first nine men he faced, exited in the top of the fourth due to right elbow stiffness. Colorado’s scheduled starter, Kyle Freeland, didn’t even make it to the post. He was scratched during warmups with what the Rockies termed left posterior shoulder soreness.

Mariners 6, Astros 1

Logan Gilbert pitched seven strong innings for his first victory of the season as Seattle defeated visiting Houston.

Randy Arozarena and Luke Raley, the Nos. 5-6 batters in Seattle’s lineup, both had three hits. Raley had two doubles and two RBIs. Yainer Diaz hit a solo homer for the Astros’ lone run. The Mariners have won the first three games in the four-game series between the American League West rivals. Gilbert (1-2), the Mariners’ opening day starter, allowed one run on four hits.

With two starters going on the injured list last week and another sent back to Houston for further evaluation, the Astros were forced to go with a bullpen day. Right-hander Cody Bolton (0-1) served as the opener and allowed two runs on one hit in one-plus innings.

–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #MLB #roundup #Braves #pound #hits #thrashing #Guardians">Deadspin | MLB roundup: Braves pound out 19 hits in 13-1 thrashing of Guardians  Apr 12, 2026; Cumberland, Georgia, USA; Atlanta Braves right fielder Ronald Acuna Jr. (13) and third baseman Austin Riley (27) react after defeating the Cleveland Guardians at Truist Park. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-Imagn Images   Dominic Smith homered and Jorge Mateo collected four hits as the Atlanta Braves rolled to a 13-1 win over the visiting Cleveland Guardians on Sunday night.  Atlanta starter Chris Sale (3-1) pitched six solid innings. The left-hander scattered eight hits, gave up one run, walked one and struck out six as the Braves won two of three games from the Guardians. Atlanta is the only team in Major League Baseball that hasn’t lost a series this year.  The Braves pounded out 19 hits as second baseman Ozzie Albies was 3-for-4 with two runs and an RBI. Center fielder Mauricio Dubon was 3-or-4 with two runs and two RBIs. Right fielder Ronald Acuna Jr had two hits and an RBI and third baseman Austin Riley also cranked out two hits, with a run and two RBIs. Left-hander Dylan Dodd went three scoreless innings in earning his first save of the season.  Cleveland starter Tanner Bibee (0-2) was saddled with the loss. He lasted 4 2/3 innings and gave up eight runs, 11 hits and one walk while fanning four.  Orioles 6, Giants 2  Baltimore Orioles starter Cade Povich, pitching on his 26th birthday, allowed just five hits and one run while fanning five in his 6 2/3-inning outing.  For Baltimore, Pete Alonso, Leody Taveras, and Taylor Ward had two hits apiece, while Samuel Basallo blasted a two-run homer.  Casey Schmitt hit a home run and two singles for the San Francisco Giants. Starter Adrian Houser (0-2) lasted 4 2/3 innings and allowed four runs on five hits with two walks and three strikeouts.  Diamondbacks 4, Phillies 3  Corbin Carroll, James McCann, and rookie Jose Fernandez had two hits apiece for Arizona in a win over host Philadelphia.  Pinch-hitter Adrian Del Castillo singled in the go-ahead run in a two-run eighth inning. Taylor Clarke (1-0) pitched a scoreless seventh, and Paul Sewald pitched a 1-2-3 ninth for his fifth save.  Andrew Painter, the second Phillies pitcher, gave up three hits and one run in five innings. The scheduled starter, Painter did not open because of a migraine headache, the Phillies announced, before entering in the third. Trea Turner had two hits, including his first homer of the season.  Twins 8, Blue Jays 2  Tristan Gray hit a three-run home run and visiting Minnesota defeated Toronto.  Kody Clemens added a solo home run and Taj Bradley (3-0) went five innings to pick the win for the Twins, who have won six of their last seven. Minnesota scored three times in the second inning and added five more in the third.  Daulton Varsho and Ernie Clement each had three hits for the Blue Jays, who finished a 2-4 homestand. The Blue Jays had a 12-8 advantage in hits, but were 2-for-14 with runners in scoring position. Max Scherzer (1-2) allowed eight runs, five hits and two walks and hit a batter while striking out three in 2 1/3 innings.  Angels 9, Reds 6  Jose Soriano continued his hot start with 10 strikeouts over seven shutout innings and Oswald Peraza homered to lead Los Angeles over host Cincinnati.   Soriano (4-0) allowed two singles and walked three, while lowering his ERA to 0.33, tops in the majors. Mike Trout went 2-for-4 with a double, a walk, three runs and an RBI and Nolan Schanuel had two hits, two walks and three RBIs for the Angels. Logan O’Hoppe and Jo Adell each added two hits and an RBI.  Elly De La Cruz hit a three-run homer and had two hits for Cincinnati, which lost for the fourth time in the last five games. Andrew Abbott (0-2) suffered the loss, allowing seven runs on eight hits in three-plus innings.  Marlins 8, Tigers 2  Dillon Dingler hit a three-run home run, Kevin McGonigle blasted his first career homer and host Detroit completed a three-game sweep of Miami.  McGonigle reached base four times, including three hits, and scored two runs while Kerry Carpenter supplied a two-run shot for the Tigers. Tigers ace Tarik Skubal didn’t allow a hit until Austin Slater’s bloop single to center in the sixth. Skubal (2-2) allowed one run and two hits while walking two and striking out seven in 6 2/3 innings.  Marlins starter Sandy Alcantara (2-1) gave up seven runs and 10 hits in six innings. Alcantara had allowed just two earned runs in his first three starts. Otto Lopez had both Miami RBIs with a solo homer and a sacrifice fly.  Rays 5, Yankees 4  Chandler Simpson collected three hits and two runs, and Tampa Bay hung on to beat New York and complete a three-game sweep in St. Petersburg, Fla.  Simpson singled and scored in the first inning, hit an RBI single in the second and tripled in the seventh inning before coming home on a sacrifice fly. Cedric Mullins also tripled and scored for the Rays, while starter Drew Rasmussen (1-0) allowed one hit, struck out seven and walked none in six scoreless innings.  Aaron Judge hit a two-run homer with nobody out in the ninth inning to cut the deficit to one run before the Rays’ Mason Englert completed his first career save. Yankees starter Cam Schlittler (2-1) allowed three runs on seven hits over five innings, striking out eight.  Athletics 1, Mets 0  Aaron Civale tossed 5 2/3 solid innings and combined with four relievers on a four-hitter for the red-hot Athletics, who completed a three-game sweep of host New York.  Civale (2-0) gave up four hits and walked none while striking out three. Nick Kurtz homered in the third for the Athletics, who won the final five games of a six-game road trip to New York against the Yankees and Mets.   Francisco Lindor recorded a pair of singles for the Mets, who lost the last five games of their six-game homestand. Freddy Peralta (1-1) took the hard-luck loss for the Mets after allowing the one run on four hits and three walks while striking out six over six innings.  White Sox 6, Royals 5  Dustin Harris roped a pinch-hit double and scored the go-ahead run on a wild pitch in the seventh inning, then made a late potential home run-robbing catch, as Chicago edged host Kansas City.  Tanner Murray and Colson Montgomery each hit two-run homers and the White Sox used nine pitchers to win a contest that started after a three-hour rain delay and salvaged their split of this four-game set.  With the score 5-5, the little-used Harris opened the seventh with a double, and eventually scored from third via a wild pitch by John Schreiber (0-2). Then in the eighth, Kansas City’s Michael Massey sent a Lucas Sims pitch deep to right field, but Harris reached up and snagged the ball at the top of the wall.  Nationals 8, Brewers 6  Keibert Ruiz singled in the go-ahead runs in the eighth inning and Washington completed a sweep with victory over host Milwaukee, which has lost five consecutive games.  James Wood hit his fifth home run of the season for the Nationals. PJ Poulin (2-0) got the win with 1 1/3 scoreless innings in relief. Gus Varland finished with a perfect ninth for his first save.  Gary Sanchez brought the Brewers even at 6-all with a three-run homer in the seventh. Brice Turang homered twice with solo shots in third and fifth innings. Jake Bauers hit his fourth homer. Milwaukee designated hitter Christian Yelich left in the fifth inning with left hamstring tightness, the team announced.  Red Sox 9, Cardinals 3  Willson Contreras had four hits, including a two-run home run, and drove in three runs to lead Boston past host St. Louis.  Jarren Duran also collected three RBIs for the Red Sox, who received four hits and two RBIs from Trevor Story. Brayan Bello (1-1) limited the Cardinals to two runs on six hits in 6 2/3 innings.   Jordan Walker and Alec Burleson each hit a solo home run and a single for the Cardinals, who trailed 7-1 after four innings. Walker’s home run was his MLB-leading seventh of the season. He homered six times in 363 at-bats during the 2025 season. St. Louis starter Andre Pallante (1-1) gave up seven runs on 10 hits in five innings and took the loss.   Cubs 7, Pirates 6  Carson Kelly drove in pinch runner Scott Kingery with one out in the ninth inning to give host Chicago a walk-off win over Pittsburgh.  Kelly’s RBI single delivered the Cubs’ first lead of the day as they rallied from deficits of 5-0 and 6-2 to avoid being swept. Cubs closer Daniel Palencia (1-0) tossed a scoreless ninth.  The Pirates wasted two home runs by Brandon Lowe. The second baseman drove in five runs with a grand slam in the second and a solo shot in the fifth. Jose Urquidy (0-1) was responsible for the ninth-inning rally.  Rangers 5, Dodgers 2  Jacob deGrom overcame allowing a leadoff homer to Shohei Ohtani by striking out nine batters, helping Texas defeat host Los Angeles, which lost for just the second time in its last nine games.  Right-hander deGrom (1-0) yielded one run on four hits in six innings. Evan Carter homered to lead off the third and Josh Smith had an RBI single later in the inning for the Rangers, who notched their fourth win in six games. Brandon Nimmo drove in his second run of the day with an RBI single in the eighth and Josh Jung had two hits and reached base four times.  For the second straight day, Ohtani homered to lead off the Dodgers’ half of the first inning. The homer was his fifth of the season. Kyle Tucker had an RBI single in the seventh inning to cut Texas’ lead to 3-2.  Padres 7, Rockies 2  Ty France, Ramon Laureano and Jackson Merrill each homered San Diego finished off a four-game sweep of visiting Colorado in a game where both starting pitchers went down with injuries.  France went 3-for-3, scoring three runs and finishing a triple shy of the cycle. Laureano and Manny Machado drove in two runs apiece, as San Diego extended its winning streak to five games, outscoring the Rockies 28-12 in the series. David Morgan (2-0) was awarded his second win of the series after throwing 1 2/3 hitless innings.  The Padres got some bad news in the fourth inning when Nick Pivetta, who retired the first nine men he faced, exited in the top of the fourth due to right elbow stiffness. Colorado’s scheduled starter, Kyle Freeland, didn’t even make it to the post. He was scratched during warmups with what the Rockies termed left posterior shoulder soreness.  Mariners 6, Astros 1  Logan Gilbert pitched seven strong innings for his first victory of the season as Seattle defeated visiting Houston.  Randy Arozarena and Luke Raley, the Nos. 5-6 batters in Seattle’s lineup, both had three hits. Raley had two doubles and two RBIs. Yainer Diaz hit a solo homer for the Astros’ lone run. The Mariners have won the first three games in the four-game series between the American League West rivals. Gilbert (1-2), the Mariners’ opening day starter, allowed one run on four hits.  With two starters going on the injured list last week and another sent back to Houston for further evaluation, the Astros were forced to go with a bullpen day. Right-hander Cody Bolton (0-1) served as the opener and allowed two runs on one hit in one-plus innings.  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #MLB #roundup #Braves #pound #hits #thrashing #Guardians

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