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NBA Playoffs’ 50 best players, ranked for 2026 postseason  Welcome to one of the larger and more preposterous playoff preview power poll projects I’ve ever attempted. We are ranking the Top 50 players in the NBA Playoffs, an utterly ridiculous effort that is, frankly, not possible to do responsibly. There is no methodology so sound that one person can rank 50 people; there is no theory so ironclad that it can avoid the rampant, harmful subjectivity of the recesses of my troubled mind. So, without meaningfully explaining my definition of “Top 50” or a philosophy of value or any kind of scientific method, I’m going to do it anyway. Also check out our rankings of every team in the field by their championship chances.In an effort to not make this a million words, I have only given the Top 25 (spoiler alert: it’s actually 26, you’ll see why) players their own blurbs, and then grouped the back 25 (spoiler alert: it’s 24) together in some loose categories that I think capture the spirit of the exercise. In any case, lots about this will be demonstrably wrong, and I apologize that there is absolutely no way to avoid that. Onwards!1. Shai Gilgeous-AlexanderMade up award: The 2019 Carsen Edwards vs. Virginia “That shot is just going in” AwardThe best player in the world until someone else feels sufficiently inevitable with the ball in their hands. Shai has achieved peak scoring excellence in that you just think his shot is always going in, and he scores at a volume, efficiency and location (over 77 percent of his shots are twos and he shoots 55.3 percent from the field … he’s a guard!) that simply shouldn’t be possible. He has the belt.Made up award: The Novak Djokovic Lifetime Achievement Award for Serbian Sports ExcellenceI debated whether Jokic or Victor Wembanyama would get the second spot, but their majestic head-to-head battle clinched it for the Joker. The San Antonio Spurs are contenders for a number of reasons, the biggest (and tallest) one being Wemby. The Denver Nuggets are contenders for one reason and one reason only: Jokic, who could enter some seriously hallowed all-time ground if he grabs a second ring in a stacked West.Made up award: Voted “Most likely to record a quadruple double in the playoffs”Wemby and his precarious health have been treated carefully this year to maximize his impact and longevity, but the kid gloves are going to have to come off eventually. When they do, he’s such an outlier that I would believe any statistical achievement if he plays 43 minutes. There have only been four quadruple doubles in NBA history, and yet I’d somehow be surprised if he wasn’t the fifth.Made up award: The Bitcoin Award for Player Who Can Swing the Market the MostLuka’s availability after an unbelievably poorly timed hamstring injury is the great question mark of these playoffs. If he can return, and actually be Luka Doncic, before the Lakers are eliminated? It’s a whole new ballgame for everyone.HOUSTON, TEXAS – APRIL 10: Anthony Edwards #5 of the Minnesota Timberwolves brings the ball up court against the Houston Rockets during the second half at Toyota Center on April 10, 2026 in Houston, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images) Getty ImagesMade up award: The John Henry Award for Potentially Having to Dig a Tunnel through a MountainEdwards is everyone’s favorite young player who might be the next Michael Jordan — he’s electrifying and displays two-way brilliance that is rare for the modern scoring guard. But he has his work positively cut out for him in these playoffs, needing to shake off some late-season injuries and then probably beat Denver, San Antonio and OKC all in a row just to make the NBA Finals. Best of luck.Made up award: The Ralph Fiennes “We need to get this guy an Oscar” AwardThis is a guy who has made the playoffs every year of his career but never made the Conference Finals, so fans are crying out for him to please get some hardware this time around. I’ve always been bullish on Mitchell as an elite playoff guy, whose highs are high enough to beat literally anyone single-handedly. But he will need to do that consistently for once to get over the hump.Made up award: The Cade Cunningham “so likeable that his injury might kill the 65 game rule” AwardEveryone was so in agreement that Cunningham deserved to be on the All-NBA First Team that we all collectively freaked out about the 65-game rule to try to salvage his candidacy before he was granted an exemption (which is probably the best reason to kill the rule). Cunningham was the twin-turbo V8 engine that drove the Pistons to the number one seed, but may be leaned on too heavily to create shots with Detroit lacking a second scorer.Made up award: The Captain Phillips “I am the captain now” AwardBrown has improved his game in ways I simply did not believe were possible at this point in his career. With Jayson Tatum out most of the year, he proved he could be the First Violin in a world-class orchestra that’s about to go on tour. Truly a spectacular season for one of my favorite players.Made up award: The Second Round Pick Award for second-best second-round pick of all timeBehind only Nikola Jokic in second round pick achievement, Brunson is of course an elite first option, an elite shot creator and an elite foul-sponge, a critical skill in the playoffs with tighter whistles across the board. It’s worth wondering, though, if the Knicks can actually win the East with Brunson at this kind of usage. I think they can, but the rest of the roster will need to take on part of the burden.Made up award: The Patriots-Falcons 28-3 Super Bowl Award for Best ComebackAlmost an unfathomably great result for Tatum, who tore his Achilles less than a year ago and now stands poised for his 122nd career playoff game and counting. He and Brown are two of the most successful playoff guys in terms of number of games played to start their careers, and Tatum is a championship-winning first option when healthy. We shall see how much strain he’s ready to take.Made up award: The Damian Lillard “You might need to demand a trade at some point” AwardBooker seems committed to Phoenix financially and competitively, and it’s impressive work that such a flawed team made the playoffs. But the Suns spent all their draft capital and young pieces to build a team, tear it down and now is staring down mediocrity for the foreseeable future. There are plenty of ways to pivot around such a great player, but there’s a chance this gets 2021ish Damian Lillard. Just a chance.Made up award: The Lightning McQueen “Ka-Chow” Award for Being FastThere is no correlation between average player speed and… being a good player, which is why Maxey is my pick for fastest NBA player in lieu of data. This is purely in terms of visually explosive burst in transition and on drives. The Celtics have struggled to contain Maxey for years, and he is Philly’s singular win condition.Made up award: The Al Horford “should we talk about how old this guy is more?” AwardDurant is still putting ball in hoop like no other in year 19 which is, somehow, still not discussed nearly enough. LeBron James cornered the market on “wow he’s how old” discussions, but Durant is casually averaging 26 a game in 36 minutes in 78 games played. In the playoffs, you often need a bucket. For all the stuff that comes with the Durant experience, he is still the bucket.Made up award: The Jaylen Brown Award for scoring leap I didn’t see comingDid you know this was Murray’s first career All-Star season? Somehow, some way, Murray became a far more efficient shooter this season and ratcheted up his scoring to over 25 a game. He and Jokic have a premier partnership that we already know can win a title. Will they win another?Made up award: The Casual NBA Fan award for “WHO are you saying is three whole spots better than LeBron?”Many NBA fans may have missed this development, but Jalen Johnson has been soaring up the superstar boards all season, basically getting better and better for five straight years … all the way to somehow looking like an All-NBA first option. Trae Young’s departure took off the training wheels, and now we’re flying.Made up award: The Banana Boat Award for going from Third to Second BananaHolmgren is a first-time All-Star who made a serious leap over Jalen Williams, whose injury-laden season saw Chet take on a bigger role. He’s a cornerstone defensive force and exactly what the Thunder need to dynasty this thing up.Made up award: The Eye Test Award for being better than your statsBarnes’ Basketball Reference page doesn’t really suggest he improved much as a scorer, but he shot the ball much better and was a major part of a pretty spicy Toronto team that is looking to spoil some fun in Round One.Made up award: The “Lock In” Award for potentially most epic lock-inIf LeBron James can carry the Los Angeles Lakers out of the first round without their two best scorers — Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves — that would be one of the premier lock-ins of all time. I’m a Celtics fan, but I’m going to be rooting for this.Made up award: The Lucy Pulling the Football Award for most consistent playoff disappointmentNot generally the most reliable guy in the playoffs, the Cleveland Cavaliers nonetheless traded Darius Garland for Harden in a last-ditch effort to salvage their meh season. It could work; Harden is a good player. But nothing historically suggests it will.Made up award: The “Most Improved Player Award” Award for exemplifying what that award is supposed to meanDuren almost doubled his scoring output this season and was the second-biggest reason the Pistons took the league by storm. He is a dominating force on the glass and a pretty solid interior scorer, given his complete lack of a jumpshot. I’m a big fan of Duren.Made up award: The Zion Williamson “I’m going to the rim no matter what” AwardDeni isn’t Williamson, who actually does not shoot threes at all anymore by the way, but he is at his best when he is trying to get downhill on every possession. He was a one-man wrecking crew in the first Play-In game, but we will see if that works against Wembanyama, whose 872-foot wingspan might cause problems.Made up award: The James Harden “not sure how reliable this guy is” AwardTowns’ playoff plus/minus stats are not what you want out of your supposed second option, but it has proved difficult for the Knicks to keep both he and Brunson on the court and survive defensively. To avoid becoming the next Harden, towns will need a moment.Made up award: The Kevin McHale Award for 2020s Post BagSengun is a legitimately great post scorer in the year 2026, and it’s pretty fun to watch him eviscerate rim protectors who haven’t had to deal with that since 1987. Balancing his and Durant’s shot diets is the real challenge.DENVER, CO – APRIL 4: Stephon Castle #5 of the San Antonio Spurs dribbles up the court during the second quarter against the Denver Nuggets at Ball Arena on April 4, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. The Nuggets won the game 136-134 in overtime. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images) Getty ImagesMade up award: The Jayson Tatum “he’s HOW young?” award for only being 21Castle is so far beyond what I could have ever expected out of him at his age, and looks like a potential future star. To quote myself when I was talking about Roman Anthony, I am two years older than Stephon Castle. I am not old.Made up award: The Not-Tim Duncan Award for player who is not Tim DuncanOne of my favorite niche NBA media moments of the last five years was this strange series of Bill Simmons podcasts circa 2022 where he and Ryen Russillo kept referring to Mobley as potentially the next Tim Duncan. I was also supremely in on Evan Mobley, and have not quite made back my investment either. He’s a really good player and a beast defensively, but he’s been too inconsistent, especially on offense, to go any higher.(Bonus solo blurb, it was going to be the Top 25 get their own blurbs but I literally forgot about Jalen Brunson when I wrote this the first time and refuse to bump DWhite)Made up award: The Matisse Thybulle Award for Blocking ThreesDerrick White has blocked nine threes this year. That isn’t quite the most, but he’s consistently up there in three-blocking, a skill that I’m just not sure how you teach or learn. Stuff like that is what makes White so valuable, because he’s also a great scorer and creator. What a player.The “How healthy will you be?” GroupThree players who are critically important to their respective teams that either haven’t been healthy for much of the year or may not be healthy going forward. Gordon and Williams seem fine at the moment, with Gordon in particular coming back in force, but none of their respective lineups are the same without them. Only the Thunder could hope to survive an extended absence of any of these three.The “We need offense, do you have offense?” Group Four guys that have had up and down offensive years and four guys who will have to be on the up part of the up and down for the playoffs if their team has any big-time goals. Specifically, I’m looking at Randle as a primo candidate to sink or swim his whole team. Edwards can’t be the only creator for Minnesota, since Rudy Gobert and Jaden McDaniels are not reliable offensively. Thompson may get exposed for his poor shooting, but is capital R required for Houston with their relative lack of ball handlers.The “Actually, we’re good on offense, can you just play defense?” GroupPerhaps the two most important defensive players in these playoffs because of their matchups. Anunoby is going to have to guard some of the best wings in the league throughout the Knicks’ run, and the Eastern Conference might as well be a Wingstop with Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown, Scottie Barnes, Jalen Johnson, they’re everywhere. Gobert, meanwhile, has Wembanyama and Jokic coming at him like a train. He will have to go full Tobey Maguire Spider-Man to stop them.These guys could score in bunches and swing a series by themselves or completely disappear and … swing a series by themselves. Ingram is a player that I wasn’t particularly interested in anymore after his Pelicans tenure expired, but he had a really nice year in Toronto and got back to the All-Star game for the first time since 2020. Both these guys are important bucket-getters on teams without an embarrassment of creators, so lock in.The Guy I Couldn’t Put in a Group Embiid is a player I continue to feel bad for, and having an appendectomy right before the postseason is the worst luck imaginable for a guy who has had a career of the worst luck imaginable. I’ve tried to make this list relatively injury-agnostic, but I didn’t want to speculate at all for Embiid, whose playoff impact I can’t really measure or project whatsoever. So here he is in his own group, presented essentially without comment.39. Nickeil Alexander-WalkerIt physically hurt me to put Alexander-Walker this low since he has more than doubled his scoring this season and is unironically shooting 50-40-90 Bridges and McDaniels are both critical players for their teams, but just feel like a lesser version of what they could be; especially Bridges, who was a legit first-option in Brooklyn for a minute there. But wings are king, and these guys will play a lot. Important Players on Important TeamsA bit of a grab bag here, but these are essential players on teams with championship aspirations. Ausar is definitely still a work in progress offensively but he is also one of the best defensive players in the league, an accolade you could also toss on Caruso, a peak pot-stirrer that somehow makes all of his opponents worse at basketball. Allen, meanwhile, is battling a knee injury but is a massive non-negotiable for the Cavs given how small the rest of their lineup is.Quite the collection of dudes here, all of whom could be described as “oh (insert name from this group), I really like that guy.” They all play pretty different games, but their teams would not be the same without them.50. Dillon Brooks/Paul George/Peyton Watson/Cason Wallace/RJ Barrett/Donovan Clingan/Desmond Bane/whoever else you wantIt’s pretty funny that in a Top 50 players list I had a pretty easy time coming up with the Top 49 but really couldn’t pick the last guy in. This is basically the free space in bingo; just put whoever you want here. I, for one, really wanted to put Baylor Scheierman or Neemias Queta here, but decided against it. Let me know in the comments who you’d put at 50, and what I messed up. If everyone just agrees with me, something went horribly wrong.  #NBA #Playoffs #players #ranked #postseason

NBA Playoffs’ 50 best players, ranked for 2026 postseason

Welcome to one of the larger and more preposterous playoff preview power poll projects I’ve ever attempted. We are ranking the Top 50 players in the NBA Playoffs, an utterly ridiculous effort that is, frankly, not possible to do responsibly. There is no methodology so sound that one person can rank 50 people; there is no theory so ironclad that it can avoid the rampant, harmful subjectivity of the recesses of my troubled mind. So, without meaningfully explaining my definition of “Top 50” or a philosophy of value or any kind of scientific method, I’m going to do it anyway. Also check out our rankings of every team in the field by their championship chances.

In an effort to not make this a million words, I have only given the Top 25 (spoiler alert: it’s actually 26, you’ll see why) players their own blurbs, and then grouped the back 25 (spoiler alert: it’s 24) together in some loose categories that I think capture the spirit of the exercise. In any case, lots about this will be demonstrably wrong, and I apologize that there is absolutely no way to avoid that. Onwards!

1. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

Made up award: The 2019 Carsen Edwards vs. Virginia “That shot is just going in” Award

The best player in the world until someone else feels sufficiently inevitable with the ball in their hands. Shai has achieved peak scoring excellence in that you just think his shot is always going in, and he scores at a volume, efficiency and location (over 77 percent of his shots are twos and he shoots 55.3 percent from the field … he’s a guard!) that simply shouldn’t be possible. He has the belt.

Made up award: The Novak Djokovic Lifetime Achievement Award for Serbian Sports Excellence

I debated whether Jokic or Victor Wembanyama would get the second spot, but their majestic head-to-head battle clinched it for the Joker. The San Antonio Spurs are contenders for a number of reasons, the biggest (and tallest) one being Wemby. The Denver Nuggets are contenders for one reason and one reason only: Jokic, who could enter some seriously hallowed all-time ground if he grabs a second ring in a stacked West.

Made up award: Voted “Most likely to record a quadruple double in the playoffs”

Wemby and his precarious health have been treated carefully this year to maximize his impact and longevity, but the kid gloves are going to have to come off eventually. When they do, he’s such an outlier that I would believe any statistical achievement if he plays 43 minutes. There have only been four quadruple doubles in NBA history, and yet I’d somehow be surprised if he wasn’t the fifth.

Made up award: The Bitcoin Award for Player Who Can Swing the Market the Most

Luka’s availability after an unbelievably poorly timed hamstring injury is the great question mark of these playoffs. If he can return, and actually be Luka Doncic, before the Lakers are eliminated? It’s a whole new ballgame for everyone.

HOUSTON, TEXAS - APRIL 10: Anthony Edwards #5 of the Minnesota Timberwolves brings the ball up court against the Houston Rockets during the second half at Toyota Center on April 10, 2026 in Houston, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images)

HOUSTON, TEXAS – APRIL 10: Anthony Edwards #5 of the Minnesota Timberwolves brings the ball up court against the Houston Rockets during the second half at Toyota Center on April 10, 2026 in Houston, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images)
Getty Images

Made up award: The John Henry Award for Potentially Having to Dig a Tunnel through a Mountain

Edwards is everyone’s favorite young player who might be the next Michael Jordan — he’s electrifying and displays two-way brilliance that is rare for the modern scoring guard. But he has his work positively cut out for him in these playoffs, needing to shake off some late-season injuries and then probably beat Denver, San Antonio and OKC all in a row just to make the NBA Finals. Best of luck.

Made up award: The Ralph Fiennes “We need to get this guy an Oscar” Award

This is a guy who has made the playoffs every year of his career but never made the Conference Finals, so fans are crying out for him to please get some hardware this time around. I’ve always been bullish on Mitchell as an elite playoff guy, whose highs are high enough to beat literally anyone single-handedly. But he will need to do that consistently for once to get over the hump.

Made up award: The Cade Cunningham “so likeable that his injury might kill the 65 game rule” Award

Everyone was so in agreement that Cunningham deserved to be on the All-NBA First Team that we all collectively freaked out about the 65-game rule to try to salvage his candidacy before he was granted an exemption (which is probably the best reason to kill the rule). Cunningham was the twin-turbo V8 engine that drove the Pistons to the number one seed, but may be leaned on too heavily to create shots with Detroit lacking a second scorer.

Made up award: The Captain Phillips “I am the captain now” Award

Brown has improved his game in ways I simply did not believe were possible at this point in his career. With Jayson Tatum out most of the year, he proved he could be the First Violin in a world-class orchestra that’s about to go on tour. Truly a spectacular season for one of my favorite players.

Made up award: The Second Round Pick Award for second-best second-round pick of all time

Behind only Nikola Jokic in second round pick achievement, Brunson is of course an elite first option, an elite shot creator and an elite foul-sponge, a critical skill in the playoffs with tighter whistles across the board. It’s worth wondering, though, if the Knicks can actually win the East with Brunson at this kind of usage. I think they can, but the rest of the roster will need to take on part of the burden.

Made up award: The Patriots-Falcons 28-3 Super Bowl Award for Best Comeback

Almost an unfathomably great result for Tatum, who tore his Achilles less than a year ago and now stands poised for his 122nd career playoff game and counting. He and Brown are two of the most successful playoff guys in terms of number of games played to start their careers, and Tatum is a championship-winning first option when healthy. We shall see how much strain he’s ready to take.

Made up award: The Damian Lillard “You might need to demand a trade at some point” Award

Booker seems committed to Phoenix financially and competitively, and it’s impressive work that such a flawed team made the playoffs. But the Suns spent all their draft capital and young pieces to build a team, tear it down and now is staring down mediocrity for the foreseeable future. There are plenty of ways to pivot around such a great player, but there’s a chance this gets 2021ish Damian Lillard. Just a chance.

Made up award: The Lightning McQueen “Ka-Chow” Award for Being Fast

There is no correlation between average player speed and… being a good player, which is why Maxey is my pick for fastest NBA player in lieu of data. This is purely in terms of visually explosive burst in transition and on drives. The Celtics have struggled to contain Maxey for years, and he is Philly’s singular win condition.

Made up award: The Al Horford “should we talk about how old this guy is more?” Award

Durant is still putting ball in hoop like no other in year 19 which is, somehow, still not discussed nearly enough. LeBron James cornered the market on “wow he’s how old” discussions, but Durant is casually averaging 26 a game in 36 minutes in 78 games played. In the playoffs, you often need a bucket. For all the stuff that comes with the Durant experience, he is still the bucket.

Made up award: The Jaylen Brown Award for scoring leap I didn’t see coming

Did you know this was Murray’s first career All-Star season? Somehow, some way, Murray became a far more efficient shooter this season and ratcheted up his scoring to over 25 a game. He and Jokic have a premier partnership that we already know can win a title. Will they win another?

Made up award: The Casual NBA Fan award for “WHO are you saying is three whole spots better than LeBron?”

Many NBA fans may have missed this development, but Jalen Johnson has been soaring up the superstar boards all season, basically getting better and better for five straight years … all the way to somehow looking like an All-NBA first option. Trae Young’s departure took off the training wheels, and now we’re flying.

Made up award: The Banana Boat Award for going from Third to Second Banana

Holmgren is a first-time All-Star who made a serious leap over Jalen Williams, whose injury-laden season saw Chet take on a bigger role. He’s a cornerstone defensive force and exactly what the Thunder need to dynasty this thing up.

Made up award: The Eye Test Award for being better than your stats

Barnes’ Basketball Reference page doesn’t really suggest he improved much as a scorer, but he shot the ball much better and was a major part of a pretty spicy Toronto team that is looking to spoil some fun in Round One.

Made up award: The “Lock In” Award for potentially most epic lock-in

If LeBron James can carry the Los Angeles Lakers out of the first round without their two best scorers — Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves — that would be one of the premier lock-ins of all time. I’m a Celtics fan, but I’m going to be rooting for this.

Made up award: The Lucy Pulling the Football Award for most consistent playoff disappointment

Not generally the most reliable guy in the playoffs, the Cleveland Cavaliers nonetheless traded Darius Garland for Harden in a last-ditch effort to salvage their meh season. It could work; Harden is a good player. But nothing historically suggests it will.

Made up award: The “Most Improved Player Award” Award for exemplifying what that award is supposed to mean

Duren almost doubled his scoring output this season and was the second-biggest reason the Pistons took the league by storm. He is a dominating force on the glass and a pretty solid interior scorer, given his complete lack of a jumpshot. I’m a big fan of Duren.

Made up award: The Zion Williamson “I’m going to the rim no matter what” Award

Deni isn’t Williamson, who actually does not shoot threes at all anymore by the way, but he is at his best when he is trying to get downhill on every possession. He was a one-man wrecking crew in the first Play-In game, but we will see if that works against Wembanyama, whose 872-foot wingspan might cause problems.

Made up award: The James Harden “not sure how reliable this guy is” Award

Towns’ playoff plus/minus stats are not what you want out of your supposed second option, but it has proved difficult for the Knicks to keep both he and Brunson on the court and survive defensively. To avoid becoming the next Harden, towns will need a moment.

Made up award: The Kevin McHale Award for 2020s Post Bag

Sengun is a legitimately great post scorer in the year 2026, and it’s pretty fun to watch him eviscerate rim protectors who haven’t had to deal with that since 1987. Balancing his and Durant’s shot diets is the real challenge.

DENVER, CO - APRIL 4: Stephon Castle #5 of the San Antonio Spurs dribbles up the court during the second quarter against the Denver Nuggets at Ball Arena on April 4, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. The Nuggets won the game 136-134 in overtime. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images)

DENVER, CO – APRIL 4: Stephon Castle #5 of the San Antonio Spurs dribbles up the court during the second quarter against the Denver Nuggets at Ball Arena on April 4, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. The Nuggets won the game 136-134 in overtime. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images)
Getty Images

Made up award: The Jayson Tatum “he’s HOW young?” award for only being 21

Castle is so far beyond what I could have ever expected out of him at his age, and looks like a potential future star. To quote myself when I was talking about Roman Anthony, I am two years older than Stephon Castle. I am not old.

Made up award: The Not-Tim Duncan Award for player who is not Tim Duncan

One of my favorite niche NBA media moments of the last five years was this strange series of Bill Simmons podcasts circa 2022 where he and Ryen Russillo kept referring to Mobley as potentially the next Tim Duncan. I was also supremely in on Evan Mobley, and have not quite made back my investment either. He’s a really good player and a beast defensively, but he’s been too inconsistent, especially on offense, to go any higher.

(Bonus solo blurb, it was going to be the Top 25 get their own blurbs but I literally forgot about Jalen Brunson when I wrote this the first time and refuse to bump DWhite)

Made up award: The Matisse Thybulle Award for Blocking Threes

Derrick White has blocked nine threes this year. That isn’t quite the most, but he’s consistently up there in three-blocking, a skill that I’m just not sure how you teach or learn. Stuff like that is what makes White so valuable, because he’s also a great scorer and creator. What a player.

The “How healthy will you be?” Group

Three players who are critically important to their respective teams that either haven’t been healthy for much of the year or may not be healthy going forward. Gordon and Williams seem fine at the moment, with Gordon in particular coming back in force, but none of their respective lineups are the same without them. Only the Thunder could hope to survive an extended absence of any of these three.

The “We need offense, do you have offense?” Group

Four guys that have had up and down offensive years and four guys who will have to be on the up part of the up and down for the playoffs if their team has any big-time goals. Specifically, I’m looking at Randle as a primo candidate to sink or swim his whole team. Edwards can’t be the only creator for Minnesota, since Rudy Gobert and Jaden McDaniels are not reliable offensively. Thompson may get exposed for his poor shooting, but is capital R required for Houston with their relative lack of ball handlers.

The “Actually, we’re good on offense, can you just play defense?” Group

Perhaps the two most important defensive players in these playoffs because of their matchups. Anunoby is going to have to guard some of the best wings in the league throughout the Knicks’ run, and the Eastern Conference might as well be a Wingstop with Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown, Scottie Barnes, Jalen Johnson, they’re everywhere. Gobert, meanwhile, has Wembanyama and Jokic coming at him like a train. He will have to go full Tobey Maguire Spider-Man to stop them.

These guys could score in bunches and swing a series by themselves or completely disappear and … swing a series by themselves. Ingram is a player that I wasn’t particularly interested in anymore after his Pelicans tenure expired, but he had a really nice year in Toronto and got back to the All-Star game for the first time since 2020. Both these guys are important bucket-getters on teams without an embarrassment of creators, so lock in.

The Guy I Couldn’t Put in a Group

Embiid is a player I continue to feel bad for, and having an appendectomy right before the postseason is the worst luck imaginable for a guy who has had a career of the worst luck imaginable. I’ve tried to make this list relatively injury-agnostic, but I didn’t want to speculate at all for Embiid, whose playoff impact I can’t really measure or project whatsoever. So here he is in his own group, presented essentially without comment.

39. Nickeil Alexander-Walker

It physically hurt me to put Alexander-Walker this low since he has more than doubled his scoring this season and is unironically shooting 50-40-90 Bridges and McDaniels are both critical players for their teams, but just feel like a lesser version of what they could be; especially Bridges, who was a legit first-option in Brooklyn for a minute there. But wings are king, and these guys will play a lot.

Important Players on Important Teams

A bit of a grab bag here, but these are essential players on teams with championship aspirations. Ausar is definitely still a work in progress offensively but he is also one of the best defensive players in the league, an accolade you could also toss on Caruso, a peak pot-stirrer that somehow makes all of his opponents worse at basketball. Allen, meanwhile, is battling a knee injury but is a massive non-negotiable for the Cavs given how small the rest of their lineup is.

Quite the collection of dudes here, all of whom could be described as “oh (insert name from this group), I really like that guy.” They all play pretty different games, but their teams would not be the same without them.

50. Dillon Brooks/Paul George/Peyton Watson/Cason Wallace/RJ Barrett/Donovan Clingan/Desmond Bane/whoever else you want

It’s pretty funny that in a Top 50 players list I had a pretty easy time coming up with the Top 49 but really couldn’t pick the last guy in. This is basically the free space in bingo; just put whoever you want here. I, for one, really wanted to put Baylor Scheierman or Neemias Queta here, but decided against it. Let me know in the comments who you’d put at 50, and what I messed up. If everyone just agrees with me, something went horribly wrong.

#NBA #Playoffs #players #ranked #postseason

Welcome to one of the larger and more preposterous playoff preview power poll projects I’ve ever attempted. We are ranking the Top 50 players in the NBA Playoffs, an utterly ridiculous effort that is, frankly, not possible to do responsibly. There is no methodology so sound that one person can rank 50 people; there is no theory so ironclad that it can avoid the rampant, harmful subjectivity of the recesses of my troubled mind. So, without meaningfully explaining my definition of “Top 50” or a philosophy of value or any kind of scientific method, I’m going to do it anyway. Also check out our rankings of every team in the field by their championship chances.

In an effort to not make this a million words, I have only given the Top 25 (spoiler alert: it’s actually 26, you’ll see why) players their own blurbs, and then grouped the back 25 (spoiler alert: it’s 24) together in some loose categories that I think capture the spirit of the exercise. In any case, lots about this will be demonstrably wrong, and I apologize that there is absolutely no way to avoid that. Onwards!

1. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

Made up award: The 2019 Carsen Edwards vs. Virginia “That shot is just going in” Award

The best player in the world until someone else feels sufficiently inevitable with the ball in their hands. Shai has achieved peak scoring excellence in that you just think his shot is always going in, and he scores at a volume, efficiency and location (over 77 percent of his shots are twos and he shoots 55.3 percent from the field … he’s a guard!) that simply shouldn’t be possible. He has the belt.

Made up award: The Novak Djokovic Lifetime Achievement Award for Serbian Sports Excellence

I debated whether Jokic or Victor Wembanyama would get the second spot, but their majestic head-to-head battle clinched it for the Joker. The San Antonio Spurs are contenders for a number of reasons, the biggest (and tallest) one being Wemby. The Denver Nuggets are contenders for one reason and one reason only: Jokic, who could enter some seriously hallowed all-time ground if he grabs a second ring in a stacked West.

Made up award: Voted “Most likely to record a quadruple double in the playoffs”

Wemby and his precarious health have been treated carefully this year to maximize his impact and longevity, but the kid gloves are going to have to come off eventually. When they do, he’s such an outlier that I would believe any statistical achievement if he plays 43 minutes. There have only been four quadruple doubles in NBA history, and yet I’d somehow be surprised if he wasn’t the fifth.

Made up award: The Bitcoin Award for Player Who Can Swing the Market the Most

Luka’s availability after an unbelievably poorly timed hamstring injury is the great question mark of these playoffs. If he can return, and actually be Luka Doncic, before the Lakers are eliminated? It’s a whole new ballgame for everyone.

HOUSTON, TEXAS – APRIL 10: Anthony Edwards #5 of the Minnesota Timberwolves brings the ball up court against the Houston Rockets during the second half at Toyota Center on April 10, 2026 in Houston, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images)
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Made up award: The John Henry Award for Potentially Having to Dig a Tunnel through a Mountain

Edwards is everyone’s favorite young player who might be the next Michael Jordan — he’s electrifying and displays two-way brilliance that is rare for the modern scoring guard. But he has his work positively cut out for him in these playoffs, needing to shake off some late-season injuries and then probably beat Denver, San Antonio and OKC all in a row just to make the NBA Finals. Best of luck.

Made up award: The Ralph Fiennes “We need to get this guy an Oscar” Award

This is a guy who has made the playoffs every year of his career but never made the Conference Finals, so fans are crying out for him to please get some hardware this time around. I’ve always been bullish on Mitchell as an elite playoff guy, whose highs are high enough to beat literally anyone single-handedly. But he will need to do that consistently for once to get over the hump.

Made up award: The Cade Cunningham “so likeable that his injury might kill the 65 game rule” Award

Everyone was so in agreement that Cunningham deserved to be on the All-NBA First Team that we all collectively freaked out about the 65-game rule to try to salvage his candidacy before he was granted an exemption (which is probably the best reason to kill the rule). Cunningham was the twin-turbo V8 engine that drove the Pistons to the number one seed, but may be leaned on too heavily to create shots with Detroit lacking a second scorer.

Made up award: The Captain Phillips “I am the captain now” Award

Brown has improved his game in ways I simply did not believe were possible at this point in his career. With Jayson Tatum out most of the year, he proved he could be the First Violin in a world-class orchestra that’s about to go on tour. Truly a spectacular season for one of my favorite players.

Made up award: The Second Round Pick Award for second-best second-round pick of all time

Behind only Nikola Jokic in second round pick achievement, Brunson is of course an elite first option, an elite shot creator and an elite foul-sponge, a critical skill in the playoffs with tighter whistles across the board. It’s worth wondering, though, if the Knicks can actually win the East with Brunson at this kind of usage. I think they can, but the rest of the roster will need to take on part of the burden.

Made up award: The Patriots-Falcons 28-3 Super Bowl Award for Best Comeback

Almost an unfathomably great result for Tatum, who tore his Achilles less than a year ago and now stands poised for his 122nd career playoff game and counting. He and Brown are two of the most successful playoff guys in terms of number of games played to start their careers, and Tatum is a championship-winning first option when healthy. We shall see how much strain he’s ready to take.

Made up award: The Damian Lillard “You might need to demand a trade at some point” Award

Booker seems committed to Phoenix financially and competitively, and it’s impressive work that such a flawed team made the playoffs. But the Suns spent all their draft capital and young pieces to build a team, tear it down and now is staring down mediocrity for the foreseeable future. There are plenty of ways to pivot around such a great player, but there’s a chance this gets 2021ish Damian Lillard. Just a chance.

Made up award: The Lightning McQueen “Ka-Chow” Award for Being Fast

There is no correlation between average player speed and… being a good player, which is why Maxey is my pick for fastest NBA player in lieu of data. This is purely in terms of visually explosive burst in transition and on drives. The Celtics have struggled to contain Maxey for years, and he is Philly’s singular win condition.

Made up award: The Al Horford “should we talk about how old this guy is more?” Award

Durant is still putting ball in hoop like no other in year 19 which is, somehow, still not discussed nearly enough. LeBron James cornered the market on “wow he’s how old” discussions, but Durant is casually averaging 26 a game in 36 minutes in 78 games played. In the playoffs, you often need a bucket. For all the stuff that comes with the Durant experience, he is still the bucket.

Made up award: The Jaylen Brown Award for scoring leap I didn’t see coming

Did you know this was Murray’s first career All-Star season? Somehow, some way, Murray became a far more efficient shooter this season and ratcheted up his scoring to over 25 a game. He and Jokic have a premier partnership that we already know can win a title. Will they win another?

Made up award: The Casual NBA Fan award for “WHO are you saying is three whole spots better than LeBron?”

Many NBA fans may have missed this development, but Jalen Johnson has been soaring up the superstar boards all season, basically getting better and better for five straight years … all the way to somehow looking like an All-NBA first option. Trae Young’s departure took off the training wheels, and now we’re flying.

Made up award: The Banana Boat Award for going from Third to Second Banana

Holmgren is a first-time All-Star who made a serious leap over Jalen Williams, whose injury-laden season saw Chet take on a bigger role. He’s a cornerstone defensive force and exactly what the Thunder need to dynasty this thing up.

Made up award: The Eye Test Award for being better than your stats

Barnes’ Basketball Reference page doesn’t really suggest he improved much as a scorer, but he shot the ball much better and was a major part of a pretty spicy Toronto team that is looking to spoil some fun in Round One.

Made up award: The “Lock In” Award for potentially most epic lock-in

If LeBron James can carry the Los Angeles Lakers out of the first round without their two best scorers — Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves — that would be one of the premier lock-ins of all time. I’m a Celtics fan, but I’m going to be rooting for this.

Made up award: The Lucy Pulling the Football Award for most consistent playoff disappointment

Not generally the most reliable guy in the playoffs, the Cleveland Cavaliers nonetheless traded Darius Garland for Harden in a last-ditch effort to salvage their meh season. It could work; Harden is a good player. But nothing historically suggests it will.

Made up award: The “Most Improved Player Award” Award for exemplifying what that award is supposed to mean

Duren almost doubled his scoring output this season and was the second-biggest reason the Pistons took the league by storm. He is a dominating force on the glass and a pretty solid interior scorer, given his complete lack of a jumpshot. I’m a big fan of Duren.

Made up award: The Zion Williamson “I’m going to the rim no matter what” Award

Deni isn’t Williamson, who actually does not shoot threes at all anymore by the way, but he is at his best when he is trying to get downhill on every possession. He was a one-man wrecking crew in the first Play-In game, but we will see if that works against Wembanyama, whose 872-foot wingspan might cause problems.

Made up award: The James Harden “not sure how reliable this guy is” Award

Towns’ playoff plus/minus stats are not what you want out of your supposed second option, but it has proved difficult for the Knicks to keep both he and Brunson on the court and survive defensively. To avoid becoming the next Harden, towns will need a moment.

Made up award: The Kevin McHale Award for 2020s Post Bag

Sengun is a legitimately great post scorer in the year 2026, and it’s pretty fun to watch him eviscerate rim protectors who haven’t had to deal with that since 1987. Balancing his and Durant’s shot diets is the real challenge.

DENVER, CO - APRIL 4: Stephon Castle #5 of the San Antonio Spurs dribbles up the court during the second quarter against the Denver Nuggets at Ball Arena on April 4, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. The Nuggets won the game 136-134 in overtime. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images)

DENVER, CO – APRIL 4: Stephon Castle #5 of the San Antonio Spurs dribbles up the court during the second quarter against the Denver Nuggets at Ball Arena on April 4, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. The Nuggets won the game 136-134 in overtime. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images)
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Made up award: The Jayson Tatum “he’s HOW young?” award for only being 21

Castle is so far beyond what I could have ever expected out of him at his age, and looks like a potential future star. To quote myself when I was talking about Roman Anthony, I am two years older than Stephon Castle. I am not old.

Made up award: The Not-Tim Duncan Award for player who is not Tim Duncan

One of my favorite niche NBA media moments of the last five years was this strange series of Bill Simmons podcasts circa 2022 where he and Ryen Russillo kept referring to Mobley as potentially the next Tim Duncan. I was also supremely in on Evan Mobley, and have not quite made back my investment either. He’s a really good player and a beast defensively, but he’s been too inconsistent, especially on offense, to go any higher.

(Bonus solo blurb, it was going to be the Top 25 get their own blurbs but I literally forgot about Jalen Brunson when I wrote this the first time and refuse to bump DWhite)

Made up award: The Matisse Thybulle Award for Blocking Threes

Derrick White has blocked nine threes this year. That isn’t quite the most, but he’s consistently up there in three-blocking, a skill that I’m just not sure how you teach or learn. Stuff like that is what makes White so valuable, because he’s also a great scorer and creator. What a player.

The “How healthy will you be?” Group

Three players who are critically important to their respective teams that either haven’t been healthy for much of the year or may not be healthy going forward. Gordon and Williams seem fine at the moment, with Gordon in particular coming back in force, but none of their respective lineups are the same without them. Only the Thunder could hope to survive an extended absence of any of these three.

The “We need offense, do you have offense?” Group

Four guys that have had up and down offensive years and four guys who will have to be on the up part of the up and down for the playoffs if their team has any big-time goals. Specifically, I’m looking at Randle as a primo candidate to sink or swim his whole team. Edwards can’t be the only creator for Minnesota, since Rudy Gobert and Jaden McDaniels are not reliable offensively. Thompson may get exposed for his poor shooting, but is capital R required for Houston with their relative lack of ball handlers.

The “Actually, we’re good on offense, can you just play defense?” Group

Perhaps the two most important defensive players in these playoffs because of their matchups. Anunoby is going to have to guard some of the best wings in the league throughout the Knicks’ run, and the Eastern Conference might as well be a Wingstop with Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown, Scottie Barnes, Jalen Johnson, they’re everywhere. Gobert, meanwhile, has Wembanyama and Jokic coming at him like a train. He will have to go full Tobey Maguire Spider-Man to stop them.

These guys could score in bunches and swing a series by themselves or completely disappear and … swing a series by themselves. Ingram is a player that I wasn’t particularly interested in anymore after his Pelicans tenure expired, but he had a really nice year in Toronto and got back to the All-Star game for the first time since 2020. Both these guys are important bucket-getters on teams without an embarrassment of creators, so lock in.

The Guy I Couldn’t Put in a Group

Embiid is a player I continue to feel bad for, and having an appendectomy right before the postseason is the worst luck imaginable for a guy who has had a career of the worst luck imaginable. I’ve tried to make this list relatively injury-agnostic, but I didn’t want to speculate at all for Embiid, whose playoff impact I can’t really measure or project whatsoever. So here he is in his own group, presented essentially without comment.

39. Nickeil Alexander-Walker

It physically hurt me to put Alexander-Walker this low since he has more than doubled his scoring this season and is unironically shooting 50-40-90 Bridges and McDaniels are both critical players for their teams, but just feel like a lesser version of what they could be; especially Bridges, who was a legit first-option in Brooklyn for a minute there. But wings are king, and these guys will play a lot.

Important Players on Important Teams

A bit of a grab bag here, but these are essential players on teams with championship aspirations. Ausar is definitely still a work in progress offensively but he is also one of the best defensive players in the league, an accolade you could also toss on Caruso, a peak pot-stirrer that somehow makes all of his opponents worse at basketball. Allen, meanwhile, is battling a knee injury but is a massive non-negotiable for the Cavs given how small the rest of their lineup is.

Quite the collection of dudes here, all of whom could be described as “oh (insert name from this group), I really like that guy.” They all play pretty different games, but their teams would not be the same without them.

50. Dillon Brooks/Paul George/Peyton Watson/Cason Wallace/RJ Barrett/Donovan Clingan/Desmond Bane/whoever else you want

It’s pretty funny that in a Top 50 players list I had a pretty easy time coming up with the Top 49 but really couldn’t pick the last guy in. This is basically the free space in bingo; just put whoever you want here. I, for one, really wanted to put Baylor Scheierman or Neemias Queta here, but decided against it. Let me know in the comments who you’d put at 50, and what I messed up. If everyone just agrees with me, something went horribly wrong.

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#NBA #Playoffs #players #ranked #postseason

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IPL 2026, KKR vs RR: Sangakkara backs captain Riyan Parag despite slow start with bat <div id="content-body-70877654" itemprop="articleBody"><p>Rajasthan Royals (RR), third in the Indian Premier League 2026 standings, looks like it has its house in order. For the most part.</p><p>It did go down heavily against the Sunrisers Hyderabad in its previous fixture, but skipper Riyan Parag did well to label the defeat as a mere ‘blip’ and move on. There was nothing to worry about, he said.</p><p>Ironically, it could be Parag’s lowly returns, after all, that may have the Royals a tad stressed. In five outings, Parag hasn’t been able to cross 50 runs. His batting average reads 12.25, and he has been taking all of nine balls on average to lose his wicket.</p><p><b>KKR vs RR PREVIEW | <a href="https://sportstar.thehindu.com/cricket/ipl/kolkata-knight-riders-vs-rajasthan-royals-ipl-2026-kkr-v-rr-match-preview-team-news/article70877601.ece" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Struggling Kolkata Knight Riders looks for foothold against high-flying Rajasthan Royals</a></b></p><p>However, Kumar Sangakkara, RR’s head coach and director of cricket, didn’t seem too worried. “When I am watching Riyan, he’s hitting the ball off the middle. I’ve been through this myself as a cricketer. There are some days when you’re batting well, you’re just not getting the runs. Especially in the middle order in T20s, you’re not looking at long innings. You’re looking at impact,” he said on Saturday ahead of a game against Kolkata Knight Riders here.</p><p>It’s difficult to get through an RR presser these days without at least one mention of the sensational Vaibhav Sooryavanshi. Naturally, Sangakkara was asked to react to Sooryavanshi’s golden duck against SRH after scoring 200 runs in the other four games at a strike rate of 266.66.</p><p>“You’re allowed to score runs; you’re allowed to fail. It’s part and parcel of cricket. Vaibhav is such an exciting young player. He reads the game really well. He anticipates situations. But the nature of opening batting in T20 cricket, especially now the way the game’s moving, is very much all-out attack. So, sometimes, for a batter like that, less said, the better.”</p><p class="publish-time" id="end-of-article">Published on Apr 18, 2026</p></div> #IPL #KKR #Sangakkara #backs #captain #Riyan #Parag #slow #start #bat

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Deadspin | Report: Aliyah Boston, Fever agree to richest deal in WNBA history <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-900/27196619.jpg" srcset="https://images.deadspin.com/tr:w-900/27196619.jpg" alt="WNBA: Playoffs-Las Vegas Aces at Indiana Fever" class="w-full" fetchpriority="high" loading="eager"/><span class="text-0.8 leading-tight">Sep 28, 2025; Indianapolis, Indiana, USA; Indiana Fever forward Aliyah Boston (7) celebrates a made basket in the second half during game four against the Las Vegas Aces of the second round for the 2025 WNBA Playoffs at Gainbridge Fieldhouse. Mandatory Credit: Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images<!-- --> <!-- --> </span></div></section><section id="section-1"> <p>Aliyah Boston and the Indiana Fever agreed to a four-year, $6.3 million extension on Friday, according to ESPN, which is the richest contract in the league’s history.</p> </section><section id="section-2"> <p>“I’m super blessed and grateful for this opportunity and to continue my journey here with the Fever. God is good!” Boston said. “I’m excited for the future ahead for both myself and for our team, and I can’t wait to keep building upon everything we have accomplished so far. Go Fever!”</p> </section><section id="section-3"> <p>To help the Fever pay other players on the roster, Boston, a 6-foot-5 forward, agreed to earn $1 million in 2026, less than the $1.19 million she was eligible for. Boston is set to earn 20% of the Fever’s cap each year through 2029.</p> </section><br/><section id="section-4"> <p>“Entering just her fourth season, Aliyah is already one of the best players in the WNBA. She’s been a foundational piece of the Indiana Fever since she was drafted here in 2023,” Fever general manager Amber Cox said in a statement. “We’re thrilled to be able to reward her with this new contract and make history, and most importantly, lock her in as a cornerstone of the Fever for years to come.”</p> </section> <section id="section-5"> <p>A three-time All-Star, Boston has averaged 14.5 points, 8.5 rebounds and 3.0 assists while shooting 54.7% for the Fever, who chose Boston with first overall pick in 2023. Boston averaged 15.0 points, 8.2 rebounds, and 3.7 assists in 2025, tying for sixth in MVP balloting while landing on the All-WNBA and All-Defensive second teams. The Fever reached the semifinals, losing to Las Vegas, which won its third league championship in four years.</p> </section><section id="section-6"> <p>Boston’s extension comes a week after Indiana retained another three-time All-Star by signing Kelsey Mitchell to a one-year, $1.4 million supermax deal.</p> </section><section id="section-7"> <p>–Field Level Media</p> </section></div> #Deadspin #Report #Aliyah #Boston #Fever #agree #richest #deal #WNBA #history

GOLF

Diksha leads strong Indian charge with 66 as three finish inside top 30 in Czech Ladies Open

Indian golfer Diksha Dagar continued her rich vein of form on the Ladies European Tour, producing a superb six-under 66 to spearhead an impressive Indian challenge in the opening round of the Czech Ladies Open here.

Fresh from a strong performance at last week’s Dutch Ladies Open, Diksha carried that momentum into the Czech Republic, finishing the day tied ninth and just three shots behind Welsh leader Lydia Hall.

Diksha’s excellent start was complemented by fellow Indians Pranavi Urs and Vani Kapoor, who also enjoyed encouraging opening rounds to give India three players inside the top 30.

Pranavi carded a five-under 67 to be tied 14th, just one shot outside the top 10, while experienced Vani opened with a four-under 68 to share 26th place.

Hitaashee Bakshi also finished under par with a one-under 71, though she was tied 76th in the tightly-packed field. Ridhima Dilawari was tied 112th after a one-over 73, while last week’s Dutch Ladies Open joint third-place finisher Avani Prashanth endured a disappointing start, carding a three-over 75 to be tied 123rd.

Diksha once again looked comfortable from the outset, producing one of the most aggressive rounds of the day. She reeled off four consecutive birdies from the second hole to race to four-under through five holes. Another birdie on the seventh took her to five-under before a bogey at the ninth slightly slowed her momentum.

The 24-year-old quickly regained control after the turn. Although she dropped another shot on the 12th, she finished in style with three birdies over her final four holes. Birdies on the 15th, 17th and 18th ensured she signed for an excellent 66, featuring eight birdies against just two bogeys.

Her latest effort continues an encouraging run of form after last week’s impressive showing in the Netherlands and keeps her firmly in contention heading into the remaining rounds.

Pranavi also built on her recent confidence following a tied-fifth finish at the Dutch Ladies Open. The Mysuru golfer mixed six birdies with just a single bogey in a composed five-under 67 that left her within touching distance of the leading group.

Vani relied on her trademark consistency to post four-under 68. She collected five birdies during the day while conceding only one bogey, placing herself well for the weekend.

At the top of the leaderboard, Lydia Hall enjoyed the best round of her Ladies European Tour career. Playing in her 292nd LET event, the Welsh golfer fired a stunning nine-under 63 to claim the outright lead. Her remarkable round included eight birdies, an eagle and just one bogey.

Hall led by a single stroke over Spain’s Blanca Fernandez, Switzerland’s Vanessa Knecht and England’s Esme Hamilton, all of whom returned impressive rounds of eight-under 64 to remain within striking distance.

-PTI

Saptak Talwar lines up potential Top-5 finish

Indian golfer Saptak Talwar moved up to tied fifth on the leaderboard with a two-day total of 5-under par, three shots behind joint leaders Pablo Ereno and John Gough at the Blot Play9 here.

Talwar carded a second-round 3-under 67, registering five birdies against two bogeys. Starting on the back nine, he picked up three shots in the first four holes with birdies on the 10th, 11th and 13th before dropping a shot on the 14th to make the turn at 2-under for the day.

Talwar, who had opened with a 2-under round, dropped another shot on the sixth hole before making par on the seventh and finishing with consecutive birdies on the eighth and ninth to sign off with a 67.

Ereno (64-68) and Gough (63-69) shared the lead at the Golf Bluegreen de Pléneuf Val André with identical totals of 8-under par. They held a one-shot advantage over Charles Huntzinger (66-67), who was third at 7-under, while Tom Gueant (64-70) was fourth at 6-under.

Gough followed his opening-round 63 with a 1-under 69 to retain a share of the lead, making four birdies and three bogeys. Ereno, who started the day tied for second, joined Gough at the top after carding a 2-under 68, featuring two birdies, two bogeys and an eagle.

-PTI

Bhatia surges into contention with sparkling 62, Scheffler threatens history at Travelers

Akshay Bhatia produced one of the best rounds of the week to vault into contention at the Travelers Championship, firing a flawless eight-under 62 that lifted the Indian-origin American into a share of third place here.

Bhatia’s bogey-free display moved him to 12-under for the tournament, just four shots behind world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, whose sensational second-round 60 gave him a commanding lead at 16-under.

Norway’s Viktor Hovland occupied second place at 14-under, while overnight leader Eric Cole slipped back into a tie for third alongside Bhatia after returning a 65.

The impressive charge helped Bhatia emerge as the leading Indian-origin player in the elite PGA Tour field. Aaron Rai remained well placed after a steady two-under 68 took him to seven-under overall and into a share of 22nd, while Sahith Theegala bounced back from a disappointing opening 74 with a three-under 67 to make progress, although he was still tied for 65th at one-over.

Bhatia, who has shown flashes of his immense potential throughout the season, looked in complete control from the outset. He picked up early birdies on the second and third holes before adding two more on the sixth and eighth to reach the turn in four-under.

The left-hander maintained the momentum on the inward nine with birdies on the 10th, 13th and 15th before capping a memorable afternoon with another gain at the 18th. The blemish-free card underlined the quality of his ball-striking and putting as he climbed firmly into the title race heading into the weekend.

While Bhatia’s round was outstanding, Scheffler produced the performance of the day. The world No. 1 fired an astonishing 10-under 60 featuring 11 birdies and just a lone bogey to open a two-shot cushion over Hovland.

-PTI

CRICKET

Chambal Ghariyals make double in MPL T20 Scindia Cup

Chambal Ghariyals completed a dream campaign in the Madhya Pradesh League (MPL) T20 Scindia Cup 2026, defeating Royal Nimar Eagles by 31 runs in the final at the Holkar Stadium here.

The triumph marked a historic double for the franchise after the Chambal Ghariyals women’s team had earlier lifted the title with an unbeaten record, here on Friday.

The men’s team followed suit, finishing the tournament unbeaten as well following consistent performances.

After being put in to bat, Chambal Ghariyals made full use of the opportunity, posting a formidable 224/5 in their allotted 20 overs.

Apurve Dwivedi and skipper Shubham Sharma shared a superb 83-run partnership for the third wicket.

Dwivedi was the aggressor during the stand, smashing 51 off just 25 deliveries, including five sixes.

Shubham anchored the innings and found excellent support from Tripuresh Singh. The pair added another valuable 47 runs before the captain departed after a composed 57 off 38 balls.

Tripuresh remained unbeaten on 43 off 24 balls, striking three fours and three sixes.

Royal Nimar Eagles were restricted to 193/7 in their 20 overs as Mayur Patel was the standout bowler, returning impressive figures of 2/21 from his four overs.

-PTI

You inspire millions of young girls: Minister Goyal hails Indian women’s cricket team’s spirit

Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal hailed the Indian women team’s spirit ahead of the crucial T20 World Cup match against Australia here on Sunday, saying the players have inspired “millions of girls” across the country.

India need to win against the Aussies at the Lord’s to ensure a spot in the ICC event’s semifinals.

“You inspire millions of girls, millions of children in the country,” said Goyal, who is in the UK to review the implementation of the bilateral Free Trade Agreement (FTA).

The Minister also attended a special reception for the squad at India House here in London on Friday night.

“Sports is one of the areas that these days in our business arrangements we usually also engage with governments to work on developing together,” said Goyal.

“We have talked about encouraging sporting partnerships, coaching, and other ways in which we can work together, so that more and more children around the country can benefit from these business engagements.” He hailed India’s rise as a cricketing nation.

“The UK was the original cricketing country, but I think India seems to become the most preeminent cricketing nation, and I must compliment all of you for this wonderful merit that you have displayed, and for the glory that you bring to our nation,” he said.

P. Kumaran, the High Commissioner of India to the UK, welcomed the squad and Deputy High Commissioner Kartik Pande moderated an interaction with the team members.

During the session, skipper Harmanpreet Kaur said she enjoyed “performing under pressure.” “Whenever I enjoy myself on the field, I always feel relaxed, always enjoy the moment… I enjoy performing under pressure,” said Kaur.

-PTI

Published on Jun 27, 2026

#Indian #Sports #Wrap #June #Chambal #Ghariyals #seal #MPL #double">Indian Sports Wrap, June 27: Chambal Ghariyals seal MPL double  GOLFDiksha leads strong Indian charge with 66 as three finish inside top 30 in Czech Ladies OpenIndian golfer Diksha Dagar continued her rich vein of form on the Ladies European Tour, producing a superb six-under 66 to spearhead an impressive Indian challenge in the opening round of the Czech Ladies Open here.Fresh from a strong performance at last week’s Dutch Ladies Open, Diksha carried that momentum into the Czech Republic, finishing the day tied ninth and just three shots behind Welsh leader Lydia Hall.Diksha’s excellent start was complemented by fellow Indians Pranavi Urs and Vani Kapoor, who also enjoyed encouraging opening rounds to give India three players inside the top 30.Pranavi carded a five-under 67 to be tied 14th, just one shot outside the top 10, while experienced Vani opened with a four-under 68 to share 26th place.Hitaashee Bakshi also finished under par with a one-under 71, though she was tied 76th in the tightly-packed field. Ridhima Dilawari was tied 112th after a one-over 73, while last week’s Dutch Ladies Open joint third-place finisher Avani Prashanth endured a disappointing start, carding a three-over 75 to be tied 123rd.Diksha once again looked comfortable from the outset, producing one of the most aggressive rounds of the day. She reeled off four consecutive birdies from the second hole to race to four-under through five holes. Another birdie on the seventh took her to five-under before a bogey at the ninth slightly slowed her momentum.The 24-year-old quickly regained control after the turn. Although she dropped another shot on the 12th, she finished in style with three birdies over her final four holes. Birdies on the 15th, 17th and 18th ensured she signed for an excellent 66, featuring eight birdies against just two bogeys.Her latest effort continues an encouraging run of form after last week’s impressive showing in the Netherlands and keeps her firmly in contention heading into the remaining rounds.Pranavi also built on her recent confidence following a tied-fifth finish at the Dutch Ladies Open. The Mysuru golfer mixed six birdies with just a single bogey in a composed five-under 67 that left her within touching distance of the leading group.Vani relied on her trademark consistency to post four-under 68. She collected five birdies during the day while conceding only one bogey, placing herself well for the weekend.At the top of the leaderboard, Lydia Hall enjoyed the best round of her Ladies European Tour career. Playing in her 292nd LET event, the Welsh golfer fired a stunning nine-under 63 to claim the outright lead. Her remarkable round included eight birdies, an eagle and just one bogey.Hall led by a single stroke over Spain’s Blanca Fernandez, Switzerland’s Vanessa Knecht and England’s Esme Hamilton, all of whom returned impressive rounds of eight-under 64 to remain within striking distance.-PTISaptak Talwar lines up potential Top-5 finishIndian golfer Saptak Talwar moved up to tied fifth on the leaderboard with a two-day total of 5-under par, three shots behind joint leaders Pablo Ereno and John Gough at the Blot Play9 here.Talwar carded a second-round 3-under 67, registering five birdies against two bogeys. Starting on the back nine, he picked up three shots in the first four holes with birdies on the 10th, 11th and 13th before dropping a shot on the 14th to make the turn at 2-under for the day.Talwar, who had opened with a 2-under round, dropped another shot on the sixth hole before making par on the seventh and finishing with consecutive birdies on the eighth and ninth to sign off with a 67.Ereno (64-68) and Gough (63-69) shared the lead at the Golf Bluegreen de Pléneuf Val André with identical totals of 8-under par. They held a one-shot advantage over Charles Huntzinger (66-67), who was third at 7-under, while Tom Gueant (64-70) was fourth at 6-under.Gough followed his opening-round 63 with a 1-under 69 to retain a share of the lead, making four birdies and three bogeys. Ereno, who started the day tied for second, joined Gough at the top after carding a 2-under 68, featuring two birdies, two bogeys and an eagle.-PTIBhatia surges into contention with sparkling 62, Scheffler threatens history at TravelersAkshay Bhatia produced one of the best rounds of the week to vault into contention at the Travelers Championship, firing a flawless eight-under 62 that lifted the Indian-origin American into a share of third place here.Bhatia’s bogey-free display moved him to 12-under for the tournament, just four shots behind world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, whose sensational second-round 60 gave him a commanding lead at 16-under.Norway’s Viktor Hovland occupied second place at 14-under, while overnight leader Eric Cole slipped back into a tie for third alongside Bhatia after returning a 65.The impressive charge helped Bhatia emerge as the leading Indian-origin player in the elite PGA Tour field. Aaron Rai remained well placed after a steady two-under 68 took him to seven-under overall and into a share of 22nd, while Sahith Theegala bounced back from a disappointing opening 74 with a three-under 67 to make progress, although he was still tied for 65th at one-over.Bhatia, who has shown flashes of his immense potential throughout the season, looked in complete control from the outset. He picked up early birdies on the second and third holes before adding two more on the sixth and eighth to reach the turn in four-under.The left-hander maintained the momentum on the inward nine with birdies on the 10th, 13th and 15th before capping a memorable afternoon with another gain at the 18th. The blemish-free card underlined the quality of his ball-striking and putting as he climbed firmly into the title race heading into the weekend.While Bhatia’s round was outstanding, Scheffler produced the performance of the day. The world No. 1 fired an astonishing 10-under 60 featuring 11 birdies and just a lone bogey to open a two-shot cushion over Hovland.-PTICRICKETChambal Ghariyals make double in MPL T20 Scindia CupChambal Ghariyals completed a dream campaign in the Madhya Pradesh League (MPL) T20 Scindia Cup 2026, defeating Royal Nimar Eagles by 31 runs in the final at the Holkar Stadium here.The triumph marked a historic double for the franchise after the Chambal Ghariyals women’s team had earlier lifted the title with an unbeaten record, here on Friday.The men’s team followed suit, finishing the tournament unbeaten as well following consistent performances.After being put in to bat, Chambal Ghariyals made full use of the opportunity, posting a formidable 224/5 in their allotted 20 overs.Apurve Dwivedi and skipper Shubham Sharma shared a superb 83-run partnership for the third wicket.Dwivedi was the aggressor during the stand, smashing 51 off just 25 deliveries, including five sixes.Shubham anchored the innings and found excellent support from Tripuresh Singh. The pair added another valuable 47 runs before the captain departed after a composed 57 off 38 balls.Tripuresh remained unbeaten on 43 off 24 balls, striking three fours and three sixes.Royal Nimar Eagles were restricted to 193/7 in their 20 overs as Mayur Patel was the standout bowler, returning impressive figures of 2/21 from his four overs.-PTIYou inspire millions of young girls: Minister Goyal hails Indian women’s cricket team’s spiritCommerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal hailed the Indian women team’s spirit ahead of the crucial T20 World Cup match against Australia here on Sunday, saying the players have inspired “millions of girls” across the country.India need to win against the Aussies at the Lord’s to ensure a spot in the ICC event’s semifinals.“You inspire millions of girls, millions of children in the country,” said Goyal, who is in the UK to review the implementation of the bilateral Free Trade Agreement (FTA).The Minister also attended a special reception for the squad at India House here in London on Friday night.“Sports is one of the areas that these days in our business arrangements we usually also engage with governments to work on developing together,” said Goyal.“We have talked about encouraging sporting partnerships, coaching, and other ways in which we can work together, so that more and more children around the country can benefit from these business engagements.” He hailed India’s rise as a cricketing nation.“The UK was the original cricketing country, but I think India seems to become the most preeminent cricketing nation, and I must compliment all of you for this wonderful merit that you have displayed, and for the glory that you bring to our nation,” he said.P. Kumaran, the High Commissioner of India to the UK, welcomed the squad and Deputy High Commissioner Kartik Pande moderated an interaction with the team members.During the session, skipper Harmanpreet Kaur said she enjoyed “performing under pressure.” “Whenever I enjoy myself on the field, I always feel relaxed, always enjoy the moment… I enjoy performing under pressure,” said Kaur.-PTIPublished on Jun 27, 2026  #Indian #Sports #Wrap #June #Chambal #Ghariyals #seal #MPL #double

Deadspin | Ducks trade Mason McTavish to Blues for 2 first-rounders  Mar 30, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Anaheim Ducks center Mason McTavish (23) warms up before the game against the Toronto Maple Leafs at Honda Center. Mandatory Credit: Griffin Hooper-Imagn Images   The Anaheim Ducks acquired the No. 15 and 29 overall picks in the first round of the 2026 NHL Draft on Friday night by trading center Mason McTavish to the St. Louis Blues.  The Blues parted with both first-rounders — originally belonging to the Detroit Red Wings and Colorado Avalanche, respectively — to add the 23-year-old McTavish, coming off his fourth full season in the NHL.  The third overall pick by Anaheim in the 2021 draft, McTavish had 17 goals and 24 assists in 75 games for the Ducks in 2025-26. Across 304 career games, he has amassed 181 points (77 goals, 104 assists) and 212 penalty minutes.   The Ducks used the 15th overall pick on forward Nikita Klepov, a Russian-American prospect from the Saginaw Spirit who was named Rookie of the Year in the Ontario Hockey League this past season.  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Ducks #trade #Mason #McTavish #Blues #firstroundersMar 30, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Anaheim Ducks center Mason McTavish (23) warms up before the game against the Toronto Maple Leafs at Honda Center. Mandatory Credit: Griffin Hooper-Imagn Images

The Anaheim Ducks acquired the No. 15 and 29 overall picks in the first round of the 2026 NHL Draft on Friday night by trading center Mason McTavish to the St. Louis Blues.

The Blues parted with both first-rounders — originally belonging to the Detroit Red Wings and Colorado Avalanche, respectively — to add the 23-year-old McTavish, coming off his fourth full season in the NHL.


The third overall pick by Anaheim in the 2021 draft, McTavish had 17 goals and 24 assists in 75 games for the Ducks in 2025-26. Across 304 career games, he has amassed 181 points (77 goals, 104 assists) and 212 penalty minutes.

The Ducks used the 15th overall pick on forward Nikita Klepov, a Russian-American prospect from the Saginaw Spirit who was named Rookie of the Year in the Ontario Hockey League this past season.

–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Ducks #trade #Mason #McTavish #Blues #firstrounders">Deadspin | Ducks trade Mason McTavish to Blues for 2 first-rounders  Mar 30, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Anaheim Ducks center Mason McTavish (23) warms up before the game against the Toronto Maple Leafs at Honda Center. Mandatory Credit: Griffin Hooper-Imagn Images   The Anaheim Ducks acquired the No. 15 and 29 overall picks in the first round of the 2026 NHL Draft on Friday night by trading center Mason McTavish to the St. Louis Blues.  The Blues parted with both first-rounders — originally belonging to the Detroit Red Wings and Colorado Avalanche, respectively — to add the 23-year-old McTavish, coming off his fourth full season in the NHL.  The third overall pick by Anaheim in the 2021 draft, McTavish had 17 goals and 24 assists in 75 games for the Ducks in 2025-26. Across 304 career games, he has amassed 181 points (77 goals, 104 assists) and 212 penalty minutes.   The Ducks used the 15th overall pick on forward Nikita Klepov, a Russian-American prospect from the Saginaw Spirit who was named Rookie of the Year in the Ontario Hockey League this past season.  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Ducks #trade #Mason #McTavish #Blues #firstrounders

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