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SUNRISE, Fla. – Sam Reinhart scored 3:02 into overtime and the Florida Panthers beat the Toronto Maple Leafs 3-2 on Sunday night to take a commanding 3-0 lead in their Eastern Conference semifinal series.

Reinhart dumped the puck off the boards behind the net to set up his game-winner, taking a pass back from Anton Lundell and scoring to give Florida its first 3-0 series lead in 27 years.

Anthony Duclair and Carter Verhaeghe scored for Florida. Sam Lafferty and Erik Gustafsson scored for Toronto.

Sergei Bobrovsky stopped 22 shots for the Panthers. Joseph Woll stopped 18 of the 21 he faced for the Maple Leafs after he relieved starter Ilya Samsonov, who stopped all eight shots he saw before leaving early in the second period with an injury.

Game 4 is Wednesday night.

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Reinhart’s goal for that 3-0 lead means it’s time for the Maple Leafs to spend the next three days hearing about the most dreaded of stats three games into a best-of-seven – the one about how only four clubs have erased such a deficit in hockey history. Toronto is one of those four, coming from 3-0 down to beat Detroit in the 1942 Cup title series.

Samsonov left the ice 37 seconds into the second period with an undisclosed injury. He was ruled out before the third period started.

The play started with Samsonov stopping a shot by Duclair, as Verhaeghe came down the slot chasing the rebound.

Verhaeghe got tripped by Toronto’s Luke Schenn, and Schenn also crashed into Samsonov on the same play. Samsonov remained down for more than a minute, eventually got to his feet and skated to the Toronto bench – going directly down the tunnel to the Maple Leafs’ locker room.

Woll replaced Samsonov, coming in cold to face the Florida power play. Woll stopped the first shot he faced, but Duclair scored with 1 second left on the power play to tie the game at 1-1.

Toronto led 1-0 and 2-1, only to see Florida come back with the tying goal each time.

Lafferty one-timed a pass from David Kampf home just 2:26 into the contest to finish off a 2-on-1 and open the scoring.

Duclair tied it on the power play shortly after Samsonov departed, only to see Toronto reclaim the lead when Gustafsson’s wrister caromed in off Marc Staal’s stick midway through the second. Verhaeghe tied it 5 minutes later and to the third they went, tied at 2-2.

AROUND THE RINK

Leafs C Auston Matthews took a puck off the outside of his right wrist in the third period, was shaken up and remained in the game – appearing to not even miss a shift. … Toronto is now 34-47 all-time in Game 3s. Florida is now 5-8. … There were only two penalties called in regulation, both against Toronto in the second period.

WOLL TIES

There is one big tie between Woll and the Panthers – he was Boston College’s go-to netminder for three years, before Spencer Knight took over for the Eagles in the 2019-20 season.

Knight has been with the Panthers for parts of three seasons and has been out since February in the NHL’s player assistance program.

THE CAPTAIN

Miami Heat captain Udonis Haslem – wearing a Duclair jersey – was at the game with some teammates including Heat guard Gabe Vincent, and did his part to get fans engaged by beating a drum at one end of the rink shortly before game time.

“I got cool with Duclair a couple years ago, and told him that when I had time I would come out,” said Haslem, whose Heat lead New York in a second-round series 2-1 with Game 4 in Miami on Monday. “It’s amazing here right now. South Florida sports, we always feel like the underdogs, but these guys on the Panthers, the heart they play with, it’s inspiring to see.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

A thunderstorm passed over Churchill Downs on Sunday morning, but nothing was going to stop the celebration at Barn 42.

Mage walked the shedrow, covered in a blanket proclaiming him “Kentucky Derby 149 winner.” He had spent Saturday evening munching on carrots and peppermints and awakened Sunday morning to dozens of photographers wanting to take his picture.

While eating hay in Stall 10 − the same stall that housed 2006 Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro − Churchill Downs officials presented the traditional garland of roses to Mage’s connections.

This is the life of a Kentucky Derby champion.

‘Minutes later, he was so relaxed,’ groom Moises Morales said of the moments after the victory. ‘He ate good. He came out of it so easy. I couldn’t believe it. Kids, you know? He’s still a kid. … He’s a spoiled little thing.’

The kid was a man among boys Saturday, rallying from the back of the pack for a one-length victory over Two Phil’s in front of 150,335 fans at Churchill Downs.

Mage was the runner-up to Forte in the Florida Derby on April 1 and had created little buzz − compared to most − heading into the Kentucky Derby.

He went to post Saturday at 15-1 odds.

‘I wasn’t expecting for him to be the star before the race,’ assistant trainer Gustavo Delgado Jr. said. ‘But we were all confident that he had a really nice race behind him.’

Morales said he watched the post parade on TV and was confident Mage was going to run a big race.

‘He was feeling good, strong like a little bull,’ Morales said. ‘I saw him galloping and warming up and said, ‘Oh, my gosh. He wants to do it.’’

Ramiro Restrepo said the post-race celebration was held at Jeff Ruby’s Steakhouse. Restrepo is part of an ownership contingent that also includes OMGA Investments (led by Gustavo Delgado Sr.), Sterling Racing (led by Sam Herzberg) and CMNWLTH (led by Brian Doxtator and Chase Chamberlin).

Restrepo said he spent part of the evening responding to nearly 1,200 text messages on his phone.

‘Told a lot of stories, a lot of hugs and kisses,’ he said. ‘Just enjoying the moment, man. This comes along once in a lifetime, if at all. The fact we could all get together and enjoy it and spend some time − basking in the glow of time, effort and dedication − you have to take it all in.’

Delgado Sr. said Mage checked out fine with veterinarians Sunday morning. Mage will get a couple days rest and could head back to the Churchill Downs track for training Tuesday morning.

Connections wouldn’t commit to entering Mage in the second leg of the Triple Crown − the May 20 Preakness at Pimlico in Baltimore − but they’re certainly considering it.

‘Obviously, you know that’s a dream in the background,’ Restrepo said. ‘But in the end, end, end, Mage has to want the Triple Crown. If he comes out of the race as he appears to us here, then I know (Delgado Sr.) is going to want to go to the Preakness and all of the partners are going to want to go, too. But it’s never going to be at the expense of the horse.

‘If my guy is feeling the way he’s feeling, then on to Baltimore and crab cakes we go.’

Whatever happens next, Restrepo and his partners will always have the memories from the first Saturday in May, 2023.

‘This is a game that you lose way more than you win,’ Restrepo said. ‘It’s a labor of love, and you’re just dream chasing. It’s come through for all of us. … This is the top of the mountain for many, many people in the sporting realm. Everyone knows the Kentucky Derby around the world.’

Jason Frakes: 502-582-4046; jfrakes@courier-journal.com; Twitter: @KentuckyDerbyCJ.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

DALLAS (AP) — The Dallas Stars canceled a watch party that was planned during their road playoff game Sunday night in the plaza outside their home arena, which is less than 30 miles from a Texas outlet mall where an assailant killed eight people the previous day.

While Game 3 of the NHL playoffs series went on as scheduled Sunday night in Seattle, the Stars said they opted against having the watch party outside the American Airlines Center “out of respect for the victims, families and community of Allen.”

Stars coach Pete DeBoer, speaking in Seattle during the team’s morning skate Sunday, said the team was “heartbroken” about the mass shooting.

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Allen Premium Outlets, a sprawling outdoor shopping center, is about 14 miles from the Stars’ practice facility and offices that are in Frisco, Texas. DeBoer, in his first season as the Dallas coach, said his family shops there and Stars players go there as well.

“It’s really close to home obviously, and just tragic,” DeBoer said. “Frankly, when you hear victims as young as 5 years old, you just, you get tired of hearing it. I think when you hear Sandy Hook and Parkland and Nashville, you know, unless it’s in your backyard, you compartmentalize it and put it aside. And then when it happens in your backyard, you realize, you know, the horror of it.”

DeBoer acknowledged that it was difficult to think about playing a game after something like that.

The Stars and Seattle Kraken split the first two games of their best-of-seven series that were played at the AAC in Dallas on Tuesday and Thursday nights. The watch party that had been scheduled Sunday night was like others the Stars have hosted during their road playoff games.

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PHOENIX — Why is Aaron Boone still managing the last-place Yankees? 

Hasn’t Rob Thomson’s expiration date come in Philadelphia? 

Isn’t it time to fire rookie manager Pedro Grifol and bring back Ozzie Guillen in Chicago? 

Is Mike Shildt still available to come back to St. Louis and replace Oli Marmol? 

Yep, this is the world we live in these days. We have absolutely zero patience.

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And whatever you do, you better perform to our standards. If not, we want you immediately fired. 

It doesn’t matter that the baseball season is barely a month old, the first day of summer is a month away, the trade deadline is 10 weeks away and there are five months left in the season. 

We’re ready for heads to roll. 

Why, just in the last week, Yankees fans were chanting ‘Fire Boone’ after they blew a ninth-inning lead, while hoping GM Brian Cashman goes out the door with him. The friendly folks in St. Louis are making Phillies fans blush with their incessant booing over the team’s worst start in 50 years. The Phillies fans’ honeymoon with Thomson has abruptly ended. And you don’t want to be anywhere near 35th and Shields in Chicago where fans want owner Jerry Reinsdorf to sell the team, but not before he fires everyone in the front office and takes Grifol with him. 

‘April is just weird, it can go in all kinds of directions,’ Washington Nationals manager Dave Martinez told USA TODAY Sports. ‘On paper, everybody says this team should do this or do that. But for me, it’s about staying the course and trying to get the players to relax a little bit. I mean, everybody wants to start off 20-10. 

‘Sometimes, it just doesn’t happen.’ 

And sometimes, a god-awful start can be swatted off like a mosquito on a muggy summer night. 

If you’re the Cardinals, White Sox, Yankees, Phillies, Mets, or any other underachieving team, a poster of the 2019 Nationals team should be hanging on your clubhouse walls. 

This is a team that was 19-31 and sitting 10 games out of first place in the NL East on May 24, 2019. 

They were World Series champions on Oct. 30, 2019. 

The secret? Don’t panic. 

‘You have to understand the process, understand what you’re trying to do, and stay positive,’ Martinez said, ‘and things will turn around. In ’19, that was my focus, with the coaches, with the players. I was fired up, ‘Hey, keep playing hard. Keep staying positive. And don’t worry about the wins and losses. Everything will even themselves out.’ 

‘You just go stay in the fight. You never know what’s going to happen.’ 

The Nationals were at the crossroads when they were swept by the Mets in New York, returned home, and Martinez honestly thought he would be fired. 

‘Basically, everybody said I was fired already,’ Martinez said. ‘But I just couldn’t listen to that, right? So that’s the advice I to give these managers now. Don’t panic. Don’t press. Be yourself.’ 

Martinez arrived at Nats Park the next day, and discovered that GM Mike Rizzo had no intention of firing him. They promptly went out and won three consecutive games, nine of their next 11, had a winning record by the end of June, were 76-58 by the end of August, and finished the regular season with a 93-69 record and a wild-card berth. 

Never once, the Nats say, did Martinez ever change. 

‘I mean, we thought we were really good still,’ said Nats starter Patrick Corbin, one of the two active carryovers from the 2019 team. ‘We knew we were talented. Guys were still working hard every day, we just weren’t getting the results. The big thing was that Davey was the same person, just showing who he is, and believed in us. 

‘We got a few wins here and there, and then got into a stretch where we didn’t think we could lose.’ 

While the Nats’ dramatic comeback season certainly is a lesson in perseverance, giving hope and faith to furious fanbases, there, of course, is a little kicker to their Cinderella story. 

They also happened to have Max Scherzer, Stephen Strasburg, Corbin and Anibal Sanchez in their starting rotation. 

‘Yeah, we had that going for us, too,’ Martinez said, laughing. 

The Yankees currently have $152.8 million worth of players on the injured list, with their $162 million free-agent prize, Carlos Rodon, having no idea whether he can pitch with his chronic back problems. 

The Cardinals starting rotation is yielding a 5.48 ERA, third-worst in baseball, with only six quality starts. 

The White Sox have the Bermuda Triangle of lousy hitting, awful pitching and horrendous defense. 

The Mets have been shut out six times, the same number of times as the lowly Kansas City Royals. 

The Phillies’ pitching staff has the NL’s worst ERA (5.15), yielding a 9.12 ERA in their six-game losing streak, with their high-powered offense scoring three or fewer runs in 16 games. 

Can it turn around for these teams? 

Sure, it’s possible. They are all rich in talent. And, of course, they have plenty of time. 

Remember, the Phillies were 21-29 on June 1 last season and went to the World Series. 

Atlanta was 52-55 and was without Ronald Acuna on Aug. 1, 2021, and won the World Series. 

So who’s staging this year’s comeback? 

The Cardinals, who haven’t had a losing record since 2007, have the luxury of playing in easily the worst division in the National League. 

The White Sox, believing that last year was just an aberration, are playing in the weakest division in the American League. 

The Yankees, who have scored just 3.93 runs a game, barely more than the A’s, will have Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton back off the injured list this month. 

The Phillies finally have Bryce Harper, their $330 million man, in their lineup. 

The Mets just welcomed the return of Cy Young winner Justin Verlander to their rotation. 

So, is it enough to make you run to your nearest casino and bet that any of them will be on a World Series float in October? 

Probably not. 

But come on, not all of these teams will make the playoffs, right? 

If that happens, rest assured, a whole lot of folks will be paying the price. 

Even patience, in the world of baseball, has an expiration date. 

Liam Hendriks readies for return from cancer

Chicago White Sox closer Liam Hendriks wore a shirt that read: ‘Struck out Cancer’ in his first media appearance since being diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma, saying he never once felt sorry for himself and asked, ‘Why me?’ 

‘I looked at it as a ‘Why not me?’ ‘ Hendriks said. ‘I tend to have a little rosier perspective on life. So that was the process behind it. ‘Look, I’ve got this. This is my next challenge.’ I know that going into it, I could never be introverted and hold it all in, just the woe is me, that attitude. I’ve seen family members go through it. You hear the stories of people going through it. 

‘You see how much it ravages not only the person but also the spouse. Not only was I wondering about myself and making sure I had the right mentality, I wanted to make sure everybody around me knew I was attacking this thing head on and to not worry about me and my mental state because I’m attacking this no matter what.’ 

Hendriks made his first rehab appearance Friday for Triple-A Charlotte and is expected to return to the White Sox later this month. 

The only negative about his first outing, Hendriks joked, is that the opposing team and crowd were too nice welcoming him back. 

‘Don’t get me wrong, it’s really, really nice,’ Hendriks said on his Zoom call. ‘I very much appreciate it. It made me very emotional. 

‘But I’m a guy who pitches on anger, and it’s really hard to get angry when you know the other team is full of nice people.’ 

Numbers game

– Cleveland Guardians closer Emmanuel Clase was the AL’s best reliever, saving a major-league best 42 games in 46 chances in 2022 – but this season he has already blown three saves in 14 opportunities. 

The fastball that averaged 100.2 mph in 2021 has now dipped to 97.7. 

– This is the first time in their proud franchise histories that the Cardinals and the Yankees were 10 games out of first place entering May. 

– You think All-Star shortstop Tim Anderson makes an impact on the White Sox? 

They are 8-7 with Anderson this season and 3-15 without him. 

Since the start of the 2020 season, they’re 153-113 (.575) with him and 67-84 (.444) without him. 

‘He’s the heart and soul of the club,’ White Sox manager Pedro Grifol said. ‘As he goes, we go. He’s the energy. It takes 26 guys to do what we want to do, but he’s a really big piece to this thing.’ 

– The A’s, with two crowds under 3,000 this past week, are now offering summer packages for just $99 to catch 37 games. 

The A’s entered Saturday with a 7-26 record, and are on pace to finish 34-128, which would shatter the record for futility set by the 1962 New York Mets who went 42-120 as an expansion team. They already set the MLB record for most losses in April with 23. 

– The 114 runs scored by the Pirates in their first 32 games were the team’s most since Honus Wagner played for them in 1902. 

– The Kansas City Royals have a 2-16 record at home. 

– It’s hard to believe the Padres’ powerful offense has been limited to one or no runs in nine games already this season. 

– The Pirates starting pitchers have 15 victories and 18 quality starts this year. 

A year ago, they didn’t have their first win until May 9 with only two quality starts. 

– The Marlins are 10-0 in one-run games this year after going 24-40 in one-run games last seasons. The 1972 Mets are the only team with a longer stretch of consecutive wins in one-run games to open a season, going 11-0. 

– The AL East looks like it will become the greatest division since divisional play began in 1969. 

The best winning percentage by a division is .566 by the 2002 AL West, according to MLB’s Sarah Langs, but the AL East now has a combined .623 winning percentage, with every team above .500. 

There has never been a season in which every team in a division finished with a winning record. 

– Closer Craig Kimbrel was an All-Star with the Chicago Cubs in 2021, yielding a 0.49 ERA and 0.70 WHIP, but hasn’t been the same since being traded to the White Sox that summer, then with the Dodgers and now Phillies. 

He since has yielded a 4.64 ERA and this year has a gruesome 8.25 ERA and 1.750 WHIP. 

– Atlanta outfielder Ronald Acuña Jr. has hit at least 120 homers with 120 stolen bases quicker than anyone in baseball history, achieving the feat in 539 games, eclipsing Cincinnati Reds’ great Eric Davis who did it 559 games. 

– The Boston Red Sox were 3-16 last season against the Toronto Blue Jays. 

This year?  They’re 4-0 after sweeping them this week. 

‘They kicked our butts last year,’ Red Sox manager Alex Cora told reporters. ‘The reason we didn’t make it to the playoffs last year was because of them.’ 

They said it

– Cardinals manager Oli Marmol went off when asked bout being booed at home this week. 

‘You think they are more frustrated than us?’ Marmol said. ‘No, I can tell you right now they’re not. That clubhouse is extremely frustrated. Understand something. I’ve had the privilege of doing this for 17 years for one organization. And whether you are in the minor leagues as a coach in the lowest level, or if you are a coach at the big league level, or you are managing in my seat, you wake up every single day with one thing in mind, and it’s how to improve the organization. So, to sit here and think other people are more frustrated than the people in this clubhouse, is insane. Absolutely insane.’ 

– Toronto Blue Jays starter Chris Bassitt, formerly of the A’s, pulled no punches ripping A’s owner John Fisher and the mess they have on the baseball field speaking to ‘Foul Territory’. 

‘We know how much money is made in this game,’ he said. ‘We just know it and with revenue sharing and all that, I just think it’s ridiculous to have a team that’s just not trying to win when you know how much money is being brought in. … I’m not saying you got to go spend $400 million, but I mean, you got to put a product on the field where it’s like, ‘Alright, we’re investing in players that are really, really good to try to win a World Series.’ 

‘So I just think if you’re not in the game to try to win a World Series, then I don’t think you should be an owner. I really don’t.’ 

Around the basepaths

– Enough with the crazy numbers folks are predicting for Shohei Ohtani’s free agent contract. 

Ohtani and his representatives are expecting a $500-$550 million contract, and certainly don’t believe anyone is going to offer $600 million. 

– The Texas Rangers are scrambling to find a closer after blowing four late-inning leads this week, converting just six of 11 save opportunities. The best closer currently available is the Royals’ Aroldis Chapman. 

If the Rangers wait, they could pick up veterans Joe Kelly or Kendall Graveman if the Chicago White Sox are out of the race by July. 

– The White Sox don’t plan to keep starter Lucas Giolito after this season, and will make him available at the trade deadline if they are out of the race. 

– The White Sox certainly plan to pick up the $15 million option on closer Liam Hendriks in 2024 considering the buyout is also $15 million. 

– The Houston Astros have yet to release a timetable on All-Star second baseman Jose Altuve’s return from his fractured right thumb, but privately they believe he’ll join the Astros during their May 29-June 4 homestand.  

It’s been a rough stint with Altuve being robbed on opening day when four people broke into his home and stole $1 million worth of watches and jewelry. 

– The St. Louis Cardinals became so frustrated with Willson Contreras’ rapport with their pitching staff that they stripped him of his catching duties over the weekend and are making him a full-time DH and part-time outfielder. 

This comes on the heels of giving him a five-year, $87.5 million contract to be their everyday catcher to replace future Hall of Famer Yadier Molina. 

So, just like that, the Cardinals have a grossly overpriced DH on their hands, and a guy who has played the outfield a grand total of 15 times in the last seven years, joining an outfield where there is no room. 

Remember, it was Astros manager Dusty Baker and owner Jim Crane who vetoed former GM James Click’s pending deal to acquire Contreras at last year’s trade deadline for starter Jose Urquidy, believing the fit would be a nightmare for their prized pitching staff. 

And, yes, this is why the Chicago Cubs barely made an effort to keep Contreras from hitting free agency. 

The Contreras fiasco simply is the latest embarrassing episode in the Cardinals’ horrific start, and after just five weeks of a five-year contract, they are stuck with a catcher they don’t want. 

– The Washington Nationals front office actually recommended they give Stephen Strasburg a two-year, $35 million contract extension when he exercised his opt-out after the 2019 season. 

He instead received a seven-year, $245 million deal. 

In the three years since signing the deal, he has since pitched 31.1 innings, going 1-4 with a 6.89 ERA. 

It’s unclear whether he will pitch again. 

– The Pittsburgh Pirates are the surprise story of the National League the first month of the season, sitting atop the division entering May for the first time since 1992, but pardon executives and scouts for not believing it will last, believing they are a year away. 

‘If they finish .500, I’ll be shocked,’ one GM said. ‘But they’re coming. They’re getting close.’ 

– The Twins’ plan to keep Byron Buxton healthy by limiting him to the DH role is certainly working. He has played in 30 of their first 33 games, hitting eight homers with 19 RBI and a .901 OPS. The Gold Glove center fielder last played in 117 games in 2017. 

The Twins eventually plan to shift Buxton back to the outfield, but are being cautious. 

– While the Yankees continue to be ridiculed for not acquiring ace Luis Castillo at last year’s trade deadline, instead settling for injured Frankie Montas, the Reds were insisting on including prized shortstop Anthony Volpe in any trade. 

– The Royals believe that prized shortstop Bobby Witt Jr.’s slow start is due to his two-week stint at the World Baseball Classic in which he got only three at-bats. 

– The Houston Astros are becoming increasingly concerned with first baseman Jose Abreu, who signed a three-year, $58.5 million contract this winter. Abreu, 36, is hitting just .223 with a paltry .527 OPS and still has not homered in 139 plate appearances. 

– The Colorado Rockies are expected to try to work out an incentive-laden contract extension with German Marquez now that he will undergo Tommy John surgery that will sideline him late into 2024. He’s in the final year of a five-year, $43 million contract that includes a $16.5 million option or $2.5 million buyout in 2024. Marquez, the team’s ace, had made at least 28 starts in each of his past six full seasons. 

– San Diego Padres outfielder Fernando Tatis is the only player in baseball to have two, two-homer games against future Dodgers Hall of Famer Clayton Kershaw. 

‘He’s a star in the game,’ the Dodgers’ Mookie Betts told reporters after the Padres’ 5-2 victory Friday night over the Dodgers. ‘He adds what any star in the game would add: energy, he plays a good right field, a leadoff bat with thump. He’s a superstar.’ 

– It’s amazing that the Astros have managed to produce a winning record considering they have played all season without All-Star second baseman Jose Altuve and outfielder Michael Brantley, and are missing three of their starters in Lance McCullers, Luis Garcia and Jose Urquidy. Garcia now needs Tommy John surgery and likely is out until 2025. 

– Well, don’t count on the San Francisco Giants joining the Mexico tourism committee after their two-game series against the San Diego Padres in Mexico City last week. 

‘It’s been a mental grind, it’s been a physical grind,’ ace Logan Webb said. ‘I think three-quarters of our clubhouse has (diarrhea). Hopefully the (diarrhea will) go away and we’ll be better in a couple days.’ 

Giants outfielder Joc Pederson called it the most treacherous trip of his career. 

‘We had a 4 ½-hour flight to get there,’ Pederson told reporters. ‘We got in at 1 in the morning, we were at customs for two hours, we had an hour and a half bus ride. Get to the hotel at 4 in the morning. In altitude. Every bus ride to and from the stadium was an hour, 15 minutes. The game ended (Sunday) and after our bus left the field, it still took four hours to get in the air, and we got here at 12 o’clock again.’ 

Good luck to the Houston Astros and Colorado Rockies, who will make the trip next year. 

– You know things are going fabulous for the Tampa Bay Rays when they desperately need a reliever, call the Cincinnati Reds about 35-year-old Chase Anderson, trade for him, put him on a flight that morning, put him in the game that night, and watch him pitch three shutout innings for his first career save. 

The cost of business? One dollar. A cash deal. 

And you wonder why they have the second-best start, 27-7, by any team since 1901. 

– One of the best free-agent pickups of the winter was 37-year-old Wade Miley, who has been stellar for the Brewers, going 3-1 with a 2.31 ERA, averaging six innings a start. 

The price-tag: 1 year, $3.5 million, with a $10 million mutual option or a $1 million buyout. 

– Minnesota Twins starter Sonny Gray could be in for a nice payday this winter as a free agent. He is 4-0 with a 1.35 ERA, and still has not given up a home run this season. 

– The Nationals and Denver Nuggets have gotten quite chummy, sharing the same hotel in Minnesota in April, and now the same hotel in Phoenix this weekend. 

‘They told us that we are their good-luck charm,’ Nats manager Davey Martinez said. 

Will the Nationals bring that good luck to another Western Conference contender?

They’ll be sharing a hotel with the Lakers in San Francisco next week when Los Angeles plays the Golden State Warriors in the NBA playoffs. 

– The Ted Williams estate is auctioning off his Hall of Fame ring from 1966 and the Babe Ruth Sultan of Swat Award crown awarded to him in 1957, and a 35-ounce bat he used during his 1946 MVP season. They will be on the block in Heritage’s May 11-13 Sports Catalog Auction. 

– This could be the first time in Rays history that they have a player finish in the top 5 of the MVP race with shortstop Wander Franco and left fielder Randy Arozarena off to hot starts. 

The highest MVP finish by a Rays’ player was Evan Longoria who finished sixth in 2010 and 2013. 

– Detroit Tigers starter Eduardo Rodriguez is going old-school this year, ditching PitchCom and actually relying on his catcher’s fingers calling pitches. 

‘That’s how we’ve been playing all our career,’ Rodriguez told the Detroit Free Press, ‘and we like it like that. We’ll keep doing it.’

Well, something sure is working. 

Rodriguez is 3-2 with a 1.81 ERA and a 0.78 WHIP, including a 0.52 ERA in his last five starts. 

– Congratulations to Kyle Muller, who became the first Athletics starter to win a game on Friday night. It’s the latest in a season that any team has gone without a starting pitcher winning a game. 

Follow Nightengale on Twitter: @Bnightengale 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

PHILADELPHIA – James Harden had a new friend he called his good-luck charm in the arena and the grit he needed to turn in a vintage effort – in the form of tying and winning shots –for the 76ers.

Looking down-and-out in the previous two games, Good Game James saved the 76ers in Game 4.

Harden hit the floater with 16 seconds left in regulation that tied the game, buried the go-ahead 3-pointer with 18 seconds remaining in overtime and scored 42 points to help the Sixers stave off a wild Boston Celtics comeback in a 116-115 victory on Sunday.

“I just want to win,” Harden said. “Today was do-or-die for us.”

The 76ers tied their playoff series at 2-2 with Game 5 set for Tuesday.

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Harden won the game in front of John Hao, a paralyzed Michigan State shooting survivor who developed a long-distance friendship with the 10-time All-Star. Harden invited Hao to a game as soon as he was able to travel.

“He’s strong, he’s bouncing back, he’s recovering very well,” Harden said. “I feel like it’s my job to give him that light, that smile that he deserves. Hopefully today was one of those days where he can smile.”

Harden waved over Hao and signed his game-worn sneakers moments after Marcus Smart’s potential winner was a tick too late. The 76ers are now guaranteed to return home for Game 6 on Thursday.

Jaylen Brown said his poor defensive read when he ditched Harden to try and double Joel Embiid was a pivotal moment.

“It’s a gamble at the wrong time and a big shot by James Harden,” he said. “That’s my fault. I take full accountability.”

The Celtics did almost all they could to snuff out that chance. Smart and Jayson Tatum keyed a Celtics rally from 15 points down with 2 minutes left in the third quarter.

Boston’s fun began in the fourth when Smart and Brown buried consecutive 3-pointers and Tatum attacked the rim for a bucket that wiped out an eight-point hole in 90 seconds. Al Horford put them ahead 98-90 – on a possession that started on the other end when Tyrese Maxey had his shot blocked – and shimmied for the crowd as boos rained on him.

Yes, the 76ers had home court but fans tensed up as memories all those second-round exits since 2001 stirred inside the building. Smart and Malcolm Brogdon hit consecutive 3s for a 105-100 lead.

But it was P.J. Tucker, the heart and guts of the Sixers, who again did the dirty work on a defensive rebound and a bucket. He made the free throw with 1:05 left and the tie game gave the Sixers new life.

Smart hit two free throws and Harden tied it 107-all to guarantee a thriller.

The Sixers were on the brink of defeat numerous times over the final 17 minutes, none more than when Embiid crashed into Smart on a driving, one-handed bank shot with 1:49 left in overtime and was whistled for an offensive foul. The play was reviewed and the call stood. Boston kept its 112-111 lead

Embiid, the NBA MVP who had 34 points and 13 rebounds, kept his composure and eventually got to the line to sink two free throws with 59 seconds left and the season in the balance.

Tatum – who struggled to score early but finished with 24 points, 18 rebounds, six assists and four blocks – hit a step-back 3 for a 115-113 lead. Harden made sure Boston would never challenge again.

“Jayson Tatum’s 3 was awful that (a push-off) wasn’t called,” 76ers coach Doc Rivers said. “You’ve got to call that play. I know it’s a big play and I’m a big fan of refs not deciding (the game) but it could have decided the game.”

Brown scored 23 points and Smart had 21.

Brown, though, took only three shots in the fourth quarter and none in OT when the Celtics needed him.

“I guess I’ve got to demand the ball a little bit more,” he said. “I thought good things happened when I had it in my hands. I thought our offense was OK. We chipped away, we made big-time shots, we got great looks all game long. We just came up short in the end.”

Harden did this already when he played in Game 1 like he was still the MVP in Houston and dropped 45 points to spur the upset road victory. Then, his game disappeared and he played two of the worst games of his career.

Harden’s 5-for-28 combined shooting in Games 2 and 3 was worst effort for him over any two-game span in his career – regular season or playoffs.

The best the 76ers could do ahead of Game 4 was only hope for a productive Harden.

Philly got him.

Harden hit all three 3s in the first half and scored 21 points, five more than his Game 3 total. Embiid was as potent as he could be on one good knee and had 19 points and 11 boards to give the 76ers a 59-50 lead at the break.

“Tonight, playing a lot of minutes kind of got to me at the end,” Embiid said. “We made the plays when we needed. PJ with the big and-1. Obviously, the James shot. I thought we stuck with it. But that’s been us all season long. We stick together and fight through everything.”

TIP-INS

Celtics: Tatum missed his first eight shots before he scored a bucket just before the first half ended.

76ers: Julius Erving was in the house. … Embiid and Harden are the first Sixers teammates with 30 points each in a playoff game since Embiid and Seth Curry did it in June 2021 against Atlanta.

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SEATTLE (AP) — Jordan Eberle sparked a five-goal outburst in the second period outburst with his fourth goal of the playoffs, Philipp Grubauer made 24 saves and the Seattle Kraken beat the Dallas Stars 7-2 on Sunday night to take a 2-1 series lead in their Western Conference semifinal.

Eberle was the recipient of an unfortunate bounce, beating Dallas goalie Jake Oettinger at 2:10 of the second period after the puck hit Stars defenseman Miro Heiskanen in the face and fell to Eberle’s stick.

That was just the start for Seattle. Alex Wennberg doubled the lead 1:26 after Eberle’s goal; Carson Soucy became Seattle’s 16th different goal scorer this postseason, beating Oettinger five-hole at 6:30; and Matty Beniers made it 4-0 at 8:22.

Seattle’s first four shots of the period beat Oettinger, and the Kraken made it 5-1 when Eeli Tolvanen finished a rebound with 37 seconds left in the period.

It was the second time in three games of the series that Oettinger had surrendered five goals after Dallas lost the opener 5-4 in overtime. Oettinger gave up four goals in the first period of Game 1 and Seattle became the first team this postseason to score five times in a single period.

Follow every game: Latest NHL Scores and Schedules

Twelve different Seattle players had a point.

Oettinger had 12 saves on 17 shots and was replaced for the third period by backup Scott Wedgewood. Wedgewood was greeted with a short-handed breakaway by Seattle and Yanni Gourde’s third goal of the playoffs on the Kraken’s first shot of the third period. Justin Schultz added a seventh for Seattle with 2:30 left on the power play.

Game 4 is Tuesday night.

It’s the second straight series the Stars split the first two games at home only to be routed in Game 3. Dallas lost 5-1 to Minnesota in Game 3 in the opening round before winning the final three games of the series.

Equally concerning for the Stars was Heiskanen, who was left bloodied on his left cheek by the puck to the face and did not return to the game. The original shot from Tye Kartye appeared to deflect off Ryan Suter’s stick and Heiskanen was not prepared for the ricochet.

Meanwhile, Grubauer was excellent again for Seattle. Mason Marchment pulled Dallas within 4-1 late in the second period finishing a one-timer from Evgenii Dadonov, but Grubauer was very good the rest of the period with breakaway saves on Roope Hintz and Jason Robertson, and a lunging save with his blocker on a deflected puck that looked to be going over his head and toward the net.

Jani Hakanpää scored his first of the playoffs with 13 minutes left.

SWEET 16

According to the NHL, the Kraken are the fifth team in the past 25 years to have 16 different players score a goal within the first 10 games of a single postseason. That group doesn’t include Jared McCann, who led Seattle with 40 goals in the regular season, but has been out since Game 4 of the opening round due to injury.

WATCH PARTY CANCELED

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Unexpected and intriguing matchups highlight the NBA’s Eastern and Western conference semifinals.

The fifth-seeded Knicks advancing to the second round isn’t surprising, but their opponent, the eighth-seeded Miami Heat, pulled off a huge upset over top-seeded Milwaukee. Great coaching and overachievers highlight this series.

Philadelphia-Boston should be a heavyweight fight with the winner most likely the favorite to win the East. The Celtics and Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown have been knocking at the door, and the 76ers are desperate to get out of the second round with Joel Embiid. 

The seventh-seeded Lakers bring momentum and a season-high confidence into another California-based series against Golden State. 

Follow every game: Latest NBA Scores and Schedules

Here are the schedules for the conference semifinals with times, TV info and predictions:

Eastern Conference

*-If necessary

No. 5 New York Knicks vs. No. 8 Miami Heat

Miami leads 2-1

Game 4, May 8: New York at Miami, 7:30 p.m. ET, TNT

Game 5, May 10: Miami at New York, 7:30 p.m., TNT

*-Game 6, May 12: New York at Miami, time TBD, ESPN

*-Game 7, May 15: Miami at New York, 8 p.m. ET, TNT

Season series: Knicks won, 3-1

Prediction: Heat in six

No. 2 Boston Celtics vs. No. 3 Philadelphia 76ers

Series tied 2-2

*-Game 5, May 9: Philadelphia at Boston, time TBD, TNT

*-Game 6, May 11: Boston at Philadelphia, time TBD, ESPN

*-Game 7, May 14: Philadelphia at Boston, time and TV TBD

Season series: Celtics won 3-1

Prediction: Celtics in seven

Western Conference

*-If necessary

No. 1 Denver Nuggets vs. No. 4 Phoenix Suns

Denver leads 2-1

Game 4, May 7: Denver at Phoenix, 8 p.m. ET, TNT

*-Game 5, May 9: Phoenix at Denver, time TBD, TNT

*-Game 6, May 11: Denver at Phoenix, time TBD, ESPN

*-Game 7, May 14: Phoenix at Denver, time and TV TBD

Season series: Tied, 2-2

Prediction: Nuggets in seven

No. 6 Golden State Warriors vs. No. 7 Los Angeles Lakers

Los Angeles leads 2-1

Game 4, May 8: Golden State at Los Angeles, 10 p.m. ET, TNT

Game 5, May 10: Los Angeles at Golden State, 10 p.m. ET, TNT

*-Game 6, May 12: Golden State at Los Angeles, time TBD, ESPN

*-Game 7, May 14: Los Angeles at Golden State, time and TV TBD

Season series: Lakers won, 3-1

Prediction: Warriors in seven

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Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., brushed off videos of him helping Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis prepare for a debate during his 2018 campaign, which ABC News leaked on Sunday, with a joke about the weight both men have lost.

When one user pointed out how much weight Gaetz had lost since 2018, noting that he ‘looks like a different person,’ the Florida Republican responded by saying DeSantis also lost weight.

‘We used to stop at Wawa way too much on that 2018 campaign,’ Gaetz wrote on Twitter. ‘More veggies these days!’

The joke came amid some backlash Gaetz is receiving from DeSantis’ supporters and those of former President Donald Trump.

The videos show DeSantis and Gaetz discussing how to communicate the governor’s differences with then-President Trump without angering his supporters.

Gaetz, a former adviser of DeSantis, has emerged as a public ally of Trump and has endorsed him for president.

‘I ran the Desantis Debate Prep in 2018,’ Gaetz said on Twitter, initially responding to the videos. ‘Though I prefer Trump for President (bigly), the release of these videos by the person operating the camera is disloyal hackery that I do not abide. Staffers who leak on the candidates they’ve done work for deserve the reputations they get.’

The DeSantis camp also pushed back on the release of the videos, saying they show an ‘authentic’ DeSantis even behind closed doors.

‘Another swing and a miss from Disney-funded ABC,’ Dave Abrams, a spokesman for DeSantis’ political team, told Fox News Digital. ‘The best their propaganda machine could do with the 2.5 hours of leaked footage is further [proof] that Ron DeSantis is unwilling to be anyone but his authentic self – no matter the politics.’

DeSantis is expected to announce his candidacy for the 2024 presidency as early as next week, setting up a primary contest against Trump.

Trump has secured key endorsements of Florida Republicans, including Gaetz as well as Reps. Byron Donalds, Gus Bilirakis, Michael Waltz, Vern Buchanan, Anna Paulina Luna, Cory Mills, John Rutherford, and Greg Steube.

More than 40 members of the House of Representatives and at least nine U.S. Senators have endorsed Trump for president. DeSantis has not yet announced his campaign but three representatives have publicly supported him.

DeSantis narrowly won his 2018 gubernatorial contest against Democratic nominee Andrew Gillum with both candidates receiving more than 4 million votes. Gillum is currently under investigation for allegedly pocketing campaign cash and illegally receiving gifts during the contest.

Fox News’ Patrick Hauf contributed to this report.

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A member of Congress from President Biden’s own party is demanding that he and Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas join Republicans at the negotiating table to find a bipartisan solution on immigration as the government’s Title 42 expulsion policy comes to an end.

Rep. Sharice Davids, D-Kan., warned that the expected onslaught of people trying to cross the border illegally after Title 42 ends could exacerbate the ‘humanitarian and refugee crisis’ if nothing is done to mitigate it.

‘As the President has decided to lift the [Title 42] order this week, we now face a doubling of illegal crossings at our southern border by some estimates, exacerbating the current humanitarian and refugee crisis,’ Davids wrote in a letter addressed to Mayorkas.

‘While you have presented a list of ways you plan to address the surge of migration, some of which I agree with, we still have not reached a comprehensive, long-term plan with bipartisan support.’

Her letter said any plan to help solve the issues at the southern border would have to have the support of both the Democrat-controlled Senate and the Republican-held House. Davids pointed out it will be a top issue in her chamber soon, as the GOP weighs its comprehensive immigration and border bill.

‘U.S. House Republicans plan to initiate debate about immigration reform in the coming weeks. I urge you and the White House to join me in engaging in these conversations about what the landscape for immigration reform in our country should look like,’ she wrote.

She called for a plan that would both secure the border and provide a pathway for citizenship for illegal immigrants already in the U.S.

‘Ultimately, we need a comprehensive and bipartisan solution that is smart, humane, and true to our country’s values. That must include securing and protecting our borders along with a roadmap to citizenship, especially for people who have served in our military and Dreamers,’ Davids wrote.

‘As Congress considers immigration reform in the coming weeks, we must make clear to the American people that we are taking this challenge seriously and are ready to find solutions. You have had a year to engage prior to the lifting of Title 42, and I hope that you and the President both recommit to working with Congress to achieve real results.’

Davids previously sounded the alarm on the border crisis in April of last year, when the Biden administration had earlier moved to lift Title 42. The policy gives border agents vast authority to turn migrants away on contact in order to slow the spread of COVID-19.

Opponents of the policy point argue that it’s a health measure imposed by the CDC, rather than an immigration rule, and is no longer needed – particularly as the national pandemic emergency ends this month.

But supporters of keeping it in place warn that an already drastic border crisis could get worse once border officials are stripped of its authority.

The expected end of the policy this week has forced federal officials to scramble to deal with the increase to what Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) says is already an average of 2,000 border crossings a day for the last two weeks, in the McAllen, Texas, area alone.

Some estimates say that figure could hit 10,000 per day after Title 42 is lifted.

In order to help with the expected onslaught of asylum-seekers and other migrants, the president ordered 1,500 U.S. troops to the border to support agents on patrol. Mayorkas was also at the border last week, when he toured with CBP agents and saw facilities where migrants awaited processing. Republicans have been sharply critical of his performance as head of DHS, and have even called for his removal.

The Senate is working on a bipartisan solution to temporarily allow for the expulsion of migrants after Title 42 ends, granting similar authorities to the health policy.

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Tara Reade, who has accused President Biden of sexually assaulting her in the 1990s, tweeted a cryptic message about death before she potentially testifies to Congress following an invitation from Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene and Matt Gaetz. 

‘I want to make something clear. If something happens to me, all roads lead to Joe Biden,’ Reade wrote Sunday afternoon. ‘Joe Biden and DNC political machine threats, bullying and intimidation over the last three years will not work.’

‘I am not suicidal,’ she added.

The message includes a promise to testify before Congress, to address ‘what happened and what’ she knows.

Reade worked as a staff assistant in Biden’s office from 1992 to 1993 when he was a U.S. Senator.

‘I should not be under investigation nor am I a foreign agent. I am a private citizen. I was a former staffer of Joe Biden’s that has chosen to step forward to tell the truth,’ Reade continued.

She added: ‘The tactics using intimidation and bullying to silence me and suppress me using DOJ and FBI and social media will not work. Leave me alone. I will testify under oath in Congress if asked to do so and tell what happened and what I know.’

‘The Biden corruption must end. Period,’ Reade said. 

She concluded her tweet by thanking Reps. Greene and Gaetz for inviting her ‘to testify and caring about the truth!’

Reade also responded to a user who accused her of being paid by Gaetz and Greene to testify.

‘No I am not getting paid to testify about being raped by my former boss. You are an absolute ghoul. Sexual assault is non-partisan,’ Reade tweeted.

Biden has denied the allegations of sexual misconduct. 

The cryptic message was posted after Dr. Gal Luft, a co-director of a Washington D.C.-based think tank, claimed he was arrested in an effort to stop him from revealing information about the Biden family.

‘I’ve been arrested in Cyprus on a politically motivated extradition request by the U.S. The U.S., claiming I’m an arms dealer. It would be funny if it weren’t tragic. I’ve never been an arms dealer,’ Luft tweeted on Feb. 18.

He added: ‘DOJ is trying to bury me to protect Joe, Jim, and Hunter Biden. Shall I name names?’

House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer, a Republican from Kentucky, told FOX Business’ Maria Bartiromo that his committee is trying to communicate with Luft and tried to get his testimony.

‘This is something we take very seriously. We had already identified this individual. We had hoped to talk to this individual by now but for whatever reason we have been unable to,’ Comer told Bartiromo on March 2.

His committee is continuing to investigate alleged coordination between the FBI and members of the Biden family, including the president and Hunter Biden.

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