Sports
Hornets top Grizzlies, eclipse last season's win total
Jan 28, 2026; Memphis, Tennessee, USA; Charlotte Hornets guard Kon Knueppel (7) drives past defender Memphis Grizzlies forward Jalen Wells (0) in the first quarter at FedExForum. Mandatory Credit: Matthew Smith-Imagn Images Brandon Miller scored 26 points, Miles Bridges added 20, and Moussa Diabate had 18 points and a career-high 20 rebounds to lead the visiting Charlotte Hornets over the Memphis Grizzlies on Wednesday night for their fourth straight win.
LaMelo Ball contributed 16 points and rookie Kon Knueppel contributed 10 points and six assists for the Hornets, who won for the 20th time this season to surpass last year’s win total.
Jaren Jackson Jr. led the Grizzlies with 26 points and rookie Cedric Coward finished with 17. GG Jackson scored 12 points off the bench.
Charlotte pulled away in the third quarter and never was threatened by a Memphis team missing several key players due to injuries; Memphis played its third consecutive game with guard Ja Morant. Morant, a two-time NBA All-Star, is sidelined with a left elbow sprain. Key reserve and occasional starter Santi Aldama also sat out.
The Grizzlies lost their fourth straight and for the seventh time in nine games.
Memphis, trailing by seven to open the third quarter, cut the deficit to 62-56 on a free throw by Jock Landale, but the Grizzlies then quickly fell behind by double digits. When Ryan Kalkbrenner dunked with 7:17 to go in the third the Hornets led by 17 at 79-62.
Four minutes into the fourth quarter, Charlotte pulled ahead by 19 following six straight points by Diabate. The Hornets extended the lead to 22 points in the final two minutes.
Charlotte began the season 4-13 but has rebounded to go 16-15 since.
The Grizzlies shot 58% in the first half but still trailed 62-55. Memphis fell behind by 16 in the first quarter, rallied to take a one-point advantage at 43-42 on Jaren Jackson’s 3-pointer, but then dropped back after consecutive 3-pointers by Ball. Jaren Jackson had 22 points and four 3-pointers in the opening half.
Miller had 21 first-half points for Charlotte, giving him his eight straight games of 20 or more points.
–Field Level Media
Sports
The Biggest Question Facing Every 2026 MLB Contender
With major league teams reporting to Spring Training this week, it’s a good time to ask the biggest questions for postseason contenders in 2026.
Toronto Blue Jays
Can Trey Yesavage be that effective again over the entire season?
Yesavage famously shot up the Jays’ minor-league system in 2025, ascending from Class A to the World Series. He had an 11-strikeout and a 12-strikeout performance in the postseason, but he’s still just nine appearances into his major league career.
Toronto has significant question marks across the rest of the pitching staff, but many of them can be papered over if Yesavage delivers a great first full season.
New York Yankees
Will ace Gerrit Cole regain his Cy Young form?
They have one of the deeper starting rotations in the league — one that can override questions about their position players and bullpen.
But the only way they’ll win the World Series for the first time in 17 years is if Cole is pitching like an ace in October at age 35, coming off Tommy John surgery.
Boston Red Sox
Will the offense score enough runs to make this a playoff team?
The front office had a tough offseason, letting go of Alex Bregman and adding more starting pitching when bolstering the lineup seemed prudent.
They will have Roman Anthony for a full season, and Willson Contreras will help. But they’ll also need Trevor Story to repeat his renaissance season and several other hitters to perform at higher percentiles than they did in ’25.
Baltimore Orioles
Did they add enough pitching?
Pete Alonso and Taylor Ward can slug, but the O’s had deeper needs on the pitching staff, particularly in the rotation.
They flirted with free-agent left-hander Framber Valdéz but bowed out of the bidding. They did make an intriguing trade for right-hander Shane Baz, though he’s still a reclamation project.
Otherwise, the Orioles are rolling with the starters they had at the end of ’25. It’s all too risky.
Seattle Mariners
Are they still a hitter or two short?
They added Brendan Donovan to play third base (or possibly second), which is fine — but still leaves something to be desired for an offense that finished 10th in runs scored.
The M’s should make the playoffs again if the starting pitchers repeat their ’25 performance, but they won’t make the World Series without better batting.
Detroit Tigers
Was not addressing the lineup an offseason mistake?
They waited out Valdéz and old pal Justin Verlander before making late moves to improve the rotation.
But everyone remembers Detroit’s infuriating inability to score runs in the postseason.
They essentially have the same lineup again.
Chicago Cubs
Who is the real Pete Crow-Armstrong?
A fantastic breakout season faded late when he hit .216/.262/.372 in the second half, followed by 12 strikeouts in 29 postseason plate appearances.
What if Crow-Armstrong’s fade is a harbinger of bigger struggles?
Los Angeles Dodgers
Can Shohei Ohtani win NL MVP and Cy Young in the same season?
Being the best hitter and pitcher in the league simultaneously is about the only thing Ohtani hasn’t accomplished yet.
He’s far enough removed from Tommy John surgery that he won’t be restricted in his innings.
This may be his best chance to do it.
New York Mets
Even with so many new faces, did they change enough of them?
They have at least five new hitters in the lineup: Bo Bichette, Jorge Polanco, Marcus Semien, Luis Robert and rookie Carson Benge.
Freddy Peralta joins the starting rotation, and Devin Williams plus Luke Weaver headline a revamped bullpen.
But with Alonso gone and Francisco Lindor now dealing with a hamate injury, the Mets don’t feel like locks to make the playoffs coming off 83 wins.
Milwaukee Brewers
How much better can Jackson Chourio get?
They proved they can make the postseason with a deep roster of solid players.
But to become true World Series contenders — assuming that’s ownership’s goal — someone like Chourio needs to make the leap from good to great.
He may have the best chance on the roster to become a postseason difference-maker, along with right-hander Jacob Misiorowski.
Philadelphia Phillies
Will they hit enough after the top of the order?
Team president Dave Dombrowski irritated Bryce Harper by implying he was diminished as a hitter — and it wasn’t Harper’s best season.
But he was still one of the three best bats in the lineup, along with Kyle Schwarber and Trea Turner.
The real issue was the rest of the lineup, and aside from adding Adolis García, it wasn’t significantly addressed.
San Diego Padres
Are they about to tear up the roster?
Manny Machado’s salary is set to spike, and Fernando Tatís Jr.’s production hasn’t fully rebounded since his PED suspension in ’22.
That’s a lot of resources tied to two players on a roster that may have already peaked.
They’ve also struggled to find managerial stability, and it’s the final season of A.J. Preller’s contract.
Cincinnati Reds
Can Suárez hit 60 home runs playing 81 games in Cincy?
He finished with 49 in ’25 and now returns to one of the most homer-friendly parks in baseball.
Cleveland Guardians
Why does anybody pitch to José Ramírez?
A couple of young hitters appear to be developing, but no one else in the lineup is particularly menacing.
Ramírez produces at an elite level — nearly unprotected — and still finds ways to do damage.
Sports
Dodgers re-sign RHP Evan Phillips to one-year deal
Apr 20, 2025; Arlington, Texas, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers relief pitcher Evan Phillips (59) pitches during the game between the Texas Rangers and the Los Angeles Dodgers at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images The Los Angeles Dodgers re-signed right-handed reliever Evan Phillips to a one-year, $6.5 million contract Tuesday.
To make room on the 40-man roster, catcher Ben Rortvedt was designated for assignment by the Dodgers for the second time this offseason in order to accommodate a roster addition.
Phillips, 31, was limited to seven appearances and one save last season before undergoing Tommy John surgery. In a Los Angeles bullpen that did not have a set closer in 2023 and 2024, Phillips took advantage of the situation to record 42 total saves in two seasons.
Over eight major league seasons, Phillips is 16-12 with a 3.36 ERA and 46 saves for the Atlanta Braves (2018), Baltimore Orioles (2018-20), Tampa Bay Rays (2021) and Dodgers.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Italy's national mint to repair broken Olympic medals
Feb 8, 2026; Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy; Breezy Johnson of the United States celebrates on the podium with her gold medal in the women’s downhill alpine skiing race during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Tofane Alpine Skiing Centre. Mandatory Credit: Michael Madrid-Imagn Images After multiple athletes reported issues with damaged medals, Milan Cortina Olympic organizers confirmed Italy’s national mint will repair any faulty medal fixings for athletes at the 2026 Games.
Olympic organizing committee spokesman Luca Casassa said a “targeted intervention” was agreed to with the producer of the medals, Rome’s Zecca dello Stato (state mint), to resolve the problems, which reportedly involve ribbons and clasps, not the medal designs themselves.
“Athletes who have medals with problems are invited to give them back through the appropriate channels so that they can be immediately repaired,” Casassa said.
American skier Breezy Johnson displayed a cracked and chipped gold medal after her win in the women’s downhill Sunday. “I was jumping up and down in excitement, then it just fell off,” Johnson told reporters Sunday. “Don’t jump in them. … I’m sure somebody will fix it. It’s not crazy broken, but a little broken.”
German biathlete Justus Strelow also had his medal fall off his neck as he was celebrating a mixed relay bronze win with his teammates. Swedish cross-country skier Ebba Andersson also reportedly saw damage on her silver medal from the women’s skiathlon.
Andrea Francisi, the chief games operations officer for the Milan Cortina organizing committee, had responded to the damaged medal reports Monday promising a swift resolution.
“… Obviously we are paying maximum attention to this matter, as the medal is the dream of the athletes, so we want that obviously in the moment they are given it that everything is absolutely perfect, because we really consider it to be the most important moment,” Francisi said Monday.
–Field Level Media
