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Spring training roundup: Gerrit Cole passes another test as Yankees rout Cubs

MLB: Spring Training-New York Yankees at Chicago CubsMar 24, 2026; Mesa, Arizona, USA; New York Yankees pitcher Gerrit Cole against the Chicago Cubs during spring training at Sloan Park. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

New York Yankees ace Gerrit Cole passed another test against the Chicago Cubs on Tuesday in his second start of the spring as he continued his return from Tommy John surgery last March.

Cole racked up three strikeouts in the first inning — fanning Cubs regulars Pete Crow-Armstrong, Michael Busch and Ian Happ — while also allowing a 413-foot solo homer to Alex Bregman. He threw 26 pitches through 1 2/3 innings and displayed increased velocity from the 2024 season as the Yankees defeated the Cubs, 8-3, in Mesa, Ariz.

Lefty newcomer Ryan Weathers produced his best outing of the spring, pitching five innings and allowing only one run on four hits. The former Marlin, who remains in New York’s rotation, allowed a long home run to Miguel Amaya, but fanned four and dropped his spring ERA to 8.83. Ben Rice, Jasson Dominguez and Randal Grichuk homered for the Yankees.

Edward Cabrera, who was teammates with Weathers last year in Miami, started for the Cubs. He gave up all three home runs and five earned runs overall, with seven hits, two walks and three strikeouts in 4 1/3 innings.

Twins 15, Red Sox 6

Ranger Suarez completed a rocky spring training with his new squad, allowing eight earned runs over 4 1/3 innings as Minnesota routed Boston in Fort Myers, Fla.

Suarez, who signed a five-year, $130 million contract in January, surrendered nine hits including a pair of home runs. He walked one, fanned five and finished the Grapefruit League slate with an 11.00 ERA. Trevor Story went 1-for-3 with two RBIs for Boston and finished spring with a .404 batting average.

The Red Sox built an early 5-2 lead, but Brooks Lee cut the deficit to 5-4 with a two-run long ball in the bottom of the second. Byron Buxton gave the Twins the lead for good with another two-run shot in the fifth. Victor Caratini and Kody Clemens added solo homers and former Dodger James Outman hit two-run blasts in the sixth and seventh.

Braves 3, Rays 2

Mike Yastrzemski hit his sixth home run of the spring and starter Grant Holmes lowered his ERA to 1.02 as Atlanta held off Tampa Bay in North Port, Fla. The Braves (21-7-2) led the Grapefruit League in wins.

Yastrzemski’s solo shot in the fourth inning gave the Braves a 2-1 lead. Drake Baldwin, Eli White and Jorge Mateo each went 2-for-3, with Baldwin and Mateo picking up RBI doubles. Holmes, who has earned a spot in the rotation, allowed two runs on four hits and two walks while fanning four in 5 1/3 innings.

Carson Williams — expected to start at shortstop for the Rays due to Taylor Walls’ injury — and Cooper Flemming each collected RBI singles.

Rangers 4, Royals 1

Jack Leiter threw four scoreless innings as Texas handled Kansas City in Arlington, Texas.

Leiter, who will fill a spot in the back of the Rangers’ rotation, allowed only two hits and struck out six. Joc Pederson contributed a solo homer in the fourth inning.

Seth Lugo went four innings for the Royals, permitting three runs (two earned) on four hits and three walks. He fanned four batters in his final prep for a start Sunday in Atlanta.

Nick Loftin doubled and scored for Kansas City in the eighth.

Tigers 11, Rockies 8

Dillon Dingler and Wenceel Perez each homered twice as visiting Detroit outslugged Colorado in Scottsdale, Ariz.

Perez drove in five runs and Dingler plated three as the Tigers amassed 10 extra-base hits in their 15-hit attack. Minor leaguer Max Anderson added a solo shot in the eighth and drove in three runs. Veteran hurler Justin Verlander was not sharp for Detroit, allowing six runs (five earned) on eight hits in 4 2/3 innings. He gave up two home runs and fanned four.

Jordan Beck gave Colorado a 3-2 lead with a bases-clearing double in the third inning, then Brett Sullivan and Ezequiel Tovar added homers in the fourth and fifth, respectively, to forge a 6-6 tie.

Guardians 10, Diamondbacks 5

Brayan Rocchio and Daniel Schneemann blasted early two-run homers and minor leaguer Nolan Schubart broke the game open with an eighth-inning three-run shot as Cleveland knocked off host Arizona in Phoenix.

Gabriel Arias added a two-run single to cap a four-run first inning for the Guardians. Starter Parker Messick (3-0) struck out six in 4 2/3 innings to earn the win, but also gave up four runs on six hits with one walk.

Michael Soroka did not make a good case to fill a role in the D-backs’ rotation, giving up six earned runs on 10 hits and two walks in 3 1/3 innings as his spring ERA ballooned to 7.50. Jordan Lawlar contributed a two-run RBI single in the fourth to slice Arizona’s deficit to 6-4.

–Field Level Media

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Daniss Jenkins, Pistons put streak on line vs. soaring Hawks

NBA: Los Angeles Lakers at Detroit PistonsMar 23, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Los Angeles Lakers Jake LaRavia (12) defends against Detroit Pistons Daniss Jenkins (24) during the second half at Little Caesars Arena. Mandatory Credit: David Reginek-Imagn Images

The absence of Cade Cunningham hasn’t affected the Detroit Pistons’ bottom line.

Detroit’s All-Star guard has missed three games after being diagnosed with a collapsed lung. The Pistons have continued to win without their team leader. They will carry a four-game winning streak into their home matchup with the Atlanta Hawks on Wednesday.

The Eastern Conference’s top team halted the Los Angeles Lakers’ nine-game winning streak on Monday with a 113-110 home victory.

Cunningham’s replacement in the lineup, Daniss Jenkins, scored a career-high 30 points. He hit a key baseline jumper and two free throws in the last 25 seconds.

“For me, I always say I’m forever humble, thankful and grateful. But you know what you can do, how I can impact the game,” Jenkins said. “Everybody else is surprised. For myself, and I speak humbly and respectfully, but I just know the work that I put in. I just know when my number is called, I know what I’m about and how I’m going to help the team. So, that’s all I try to go out and do. It really doesn’t surprise me.”

Jenkins began the season on a two-way contract. He was promoted on a two-year standard contract last month.

“Again, no longer surprised,” coach J.B. Bickerstaff said. “When he has the opportunity, he has delivered for us. Whether it’s throughout the game or in clutch moments, he finds a way to impact winning. I thought, again, he made huge plays down the stretch, made his free throws. So, he deserves a lot of credit.”

Detroit (52-19) is getting closer to securing the top seed in the Eastern Conference playoffs. The Pistons have a five-game cushion over their closest pursuer with 11 games remaining.

The Pistons can sweep the four-game season series with the Hawks with a victory on Wednesday. All those wins came during November and December.

Atlanta (40-32) is now the hottest team in the league, winning 13 of its last 14 contests. The Hawks pummeled the injury-riddled Memphis Grizzlies 146-107 on Monday. The surge has positioned the Hawks to potentially avoid the play-in tournament.

The Hawks had eight players score in double figures, including four reserves, during their latest victory. They had 37 assists on 49 made field goals.

“I thought CJ (McCollum) set the tone early,” coach Quin Snyder said. “He was just in the lane and had his eyes out, finding people, and then Nickeil (Alexander-Walker) had a stretch at the beginning of the third quarter, where just those guys playing that way, it raises everybody’s level. It sets a tone.”

Alexander-Walker scored one of his baskets on a first-quarter dunk, a rarity for him.

“Paint touches are important to the team. Just transition play,” Alexander-Walker said. “From when I got the ball, I could see the defender was timing me. So I knew I had to go aggressively. If I tried to lay it up, he probably would have, I think, like, the more aggressive guy wins in that situation.”

The game on Wednesday begins a stretch of three games in four nights for Atlanta. The Hawks will visit Boston on Friday and host Sacramento on Saturday.

–Field Level Media

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Report: Georgetown guard KJ Lewis entering transfer portal

NCAA Basketball: Georgetown at Seton HallFeb 21, 2026; Newark, New Jersey, USA; Georgetown Hoyas guard KJ Lewis (5) drives to the basket against Seton Hall Pirates guard Adam Clark (0) during the first half at Prudential Center. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Georgetown guard KJ Lewis, an All-Big East third-team selection, plans to enter the transfer portal for a second consecutive offseason, On3 reported on Tuesday.

Lewis, who played his first two seasons at Arizona, started 27 of his 28 games this season, leading the Hoyas in scoring average (14.9), which was ninth in the Big East. He also was second in the league in steals (2.1 per game) and led the team with 5.1 rebounds.

The 6-foot-4 Lewis sustained a season-ending injury to his left ankle against Marquette on Feb. 24, with six games remaining in the regular season.

Georgetown (16-18, 6-14 Big East) won two games at the conference tournament before falling to UConn in the semifinals.

Lewis averaged 10.8 points and 4.6 rebounds in 37 games (six starts) last season at Arizona. He made the Pac-12 All-Freshman team as an honorable mention in 2023-24. He averaged 8.5 points, 3.8 rebounds, 2.4 assists and 1.2 steals in 73 career games for the Wildcats.

–Field Level Media

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Pacers get fresh start vs. Lakers with record skid over

NBA: Indiana Pacers at Orlando MagicMar 23, 2026; Orlando, Florida, USA; Indiana Pacers forward Pascal Siakam (43) lays up during the second half against the Orlando Magic at Kia Center. Mandatory Credit: Mike Watters-Imagn Images

The slate has been wiped clean ahead of Wednesday’s meeting in Indianapolis, where the Los Angeles Lakers and Indiana Pacers collide after both saw their recent streaks come to an end.

Indiana coach Rick Carlisle implored his players to “make a stand” after crashing to a 16th consecutive loss — a franchise record — and the Pacers did just that with a drought-breaking 128-126 victory over the host Orlando Magic on Monday.

Pascal Siakam scored 37 points before producing the clutch defensive play of the game when he blocked Paolo Banchero’s drive at the buzzer, which would have sent the game into overtime.

“We had not been playing well,” Carlisle said. “The game (Saturday) in San Antonio was very disappointing for all of us. We talked about it (Monday) morning that we needed to make a stand and raise our level of collective will of how we’re competing. Guys did it, led by the veterans — Pascal, Andrew (Nesmith) and Aaron (Nembhard). It was a great game. It felt like a playoff-type game.”

Indiana (16-56) had led by 12 deep in the fourth period before narrowly surviving a late Orlando rally.

It was the Pacers’ first win since Feb. 11, before the All-Star Game that featured Siakam, who is averaging a team-best 24.0 points.

“In the position we’re in, we need to play as much meaningful basketball as we can, because we know we’re not going to be in the playoffs,” Carlisle said. “This was an important game at an important time … We hadn’t won a game in a while. We needed this.”

The Lakers (46-26) had won nine straight — their best run since 2020 — before being edged 113-110 in Detroit on Monday.

Luka Doncic — the league’s leading scorer, averaging 33.4 points — posted 32 against the Pistons, but missed two key shots down the stretch.

The Slovenian superstar was unsuccessful with a go-ahead pullup from 13 feet, before Daniss Jenkins’ two free throws at the other end put Detroit up by three.

Los Angeles called for time and LeBron James’ long inbound caught a deflection before ending with Doncic, who missed a tough 3-pointer over Jalen Duren to level it at the buzzer.

Despite the setback, Lakers coach JJ Redick liked how his team rallied after the Pistons had stormed ahead by 16 in the third period.

“I didn’t feel like we were going to break,” Redick said. “We made the adjustment at halftime to switch one through five. That was helpful in slowing them down.”

The Lakers’ cause wasn’t helped by the absence of regular starters Marcus Smart (ankle) and Rui Hachimura (calf). Smart is doubtful to play Wednesday and Hachimura is questionable.

“Our winning streak also coincided with us being healthy,” Redick said. “(Monday), Smart and Rui were out. Not having Smart killed us. It’s important for us that we can get healthy and play our rotation. Post-Luke (Kennard) trade, when all nine guys have played, we’ve been a good basketball team. We need to finish the season strong, but we also need to finish the season healthy.”

LeBron James endured a rare scoreless first half but still impacted the game, finishing just shy of a triple double — 12 points, 10 assists and nine rebounds.

“They play extremely hard, extremely fast and they’re super well-coached,” James said of the Pacers. “We’ve got to be ready for that. It’s our last game of the road trip. I know everybody’s trying to get home, but we’ve got business to take care of. We’ll be ready.”

–Field Level Media

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