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Why The Darryn Peterson Backlash Has Gone Too Far

There’s been so much backlash to Kansas star Darryn Peterson missing time that we’ve reached the backlash-to-the-backlash portion of the public discourse.

Jay Bilas called the criticism of Peterson “unfair” and said if he really wanted to shut it down for the season, he’d do so and still go No. 1 in the NBA draft. His coach Bill Self, whose bluntness a week ago gave credence to many of these narratives about Peterson’s availability, has taken the national media to task for those exact narratives.

So I’m here to provide the backlash to the backlash to the backlash.

It can probably be summed up in one sentence: If we accept that no questions can be lodged about Peterson’s heart, then something is really worrisome about Peterson’s body.

The freshman phenom has been terrific when he’s on the court. But after hurting his hamstring early in his season, he’s also missed time with cramping, ankle and quad issues and flu-like symptoms.

He’s played 465 minutes of a possible 1,130 — for comparison, teammate Melvin Council Jr. has been out there for 968 minutes. It’s earned him an undeniably funny nickname from the haters based on his initials: DNP.

This really hit a fever pitch earlier this month. Before Kansas faced undefeated No. 1 Arizona, Peterson was ruled out with flu-like symptoms 10 minutes before the game. The Jayhawks handed the Cats their first loss anyway. Then he scored 23 points at Oklahoma State but removed himself early in the second half and watched the rest of the game.

At that point, Self — who’s stuck up for his player all season and said he agreed with Peterson’s family that the guard should only play when close to 100% — made his revelatory comments.

“I thought we were past it, but obviously we’re not,” Self said. “It’s certainly a concern. You get into the NCAA Tournament, you’re playing a team just as good as you and you need to have all your best players available, so to speak.”

Ah, proof! Peterson (specifically, any “protect yourself” advice from his agent) was wearing on the Hall of Fame coach. The internet ran wild. What a bad teammate. These guys are paid now, so we can criticize them like professionals. And so on.

Peterson even did one of the rarest things imaginable and got “First Take” to talk about college basketball before March, Stephen A. Smith declaring that “no team in hell” should draft Peterson No. 1.

I agree, but not for the reason everyone seems to be settling on.

First of all, this class is loaded. AJ Dybantsa was the big thing coming out of high school. Cameron Boozer now looks like the can’t-miss prospect of this group. Wait, I meant Caleb Wilson at North Carolina. Then Arkansas’ Darius Acuff dropped 49 points – 41 in regulation! – after wearing a walking boot for two days, and the same night Peterson had a little cramp against Oklahoma State.

You, a tanking, rebuilding NBA franchise, don’t have to feel tied to Peterson at Nos. 1, 2 or 3. There are tons of great flavors of ice cream out there this year.

And moreover, the availability thing does not have to be a reflection on Peterson’s character or competitiveness. It can simply be about his body’s ability to withstand an 82-game NBA season, when he can barely play two-thirds of a college season. Why is he cramping so often and why can’t he get through it with some electrolytes and massage guns? It’s stumping Self, so it sure as hell stumps me.

It doesn’t help that Peterson has rarely spoken to the media throughout this campaign, leaving a vacuum for Reddit threads and conspiracy theories. He gave ESPN an interview before the Jayhawks’ game Monday, and said, “Basketball is my life… If you would have asked me last year, what were my goals for this year, I would never mention missing games.”

Then Kansas toppled No. 5 Houston on Monday, and Peterson (14 points) said afterward he ignores the internet’s criticism. “I’ve kind of been an anti-social loner my whole life, so I just kind of deal with it on my own,” he said.

I don’t know, I get Kawhi Leonard vibes when I hear him talk, but maybe I’m being unfair. I’m sorry, Jay Bilas!

Kansas has won and lost without Peterson. It’s won in impressive fashion and lost in embarrassing fashion with Peterson. One thing you shouldn’t do is pick the Jayhawks to go all the way in your bracket. We can take Peterson at his word that he wants to be out there, but you never know when the cramping will take hold.

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Mariners' stadium reminds A's of their goal: AL West title

MLB: Athletics at Seattle MarinersApr 20, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; Athletics catcher Shea Langeliers (23) hits a home run against the Seattle Mariners during the sixth inning at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images

The Athletics need only to look to the top of the third deck in right field at T-Mobile Park to realize the road to the American League West title goes through Seattle.

That’s where the Mariners’ 2025 division championship banner hangs.

“(The Mariners) were one game away from going to the World Series last year,” the Athletics’ Shea Langeliers said. “Last year, it kind of felt like a dogfight every time we played them. I don’t think it’s going to be any different this year. These early games in the season, you can look back later and realize how much they mean.”

Langeliers homered for a second consecutive night Tuesday, leading the A’s to a 5-2 victory as they remained a half-game ahead of the Texas Rangers atop the division race.

The Athletics will go for a sweep of their three-game series in Seattle on Wednesday afternoon.

Last season, the A’s went 6-7 against the Mariners, with 10 of those games decided by two runs or less.

This season’s series has started similarly, with the A’s winning 6-4 Monday. They scored an insurance run in the ninth Tuesday for the final three-run margin.

“If we want to beat anybody, we want to beat the Mariners,” A’s outfielder Lawrence Butler said. “So it felt really good beating them. … I wish (the stadium) was more packed out so more fans could go home sad.”

The Mariners’ Cal Raleigh also homered for a second straight night, but it wasn’t enough to prevent his team from losing for the sixth time in the past eight games.

Raleigh and Julio Rodriguez both went 2-for-3 and drew walks, showing signs of breaking out of their early season slumps.

“We had a lot of contact, but just not a lot to show for it,” Mariners manager Dan Wilson said. “We’ve got to keep pushing, and keep getting that traffic on there and keep giving ourselves a chance. At some point, we’ll start to get those runs.”

Raleigh insisted it’s not for a lack of effort.

“Nobody’s ever gonna fault this team for not working hard and doing that stuff,” he said. “But just because you work hard, it doesn’t mean you get good results. So to me, it’s really about focusing in that two-minute stretch when you’re in the box. You want guys being competitive, being warriors in the box.

“It’s a fine balance, right? We all know that we want to be doing better than we are, but at the same time, it’s not going to help anybody in this room by trying to press and go out there and do more, try to be ‘the guy.’ It’s happened before to good clubs. It’s more under a microscope because it’s the beginning of the season. I have faith in this group.”

The series finale is set to feature a pair of right-handers in the Athletics’ Aaron Civale (2-1, 3.54 ERA) and Seattle’s Logan Gilbert (1-3, 4.03).

Civale is coming off a 9-2 loss to the visiting Chicago White Sox on Friday in West Sacramento, Calif., when he gave up five runs on 11 hits over 4 2/3 innings. He’s 2-3 with a 3.96 ERA in six career starts against Seattle.

Gilbert lost 5-0 Friday to visiting Texas, allowing two runs on seven hits over 5 1/3 innings, with one walk and seven strikeouts. In 14 career starts against the A’s, Gilbert is 4-1 with a 2.82 ERA.

–Field Level Media

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Jose Soriano on a mission to jolt Jays, end Angels' losing streak

MLB: Los Angeles Angels at Chicago CubsMar 31, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Los Angeles Angels pitcher Jose Soriano (59) smiles after ending the the fifth inning against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field. Mandatory Credit: Patrick Gorski-Imagn Images

Jose Soriano has been the most dominating starting pitcher in the majors so far this season, and the Los Angeles Angels need another strong performance.

The right-handed Soriano will carry a microscopic 0.28 ERA to the mound Wednesday afternoon when he attempts to pitch the Angels to a victory in the finale of a three-game series against the Toronto Blue Jays in Anaheim, Calif.

The Angels dropped the first two contests of the series and have lost a season-worst four straight games. Los Angeles has scored just six runs during the slide.

That makes it good timing for Soriano’s turn to arrive. His 5-0 record ties for the major league lead in wins with Milwaukee Brewers reliever Aaron Ashby and his 0.73 WHIP is second behind Shota Imanaga (0.72) of the Chicago Cubs.

In addition to leading the majors in ERA, Soriano also is on top in opponents batting average (.104).

Soriano, 27, allowed three hits in one start and just two in the other four. He has given up 11 hits while posting 39 strikeouts in 32 2/3 innings.

The Angels last won on Friday when Soriano allowed two hits in 5 2/3 innings of an 8-0 victory over the visiting San Diego Padres. He struck out eight and walked four.

Soriano went 10-11 with a 4.26 ERA in 31 starts last season, sometimes displaying a dominant version of himself.

But he’s never approached the consistent status of this season’s five starts.

“I think mentally I’m stronger and physically too, I feel stronger,” Soriano said after the victory over San Diego. “I’m learning a lot from the past. I’m taking the good things and trying to use them right now. I think that’s part of the good results I’m having now.”

Soriano has a 5.40 ERA in two career appearances (one start) against Toronto. Vladimir Guerrero is 2-for-2 with a walk against Soriano.

The Angels lost 5-2 on Monday and 4-2 on Tuesday to the Blue Jays.

Los Angeles had the bases loaded with one out in the bottom of the ninth inning on Tuesday but Toronto’s Louie Varland induced Nolan Schanuel to hit into a game-ending double play for his first career save.

Varland was called on because closer Jeff Hoffman endured another shaky outing. After getting the first out, Hoffman gave up a single, hit two consecutive batters and allowed an RBI single to Yoan Moncada before getting pulled.

Hoffman has been under fire from Toronto fans since blowing the save in Game 7 of the World Series last season when non-power hitter Miguel Rojas of the Los Angeles Dodgers hit a tying homer with one out in the ninth inning. The Dodgers won the game 5-4 in 11 innings to win the championship.

Hoffman has a 7.59 ERA and is 3-for-6 in save opportunities this season.

“I know there may be people who don’t want to hear this, but I’ve got a lot of trust and confidence in Jeff Hoffman,” Blue Jays manager John Schneider said after the game on Tuesday. “If there’s a situation to close out a game, I’ll take Jeff Hoffman.”

Tuesday’s contest was tied 1-1 in the eighth before Lenyn Sosa drilled a tiebreaking two-run double for the Blue Jays and scored on Eloy Jimenez’s single.

Toronto will send left-hander Eric Lauer (1-3, 7.13) to the mound for the finale.

Lauer, 30, has lost three straight starts and allowed 12 earned runs in 12 1/3 innings during the span.

He lost to the Arizona Diamondbacks on Friday when he gave up three runs and five runs over five innings in the 6-3 game.

Lauer has a 2.84 ERA in two career appearances (one start) against the Angels. Jorge Soler has a homer in four at-bats against him.

–Field Level Media

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Top Seeds in Eastern Conference in Trouble During NBA Playoffs Round 1

The New York Knicks looked like they would be cruising to a 2-0 series lead over the Atlanta Hawks on Monday night, then CJ McCollum struck. New York was outscored 28-15 in the 4th quarter, and all the momentum has flipped back in the Hawks’ favor as the series heads down south to Atlanta for game three.

Then over in Detroit, the Pistons feel like they’re in a must-win game two, as they’ll be looking to even their series up at one game apiece before the series heads down to Orlando.

Both Detroit and New York had lofty expectations heading into the playoffs, but the road has been a little bumpier than expected. For the Pistons, it was shocking to see another team set the tone for aggression in game one. Specifically with Isaiah Stewart and Jalen Duren. Those two combined for only 11 points and 11 rebounds and struggled to handle the physical play Orlando has consistently brought to the playoffs over the last few seasons.

Detroit wouldn’t be the first 60-win team to get bounced in the first round, but this would feel like a massive setback for the organization. JB Bickerstaff has a reputation for struggling in the postseason, and a first-round exit would bring into question whether he’s the right guy to lead the Pistons, even after two tremendous seasons turning things around in the Motor City.

The vibe for the Knicks is a bit different than what we’re seeing in Detroit, but their fans are still starting to feel some heat. New York has been in control for 95 minutes of this series, yet it’s still tied at 1 game each.

Of course, you’d think that New York would still be confident that they’re going to win this series; unfortunately, you can’t help but remember what Trae Young and previous iterations of the Hawks have done to the city. It’s hard not to let negative thoughts creep into your brain after what you’ve experienced in the past. If there was one lower seed the city of New York wanted to miss, it was Atlanta, and we’re already seeing why in what might be the best series in the first round of the playoffs.

Boston is the third favorite in the East to drop a game, but the vibe in that series still feels entirely different. Boston has notoriously dominated the Sixers in the postseason, so I doubt that even after losing one game, they’re feeling any pressure in their series.

The Knicks are still -198 to advance, and Detroit is -205, so they’re still solidly favorites to advance, but the pressure has begun to creep in. Who would’ve guessed that James Harden and the Cavs would look the most comfortable in an Eastern Conference first-round series?

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