
The Sports Report: Tyler Glasnow looks to stay healthy this season
Howdy, I'm your host, Houston Mitchell. Let's get right to the news.
From Jack Harris: In his first year with the team last season, the Dodgers got the full Tyler Glasnow experience.
In the first half of the campaign, the $136.5 million offseason addition was one of the best pitchers in baseball.
He had a sub-3.00 ERA into late June, recording 135 strikeouts over his first 100 innings. He earned his first-ever All-Star selection, and was fulfilling his potential as the ace of the Dodgers' starting rotation.
Alas, in a season that began with so much promise, old (and frustrating) problems resurfaced again.
When he returned to action, the 6-foot-8 right-hander didn't look as dominant, either. He struggled to rediscover a comfort level in his long-limbed delivery. From June 29 (shortly before he got hurt) to Aug. 11, he stumbled to a 5.29 ERA over six starts.
That's when, right as the Dodgers' shorthanded rotation needed him most, Glasnow went on the shelf for good.
Thus, after being relegated to spectator during the team's World Series run last October, Glasnow arrived in camp this spring with a familiar objective.
'The No. 1 goal this year is just to stay healthy,' Glasnow said at the team's DodgerFest fan event earlier this month. 'That's by far the No. 1 goal.'
Continue reading here
From Dan Woike: Lakers players looked around the meeting room Saturday morning, double-checking with one another to make sure that what they thought they just heard was what JJ Redick actually said.
Did he, the Lakers coach, clearly amped up for their game with Denver later that night, tell his players to go to war and to be 'willing to die on the court?'
He sure did.
'We said, 'We're going to war' that night,' forward Rui Hachimura said.
After the Lakers beat Denver 123-100 in one of their best wins of the season, the admittedly 'amped' Redick was still preaching intensity.
'If we play that hard for the rest of the regular season, we're going to be just fine,' Redick told his team postgame. 'That should build your belief. It built my belief in what we can accomplish.'
The challenge, of course, is that the NBA schedule doesn't always provide big games like this one, the Lakers facing a team that knocked them out of the playoffs the last two seasons.
Continue reading here
Cade Cunningham had 32 points and nine rebounds, Jalen Duren added 12 points and 19 rebounds, and the Detroit Pistons won their seventh straight game with a 106-97 victory over the Clippers on Monday night.
Tobias Harris added 20 points for the Pistons, who broke a 10-game losing streak to the Clippers.
Detroit (32-26) hadn't won seven straight since Dec. 26, 2014, to Jan. 7, 2015. The Pistons have their best 58-game record since they were 42-16 in 2007-08 — the last year they won a playoff game.
James Harden had 18 points and 12 rebounds for the Clippers, who were again without Kawhi Leonard and Norman Powell. Ivica Zubac had 13 points and 16 boards.
Continue reading here
Clippers box score
NBA scores
NBA standings
From Gary Klein: After a season-ending loss in the snow, it did not take long for the Rams' offseason to heat up.
Questions about quarterback Matthew Stafford's future arose immediately. A few weeks later, receiver Cooper Kupp's fate was apparently sealed.
Will both stars be gone? Will one or both be back?
General manager Les Snead and coach Sean McVay must address other issues. But until Stafford's and Kupp's situations are resolved, real plans for free agency and the draft cannot move forward.
The NFL scouting combine begins Thursday in Indianapolis, free agency opens March 12 (preceded by the two-day negotiating period) and the draft will be held April 24-26 in Green Bay, Wis.
Last week, the NFL announced that the salary cap would be between $277.5 million to $281 million per team, an increase of more than $22 million. The Rams currently have about $44.3 million in cap space, according to Overthecap.com.
Here are five questions facing the Rams as they prepare for free agency and the draft.
Continue reading here
From Thuc Nhi Nguyen: From drafting fifth overall to set up a quick one-year turnaround, the Chargers hold the 22nd overall pick in April's draft after an unexpected 11-6 record and wild-card round appearance. Between next month's draft and one of the most flexible salary-cap scenarios in the league, the Chargers can address their most pressing concerns at offensive line, receiver and on the defensive front to gear up for what coach Jim Harbaugh called 'Version 2.0.'
While the Chargers are seemingly ahead of schedule in their rebuild, each hole is still glaring for a franchise searching for its first playoff win since 2018.
'It's a thousand little things that add up to make all the difference,' Harbaugh said last month. 'We were close. Now we want to put it over the top.'
Here are five questions facing the Chargers as they shuffle their roster this spring.
Continue reading here
Sam Farmer's NFL mock draft 1.0: Titans won't pass on QB with their top pick
Trevor Moore had two goals, Quinton Byfield had a career-high four assists and Warren Foegele scored the go-ahead goal as the Kings rallied to a 5-2 win over the Vegas Golden Knights on Monday night.
The Kings trailed 2-1 after two periods, but Moore tied it 42 seconds into the third with a wrist shot from the left faceoff circle that went off the crossbar for the first of four straight L.A. goals in the final 20 minutes.
It was Moore's second game this season with two goals. Four of the forward's 10 goals have come in the last four games.
Continue reading here
Kings summary
NHL scores
NHL standings
Ducks forward Trevor Zegras has been suspended three games without pay for a hit to the head of Detroit's Michael Rasmussen.
The NHL's Department of Player Safety announced the suspension for interference Monday after holding a disciplinary hearing with Zegras, saying it was a 'late, high hit.' No penalty was called on the play late in the second period of the teams' game Sunday.
'Players who are not in possession of the puck are never eligible to be checked,' the league said in a video explaining the suspension. 'Contact is made outside the window where a check may be legally finished. In addition to the lateness, what causes this hit to rise to the level of supplemental discipline is the significant head contact on this play, combined with the force.'
Also Monday, the Red Wings freed up $3.6 million in salary-cap space by trading goalie Ville Husso to the Ducks.
The Red Wings received future considerations in dealing the 30-year-old player who has spent a majority of this season in the minors. Husso had a 1-5-2 record with Detroit and went 8-4 with two shutouts with AHL Grand Rapids this season.
Husso is completing the final year of a three-year contract, and was assigned by Anaheim to the Ducks' AHL affiliate in San Diego.
Continue reading here
1940 — The first telecast of an American hockey game is transmitted over station W2XBS in New York. The viewing audience watches the New York Rangers battle the Montreal Canadiens at Madison Square Garden.
1957 — The United States Supreme Court rules that pro football, unlike professional baseball, is subject to the anti-trust laws of the United States. The court decides 6-3 that baseball is only anti-trust exempt pro sport.
1961 — Niagara ends St. Bonaventure's 99-game winning streak at home with an 87-77 victory over the Bonnies.
1962 — Wilt Chamberlain of the Philadelphia Warriors scores 67 points, but New York's Richie Guerin scores 50 to lead the Knicks to a 149-135 victory.
1964 — Cassius Clay wins the world heavyweight title when Sonny Liston is unable to answer the bell for the seventh round at Convention Hall in Miami Beach, Fla.
1977 — Pete Maravich of the New Orleans Jazz scores 68 points, the most by an NBA guard, in a 124-107 victory over the New York Knicks. Only Wilt Chamberlain and Elgin Baylor had scored more points in an NBA game.
1987 — The Southern Methodist football team is suspended for the 1987 season after investigations reveal that players received $61,000 from a booster slush fund.
1994 — Oksana Baiul of Ukraine wins the figure skating gold medal at the Winter Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway, and Nancy Kerrigan, who was whacked on the knee 2½ months earlier, wins the silver. Tonya Harding, later convicted of hindering prosecution in the Kerrigan attack, finishes eighth.
2001 — In the largest playoff in PGA Tour history, Robert Allenby wins the Nissan Open on the first extra hole against five other players. It's Allenby's third PGA Tour victory, all of them won in playoffs.
2010 — In Vancouver, the Canadian women defeat the United States 2-0 for their third straight Olympic hockey title. Americans Billy Demong and Johnny Spillane finish 1-2 in a Nordic combined race. They are the first American medalists in a sport that's been part of the Winter Olympics since 1924.
2017 — Marit Bjoergen wins a record 15th world championship gold medal in cross-country skiing with victory in a 15-kilometer skiathlon. The 36-year-old Bjoergen has more gold medals than any other cross-country skier — male or female — in world championship history, having previously shared the record of 14 gold medals with retired Russian Yelena Valbe.
2017 — Kelsey Plum surpasses Jackie Stiles to become the NCAA's all-time scoring leader with a career-best 57 points in the final regular season game of her career, leading No. 11 Washington past Utah 84-77. Plum passes Stiles' mark of 3,393 points midway through the fourth quarter.
2018 — Kirill Kaprizov scores a power-play goal in overtime to lift the Russians to the gold medal in men's hockey with a 4-3 win over Germany at the Pyeongchang Olympics.
2018 — Norway's Marit Bjoergen closes out a remarkable Olympic career, winning the gold medal in the women's 30-kilometer mass start at the Pyeongchang Games. The 37-year-old Bjoergen is the only Olympian to win five medals at these Games and finishes her career with 15 medals. She leaves as the most decorated athlete in Winter Olympic history.
Compiled by the Associated Press

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
30 minutes ago
- Yahoo
"I don't think I should defend myself anymore, I'm done with that in my life" - Allen Iverson on why he's had enough trying to defend his public image
"I don't think I should defend myself anymore, I'm done with that in my life" - Allen Iverson on why he's had enough trying to defend his public image originally appeared on Basketball Network. During his career, Allen Iverson was always the subject of primetime debates, panel discussions and newspaper editorials. Not because he lacked greatness — his Hall of Fame career is etched with MVP seasons, 11 NBA All-Star nods, and a lifetime average of 26.7 points per game — but because he insisted on being himself in a league still struggling with how to receive that. From the moment he stepped onto an NBA court in 1996 as the No. 1 pick, Iverson was not only contending with defenders on the floor but with coded language off it, fighting a decades-long battle against image politics that always seemed stacked against him. Just over a decade and a half after his last professional game, Iverson has made one thing clear: he's no longer interested in fighting a battle that never seemed to care about the truth anyway. "At the age of 40, I don't think I should defend myself anymore," Iverson said in 2015. "I'm done with that in my life. I'm done with defending myself. I'm a villain to people that don't rock with me. I'm a superhero to the people that love me." Iverson isn't a man searching for closure. He's already lived it. The journey from a teen imprisoned for a bowling alley brawl in Hampton, Virginia, and later pardoned to one of the NBA's most electrifying stars was paved with both myth and misunderstanding. Even at his athletic peak, Iverson often found himself typecast. He was a cultural disturbance. That persona never sat easily with him, though he wore it anyway. Now, at middle-age, the burden of justification no longer seems worth lifting. In the years following his retirement, Iverson has mostly remained out of the spotlight, making select appearances at NBA events, tributes, and cultural panels, often greeted with a reverence that once eluded him during his prime. This post-career embrace wasn't always inevitable. In 2010, just months after his final NBA game with the Philadelphia 76ers, Iverson faced rumors of financial distress, alcoholism, and alienation. None of these were ever confirmed outright, but the public frenzy spoke volumes about the appetite for sensationalism when it came to him. There was never any doubt about Iverson's impact on the court. The Sixers legend played through pain, carried underwhelming rosters, and dragged Philadelphia to the NBA Finals in 2001, claiming the league MVP that same year. That season alone — 31.1 points, 4.6 assists, and 2.5 steals per game — told a truth far more honest than any back-page headline ever did. His image has always been at the center of discussion, not for lack of talent, but because he challenged the NBA's comfort zone. From his braids to his sleeve tattoos to the hip-hop beats that accompanied his walk to the locker room, Iverson carried himself like the neighborhoods he came from. "It's just a stereotype," he said. "And then with my hair and the cornrows, people talk about it being a thug thing … I guess it's just [an] Allen Iverson thing, not agreeing with the fact that I wasn't going to try to look like somebody else instead of looking like myself." In 2005, the NBA implemented a dress code, widely interpreted as a veiled response to Iverson's influence on player fashion and identity. The league, concerned with its public image, required players to wear "business casual" attire when representing teams. Though not named directly, Iverson's name always hovered behind the press releases. What he was expressing wasn't rebellion; it was representation. His refusal to bend didn't stem from arrogance but from the understanding that, for kids who looked like him, saw themselves in him, and came from where he did, the power of authenticity meant everything. Today's NBA is filled with players whose fashion choices are praised as bold and whose ink and hairstyles are just as visible as their skill. The culture Iverson brought into the league now thrives unapologetically and is often celebrated. That evolution owes a debt to his stubbornness, to his resistance, to his refusal to story was originally reported by Basketball Network on Jun 14, 2025, where it first appeared.
Yahoo
35 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Stanton stays in lineup but Yankees don't rush decision on return
Stanton stays in lineup but Yankees don't rush decision on return originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Giancarlo Stanton went 0-for-4 with two strikeouts Thursday night in his third straight rehab game for Double-A Somerset. He served as the designated hitter and stayed in the game for all nine innings, checking another box in his return from elbow tendinitis. Advertisement Stanton has been sidelined since spring training with epicondylitis in both elbows—essentially, inflammation where the forearm tendons meet the elbow joint. Before Thursday night's game in Kansas City, manager Aaron Boone said the club hadn't made a decision yet on whether Stanton would be activated in time for this weekend's series in Boston. New York Yankees slugger Giancarlo Stanon© Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images Through his first three games with Somerset, Stanton has just three hits and four RBIs in 11 at-bats. The results don't matter much. This is about workload and recovery, and seeing how his elbows handle the repetition after missing nearly three months. Fenway is the park where Stanton is at his best. His .312 batting average and .961 OPS are the highest there are his best numbers in any opposing ballpark. Advertisement I could be a way to ease him back into the lineup. Stanton last played in a major league game in the 2024 World Series. He was placed on the 60-day injured list on May 1. Before the injury, the veteran slugger was expected to be a key power source in the middle of the Yankees' lineup after hitting 24 home runs in 2024. Since joining the Yankees in 2018, Giancarlo Stanton has hit over 120 home runs with an OPS of nearly .800, but injuries have limited his impact. He's missed significant time with biceps, knee, Achilles, hamstring, quad, and now elbow issues—landing on the injured list in six of his seven seasons in New York. Availability has defined his Yankee tenure as much as power. If all goes well overnight and into Friday, a return this weekend against the Red Sox in Fenway Park remains in play. But after multiple stops and setbacks over the years, the Yankees are clearly taking the long view. Advertisement Related: Surprise Pitching Market Shift Could Put Yankees on Alert Related: Gerrit Cole Takes on a Different Kind of Yankees' Role Tuesday This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 13, 2025, where it first appeared.


New York Post
42 minutes ago
- New York Post
Mark Jackson grateful for Rick Pitino's Knicks coaching endorsement: ‘Got great taste'
The Knicks coaching search has gone from sloppy to embarrassing, and one of their former coaches, Rick Pitino, proactively said he has no interest in the job. But Pitino did stump for one of his former Knick players, suggesting they hire Mark Jackson in the Garden. Advertisement And the seemingly blackballed Jackson — who hasn't coached in over a decade — appreciated the endorsement of his mentor. 'He's a legend. I love him to death,' Jackson, speaking on SiriusXM NBA Radio, said of Pitino, who coached the point guard during his first two seasons with the Knicks. Jackson won NBA Rookie of the Year under Pitino in 1988 and was an All-Star the next season. 3 Rick Pitino addresses reporters during a press conference on March 21, 2025. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post Advertisement 'I'm not in the league 17 years playing if he's not my first coach,' Jackson said. 'I'm forever grateful, and he's Coach to me. 'He's a brilliant basketball mind. He's turned over St. John's University and turned back the hand of time to bring them back to their glory days. It's great to watch. It's fun to watch. He's one of the greatest coaches in the history of sports, not just basketball. And on top of that, he's got great taste by that statement.' One can question the Knicks' taste in abruptly firing Tom Thibodeau on June 3, just three days after they were eliminated from their first Eastern Conference finals since 2000. Advertisement 3 ESPN analyst Mark Jackson is pictured before a December 2018 game. Icon Sportswire via Getty Images Since then, Knicks president Leon Rose has been denied permission to speak with Dallas' Jason Kidd, Houston's Ime Udoka, Minnesota's Chris Finch, Atlanta's Quin Snyder and Chicago's Billy Donovan, according to multiple reports. The Post's Stefan Bondy has confirmed the Knicks are expected to interview former Grizzlies coach Taylor Jenkins and former Kings coach Mike Brown, each fired earlier this season. The Post reached out to the agents for both Jenkins and Brown on Saturday, with neither returning calls. Advertisement 3 Mark Jackson coaches during a December 2013 game for the Warriors. Getty Images Though there is no indication Jackson is a candidate for a Garden return, Pitino — who coached the Knicks from 1987-89, and earned AP Coach of the Year this season for St. John's — took to social media earlier this week to tell his former employer that there is an ideal candidate actually available. 'I obviously coached our rookie of the year, Mark Jackson,' Pitino tweeted Wednesday. 'I believe he spent 18 years in the NBA as a player. Great coach with the Warriors and one of the brightest minds I've coached. Would love to see the Knicks bring Mark Jackson home!!' Certainly New York would be a return home for Jackson, after growing up in Brooklyn and starring at St. John's before having two stints with the Knicks in a 17-year playing career. What's happening on and off the Garden court Sign up for Inside the Knicks by Stefan Bondy, a weekly exclusive on Sports+. Thank you Enter your email address Please provide a valid email address. By clicking above you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Enjoy this Post Sports+ exclusive newsletter! Check out more newsletters He coached Golden State from 2011-14 and played a key role in turning around a losing Warriors team into a contending team. But after posting a 121-109 record with two playoff appearances in Golden State, Jackson was fired in 2014 and hasn't coached since. The Post also has reported that ex-Villanova coach Jay Wright isn't interested in the Knicks job despite the presence of former Wildcats Jalen Brunson, Mikal Bridges and Josh Hart. Advertisement UConn's Dan Hurley also preemptively withdrew. Michael Malone (who won the 2023 NBA title with Denver), Frank Vogel (who won with the Lakers in 2020) and Mike Budenholzer (who won with Milwaukee in 2021) are available, as are Detroit assistant Luke Walton and Cleveland assistant Johnnie Bryant, the latter of whom was Thibodeau's associate head coach from 2020-24.