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Grading all 9 teams’ 2026 CFL Canadian Draft classes

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The 2026 CFL Canadian Draft has come and gone with plenty to discuss.

Every year we say we didn’t expect some names to come off the board, but this time it happened earlier, more often, and with some names I didn’t expect to see at all coming off the board.

Teams will logically defend their decision making whenever a pick is called into question, but they should also be rightfully celebrated for those that landed with widespread approval.

Throwing a grade at each team is never easy because, like in life, there are pros and cons to all draft classes. That said, here is a letter to symbolize their respective nights.

BC LIONS

GRADE: A

PlayerPositionSchoolSelection
Nate DeMontagnacRECNorth Dakota1st Round (7th)
Jett EladDBRutgers2nd Round (15th)
Pierre KemeniDBOhio4th Round (36th)
Nick CenacleRECHawaii5th Round (45th)
Ethan GrahamOLRegina6th Round (54th)
Chase HenningLBUBC7th Round (63rd)
Ebenezer DibulaDLKennesaw State8th Round (72nd)

Nathan Rourke gets his new toys, the defence gets some added defensive back depth and a few big bodies enter the developmental pipeline.

A smart, sound draft from a team that didn’t have many high-value picks.

EDMONTON ELKS

GRADE: B+

PlayerPositionSchoolSelection
Dariel DjabomeLBRutgers1st Round (3rd)
Benjamin SangmuahDBUBC2nd Round (12th)
Wesley BaileyDLLouisville2nd Round (19th)
Carter KettyleRECAlberta3rd Round (21st)
Spencer WalshOLWilfrid Laurier4th Round (32nd)
Justin PaceLBQueen’s4th Round (35th)
Chris PashulaOLCalgary6th Round (50th)
Eloa Latendresse-RegimbaldQB/RECMcGill7th Round (58th)
Matthew LjudenOLAlberta7th Round (59th)

Rutgers’ linebacker Dariel Djabome is such a great player and his ability to move around with or behind Joel Dublanko is a tremendous way to build the Canadian front.

The Elks also added some ‘futures’ picks that included a few developmental linemen, local receivers, high-value tackling linebackers and a super athletic dual-threat quarterback. That gets the big thumbs up from me.

CALGARY STAMPEDERS

GRADE: A-

PlayerPositionSchoolSelection
Eric RascoeLBAngelo State1st Round (6th)
Jesulayomi OjutalayoRECWilfrid Laurier3rd Round (26th)
Tristan MaroisDLColorado3rd Round (27th)
Matt SibleyRECCalgary5th Round (44th)
Mitchel SchechingerOLGuelph6th Round (53rd)
Steven KpeheDLQueen’s7th Round (62nd)
Jack WarrackOLSaskatchewan8th Round (71st)

Angelo State’s linebacker Eric Rascoe and Wilfrid Laurier’s receiver Jesulayomi Ojutalayo were two of my favourite players at the CFL Combine presented by Anytime Fitness Canada.

Colorado’s defensive lineman Tristan Marois also impressed me at the combine with his energy in every rep, while Calgary’s receiver Matt Sibley has quickness that should get him open. That potentially creates a Calgary-Dinos-to-Calgary-Stampeders receiver crew headlined by star receiver Jalen Philpot.

SASKATCHEWAN ROUGHRIDERS

GRADE: A

PlayerPositionSchoolSelection
Malcolm BellDBMichigan State1st Round (9th)
Dylan DjeteRECAlabama State2nd Round (18th)
Darius BellOLEast Carolina3rd Round (29th)
Osasere OdemwingieLBCalgary4th Round (38th)
Jez JanvierOLSouthern Mississippi5th Round (47th)
Albert Reese IVOLMississippi State6th Round (56th)
Shemar McBeanRECUBC7th Round (65th)
Ryan SpeightFBWilfrid Laurier8th Round (74th)

Michigan State defensive back Malcolm Bell is going to be a problem if and when he gets to the CFL, while undersized-but-hyper-fast receiver Dylan Djete went earlier than expected.

East Carolina offensive lineman Darius Bell, Calgary linebacker Osasare Odemwingie and the rest of their highly capable and talented class have restocked multiple positions for the Riders.

WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS

GRADE: B-

PlayerPositionSchoolSelection
Nuer GatkuothDLWake Forest1st Round (4th)
Dante DanielsTENorth Carolina State2nd Round (10th)
Kevin ClineOLBoston College2nd Round (20th)
Charles-Elliot BoulianeLBMontreal3rd Round (24th)
Ethan StuartDBMcMaster4th Round (33rd)
Brody ClarkLBYork5th Round (42nd)
Benjamin BrittonRECCalgary6th Round (51st)
Joshua JackRECSaint Mary’s7th Round (60th)
Brady LidsterKWindsor8th Round (69th)

Wake Forest defensive lineman Nuer Gatkuoth is a nice piece if he continues to develop lower body power that a pro defensive ends requires.

The selection of North Carolina tight end Dante Daniels pick had me dazed and confused for a solid round on Tuesday. I tried to understand the fit and usage rate expected from the big bodied, primarily blocking tight end who doesn’t show true tackle instincts if he were to throw some weight on and switch positions.

Getting McMaster defensive back Ethan Stuart and York linebacker Brody Clark is great value. Mike O’Shea also added another kicker in the pipeline capable of 50+ yards walk-off wins in Windsor’s Brady Lister.

HAMILTON TIGER-CATS

GRADE: B

PlayerPositionSchoolSelection
Jonathan DenisOLLouisiana Tech1st Round (5th)
Malick MeigaRECCoastal Carolina2nd Round (14th)
Devynn CromwellDBMichigan State3rd Round (25th)
Brayden SzemanOLCalgary4th Round (34th)
Loïk GagnéLBConcordia5th Round (43rd)
Marc Djonay RondeauLBOttawa6th Round (52nd)
Aamarii NoticeDLCoastal Carolina7th Round (61st)
Kyler LaingDLMercyhurst College8th Round (70th)

I hope Jonathan Denis can stay healthy but you never know with a history like his.

The real upside here comes in the form of Coastal Carolina receiver Malick Meiga, Michigan State defensive back Devynn Cromwell and centre Brayden Szeman, who has legitimate starting middle man potential within the next few years.

TORONTO ARGONAUTS

GRADE: C+

PlayerPositionSchoolSelection
Niklas HenningOLQueen’s1s Round (2nd)
Isaiah SmithRBGuelph2nd Round (11th)
Ethan JohnDBWindsor2nd Round (16th)
Louis-Philippe GauthierDBMontreal3rd Round (22nd)
Darius McKenzieLBSouth Alabama3rd Round (23rd)
Nolan UlmRECEastern Washington4th Round (30th)
Frank VreugdenhilOLMcMaster5th Round (40th)
Tyriq QuaysonRECWindsor6th Round (49th)
Nathan WalkerKYork7th Round (57th)
Weagbe MomboRBWindsor8th Round (67th)
Sebastian ParsalidisFBWilfrid Laurier8th Round (68th)

Queen’s offensive lineman Niklas Henning is a tremendous player who I hope will grow into a long term All-CFL threat, but picking a running back in the second round because there weren’t many others available doesn’t feel overly inspired.

Windsor’s Ethan John is a scrappy undersized defensive back which was a theme of the Argos draft. Their choice to take receiver Nolan Ulm and offensive lineman Frank Vreugdenhil might just save the Double Blue 2026 class depth.

OTTAWA REDBLACKS

GRADE: A

PlayerPositionSchoolSelection
Giordano VaccaroOLPurdue1st Round (1st)
Émeric BoutinFBLaval2nd Round (13th)
Charlie ParksDLSaskatchewan4th Round (31st)
Alassane DioufOLMontreal5th Round (39th)
Benjamin DobsonLBCalgary5th Round (41st)
Rene KongaDLLouisville6th Round (48th)
Josh ConnorsLBWilfrid Laurier8th Round (66th)

As always, the class will be defined by the top overall pick, but addressing needs is the name of the game here.

Émeric Boutin stands next in line to be a long term fullback starter who can do much more than block. Meanwhile, Charlie Parks works in behind Isaac Adeyemi-Berglund to hone his pass-rushing skills and the back end of Calgary’s Benjamin Dobson, Louisville’s Rene Konga, and Wilfrid Laurier’s Josh Connors might be the best last three picks of the selection show.

MONTREAL ALOUETTES

GRADE: B-

PlayerPositionSchoolSelection
Rohan JonesTEArkansas1st Round (8th)
Shakespeare LouisDBSoutheastern Louisiana2nd Round (17th)
Nathan UdohRECManitoba3rd Round (28th)
Liam TalbotRBWindsor4th Round (37th)
Harrison DaleyDBWindsor5th Round (46th)
Michael HorvatK/PMcMaster6th Round (55th)
Cyrus McGarrellDBNorthern Illinois7th Round (64th)
Zachary HoudeRECSt. Francis Xavier8th Round (73rd)

If first round pick Rohan Jones arrives on the scene this grade improves dramatically. That said, the Alouettes will be unbothered by a B- because they’ve done such a great job building depth on their roster that they can afford to spend a pick hoping someone like Jones comes North.

The selection of Southern Louisiana defensive back Shakespeare Louis in the second round felt like a reach to me, but the solid size and positional variety of their subsequent picks, plus a top notch kicker/punter prospect in Michael Horvat, means the Als are doing just fine.

PWHL Game Preview: Ottawa Charge (0-0-0-0) vs. Boston Fleet (0-0-0-0)

Tsongas Center at UMass Lowell — Lowell, Massachusetts

Puck Drop: 7:00 PM ET / 4:00 PM PT

Series: Eastern Conference Semifinals — Game 1

Venue & Game Context

Location: Tsongas Center — Boston’s home venue for the postseason Ice Conditions: Fast sheet, low humidity, ideal for Boston’s transition game Home‑Ice Impact: Boston has been one of the league’s strongest home teams, especially in first periods

This is Game 1, setting the tone for a series between two teams with contrasting identities:

Boston: Speed, structure, elite puck movement

Ottawa: Physicality, forecheck pressure, opportunistic scoring

Injury Report

Ottawa Charge

Emily Clark (F): Day‑to‑day (upper body) — expected to play

Jincy Dunne (D): Day‑to‑day (lower body) — game‑time decision

Kristen Campbell (G): Healthy and starting

Impact: Ottawa’s blue line depth is slightly compromised if Dunne is limited

Boston Fleet

Hilary Knight (F): Healthy and cleared

Aerin Frankel (G): Healthy and starting

Jamie Lee Rattray (F): Day‑to‑day (illness) — probable

Impact: Boston enters nearly full strength, with elite goaltending stability

Team Records & Recent Form

Ottawa Charge — Regular Season

Record: 0‑0‑0‑0 entering postseason

Last 10: 6–4

Trend: Offense improving late in season; defense tightening

Strengths: Heavy forecheck, strong net‑front presence, physicality

Weaknesses: Penalty kill inconsistency, defensive‑zone turnovers

Key Note: Ottawa scored 3+ goals in 7 of their last 10 games

Boston Fleet — Regular Season

Record: 0‑0‑0‑0 entering postseason

Last 10: 7–3

Trend: Elite defensive structure; power play heating up

Strengths: Speed, puck possession, elite goaltending

Weaknesses: Occasional scoring droughts from depth lines

Key Note: Boston allowed 2 goals or fewer in 8 of their last 10 games

Goaltending Matchup

Ottawa — Kristen Campbell

Season Stats: .915 SV%, 2.32 GAA

Strengths: Calm positioning, rebound control

Concerns: Struggles with east‑west puck movement

Boston — Aerin Frankel

Season Stats: .932 SV%, 1.98 GAA

Strengths: Elite reflexes, best high‑danger save percentage in PWHL

Concerns: Can be beaten by heavy screens and deflections

Edge: Boston (clear)

Key Player Matchups

Brianne Jenner (OTT) vs. Megan Keller (BOS)

Jenner drives Ottawa’s offense

Keller is Boston’s shutdown defender and will shadow her heavily

Emily Clark (OTT) vs. Aerin Frankel (BOS)

Clark’s net‑front presence is Ottawa’s best weapon

Frankel’s rebound control will be tested

Hilary Knight (BOS) vs. Savannah Harmon (OTT)

Knight’s shot volume and power play presence are elite

Harmon must limit her touches in the slot

Alina Müller (BOS) vs. Ottawa Bottom Six

Müller’s line has dominated possession all season

Ottawa depth forwards must avoid long defensive shifts

Series History

2026 Regular Season: Boston won the season series 2–1

Goals For/Against: Boston 8 — Ottawa 6

Trend: Tight, low‑scoring games with heavy defensive emphasis

Notable: All three meetings were decided by one goal

Betting Trends

Ottawa

ATS: 6–4 last 10

Totals: Over in 6 of last 9

As Road Underdogs: 43% win rate

PP: 4-for-17 last five games

Boston

ATS: 7–3 last 10

Totals: Under in 7 of last 10

As Home Favorites: 68% win rate

PP: 6-for-18 last five games

Head‑to‑Head Trends

Unders: 2 of 3 meetings

One‑goal games: 3 of 3

First‑period scoring: 2 of 3 games had 0–1 goals

GAME ODDS

Ottawa Charge                  5

Boston Fleet                      – 155

Odds Courtesy of Sports Odds Direct as of Wednesday, April 29, 2026

NHL Western Conference Game 6 Preview: Dallas Stars (2-3) vs. Minnesota Wild (3-2)

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Xcel Energy Center — Saint Paul, Minnesota

Puck Drop: 8:00 PM CT / 9:00 PM ET

Series: Minnesota leads 3–2 (Best‑of‑7)

Venue & Game Context

Location: Xcel Energy Center — one of the NHL’s loudest playoff buildings Ice Conditions: Expected to be fast, with cool arena temps and low humidity Home‑Ice Impact: Minnesota is elite at home in the postseason, with strong defensive metrics and high‑energy forechecking

This is a potential elimination game for Dallas and a closeout opportunity for Minnesota.

Injury Report

Dallas Stars

Miro Heiskanen (D): Day‑to‑day (lower body) — expected to play but not 100%

Tyler Seguin (F): Day‑to‑day (illness) — game‑time decision

Jani Hakanpää (D): Out (knee)

Impact: Defensive depth stretched; top‑pair minutes heavy on Lindell/Heiskanen

Minnesota Wild

Kirill Kaprizov (F): Healthy and playing at full strength

Jonas Brodin (D): Day‑to‑day (upper body) — trending toward playing

Frederick Gaudreau (F): Out (wrist)

Impact: Minnesota’s top defensive pair remains intact if Brodin plays

Team Records & Recent Form

Dallas Stars — 2–3 in Series

Last 10 Overall: 5–5

Trend: Offense inconsistent; power play cooling off

Strengths: Veteran scoring depth, elite transition game

Weaknesses: Defensive-zone coverage lapses, penalty kill struggles

Key Note: Dallas has allowed 3+ goals in four of five games this series

Minnesota Wild — 3–2 in Series

Last 10 Overall: 7–3

Trend: Forecheck dominating; defensive structure tightening

Strengths: Elite home play, strong goaltending, physicality

Weaknesses: Secondary scoring streaky

Key Note: Minnesota has scored first in four of five games

Goaltending Matchup

Dallas — Jake Oettinger

Series Stats: .901 SV%, 3.12 GAA

Strengths: Big-game pedigree, rebound control

Concerns: Struggling with screens and lateral movement vs. MIN’s cycle

Minnesota — Filip Gustavsson

Series Stats: .923 SV%, 2.41 GAA

Strengths: Calm positioning, excellent vs. rush chances

Concerns: Rebound control under heavy traffic

Edge: Minnesota (slight)

Key Player Matchups

Jason Robertson (DAL) vs. Jonas Brodin (MIN)

Robertson has been held to limited high-danger looks

Brodin’s availability is critical — he has neutralized Dallas’ top line

Roope Hintz (DAL) vs. Joel Eriksson Ek (MIN)

Hintz drives Dallas’ transition game

Eriksson Ek is one of the league’s best shutdown centers

Kirill Kaprizov (MIN) vs. Dallas Top Pair

Kaprizov has 3 goals, 2 assists in the series

Dallas has struggled to contain his edgework and slot penetration

Matt Boldy (MIN) vs. Dallas Bottom Six

Boldy’s line has dominated possession

Dallas depth lines have been out‑chanced significantly

Series History & Trends

Minnesota leads series 3–2

Home Team Record: 4–1 in this series

Last 10 Head‑to‑Head: Minnesota 6–4

Wild at Home (Last 15 Playoff Games): 10–5

Stars Road Playoff Record (Last 15): 6–9

Trend: Minnesota’s defensive structure at home has consistently frustrated Dallas.

Betting Trends

Dallas

ATS: 4–6 last 10

Totals: Over in 6 of last 9

As Road Underdogs: 42% win rate

PP: 2-for-13 in last three games

Minnesota

ATS: 7–3 last 10

Totals: Under in 5 of last 7

As Home Favorites: 64% win rate

PK: 11-for-12 in last three games

Series Totals

Over: 3

Under: 2

Average Goals/Game: 5.8

Game Odds

Dallas Stars                         5.5

Minnesota Wild               – 122

Odds Courtesy of Sports Odds Direct as of Wednesday, April 29, 2026

NHL Western Conference Game 6 Preview: Anaheim Ducks (3-2) vs. Edmonton Oilers (2-3)

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Rogers Place — Edmonton, Alberta

Puck Drop: 7:30 PM MT / 6:30 PM PT / 9:30 PM ET

Series: Anaheim leads 3–2 (Best‑of‑7)

Venue & Game Context

Location: Rogers Place — one of the NHL’s most hostile playoff environments Ice Conditions: Fast sheet, low humidity, ideal for high‑tempo transition hockey Home‑Ice Impact: Edmonton typically thrives at home with aggressive forechecking and heavy offensive‑zone time

This is a potential elimination game for Edmonton and a closeout opportunity for Anaheim.

Injury Report

Anaheim Ducks

Mason McTavish (F): Day‑to‑day (upper body) — expected to play

Pavel Mintyukov (D): Day‑to‑day (lower body) — game‑time decision

Radko Gudas (D): Out (ankle)

Impact: Anaheim’s blue line depth is stretched; top‑pair minutes heavy on Fowler/Drysdale

Edmonton Oilers

Leon Draisaitl (F): Day‑to‑day (lower body) — trending toward playing

Mattias Ekholm (D): Day‑to‑day (illness) — expected to play

Evander Kane (F): Out (hip)

Impact: Edmonton’s top‑six remains intact; defensive structure depends heavily on Ekholm’s availability

Team Records & Recent Form

Anaheim Ducks — 3–2 in Series

Last 10 Overall: 6–4

Trend: Defensive structure improving; goaltending stabilizing

Strengths: Speed, transition game, opportunistic scoring

Weaknesses: Penalty kill inconsistency, defensive‑zone turnovers

Key Note: Anaheim has allowed 2 goals or fewer in three of five games

Edmonton Oilers — 2–3 in Series

Last 10 Overall: 5–5

Trend: Offense inconsistent; power play cooling off

Strengths: Elite top‑end talent, strong home‑ice scoring metrics

Weaknesses: Defensive lapses, overreliance on top line

Key Note: Edmonton has scored first in only one game this series

Goaltending Matchup

Anaheim — Lukas Dostal

Series Stats: .926 SV%, 2.21 GAA

Strengths: Calm under pressure, excellent lateral movement

Concerns: Rebound control vs. Edmonton’s net‑front presence

Edmonton — Stuart Skinner

Series Stats: .897 SV%, 3.31 GAA

Strengths: Strong when seeing pucks cleanly

Concerns: Struggles with Anaheim’s east‑west passing and rush chances

Edge: Anaheim (moderate)

Key Player Matchups

Trevor Zegras (ANA) vs. Darnell Nurse (EDM)

Zegras’ creativity has forced Edmonton into defensive mismatches

Nurse must limit his zone entries and lateral movement

Troy Terry (ANA) vs. Mattias Ekholm (EDM)

Terry has been Anaheim’s most consistent forward

Ekholm’s return stabilizes Edmonton’s defensive structure

Connor McDavid (EDM) vs. Anaheim Top Pair

McDavid has 2 goals, 5 assists in the series

Anaheim has attempted to shadow him with Fowler + Lundestrom

Ryan Nugent‑Hopkins (EDM) vs. Anaheim Bottom Six

RNH’s line has dominated possession

Ducks’ depth forwards have struggled to contain him

Series History & Trends

Anaheim leads series 3–2

Home Team Record: 3–2 in this series

Last 10 Head‑to‑Head: Anaheim 6–4

Oilers Home Playoff Record (Last 15): 9–6

Ducks Road Playoff Record (Last 15): 7–8

Trend: Anaheim’s speed has consistently disrupted Edmonton’s defensive structure.

Betting Trends

Anaheim

ATS: 6–4 last 10

Totals: Under in 6 of last 9

As Road Underdogs: 48% win rate

PP: 4-for-15 in series

Edmonton

ATS: 4–6 last 10

Totals: Over in 5 of last 7

As Home Favorites: 62% win rate

PP: 3-for-17 in series

Series Totals

Over: 3

Under: 2

Average Goals/Game: 5.6

Game Odds

Anaheim Ducks                 – 130

Edmonton Oilers              6.5

Odds Courtesy of Sports Odds Direct as of Wednesday, April 29, 2026

NFL team transactions report for Wednesday, April 29, 2026

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WAIVER SYSTEM TRANSACTION
WAIVER REQUEST (NO RECALL)
KANSAS CITY

Powell, ShunDerrick RB Central Arkansas (0)* PS: STND
CLAIMING DEADLINE: 4:00 p.m., N.Y. Time, Thursday, 4/30/26
*Indicates player’s accrued seasons at end of 2025 season.

ACTIVE LIST ADDITIONS
FREE AGENT SIGNINGS
DETROIT
Bachie, Joe LB Michigan State
Tufele, Jay DT Southern California

OTHER TRANSACTIONS/COMMENTS
ROSTER EXEMPTIONS
KANSAS CITY
Godrick, Chukwuebuka T No College – Exempt/International Player
LOS ANGELES CHARGERS
Yassmin, Thomas TE Utah – Exempt/International Playe

NFL Offseason Workout Program Dates Announced

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NEW YORK – Voluntary offseason workout programs are intended to provide training, teaching and physical conditioning for players. The calendar for 2026 is below.

As per Article 21 of the Collective Bargaining Agreement, each club’s official, voluntary nine-week offseason program is conducted in three phases:

Phase One consists of the first two weeks of the program with activities limited to meetings, strength and conditioning, and physical rehabilitation only.

Phase Two consists of the next three weeks of the program. On-field workouts may include individual or group instruction and drills, as well as “perfect play drills,” and drills and plays with offensive players lining up across from offensive players and defensive players lining up across from defensive players, conducted at a walk-through pace. No live contact or team offense vs. team defense drills are permitted.

Phase Three consists of the next four weeks of the program. Teams may conduct a total of 10 days of organized team practice activity, or “OTAs”. No live contact is permitted, but 7-on-7, 9-on-7, and 11-on-11 drills are permitted.

Article 22 of the Collective Bargaining Agreement stipulates that clubs may hold one mandatory minicamp for veteran players. This minicamp, noted below, must occur during Phase Three of the offseason program.

Each club may hold a rookie football development program for a period of seven weeks, which in 2026 may begin on May 11. During this period, no activities may be held on weekends, with the exception of one post-Draft rookie minicamp, which may be conducted on either the first or second weekend following the draft.

The NFL Offseason Workout Program calendar (dates are subject to change at the discretion of individual clubs):

TeamProgramDates
ARIZONAOTA Offseason Workouts:May 18-19, May 21, May 26-27, May 29, June 1-2, June 4
Mandatory Minicamp:June 8-10
Rookie Minicamp:May 8-10
   
ATLANTAOTA Offseason Workouts:May 18-19, May 21, May 26-27, May 29, June 8-9, June 11
Mandatory Minicamp:June 16-18
Rookie Minicamp:May 8-10
   
BALTIMOREOTA Offseason Workouts:May 18-19, May 21, May 26-28, June 1-2, June 4
Mandatory Minicamp:June 9-10
 Rookie Minicamp:May 1-2
   
BUFFALOOTA Offseason Workouts:May 18-19, May 21, May 26-28, June 1-4
Mandatory Minicamp:June 9-11
Rookie Minicamp:May 8-9
   
CAROLINAOTA Offseason Workouts:May 26-27, May 29, June 1-2, June 4
Mandatory Minicamp:June 9-11
 Rookie Minicamp:May 8-9
   
CHICAGOOTA Offseason Workouts:May 27-29, June 2-4
 Mandatory Minicamp:June 9-11
 Rookie Minicamp:May 8-9
   
CINCINNATIOTA Offseason Workouts:June 1-3, June 9-11
 Mandatory Minicamp:June 16-18
 Rookie Minicamp:May 8-9
   
CLEVELANDOTA Offseason Workouts:May 19-21, May 26-28, June 2-5
Mandatory Minicamp:June 9-11
 Rookie Minicamp:May 8-10
   
DALLASOTA Offseason Workouts:June 1-2, June 4, June 8-9, June 11
 Mandatory Minicamp:June 16-18
 Rookie Minicamp:May 1-3
   
DENVEROTA Offseason Workouts:June 2-4, June 9-11
 Mandatory Minicamp:June 16-18
 Rookie Minicamp:May 8-10
   
DETROITOTA Offseason Workouts:May 27-29, June 2-4, June 9-11
 Mandatory Minicamp:June 16-17
   
GREEN BAYOTA Offseason Workouts:May 26-27, May 29, June 1-2, June 4, June 15-16, June 18
 Mandatory Minicamp:June 9-11
 Rookie Minicamp:May 1-2
   
HOUSTONOTA Offseason Workouts:May 27-29, June 1-2, June 4
Mandatory Minicamp:June 9-11
 Rookie Minicamp:May 7-9
   
INDIANAPOLISOTA Offseason Workouts:May 26-27, May 29, June 1-2, June 4
 Mandatory Minicamp:June 9-11
 Rookie Minicamp:May 8-9
   
JACKSONVILLEOTA Offseason Workouts:May 26, May 28-29, June 1-2, June 4, June 15-17
 Mandatory Minicamp:June 9-11
 Rookie Minicamp:May 8-10
   
KANSAS CITYOTA Offseason Workouts:May 26-28, June 1-3
 Mandatory Minicamp:June 9-11
 Rookie Minicamp:May 1-3
   
LAS VEGASOTA Offseason Workouts:May 18, May 20-21, May 26, May 28-29, June 1-4
Mandatory Minicamp:June 9-11
 Rookie Minicamp:May 1-3
   
L.A. CHARGERSOTA Offseason Workouts:May 26-27, May 29, June 2-4, June 8-11
 Mandatory Minicamp:June 16-18
 Rookie Minicamp:May 8-10
   
L.A. RAMSOTA Offseason Workouts:May 26-28, June 1-2, June 4, June 8-9, June 11
 Mandatory Minicamp:June 15-16
 Rookie Minicamp:May 8-10
   
MIAMIOTA Offseason Workouts:May 18-19, May 21, May 26-27, May 29, June 8-9, June 11
Mandatory Minicamp:June 2-4
 Rookie Minicamp:May 8-10
   
MINNESOTAOTA Offseason Workouts:May 26-27, May 29, June 1-2, June 4, June 15-18
 Mandatory Minicamp:June 9-11
Rookie Minicamp:May 8-9
   
NEW ENGLANDOTA Offseason Workouts:May 26, May 28-29, June 1-2, June 4, June 8-9, June 11
 Mandatory Minicamp:June 15-17
 Rookie Minicamp:May 8-10
   
NEW ORLEANSOTA Offseason Workouts:May 27-28, June 1, June 3-4, June 8, June 10-11
 Mandatory Minicamp:June 16-17
 Rookie Minicamp:May 8-9
   
N.Y. GIANTSOTA Offseason Workouts:May 19-21, May 27-29, June 1-4
Mandatory Minicamp:June 8-10
 Rookie Minicamp:May 8-10
   
N.Y. JETSOTA Offseason Workouts:May 27-29, June 1-2, June 4, June 8-11
 Mandatory Minicamp:June 16-18
 Rookie Minicamp:May 8-10
   
PHILADELPHIAOTA Offseason Workouts:May 26-27, May 29, June 1-2, June 4
 Mandatory Minicamp:June 9-10
Rookie Minicamp:May 1-2
   
PITTSBURGHOTA Offseason Workouts:May 18, May 20-21, May 26, May 28-29, June 8-9, June 11-12
Mandatory Minicamp:June 2-4
 Rookie Minicamp:May 8-10
   
SAN FRANCISCOOTA Offseason Workouts:May 27-29, June 1, June 3-4
 Mandatory Minicamp:June 9-10
 Rookie Minicamp:May 8-9
   
SEATTLEOTA Offseason Workouts:May 26, May 28-29, June 1, June 3-4
 Mandatory Minicamp:June 9-11
 Rookie Minicamp:May 1-2
   
TAMPA BAYOTA Offseason Workouts:May 26-28, June 2-4, June 9-11
 Mandatory Minicamp:June 16-18
 Rookie Minicamp:May 8-10
   
TENNESSEEOTA Offseason Workouts:May 18-19, May 21, May 26-27, May 29, June 8-9, June 11-12
Mandatory Minicamp:June 16-17
 Rookie Minicamp:May 1-2
   
WASHINGTONOTA Offseason Workouts:May 27-29, June 2-4, June 9-11
 Mandatory Minicamp:June 16-18
 Rookie Minicamp:May 8-9

NBA Western Conference Game 6 Preview: Denver Nuggets (2-3) vs. Minnesota Timberwolves (3-2)

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Tipoff is scheduled for 9:30 PM ET at Target Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

The game airs on ESPN.

The Timberwolves hold a 3-2 series advantage after the Nuggets staved off elimination with a 125-113 victory in Game 5 at Ball Arena in Denver, highlighted by a triple-double from Nikola Jokić. Minnesota is now one win away from advancing, while Denver must win on the road to force a Game 7 back in Colorado on Saturday, May 2.

Team Records and Context

Denver Nuggets: Finished the 2025-26 regular season 54-28 (.659 winning percentage), earning the No. 3 seed in the West (28-13 home, 26-15 away). They posted a strong net rating driven by elite offense (122.1 PPG) and efficient half-court execution centered around Jokić.

Minnesota Timberwolves: Ended at 49-33 (.598), securing the No. 6 seed (26-15 home, 23-18 away). They ranked as a solid defensive team with a positive net rating (+3.07) and rely on athleticism, length, and perimeter scoring.

This is a rematch of recent playoff battles, with Minnesota looking to upset the higher-seeded Nuggets for the second straight postseason. Denver has the slight regular-season edge in head-to-head but faces significant injury challenges and must win on the road in a hostile environment.

Recent Form

Nuggets: They split the first two games (win in Game 1, loss in Game 2) before Minnesota took control with wins in Games 3 and 4 (including a dominant 112-96 victory in Game 4 at Target Center). Denver responded strongly in Game 5 with improved rebounding and Jokić’s playmaking to avoid elimination. Their offense has remained potent, but defensive lapses and depth issues have shown in losses.

Timberwolves: Minnesota has been resilient, winning tight contests and capitalizing on Denver’s injuries. They took a 3-1 lead with strong defensive efforts and timely scoring from role players, though they were outscored in the fourth quarter of Game 5. Their home play has been solid, and they have shown the ability to grind out wins even when stars are limited.

Series History and Head-to-Head

The Nuggets and Timberwolves have developed a budding rivalry with multiple recent playoff meetings (Timberwolves won the 2024 Western Conference Semifinals in 7 games; Nuggets won the 2023 first round 4-1). In the 2025-26 regular season, Denver went 3-1 against Minnesota, including an overtime win on Christmas Day.

Playoff series so far (Minnesota leads 3-2):

Game 1: Nuggets 116, Timberwolves 105

Game 2: Timberwolves 119, Nuggets 114

Game 3: Timberwolves 113, Nuggets 96

Game 4: Timberwolves 112, Nuggets 96

Game 5: Nuggets 125, Timberwolves 113

Games have featured physical defense, high scoring in some, and blowouts in others. Minnesota has exploited Denver’s vulnerabilities on the perimeter and in transition during their wins.

Key Player Matchups

Nikola Jokić (Nuggets C) vs. Rudy Gobert / Naz Reid (Timberwolves frontcourt): Jokić has been the series standout with triple-doubles and efficient scoring/rebounding. Gobert provides elite rim protection and rebounding, while Reid offers spacing and scoring off the bench. Controlling Jokić’s playmaking will be key for Minnesota.

Jamal Murray (Nuggets PG) vs. Minnesota’s backcourt (Mike Conley, Ayo Dosunmu, etc.): Murray has had strong scoring outbursts but has been inconsistent. Minnesota’s guards and wings (including Jaden McDaniels) aim to disrupt his rhythm with length and physicality.

Aaron Gordon (Nuggets PF) vs. Jaden McDaniels / Julius Randle: Gordon’s two-way energy and defense are vital for Denver, but his availability has been in question. McDaniels offers elite perimeter defense.

Supporting casts: Denver relies on bench contributions amid injuries. Minnesota has gotten big games from role players like Dosunmu (high-scoring in recent games) and Reid when Edwards has been limited.

Denver’s half-court execution vs. Minnesota’s length and transition opportunities have defined the series.

Injury Report

Nuggets:

Aaron Gordon: Questionable (left calf tightness) — has missed time recently and is a major concern for Denver’s defense and rebounding.

Peyton Watson: Out (right hamstring strain) — has missed the entire playoffs so far. Depth is thin, forcing heavier minutes on core players like Jokić and Murray.

Timberwolves:

Anthony Edwards: Out or highly limited (left knee bone bruise/hyperextension) — suffered the injury in Game 4 and is expected to miss significant time, a major blow to Minnesota’s offense.

Donte DiVincenzo: Out for the season (right Achilles tendon repair).

Naz Reid: Has been questionable with ankle issues at times but has played through them. Minnesota is shorthanded without Edwards but has shown adaptability with increased roles for Conley, Dosunmu, and others.

Betting Trends

Road favorites in elimination scenarios can be volatile, but Denver has the talent edge when healthy.

Series has seen blowouts favoring the home team in some cases; rebounding and defensive efficiency have swung games.

Playoff games often trend Under due to slower pace and intensity, though Jokić-led offenses can push totals.

Minnesota has covered as home underdogs or in close games; Denver has struggled ATS on the road lately when dealing with injuries.

Game Odds

Denver Nuggets                                – 5.5

Minnesota Timberwolves            224.5

Odds Courtesy of Sports Odds Direct as of Wednesday, April 29, 2026

NBA Eastern Conference Game 6 Preview: Boston Celtics (3-2) vs. Philadelphia Sixers (2-3)

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Tipoff is scheduled for 8:00 PM ET at Xfinity Mobile Arena (formerly Wells Fargo Center) in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

The game is broadcast on Peacock and NBC Sports Network. The Celtics hold a 3-2 series advantage after the 76ers forced Game 6 with a convincing 113-97 road victory in Game 5 at TD Garden, powered by a strong fourth-quarter surge.

Team Records and Context

Boston Celtics: Finished the 2025-26 regular season 56-26 (.683), securing the No. 2 seed in the East (strong home record of 30-11). They boast elite two-way play, depth, and championship pedigree, with a top-tier net rating during the season.

Philadelphia 76ers: Ended at 45-37 (.549), earning the No. 7 seed after navigating the play-in (including a win over Orlando). They rely heavily on star power from Joel Embiid and Tyrese Maxey but have shown inconsistency, especially defensively.

Boston is the clear favorite to close out the series on the road, though Philadelphia’s home crowd and recent momentum create elimination-game tension. A potential Game 7 would return to Boston on Saturday, May 2.

Recent Form

Celtics: They dominated early, winning Game 1 by 32 points (123-91) and Game 4 by 32 points (128-96). However, they dropped Games 2 and 5 at home (97-111 and 97-113), showing vulnerability when their offense stalls. Boston has looked dominant when clicking on both ends but has allowed Philly to force turnovers and dictate pace in losses.

76ers: After a blowout loss in Game 1 and tight Game 3 defeat (100-108), Philadelphia stole Game 2 on the road and delivered a statement 16-point win in Game 5. Embiid and Maxey combined for 58 points in Game 5, with Philly outscoring Boston 28-11 in the fourth quarter. The Sixers have shown resilience and the ability to exploit Boston’s occasional offensive lulls, but they were overwhelmed in Boston’s blowout wins.

Series History and Head-to-Head

This is the latest chapter in one of the NBA’s most storied rivalries (23rd playoff series all-time, with Boston holding a significant historical edge, including winning the last six series). In the 2025-26 regular season, the teams split 2-2, with Philly taking two early close games (including a 117-116 opener) and Boston winning the later matchups more decisively (e.g., 114-98).

Playoff series so far (Boston leads 3-2):

Game 1: Celtics 123, 76ers 91

Game 2: 76ers 111, Celtics 97

Game 3: Celtics 108, 76ers 100

Game 4: Celtics 128, 76ers 96

Game 5: 76ers 113, Celtics 97

Boston has won the blowouts with superior efficiency and rebounding, while Philly’s wins have featured strong guard play and fourth-quarter execution.

Key Player Matchups

Jayson Tatum & Jaylen Brown (Celtics wings) vs. Philadelphia’s perimeter defenders: Tatum (returning from injury earlier) and Brown provide scoring, playmaking, and defense. They combined for 50 points in Game 3. Philly must contain their creation without over-helping.

Joel Embiid (76ers C) vs. Boston’s frontcourt (Al Horford, Kristaps Porzingis if available, or versatile bigs): Embiid was dominant in Game 5 with 33 points, 8 assists. His post presence and passing are critical for Philly, but Boston’s switching and help defense have limited him in blowout losses.

Tyrese Maxey (76ers PG) vs. Derrick White / Jrue Holiday (or Boston’s backcourt): Maxey’s speed and scoring (25+ points in Game 5 with rebounds/assists) fuel Philly’s attack. Boston’s elite guard defense aims to disrupt his rhythm and force tough shots.

Supporting casts: Boston gets energy from Payton Pritchard, Sam Hauser, and versatile forwards. Philly leans on Kelly Oubre Jr., and role players for rebounding and three-point shooting.

Boston’s depth and defensive versatility have been decisive in their wins, while Philly’s star duo has kept them alive.

Injury Report

Celtics: Largely healthy heading into Game 6, with no major injuries reported in recent games. The team has benefited from a full or near-full rotation, contributing to their blowout performances.

76ers: Joel Embiid has returned from post-appendectomy recovery and played effectively in Game 5 (probable/available status recently cleared). Kelly Oubre Jr. has been monitored for adductor soreness in prior games but is expected to be available unless new issues arise. Depth pieces may still be limited, but the core is intact for this must-win.

Betting Trends

Boston has covered big in their series wins but has been vulnerable at home in losses.

Series totals have varied widely due to blowouts vs. competitive games.

Road favorites in elimination scenarios can be tricky, but Boston’s superior regular-season metrics and historical playoff dominance against Philly provide an edge.

Rebounding and defensive rating have favored Boston in most games.

Game Odds

Boston Celtics                   – 5.5

Philadelphia Sixers         212.5

Odds Courtesy of Sports Odds Direct as of Wednesday, April 29, 2026

NBA Eastern Conference Game 6 Preview: New York Knicks (3-2) vs. Atlanta Hawks (2-3)

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Tipoff is scheduled for 7:00 PM ET at State Farm Arena in Atlanta, Georgia.

The game airs on ESPN, with the Knicks holding a commanding 3-2 lead after a dominant 126-97 victory in Game 5 at Madison Square Garden.

Team Records and Context

New York Knicks: Finished the 2025-26 regular season 53-29 (.646 winning percentage), earning the No. 3 seed in the East (30-10 home, 22-19 away). They ranked as a strong defensive and efficient offensive team with a +6.4 net rating.

Atlanta Hawks: Ended at 46-36 (.561), securing the No. 6 seed (24-17 home, 22-19 away). They showed offensive firepower (118.5 PPG) but struggled defensively compared to New York.

The Knicks are the clear favorites to close out the series on the road and advance, though Atlanta will have home-court energy in a must-win elimination game. A Game 7 (if necessary) would be Saturday, May 2, back in New York.

Recent Form

Knicks: They have won the last two games convincingly, including a 29-point blowout in Game 5 where they shot efficiently and dominated the glass/pace. Earlier in the series, they split the first four games, with losses coming in tight contests (one-point margins in Games 2 and 3). New York has looked more cohesive and physical lately, especially at home, but road performance has been a slight question mark (they are just 10-19 ATS as road favorites this season).

Hawks: They pushed the series to 2-2 with narrow home wins in Games 3 and an earlier road win in Game 2, but were overwhelmed in Games 4 and 5 (double-digit losses). Atlanta has shown resilience in close games but has been outscored significantly in blowout scenarios. Their post-All-Star surge helped them reach the playoffs, but the Knicks have exposed defensive and rebounding issues.

Series History and Head-to-Head

The teams split the regular-season series (Knicks went 2-1 per some reports, with overall recent H2H favoring New York around 9-6 or 10-6 in recent seasons). In the playoffs so far:

Game 1: Knicks 113-102

Game 2: Hawks 107-106

Game 3: Hawks 109-108

Game 4: Knicks 114-98

Game 5: Knicks 126-97

New York has the edge in efficiency (higher eFG%, better offensive rating in the series) and has won the two games by large margins. Historically, matchups have been competitive, but the current Knicks roster (built around Brunson, Towns, and Anunoby) has the personnel advantage.

Key Player Matchups

Jalen Brunson (Knicks PG) vs. Atlanta’s backcourt (e.g., Dyson Daniels, CJ McCollum): Brunson has been the series MVP so far, dropping 39 points in Game 5 on efficient shooting. He controls tempo and creates for others. Atlanta needs to disrupt him without fouling.

Karl-Anthony Towns (Knicks C/PF) vs. Onyeka Okongwu / Hawks frontcourt: Towns has been dominant, including a postseason triple-double earlier. He provides spacing, scoring, and rebounding that Atlanta has struggled to match, especially with center depth issues.

OG Anunoby (Knicks forward) vs. Jalen Johnson (Hawks forward): Anunoby offers elite two-way play and has had strong scoring outbursts. Johnson is Atlanta’s most consistent two-way contributor and must step up offensively.

Supporting casts: Knicks get solid contributions from Josh Hart (energy, rebounds) and the bench. Hawks rely on McCollum’s scoring and perimeter creation, but have been outrebounded and out-hustled in recent games.

New York’s physicality and half-court execution have given them the upper hand in the last two contests.

Injury Report

Knicks: Largely healthy heading into Game 5 and expected to remain so for Game 6. Josh Hart has been occasionally questionable with back issues in the series, but the team has had its full rotation available recently. No major long-term concerns reported.

Hawks: Center Jock Landale remains out with a right high-ankle sprain (missed extended time and is expected to be sidelined for the remainder of this series). Other depth pieces like N’Faly Dante (knee) have also been unavailable. This has thinned Atlanta’s frontcourt rotation, forcing more minutes for Okongwu and others, which New York has exploited on the glass. No major new injuries reported for Game 6, but Atlanta is playing shorthanded up front.

Betting Trends

Knicks are strong straight-up but have been inconsistent ATS as road favorites (10-19 this season).

Series games have varied: blowouts in Knicks wins, one-point thrillers in Hawks wins.

Rebounding and defensive efficiency have favored New York lately.

Playoff unders often hit due to slower pace and better defense; however, Atlanta’s home offense could push the total.

Game Odds

New York Knicks               – 2.5

Atlanta Hawks                   213.5

Odds Courtesy of Sports Odds Direct as of Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Minnesota Lynx Waive Three

Minneapolis/St. Paul – The Minnesota Lynx today announced the team has waived guard Amaya Battle, along with forwards Ra Shaya Kyle and Sakima Walker.