It took them one day to show why their ownership should be exciting for the Orioles, too. Baltimore acquired 2021 Cy Young winner Corbin Burnes from the Brewers, a statement move for a franchise that had been reluctant to spend under its former owners, the Angelos family.
Burnes is a bonafide top-of-the-rotation starter, and the price — prospects shortstop Joey Ortiz and left-handed pitcher D.L. Hall and the 34th overall draft pick — is more than reasonable. As such, Baltimore earned an “A” in R.J. Anderson’s trade grades.
Anderson:“Burnes, 29, has been one of the best starters in baseball dating back to 2020. His 146 ERA+ over that time ranks fourth out of the 67 pitchers with at least 75 starts … Where things get interesting now is what the Orioles intend to do about Burnes’ impending free agency. … There’s no legitimate financial reason for the Orioles to shy away from retaining Burnes on a long-term basis. Will the Orioles actually make it so? Perhaps this proves overzealous, but we feel more optimistic about their chances than we would have a week ago.”
Joel Embiid‘s MVP campaign is all but over. Now his and the 76ers‘ focus must be on getting him healthy — and hoping he can stay that way. The superstar center injured his meniscus and will be out through the weekend as the team figures out a path forward.
Embiid had been dealing with another knee injury — one that cost the 76ers $75,000 for not reporting it — before the latest injury against the Warriors.
Currently, Embiid is on pace to join Wilt Chamberlain (in 1963-64) as the only players to average 35 points, 10 rebounds and five assists.
The 76ers are 26-8 with Embiid this season and 4-9 without him.
The individual accolades are one thing — albeit certainly a disappointing one as Embiid went for his second straight MVP — but Embiid has to get healthy. Period. His injury history keeps getting longer and longer.
2014-16: Right foot
2016-17: Torn meniscus
2017-18: Orbital fracture
2018-19: Sore left knee
2019-20: Torn left hand ligament
2020-21: Left knee bruise
2021-22: Hand injury
2024: Left meniscus injury
For Philadelphia to succeed this postseason, it needs that list to end there.
Quinn was in Dallas for the past three seasons. Over that span, Dallas finished second in defensive expected points added. For more basic numbers, Dallas was seventh in total defense, first in turnovers forced, first in interception rate and second in sack rate.
Quinn went 43-42 and made a Super Bowl as the Falcons‘ head coach from 2015-20. He was fired after starting 0-5 in 2020.
Washington has the No. 2 overall pick and five top-100 picks overall.
Benjamin:“Washington was right to part ways with Ron Rivera after four tough but ultimately middling seasons, but to go from one aging defensively minded retread to another is curious considering how forward-thinking the organization appeared to be, welcoming both new ownership and front-office leadership. … Perhaps his experience will help ground a rebuilding team, but this hardly registers as an inspiring, innovative move. Grade: D+“
I get it. The optics aren’t great. Washington was heavily connected to young, exciting candidates Ben Johnson (who stayed in Detroit) and Mike Macdonald (hired by Seattle). Quinn is 53 and has already been a head coach. He’s never going to generate a ton of excitement.
But Quinn is also very respected and well-connected and a strong leader. His experience will be valuable with a second-year owner (Josh Harris) and first-year GM (Adam Peters). In Atlanta, Quinn found a terrific offensive coordinator — Kyle Shanahan — and flourished. The biggest factor in his success in Washington is finding another strong offensive coordinator. I’m not as down on this hire as some others seem to be.
Parrish:“As Matt Norlander detailed in Tuesday’s Court Report, Saturday will represent the 49th time Duke and UNC will meet as top-10 teams. That’s 35 times more than any other two schools have met as top-10 teams … This meeting will be highlighted by the presence of two possible First Team All-Americans — Kyle Filipowski at Duke and RJ Davis at North Carolina. The advantage obviously goes to the home team; the Tar Heels will be favored. But I’ve been covering this series long enough to have seen North Carolina upset Duke at Duke, Duke upset North Carolina at North Carolina and everything in between. So ruling anything out or making big guarantees is often a fool’s errand. That’s why it’s usually best to just sit back and enjoy it, the latest highly anticipated meeting between two of the biggest brands in college athletics.”
What we’re watching this weekend
Friday
NHL All-Star skills competition, 7 p.m. on ESPN Warriors at Grizzlies, 8 p.m. on NBA TV Butler at No. 13 Creighton (M), 9 p.m. on FS1
Saturday
No. 1 UConn at St. John’s (M), noon on Fox Senior Bowl, 1 p.m. on NFL Network Texas at No. 25 TCU (M), 2 p.m. on ESPN2 NHL All-Star Game, 3 p.m. on ESPN No. 17 Utah State at San Diego State (M), 3:30 p.m. on Fox No. 4 Houston at No. 8 Kansas (M), 4 p.m. on ESPN No. 7 Duke at No. 3 North Carolina (M), 6 p.m. on ESPN No. 12 Iowa State at No. 18 Baylor (M), 8 p.m. on ESPN2 No. 3 Iowa at Maryland (W), 8 p.m. on Fox No. 5 Tennessee at No. 10 Kentucky (M), 8:30 p.m. on ESPN Lakers at Knicks, 8:30 p.m. on ABC
Sunday
No. 10 Indiana at No. 8 Ohio State (W), noon on FS1 No. 17 Virginia Tech at No. 24 North Carolina (W), noon on ESPN2 No. 2 Purdue at No. 6 Wisconsin (M), 1 p.m. on CBS No. 2 Kansas State at No. 12 Texas (W), 2 p.m. on FS1 Suns at Wizards, 3:30 p.m. on NBA TV No. 7 UCLA at No. 4 Stanford, 4 p.m. on ESPN Clippers at Heat, 6 p.m. on ESPN Trail Blazers at Nuggets, 8:30 p.m. on NBA TV