Sports
Free MLB home run picks, odds for April 15: Ben Rice among HR prop bets from MLB betting expert

With Wednesday featuring another loaded 15-game MLB slate, bettors interested in placing MLB bets have no shortage of options for placing wagers. One very popular bet type is prop betting, and for MLB betting, arguably the most popular prop type is home run picks. Before you lock in any MLB player props or home run picks of your own for Wednesday’s action, make sure to see which players SportsLine betting expert Bob Konarski is backing to leave the yard. And for even more expert picks and MLB predictions, see what the SportsLine Projection Model has to say.
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Best home run picks for Wednesday, April 15
Ryan O’Hearn, Pirates (+700)
Washington’s Jake Irvin has allowed one home run in each of his first three starts. Two of those three have come to the lefties, favoring Pittsburgh’s Ryan O’Hearn. Of the 36 homers Irvin allowed last year, 26 came to left-handed hitters. O’Hearn has three dingers on the season, with two of them coming off right-handers. He’s also slugging .538 against righties thus far and owns a 44.3% hard-hit rate against Irvin in his career. The weather in Pittsburgh is calling for the wind to be blowing out 10+ mph with wind gusts potentially reaching 22 mph, giving hitters like O’Hearn a potential boost when they get the ball in the air.
Place MLB player prop bets, including O’Hearn to homer on Wednesday, with the Caesars Sportsbook promo code.
Ben Rice, Yankees (+242)
Rice is facing Angels right-handed starter Jack Kochanowicz, and the wind is blowing out at 10.3 mph at Yankee Stadium on Wednesday. Rice has a 25% barrel rate. 80% hard-hit rate and an average exit velocity of 99.1 mph over the last two weeks. He also excels against right-handers with a 43.5% fly ball rate, .389 batting average, a 26.5% walk rate and a 26.5% strikeout rate. Kochanowicz has yet to give up a home run this season, but he has struggled with control and limiting walks.
Use the BetMGM bonus code to back Rice going yard against the Angels.
Sports
Time for seasoned Oilers to hit playoff gear against hapless Canucks
EDMONTON — The Edmonton Oilers’ second season as a recovering Stanley Cup finalist has been… well, let’s just say they’ve taken it one day at a time.
They’ve learned how to get to April 15 in a comfortable playoff position, without expending too much energy along the way. How to maintain the level in everyone’s personal game to stay at or near the top of the Pacific, then find a team game when needed after the Olympic break — but not necessarily before.
How to be good enough, while saving your best for last.
Because if there’s one thing they know, it’s that you can’t play playoff hockey in December. Not if you plan on playing it in June.
“The expectations are to win the Stanley Cup,” Zach Hyman said Wednesday. “We lose in the final, we lose in the first round — we’re going to be pissed.”
When you’re in the middle of a Stanley Cup window, it’s all about the 16 wins from April to June. The 82 games before that, they’re crab cakes: the appetizer before the main course.
And the more playoff hockey you’ve played, the more that becomes ingrained in the DNA of an NHL team.
“Playoff experience,” began Hyman. “When you don’t have it, you don’t really think it’s that important. And when you do, you realize it is important.”

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Expound on that, could you?
“When you’re a young kid and it’s your first playoff game, you’re taken aback. Everything’s different,” Hyman, who will be in the lineup Thursday against the Canucks, explained. “Players play differently. Everything’s faster. Every play matters. It’s just a different, different game.
“That’s why you see teams like Florida, who had 98 points last year, and then they turned it on. They were the best team by quite a (distance) in the East.”
And, in the end, two games better than these Oilers.
Edmonton has been a 100-plus point team for four straight seasons. As we arrive at Game 82 Thursday in Edmonton, a point earned against the hapless Vancouver Canucks — and with playoff seeding at stake, can you envisage a world in which Edmonton doesn’t win by two or three? — the Oilers will close out the 2025-26 season with 92 or 93 points, good for (at least) second place in the pillow-fight Pacific.
Frankly, had Leon Draisaitl and then Hyman not been injured late in the season, the Oilers would likely have two or three more points and be home and cooled atop the division. But really, who cares?
“You want to put yourself in a position that you can be comfortable going into the playoffs, and obviously we’re not,” Hyman said. “We’ve got to win a game here. But at the same time, you still have the confidence that when you get in you can beat anybody.”
I know this: from about 2008 to 2011, if those Canucks teams needed a late season victory over Edmonton to feather their playoff nest, we all would have bet the house that the Sedins et al would take both points from those inferior Oilers teams.
Today, the skate is on the other foot.
“We’re pretty confident,” Hyman said. “I mean, it’s kind of how we’ve been the whole time. It’s a big game for us. Every game we go into we’re confident that we can win.”
Thursday’s game is, in fact, a chance to kick in a little muscle memory before the games start for real.
There is a chance, should Vegas somehow lose in regulation Wednesday, that a win could give Edmonton first place. More importantly, if the tumblers fall the right way, there’s a chance a regulation loss could send Edmonton down to Colorado for Game 1, with a slog through the Central ahead even if they pull off an improbable upset over the Avalanche.
Simply winning and playing either Anaheim or Los Angeles makes the stakes high in Game 82, a nice rehearsal for the gut-wrenching games that lie ahead.
“For a lot of us, these last few years, we’ve played a lot of hockey,” said veteran Darnell Nurse. “I wouldn’t say (playoff hockey) is the same feeling as a regular-season game — it’s more amplified, the context of the game. But there’s a familiarity and comfort to it.”
And they’re closing in on that game, just in time for the games they’ve been waiting for all season.
“This last week, we haven’t gotten all the results we wanted. But we played really well,” assessed Nurse. “It’s on us to bring that again against Vancouver — the full package. Be able to create some more offence for our team, but not at the expense of our defence.”
If your game isn’t at a point that makes a speed bump out of Vancouver — with this much on the line — then what’s next doesn’t really matter, does it?
Sports
Bayern Munich edge Real Madrid to reach Champions League semi-finals
Late strikes from Luis Diaz and Michael Olise sealed a dramatic 4-3 win for Bayern Munich over Real Madrid on Wednesday, clinching a 6-4 aggregate victory and setting up a semi-final with holders Paris Saint-Germain.
The tie was level at the break in the second leg after a scintillating opening half, with record 15-time European champions Real going ahead three times on the night.
Bayern won 2-1 last week in the Spanish capital, but Arda Guler pounced on a loose Manuel Neuer pass to put the visitors ahead after just 34 seconds at the Allianz Arena. He scored again from a free-kick after Aleksandar Pavlovic equalised.
Harry Kane put Bayern back ahead in the tie only for Kylian Mbappe to restore parity overall when he put Madrid 3-2 up before half-time.
Eduardo Camavinga was sent off for a second yellow card with four minutes left and Bayern pushed forward, Diaz blasting into the corner from outside the box after a crucial deflection.
Read moreGriezmann hopes to bid Atletico farewell in spectacular fashion
With Real pressing for an equaliser, Bayern broke and Olise curled in a magnificent shot to rubberstamp their ticket to the last four, where Luis Enrique’s reigning European champions await.
Tempers boiled over after the final whistle with Guler picking up a straight red for confronting the referee.
“We got off to a bad start, and then conceded again through a free-kick and a counter. The first half was hectic,” Joshua Kimmich told DAZN.
“The second half was calmer, we had more control – and then managed to win it in the end. It wasn’t our best performance, but we’ll take the win.
“The two best teams in Europe will face each other. We had many top level games against Paris in recent years. I’m looking forward to it.”
For the first time in Real’s long Champions League history, their starting XI did not contain a single Spanish player. Jude Bellingham, who impressed off the bench in the first leg, was one of four changes to Alvaro Arbeloa’s line-up for the visitors.
Read moreChampions League: PSG through to semis after defeating Liverpool
Guler punishes Neuer
Neuer, widely lauded after a vintage performance in Madrid, gifted Real an opener. The Bayern goalkeeper miscued a pass directly to Guler, who floated a first-touch shot into the unguarded goal in the first minute.
Bayern looked stunned but struck back almost immediately when Pavlovic headed in a Kimmich corner after Real goalkeeper Andriy Lunin failed to read the flight of the ball.
The match had barely time to settle before Real were ahead once more thanks to a Guler goal, with Neuer again not at his best.
The Turkey international whipped a free-kick into the top corner which Neuer got a hand to but was unable to keep out.
The match continued to swing back and forth before the break, as Kane struck first before Mbappe responded by getting himself on the scoresheet.
Kane slotted clinically into the bottom corner in the 38th minute to again haul Bayern level on the night — and ahead in the tie — before Mbappe ran onto a Vinicius Junior pass and slotted home to level the tie 4-4 on aggregate.
With Real regularly cutting into Bayern’s high line, coach Vincent Kompany responded by introducing the pace of Alphonso Davies at the interval.
Both sides traded chances in the second half, with Olise particularly dangerous, forcing a fingertip save from Lunin with 20 minutes left.
Camavinga came on midway through the half but picked up two yellow cards in quick succession to leave his team a man down in the closing stages.
It proved a turning point as Bayern struck three minutes later when Diaz’s effort from outside the box took a touch off Eder Militao and flashed beyond Lunin.
Olise made certain of Bayern’s progress deep into stoppage time as the German giants took down Real in a knockout clash for the first time since 2012.
(FRANCE 24 with AFP)
Sports
Manny Pacquiao says one former champion would beat Shakur Stevenson in his prime
Shakur Stevenson is currently one of the most talented fighters in the sport, but Manny Pacquiao believes that one of his former opponents would have had Stevenson’s number if they met in their primes.
Stevenson has boxed between featherweight and super-lightweight, winning a world title in each to become a four-division conqueror, but he has struggled to find the willing dance partners who could make him a global superstar.
In January, the undefeated southpaw notched a career-best victory over Teofimo Lopez and the Newark sensation is now on the hunt for further opponents with big profiles, in pursuit of recognition as boxing’s pound-for-pound number one.
Although, whilst Stevenson may indeed be the most skilful operator in the sport, boxing’s only eight-division world champion Pacquiao told Inside The Ring that he believes Shane Mosley would have been too much for the 28-year-old, if they collided when both were at their best.
“Shakur Stevenson vs Shane Mosley in his prime? I’m going Mosley. Mosley has speed and combinations in his prime. If you watch Mosley in his prime, he’s very good. Hard to hit and can move around.”
Mosley ruled in three weight divisions, but lost almost every round to Pacquiao (120-107, 120-108, 119-108) when he challenged for the Filipino icon’s WBO welterweight world title back in 2011.
Still, Mosley boasts two famous wins over Oscar De La Hoya, as well as impressive stoppage triumphs over Antonio Diaz and Antonio Margarito, but the Californian hung up the gloves with a record which did not reflect his quality – retiring at 49-10-1 in 2016.
As for the fantasy fight, Stevenson would disagree. In fact, he has said himself that he believes he would ‘smoke’ Pacquiao had they been in the same era, so a similar prediction would be directed Mosley’s way.
Sports
Think “head behind” for longer, straighter drives
If you’ve ever taken a golf lesson or gone down the rabbit hole of swing videos online, you’ve likely heard about the importance of sequencing. A well-timed swing generates more speed and power than one that’s out of sync.
However, there’s a critical link in the chain many amateurs forget—largely because they don’t even realize it’s part of their sequence in the first place.
Mike Perpich, a GOLF Top 100 Teacher, explains that if you want to hit longer, straighter drives, you have to learn how to time your head in your swing. Not your clubhead. Your noggin.
Sequence your head for more speed
Now, you might be wondering, “what does my head have to do with my golf swing?”
As Perpich explains, the head plays a vital role in the swing because it helps counterbalance your lower body in your transition and downswing. This creates a slingshot effect that boosts clubhead speed.
It works like this: as you transition into the downswing, you change direction. To do so, you have to push off your trail foot. As a result, pressure shifts forward. This initiatives your downswing sequence. But, as Perpich explains, it also causes your force to move from back to front. As your club and lower body move forward, your upper body actually needs to resist briefly and work in the opposite direction.
“You can’t have the top and the bottom going in the same direction,” Perpich says. “Your head is going to feel like it’s going backwards. That’s what helps speed the clubhead up.”
This brief moment of separation is what causes the “whip” effect that elite players use to maximize speed.
Time your head to boost accuracy
Poor head sequencing might be draining you of power. It could also be the cause of your mis-hits with the driver. In a swing where the head is going forward at the same time as their lower body, Perpich says, the path of the swing will likely travel too far out—or over the top—and you’re going to have to compensate to strike the ball.
“When the head moves with the torso, you’re hitting down with the driver,” he says, “So, you’re not going to get a center hit, and you’re also not going to get an ascending blow.”
Remember: head backwards for longer straighter drives
If you’re trying to incorporate this into your swing, Perpich says to think about the top of your head going backwards as you change direction and begin the transition into your downswing.
“It’s like a whip, a slingshot,” he says, “You have to have the bottom half going forward, but the top half is going backwards.”
Do that, and you’ll hit longer, straighter drives.
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Sports
Kevin McGonigle extension: Tigers lock up top prospect on eight-year, $150M deal
The Detroit Tigers and standout rookie third baseman Kevin McGonigle have agreed to an eight-year contract extension, the club announced on Wednesday. The deal is worth $150 million guaranteed and includes escalators that could push the total value to $160 million. It kicks in for 2027 and will run through the 2034 season.
McGonigle’s deal is the latest in a recent spate of long-term extensions for young players with little or no MLB service time. His pact is larger than the recent one signed by young shortstop Konnor Griffin and the Pittsburgh Pirates.
The 21-year-old McGonigle is a former No. 37 overall draft pick out of a Pennsylvania high school who’s thus far enjoying a highly productive rookie campaign in Detroit.
Through the first 17 games of his MLB career, McGonigle has an OBP of .417 with more walks (11) than strikeouts (eight). He’s also slugging .492 with six doubles and an OPS+ of 162. Thanks to strong quality-of-contact measures, McGonigle boasts an expected slugging of .546, which puts him in the 90th percentile of MLB hitters in projectable power. That’s in addition to his running the bases well and playing sound defense at short and third for a Tigers team with designs on making the playoffs for a third straight year.
“Since I’ve been drafted by the Tigers, the way I am, I’m loyal,” McGonigle said at a press conference Wednesday. “I want to stick in one spot and help a team to win a World Series.”
Coming into the 2026 season, CBS Sports ranked McGonigle as the No. 1 prospect in all of baseball. Here’s part of our write-up:
McGonigle is probably the single most polished hitter not already in the majors. He’s a lefty who, when he’s in his stance, resembles a mirrored version of Jose Altuve. There are some skill-set similarities too. McGonigle can hit the ball wherever, whenever, and often with gusto behind it. He’s mindful of the zone, and last year he walked 13 times more than he struck out combined across three levels. McGonigle has shown headiness on the basepaths in the past, though last year he wasn’t as successful in volume or efficiency. Defensively, he may play shortstop at the onset of his big-league career as a necessity to get his bat in the lineup. McGonigle seems unlikely to remain at the six much beyond that, however, with second base appearing to be his long-term home. It won’t matter. If he hits like he’s demonstrated he can throughout his professional career, the Tigers will be pleased all the same.
The eight-year extension buys out multiple free agent years from McGonigle and all but ensures he’ll remain in Detroit through at least his age-29 season. From McGonigle’s standpoint, he gets a life-changing guarantee, and he can still test the free-agent market before he turns 30 years of age. For the Tigers, it’s bound to be a highly popular move for a fan base that’s primed to be frustrated by ace Tarik Skubal‘s likely departure via free agency next offseason.
McGonigle becomes the fifth player to whom the Tigers are committed beyond the current season. Marquee offseason addition Framber Valdez will be owed $42.8 million for the 2027 season, and he has a $35 million player option for 2028. Javier Báez is owed $27 million for the final year of his contract in 2027. Colt Keith is under contract through at least 2029 with three additional club options. Finally, reliever Kyle Finnegan will make $9.5 million next season. The Tigers also have 2027 options on Kenley Jansen and Drew Anderson. Overall, that comes to just more than $80 million committed for 2027, which means the Tigers have plenty of room to add salary this coming winter.
At this writing, McGonigle and the Tigers have won four in a row to reach 8-9 on the season after a slow start.
Spring prospect extensions
Sports
Report: Saudi PIF on verge of cutting LIV Golf support
Apr 6, 2024; Miami, Florida, USA; The LIV Golf logo is on display along the 10th hole during the second round of LIV Golf Miami golf tournament at Trump National Doral. Mandatory Credit: Reinhold Matay-Imagn Images Speculation over the future of LIV Golf ran rampant after league executives reportedly were summoned to New York for an emergency summit.
The Financial Times reported Wednesday that Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund is on the verge of cutting its support for the league and that an announcement could come as soon as Thursday.
LIV Golf members are currently in Mexico City preparing to play the sixth event on the 2026 calendar, starting on Thursday. Golfer Sergio Garcia told reporters there Wednesday that the players “have not heard anything.”
All outward appearances indicated the event was proceeding as planned, with LIV Golf posting interviews and tee times on social media.
Garcia said a shutdown would be contrary to what they have heard from Yasir Al-Rumayyan, governor of the Saudi PIF.
“That is not what Yasir told us at the beginning of the year, that he is behind us, that they have a project of many years,” said Garcia, translated from Spanish.
The PIF has reportedly poured more than $5 billion into LIV Golf since it launched in 2022, luring stars like Jon Rahm, Bryson DeChambeau and Phil Mickelson with lucrative contracts and massive tournament purses.
LIV Golf’s potential demise would not come as a total shock given the circuit’s stagnant television ratings and its inability to attract any big names of late, coupled with the recent departures of Brooks Koepka and Patrick Reed back to the PGA Tour.
After Mexico City, there are nine events remaining on the schedule in LIV Golf’s fourth season.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Under-Fire PBKS Star Aims Success On Return To Wankhede For MI Clash
Familiarity with playing conditions and players breeds confidence, especially for a player going through a lean patch with the bat. Punjab Kings’ middle-order batter Nehal Wadhera is hoping that his return to the Wankhede Stadium for the Indian Premier League (IPL) 2026 clash with the Mumbai Indians on Thursday will help him regain form and produce a big knock. Wadhera, who has scored 3, 10, and 14 runs in the three matches in which PBKS have batted this season, has played two seasons for the Mumbai Indians from 2023-24 and is quite familiar with the Wankhede Stadium and the current MI squad, barring a few players.
The 25-year-old batting all-rounder from Ludhiana in Punjab is brimming with confidence on his return to Wankhede.
“I have played here for two years, so I know the conditions well. I have played with everyone here. I have played a lot of these bowlers in the nets too. I know I am short of runs, but I am hoping that the time will come when I am also scoring well. I am in good touch, though. I think it is a matter of one innings, and then it will start from there,” said Wadhera in the pre-match press conference at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai on Wednesday.
Wadhera said the team will take confidence from their good record against the Mumbai Indians over the year — among the eight IPL-founding teams, PBKS are the only one with an equal head-to-head record with MI, with both teams having won 17 matches in the 34 they have played so far.
“Just like a bowler who is doing well has lots of confidence in bowling or a batter who is doing well has confidence in his batting, similarly, a team. If a team has a good winning record against another team, that also carries forward the momentum.
“So we are in a very positive frame of mind. It is not only that, but last year we won against them in the semifinals, and this time too they same set of bowlers, the same team.
“So, we also have an idea of what plan they will come up with, which plan of action they will come up with, and we already have an idea. It is an added advantage that last year, if we did well against their plans, then this year also we will do well,” said Wadhera.
The middle-order batter who bowls leg-break when required agreed that Punjab Kings have started from where they left off last year, though they were disappointed at losing the final to Royal Challengers Bengaluru.
“We are exactly where we left, we are carrying up the same momentum. Though we lost the final last year, we are still dominating every team like we did last year. We are following the same routine, there is the same atmosphere basically, which we had last year,” he said.
Wadhera praised head coach Ricky Ponting and skipper Shreyas Iyer for instilling a positive outlook among the players and giving them confidence to play freely. He said Ponting always tells the players to follow their natural game without bothering about failure.
Wadhera said interacting with a legend like Ponting is a big gain for players like him who have not played for India. “He is a great batsman and has captained Australia to multiple World Cup titles, so he brings a lot to the conversation. He always asked the players to be positive in their outlook and that results will come,” said Wadhera.
The 25-year-old batter from Punjab said skipper Shreyas Iyer’s one-on-one interactions with the players also have a good impact on the players. “Just the other day, I was having a conversation with him, and he told me to play my natural game without bothering about pressure. ‘You play your natural game, I am there to take up the pressure, he told me,” said Wadhera.
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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Ex-MLB pitcher Dan Serafini claims innocence to murder in ‘Dateline’ interview
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Former MLB pitcher Dan Serafini, who was sentenced to life in prison, insists he is innocent of the 2021 murder his in-laws.
Serafini did a recent interview with “Dateline,” where the ex-Minnesota Twins hurler claimed to Keith Morrison that he was not the one who killed Gary Spohr and Wendy Wood five years ago.
“I don’t understand it at all,” Serafini said to Morrison. “I believed in the justice system. And the justice system failed.”
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Pitcher Dan Serafini of the Minnesota Twins poses for the camera on Photo Day during spring training at Hammond Stadium at Lee County Sports Complex in Fort Myers, Fla. (GETTY)
Serafini was accused of surprising Spohr and Wood in Lake Tahoe, California, at their home in 2021, where he murdered them in the belief he would acquire a piece of their fortune via his then-wife, Erin Spohr.
Prosecutors said Serafini had snuck into the Lake Tahoe home while the married couple was out on the lake. He was allegedly hiding in a closet with a gun for several hours awaiting their return.
BRIAN WALSHE TO BE SENTENCED FOR MURDERING, DISMEMBERING WIFE WHO DISAPPEARED ON NEW YEAR’S DAY 2023
When they got back, Serafini allegedly shot them both in the head, but Wood survived after being left for dead. However, she died by suicide in 2023.
Serafini was eventually found guilty of first-degree murder and attempted murder as well as first-degree burglary in 2025 after a trial that lasted weeks. In February, he was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
“Circumstantial case and I believe that the circumstantial stuff that they had was just making up a story. They had no proof, no anything,” he told Morrison.

Dan Serafini of Italy delivers a pitch during a World Baseball Classic game against Canada at Rogers Centre in Toronto on March 9, 2009. (Tom Szczerbowski/Getty Images)
Serafini also felt the jury didn’t like him for the way he was acting in court, though he alleges he was just following his lawyers’ advice.
“They just didn’t like me, they didn’t like my lifestyle,” Serafini explained. “They didn’t like the way I acted in court, which I didn’t act any way. I sat there like I was supposed to because my lawyers told me to [not] react, [not] respond. ‘Sit there like nothing’s bothering you.’ And I did. And I got crucified for it.”
The full “Dateline” special with Serafini will air on Friday night.

Dan Serafini #50 of the Cincinnati Reds throws a pitch against the Pittsburgh Pirates at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati, Ohio, on Sept. 11, 2003. (Andy Lyons/Getty Images)
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Serafini was a first-round draft choice by the Twins in 1992, eventually making his major league debut in 1996. He allowed five runs on seven hits, including a home run, and two walks across 4.1 innings.
Serafini also played for the Chicago Cubs, San Diego Padres, Pittsburgh Pirates, Cincinnati Reds and Colorado Rockies in his seven years in the big leagues.
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Will Rohit Sharma play next IPL game? Mumbai Indians share injury update | Cricket News
MUMBAI: In a big blow to the Mumbai Indians, already reeling after three straight defeats, their former captain and star opener Rohit Sharma is set to miss the team’s fifth match of IPL 2026 against Punjab Kings at the Wankhede Stadium due to a recurrence of a hamstring injury, TOI has learnt.Rohit sustained the injury during Mumbai Indians’ previous clash against Royal Challengers Bengaluru at the same venue. Providing an update ahead of the pre-match press conference, addressed by Naman Dhir, an MI spokesperson said, “The medical staff is assessing him. An official update will be given when available.” During the team’s training session later in the evening, Rohit was seen jogging at the Wankhede Stadium.
The MI spokesperson also confirmed that England allrounder Will Jacks, who has not featured in the IPL so far, “is on his way and will join the team soon.”Rohit picked up the injury during the second innings against RCB and retired hurt in the sixth over of the chase. MI went on to lose the match, their third defeat in four games this season. He walked off after scoring 19 off 13 balls, with two fours and a six, following a lengthy on-field treatment by the team physio before a delivery by Rasikh Salam.Teammate Sherfane Rutherford said after the game, “I’m not entirely sure yet – perhaps it’s a bit of a hamstring issue – but I can’t say for certain. I was in the dugout, so I don’t have much information on it.”Rohit, who recently completed 15 years with MI, has scored 137 runs in four matches, including a half-century. However, the 38-year-old has had a history of hamstring issues, having missed games in IPL 2020 and parts of the 2016-17 season due to similar injuries.
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‘There’s a lot of excitement’: Vancouver mayor Ken Sim explains desire for MLB expansion bid
Could now be the perfect time to add another Major League Baseball franchise north of the border? Vancouver mayor Ken Sim seems to think so.
A day after announcing the intention to bring a motion to city council aiming to bring an MLB team to Vancouver, Sim joined Sportsnet’s Blair & Barker to discuss why the time is right and why the city is right.
“I can tell you, our council, the councillors in my party are very excited about it,” Sim said. “But there is a lot of excitement.
“You look at what happened last year with the magical run that the Jays had, you could tell there’s a huge appetite (for baseball) right across this country, and specifically in Vancouver,” Sim said, referring to the popularity of the Toronto Blue Jays and baseball as a whole in the city, particularly during the team’s run to the World Series last year.
“Vancouver’s right, and we want to make that when this opportunity comes up, we’re not flat-footed. We’re being proactive as a city council to make sure that … we have our ducks in a row. That we’re not the bottleneck that stops a team from coming to Vancouver.
Sim is set to put forth the motion on April 22, and although MLB hasn’t clearly expressed that expansion is in the works, the mayor says the intention for the time being is to make sure the city is prepared for when it is.
Commissioner Rob Manfred has mentioned that he would like to grow the league to 32 teams, saying in January that “I would like to expand. I think 32 would be good for (MLB),” and that he would like to set the wheels in motion before his term ends in January 2029, when he has made it clear he will retire.
“I truly believe in being proactive. These are short windows, and at the end of the day, one of the big reasons why we have to wrap this up as a city is we have to show Major League Baseball that Vancouver is a credible location and the city’s on board,” Sim said. “This is part of keeping it on the commissioner’s timeline.”
Although he’s taken only the first few steps toward possible expansion to the city, Sim believes that, should the motion go through, Vancouver would stand a good chance at locking down a team because of its unique geography.
“We’re the gateway to Asia, and so we could actually be quite strategic for Major League Baseball as they’re looking at expanding in other markets digitally,” he said. “We’re unique in Vancouver. (We have) a lot of (things) the other cities that are looking for expansion teams just don’t have.”
Additionally, Manfred said in an interview with Sportsnet in October that “another city in Canada clearly could work for us,” when he was asked about the possibility of expansion to Vancouver.
Before anything concrete comes together, however, a few key details will have to be hammered out. For one, Sim said that no location for a potential new stadium has been decided and that he’s “leaving it up to the bidders.”
“Any party that puts in an expression of interest — show us where they want the location and show us how they’re going to fund it, and show us why it’s gonna be great to not only win the bid, but also why it would be great for the residents of Vancouver and the region and Western Canada,” Sim said.
Sim made it clear that the city won’t allocate public funding in the form of subsidies or tax breaks, and will instead put that in the hands of any interested parties. Rather, he hopes that putting the motion forward will give potential bidders the opportunity to “put their name in the hat and show us why they should be the partner,” in an effort to show MLB that both the city and the interested party are working in tandem, should the window for expansion open.
“We’re looking for parties to show us where they’re at right now, where their interest lies, and how they’re gonna do it,” Sim said. “And then, from there, we can start fleshing this out and have a credible bid presented in front of Major League Baseball.”
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