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SAN DIEGO — Juan Soto and Josh Hader absorbed most of the attention, but Brandon Drury and Josh Bell were in-season acquisitions of similar importance to the San Diego Padres — a belief further emphasized by Fernando Tatis Jr.’s ensuing suspension. Bell and Drury represented key power bats in the middle of the lineup, a key source of protection for Soto and Manny Machado. And on Wednesday, with the Padres in desperate need of a victory, their bats finally came alive.

Drury and Bell, struggling all postseason and for most of their Padres tenure, combined for five hits and drove in five runs in Game 2 of the National League Championship Series, keying an 8-5 come-from-behind victory over the Philadelphia Phillies to earn a split from Petco Park.

The Padres found themselves in a four-run hole midway through the second inning and clawed all the way back, an exceedingly rare triumph for this time of year. Before Wednesday, teams that trailed by four or more runs at any point in an LCS game were 12-268, which amounts to a .043 winning percentage. The Padres themselves were 1-16 in their postseason history, but they had recency on their side. They came back from down four runs during their last trip to the postseason in 2020, in Game 2 of their wild-card series against the St. Louis Cardinals. And they strung together a five-run seventh inning to overcome a three-run deficit and eliminate the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 4 of the NL Division Series four days ago.

“We’re trying to extend every at-bat,” said Padres catcher Austin Nola, who helped ignite a five-run fifth inning with a hit off his brother. “We’re trying to get to the next one. That’s kind of what we’re doing right now. Get to the next pitch, and then eventually you’re going to get to the next guy and keep this thing rolling, getting a good rally.”

Padres manager Bob Melvin made what appeared to be a small lineup change heading into Game 2, benching Wil Myers, who provided superior defense at first base, and moving Jake Cronenworth up to the cleanup spot. Drury and Bell, who had combined for a .105/.128/.184 slash line through the Padres’ first eight postseason games, would hit fifth and sixth, respectively. And they came through when the Padres most desperately needed a lift.

The Phillies had compiled four runs off Blake Snell in the most unlikely of ways, stringing together four softly hit singles, benefiting from a fly ball Soto lost in the sun and scoring another run on a sharp grounder that was booted by Drury at first base. Aaron Nola, who had yet to allow an earned run in these playoffs, was toeing the rubber. A 2-0 lead in this series — with up to three games to follow in Philadelphia — seemed well within the Phillies grasp.

Then Drury led off the bottom half and lined the second pitch he saw, a chest-high fastball, over the fence in left field.

“I was trying to get a big inning going,” Drury said during an on-field interview. “He left a fastball over the middle and I just took a good swing on it.”

On the next pitch — another fastball, this one up and in — Bell hit a towering blast out to right, cutting the Phillies’ lead in half and injecting life into a sold-out crowd of 44,607. Three innings later, in the bottom of the fifth, the Padres sent 11 batters to the plate and accumulated five runs. Three of the first four batters reached, and then Soto tied the score with an RBI double into the right-field corner. Drury came up later against Brad Hand, with the bases loaded and two outs, and smoked a two-run single to left-center. Bell followed with a run-scoring single down the right-field line. By that point, Drury and Bell had combined for as many hits through the first five innings of one game (four) as they had through the entire postseason.

“Those guys are here for a reason, and they all have track records,” Melvin said. “You look at their numbers over the course of this year, and they’re all good. Those are the guys we’re going to keep running out there.”

The Padres’ win was a by-product of so much more than just Drury and Bell. It was Snell hanging tough after a 37-pitch second inning, finding a way to record 15 outs to turn the game over to the Padres’ best high-leverage relievers. It was Soto, who had been hitting the ball hard all month but didn’t have much to show for it, atoning for a missed fly ball with a key hit. It was Machado clobbering a 424-foot home run in the seventh, then starting a slick double play with the Phillies threatening and Bryce Harper up in the next half-inning. And, most memorably, it was Nola conquering his younger brother.

The Padres had one on and one out, still trailed by a couple of runs, and Austin Nola faced an 0-2 count against Aaron Nola, with their parents nervously watching from the stands.

“I feel like every time I face my brother I’m 0-2,” Austin Nola said. “He’s always ahead of me, and I’m always fighting back just trying to get some barrels somewhere.”

This time, Austin — in the first sibling matchup of pitcher versus batter in postseason history — executed a perfect run-and-hit. Ha-Seong Kim took off for second base in an attempted steal, Phillies second baseman Jean Segura shifted over to cover and Austin lined a base hit through a vacated right side, allowing Kim to score all the way from first and ultimately igniting a major rally.

The Padres avoided what would have felt like a major deficit and now they’ll have one of their aces, Joe Musgrove, lined up for Game 3 in Philadelphia on Friday.

“We knew what we had to do,” Machado said in Spanish. “We had to win this game no matter what.”

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Jets’ Hellebuyck posts 1st playoff shutout since ’21

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Jets' Hellebuyck posts 1st playoff shutout since '21

The sea of white in Winnipeg chanted “M-V-P!” in unison during the Jets‘ Game 2 win over the Dallas Stars on Friday night. Goalie Connor Hellebuyck heard and appreciated those chants.

“It means a whole lot. I love this crowd. I love this city,” said Hellebuyck, who stopped 21 shots in Winnipeg’s 4-0 victory that evened their Western Conference semifinal series at 1-1.

It was Hellebuyck’s first playoff shutout since a 1-0 blanking of the Edmonton Oilers in the first round in 2021, and the fourth postseason shutout of his career. Hellebuyck led the NHL with eight shutouts in the regular season, which helped him become a finalist for the Hart Trophy as league MVP and for the Vezina Trophy as the NHL’s top goaltender, an award he won last season and in 2020.

Prior to Friday night, he had not been that same goaltender in the postseason.

Considered by many the best netminder in the world, Hellebuyck was the worst goalie statistically in the 2025 Stanley Cup playoffs entering Game 2. He was 4-4 with an .836 save percentage, the lowest for any goalie with at least three postseason games played. He was last in the playoffs through eight games with a minus-9.68 goals saved above expected. He had a 3.75 goals-against average as well, after sporting a GAA of 2.00 and a .925 save percentage in the regular season.

Yet the Jets’ faith in their goaltender never wavered.

“We rely on him. Sometimes too much. But he was incredible tonight,” said defenseman Josh Morrissey, who missed Game 1 against Dallas and most of Game 7 against St. Louis with an injury. “That’s what he does every night for us. He’s an incredible goaltender. He makes very difficult saves look very easy, routinely and often. You could tell he was feeling it tonight. When he’s feeling it like that, it gives the players in front of him a lot of confidence.”

Jets coach Scott Arniel said his goalie was “fantastic” in Game 2.

“Sometimes we take him for granted because he makes the hard look easy, but he had some acrobatic ones tonight,” Arniel said.

That was especially true in the second period. The Jets built a 2-0 lead in the first period on goals by Gabriel Vilardi and Nik Ehlers, whose shot deflected off the skate of Dallas defenseman Esa Lindell. Hellebuyck made nine saves in that opening frame.

“We pushed hard in the second to try and climb back in the game,” said Dallas coach Peter DeBoer. “Hellebuyck made some saves. We get one there, maybe the momentum shifts. But that was the game. He was a good. He was really good. We can always make it more difficult on him, but he was really good.”

After the game, Hellebuyck told Sportsnet that he believed he was back on his game after the shutout win.

“Now it’s locked in. We broke it down to build it back together,” he said. “I like where it’s at. I like where the team’s playing. I’m really excited for the series. It’s been fun.”

Whether the fun continues on the road for Sunday’s Game 3 is anyone’s guess.

Hellebuyck was a disaster in the Jets’ three games in St. Louis, giving up 16 goals on 66 shots (.758 save percentage) and getting pulled in each loss. In his past eight postseason road games, Hellebuyck is 1-7 with a .838 save percentage and a 5.19 goals-against average.

“We’re still playing hockey, and it’s May. That’s fun. It’s the best time of year, because you’ve dialed your game in all year long,” Hellebuyck said.

The Jets said they need to be better in front of their goalie on the road.

“It’s going to be a tough building. They grabbed home ice from us by winning Game 1,” Arniel said. “It’s [about] lessons learned. Take some of the things from that series. We know we have to do a lot of what we did tonight.”

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Ohtani’s blast caps 6-run 9th in wild Dodgers rally

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Ohtani's blast caps 6-run 9th in wild Dodgers rally

PHOENIX — Shohei Ohtani hit a three-run homer to cap a six-run ninth inning and the Los Angeles Dodgers rallied for a wild 14-11 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks on Friday night.

The Dodgers trailed 11-8 entering the ninth inning after blowing an early five-run lead.

Andy Pages and Enrique Hernandez hit consecutive run-scoring doubles to open the ninth inning against Kevin Ginkel (0-1). Max Muncy tied it at 11-11 with a run-scoring single and Ryan Thompson replaced Ginkel to face Ohtani.

It didn’t go well for Arizona.

Ohtani, who doubled twice, fell into a 1-2 hole before launching his 12th homer near the pool deck in right to put the Dodgers up 14-11. He finished with four RBIs.

Tanner Scott worked a perfect ninth save in 11 chances.

The Dodgers roughed up Eduardo Rodriguez to take an 8-3 lead through three innings, but couldn’t hold it.

Lourdes Gurriel Jr. hit a tying grand slam in the fifth inning, then Ketel Marte and Randal Grichuk hit solo shots off Alex Vesia (1-0) in the eighth to put Arizona up 11-8.

Pages finished with three RBIs and Hernández extended the Dodgers’ homer streak to 13 straight games with a solo shot in the second inning.

Marte homered twice for the Diamondbacks. Rodriguez allowed eight runs on nine hits in 2⅔ innings.

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Marchand’s OT score cuts Panthers’ deficit to 2-1

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Marchand's OT score cuts Panthers' deficit to 2-1

SUNRISE, Fla. — Brad Marchand scored on a deflected shot at 15:27 of overtime and the Florida Panthers beat the Toronto Maple Leafs 5-4 on Friday night to cut their deficit in the Eastern Conference semifinal series to 2-1.

Aleksander Barkov, Sam Reinhart, Carter Verhaeghe and Jonah Gadjovich scored for Florida, which got 27 saves from Sergei Bobrovsky. Evan Rodrigues had two assists for the Panthers. They 13-2 in their last 15 playoff overtime games.

John Tavares scored twice, and Matthew Knies and Morgan Rielly also scored for the Maple Leafs. Joseph Woll stopped 32 shots.

Game 4 will be in Sunrise on Sunday night.

Florida erased deficits of 2-0 and 3-1, and that’s been almost impossible to do against Toronto this season.

By the numbers, it was all looking good for the Maple Leafs.

  • They were 30-3-0 when leading after the first period, including playoffs, the second-best record in the league.

  • They were 38-8-2, the league’s third-best record when scoring first.

  • They had blown only 11 leads all season, none in the playoffs.

  • They were 44-3-1 in games where they led by two goals or more.

Combine all that with Toronto having won all 11 of its previous best-of-seven series when taking a 2-0 lead at home, Florida being 0-5 in series where it dropped both Games 1 and 2, and leaguewide, teams facing 0-2 deficits come back to win those series only about 14% of the time.

But Marchand — a longtime Toronto playoff nemesis from his days in Boston — got the biggest goal of Florida’s season, rendering all those numbers moot for now.

The Leafs got two goals that deflected in off of Panthers defensemen: Tavares’ second goal nicked the glove of Gustav Forsling on its way past Bobrovsky for a 3-1 lead, and Rielly’s goal redirected off Seth Jones’ leg to tie it with 9:04 left in the third.

Knies scored 23 seconds into the game, the second time Toronto had a 1-0 lead in the first minute of this series. Tavares made it 2-0 at 5:57 and just like that, the Panthers were in trouble.

A diving Barkov threw the puck at the night and saw it carom in off a Toronto stick to get Florida on the board — only for Tavares to score again early in the second for a 3-1 Leafs lead.

Florida needed a break. It came.

Reinhart was credited with a goal after Woll thought he covered up the puck following a scrum in front of the net. But after review, it was determined the puck had crossed the line. Florida had life, the building was loud again and about a minute later, Verhaeghe tied it at 3-3.

Gadjovich made it 4-3 late in the second, before Rielly tied it midway through the third.

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