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Well, THAT was unexpected.

On the verge of being swept in the 2024 Stanley Cup Final, the Edmonton Oilers dominated the Florida Panthers en route to a 8-1 victory in Game 4. The series now heads back to Sunrise, Florida, with the Panthers looking for the “gentleman’s sweep” (winning in five games).

There were many notable events in this one, including Connor McDavid and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins scoring goals for the first time all series, and Sergei Bobrovsky being pulled for the first time all postseason.

We’re here to break it all down for you. Here are our grades for both teams, along with takeaways that stuck out the most, key players to watch for Game 5 and the big questions left unanswered prior to Game 5 (8 p.m. ET, ABC/ESPN+).

Panthers grade: C-

Florida was probably due for a dud. The Panthers had been on a dominant run through the playoffs — they entered Game 4 on a six-game win streak — and looked tired out from the start.

Sergei Bobrovsky had been the Panthers’ backbone, and even he couldn’t salvage anything for Florida, being pulled after allowing five goals midway through the contest.

The Panthers’ special teams let them down, with goals allowed while shorthanded and on the power play, and Edmonton’s star skaters vastly outplayed Florida’s top shooters, who failed to appear on the scoresheet.

It was the sort of game Florida has to try to flush, without allowing how poorly they showed up overall to leak into their next matchup.


Oilers grade: A+

Edmonton finally woke up in Game 4. Unsurprisingly, the Oilers weren’t ready for their season to end.

Connor McDavid? Sensational. His four-point night earned the Oilers’ captain his 32nd assist of the postseason, breaking Wayne Gretzky’s previous NHL record for most helpers in a single playoff run.

Dylan Holloway tucked in two goals to help pad the Oilers’ lead, and prove how dangerous Edmonton can be when all its lines get rolling.

Stuart Skinner put on a fantastic performance in net, and the Oilers’ defense showed up to give Skinner enough support.

Couple all of that with some excellent special teams play — including one shorthanded and one power-play goal — and Edmonton truly put it all together to plant serious doubt in Florida’s mind about where the rest of this Cup Final is headed.

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Leon Draisaitl: ‘We did our job on the offensive side’

Leon Draisaitl recaps the Oilers’ magnificent 8-goal performance to stay alive and force a Game 5.


What we learned in Game 4

Sergei Bobrovsky’s first falter

Florida’s goaltending has been arguably its best asset in the Cup Final. But Bobrovsky is human, after all.

The Panthers’ goaltender was pulled in the second period of Game 4 after giving up five goals on 16 shots. And that was after Bobrovsky went into Saturday’s game with a .953 save percentage and 1.33 goals-against average in the Cup Final.

His save on Ryan McLeod late in the third period of Game 3 sealed the Panthers’ victory, and put them in position to win the Cup in Game 4. Florida’s lackluster defensive effort in front of Bobrovsky took a toll, and it ultimately made more sense to give Bobrovsky some rest ahead of another chance to clinch in Game 5.

Welcome to the series, Edmonton’s stars

The Oilers’ top skaters had been inundated with criticism over failing to have an impact through the Cup Final’s first three games. Well, consider that barrier breached.

McDavid had one goal and three points in the first two periods alone. Leon Draisaitl had two assists, Nugent-Hopkins had a goal and Darnell Nurse had another. For once, it was the stars churning out star-like performances to lift Edmonton to its first win of the series.

Whether it was fueled by desperation or just an inevitable waking of the Oilers’ sleeping giants, they couldn’t have picked a more critical moment to finally enter the proverbial chat.

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0:48

Connor McDavid scores his 1st Stanley Cup goal

Connor McDavid zips home his first Stanley Cup goal to give the Oilers a 4-1 lead in the second period.

When Florida’s bad, it’s bad

The Panthers had not allowed eight or more goals since Game 5 of the 2023 Cup Final when the Vegas Golden Knights lit the lamp nine times.

Suffice to say, Florida’s disjointed effort was a true anomaly, and one that’s hard to explain away.

The Panthers knew what was at stake in Game 4 — the Cup was, after all, in the building — and yet Florida appeared inept and out of sorts in a way the Panthers haven’t shown in some time. The way Edmonton capitalized off the rush and could pressure Florida from the slot area — when the Panthers had previously done an excellent job holding the Oilers off — were quick examples of Florida being thrown off. The question now is whether the Panthers stay that way or manage to get back on track.

Edmonton’s special teams can be a factor

It took until Game 4, but the Oilers’ power play finally found the gas pedal. That’s excellent news for Edmonton.

Florida gave the Oilers ample opportunity to test-drive their man advantage, and Edmonton went 1-for-6, a hardly impressive stat line until it’s taken in consideration with the Oilers’ total lack of success on the power play up until Nugent-Hopkins broke through.

Add to that a shorthanded goal from Mattias Janmark to open the scoring on Saturday, and that’s some serious confidence-boosting energy for Edmonton and their special teams prospects. Those units could well be the difference in a tough Game 5 to come — when the Oilers have to expect the Panthers will be desperate to redeem themselves.


Players to watch in Game 5

Sergei Bobrovsky, G, Panthers

Game 4 made it abundantly clear that as Bobrovsky goes, so do the Panthers. Therefore, seeing Bobrovsky bounce back in Game 5 will be paramount to Florida’s success in that contest.

The veteran netminder appeared light-hearted on the bench after being pulled on Saturday — even locating a puck and flipping it out to a Florida fan in the stands — and that’s a good sign he won’t let the debacle in Game 4 affect his confidence going forward. The Panthers will need him rejuvenated and ready to keep the Oilers’ stars from having another field day.

Connor McDavid, C, Oilers

It’s no coincidence that when McDavid got hot, so did the Oilers’ offense. While the tail end of Game 3 showed that Edmonton could push back when on the brink, it was when McDavid & Co. played to their full potential in Game 4 that the Oilers truly looked the best they have in the Cup Final.

The Oilers will have their backs against the wall from here to the end of this series and will mimic what urgency their captain brings to the fight. McDavid was feeding every linemate he could in Game 4 — on the power play, and at 5-on-5 — so it’s clear he recognizes the value in making everyone feel important. Channeling that all-for-one energy again could go a long way for Edmonton keeping this series going.


Big questions for Game 5

Are the floodgates open for Edmonton?

A worst-case scenario for Florida was Edmonton finding its legs offensively. The Oilers were lethargic up front early in the series, and that was something of which the Panthers clearly took advantage.

But Edmonton extracted some power from their play in the third period of Game 3, and it translated into a hot start in Game 4 that never died out. Is it a positive sign of what’s to come for Edmonton? Can the Oilers recreate that dominance again — and again — as the Cup Final moves along? Or will Florida’s projected counter-punch throw the Oilers back off track in Game 5? Now that the spark is lit for Edmonton, it’s on their top players to keep it alight from here.

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Oilers pouring it on as Ryan McLeod slaps home 8th goal

Ryan McLeod slaps home the goal to give the Oilers an 8-1 lead.

How will Florida respond to a lopsided loss?

The Panthers hadn’t lost a playoff contest by multiple goals since Game 1 of their second-round series against the Boston Bruins (which was a 5-1 defeat). In fact, Florida had lost only three games total since then, going into Game 4.

All in all, the Panthers don’t have much experience in the postseason with unfavorable one-sided outcomes or getting vastly outplayed across the board. That’s what happened on Saturday though, and now the Panthers have to show what they’re made of with a responsive effort in Game 5.

Florida knows it can’t let Edmonton steal too much momentum — or else. The Panthers have shown repeatedly in the playoffs that they can rally from disappointment — having not recorded consecutive losses the entire postseason — and that’s never been more critical a trait to have than it is now.

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Stanley Cup Final Game 7 mega-preview: What’s at stake, key players to watch, picks

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Stanley Cup Final Game 7 mega-preview: What's at stake, key players to watch, picks

It has all come down to this. After the Florida Panthers opened up a 3-0 lead on the Edmonton Oilers in the 2024 Stanley Cup Final, many believed the series to be all but over.

Then Connor McDavid and his friends outscored the Panthers by a combined score of 18-5 en route to tying the series up at three games apiece, becoming just the third team in NHL history to do so in the Stanley Cup Final.

Will the Oilers pull off the historic reverse sweep? Can the Panthers avoid ignominy? Here’s everything you need to know before puck drop tonight, including what’s at stake for each team, key players to watch and advanced matchup metrics from ESPN Stats & Information.

Jump ahead: What’s at stake?
Players to watch, picks
Key stats for Game 7

What’s at stake for the Panthers?

Reputation. And we’re not talking (underrated) Taylor Swift albums.

The Panthers had been afterthoughts for most of the franchise’s history. Florida lost in the 1996 Stanley Cup Final and then made just four playoff appearances — without winning a round — through the next 23 years. It was a team players aspired to join at the end of their careers, when it was more about the temperate climate and less about potential to win. And the Panthers were used to an arena filled with opposing fans capitalizing on their cheap tickets in a sunny locale not readily available in most hockey markets. A nice perk perhaps, but hardly a foundation upon which to build a thriving culture.

That’s what Florida has now, though. GM Bill Zito has methodically crafted the Panthers into a true top-tier contender. He turned Florida into a President’s Trophy winner and, when that didn’t translate to postseason success, had the courage to trade his club’s best player (Jonathan Huberdeau) for Matthew Tkachuk in a blockbuster swap that might have ended horribly for Florida. But it didn’t. Zito grabbed low-risk, high-reward players such as Gustav Forsling (off waivers) and Oliver Ekman-Larsson (post-buyout) who have played key roles for them in this dominant season. If last year’s run to the Final was a fluke, this year’s berth was anything but. Florida was supposed to be this good. The Panthers were meant to be at this pinnacle and provide it repeatedly with their play throughout the playoffs.

If they let this opportunity to be Cup champions slip away after holding a 3-0 lead in this series, that’s a dagger in more ways than one. Florida can write a chapter on its history now that even five years ago might have seemed like a pipe dream. The only question for the Panthers now is: Are you ready for it?


What’s at stake for the Oilers?

In a word, legacy. Edmonton is one of those places where winning just isn’t enough. There must be something additional about the way the team won.

The Oilers haven’t just won five Stanley Cups. They won five Stanley Cups in seven seasons. They didn’t simply have great players. They had some of the greatest players of all time, with one of them being the greatest to ever play hockey. Winning this particular Stanley Cup not only adds to their legacy, but enhances it even more. A franchise that has gone from being the standard to being in the cellar is now a win away from returning to the pinnacle; it’s a chance to pull off what would become the greatest comeback in NHL history, and maybe the greatest comeback in North American professional sports.

The more sobering truth is that this could be the Oilers’ best and/or possibly only chance to win a Stanley Cup with Leon Draisaitl and McDavid, because there is no guarantee they can get back to this position. Edmonton has gone through front office, coaching, personnel and philosophical changes to do everything possible to win with a pair of generational talents. Winning Game 7 and the Stanley Cup would prove all those decisions correct. Not that losing Game 7 and the Stanley Cup would condemn every aspect of the franchise’s path. But it would lead to more questions at a time in which Draisaitl is heading into the final year of his contract as he and McDavid enter their late 20s.

Winning Game 7 would give the Oilers an opportunity to say they won it regardless what happens going forward. Losing Game 7 would only make the path forward slightly more painful to navigate knowing they were this close. — Ryan S. Clark

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Messier, Subban lament ‘desperate’ display from Panthers

Mark Messier and P.K. Subban explain why the Panthers have become the desperate team as the series heads to Game 7.

Who is the one key player you’ll be watching for the Panthers?

Ryan S. Clark, NHL reporter: Sergei Bobrovsky. He went from being a win away from capturing his first Stanley Cup and a Conn Smythe, to now facing questions about what has gone wrong with both him and his teammates. Losing Game 7 and the Stanley Cup as a whole would not be entirely on Bobrovsky. The Panthers have struggled to defend their zone and haven’t provided the level of offensive support needed to help any goaltender. That said, Bobrovsky has also had his challenges that have compounded the Panthers’ problems. It all amounts to the fact that Bobrovsky, a two-time Vezina Trophy winner, would be one of the faces of a team that went from having a chance to sweep the Stanley Cup Final only to be on the other end of what would be one of the biggest collapses in sports history.

Victoria Matiash, NHL analyst: Carter Verhaeghe. Minus-11 through the past four games, he has one lonely assist since the series opener. Not so good. The top-line winger now has one contest remaining to save his team from suffering a legendary collapse and his own reputation as a clutch playoff performer. No one will remember the inferior numbers leading in if Verhaeghe manages to tangibly turn it around when it matters most.

Arda Öcal, NHL broadcaster: Gustav Forsling. As the Panthers have gone, so has Forsling. He was plus-4 in Games 1-3, minus-5 in Games 4-6. Will he be able to play that shutdown role in Game 7? Can he contain McDavid like he did in the first three games? Forsling will certainly get his flowers from hockey fans, even if his contributions might not receive the big headlines, but they certainly are important and critical to Florida’s success in Game 7 and ultimately raising the Stanley Cup.

Kristen Shilton, NHL reporter: Sam Reinhart. Reinhart has been noticeably missing in this Cup Final. One goal and two assists through six games — and zero points total in the past three when Florida had a chance to put Edmonton away? That’s shocking output from a skater who put up 57 goals in the regular season and produced 12 points in 17 postseason games prior to the Panthers facing the Oilers. Whatever has gone wrong for Reinhart so far, he’d better put it behind him in a hurry. Florida needs its best players to match what Edmonton has going from its stars in this series.

Greg Wyshynski, NHL reporter: Matthew Tkachuk. Welp, here we are. The chance for a superstar to have a superstar moment. Tkachuk tied with Aleksander Barkov for the team lead in scoring (22 points), but you can count on one hand the number of games in which Tkachuk was a driving force for Florida. We caught a glimpse of that player in the Panthers’ Game 5 loss: Throwing the body, defending brilliantly and factoring on two goals. That was sandwiched by two minus-3 efforts, including Game 6, when his line with Sam Bennett and Evan Rodrigues was a major dud. A playoff run that has been more compilation than clutch will be immediately rewritten by an impactful Stanley Cup Final Game 7. A broken sternum cost him this kind of chance in 2023 against Vegas. This is his moment.


Who is the one key player you’ll be watching for the Oilers?

Clark: Connor McDavid. The fact he didn’t have a single shot on goal in Game 6 is wild, given that he’s the game’s best and most dominant player. But it also speaks to how the Oilers can win even if he doesn’t record a shot or a point. We’ve seen the Oilers rely on their entire roster to force a Game 7. If they can get another multipoint performance from McDavid in addition to the secondary and tertiary offense they produced in Game 6, it could prove too overwhelming en route to winning their first Stanley Cup in more than 30 years.

Matiash: Leon Draisaitl. It would seem a bit bizarre to watch the Oilers hoist the Cup following a seven-gamer in which Draisaitl, even badly hobbled, didn’t score a single goal. Especially considering his postseason history and the handful of recent quality chances. One of his own past Panthers goaltender Bobrovsky, along with a helper similar to Friday’s perfect pass to Warren Foegele to open the scoring in Game 6, would go a long way to sealing the deal for Edmonton.

Öcal: The obvious answer here is McDavid, but I’ll go with Draisaitl. He has three assists this series, which is surprising by his lofty standards. The Oilers won their first game without McDavid registering a point or a shot in Game 6, but the Oilers also pushed this to Game 7 without Draisaitl being the second-best player on the team, which he usually is. He had flashes of his usual self Friday; what if Monday is “The Draisaitl Game”?

Shilton: Zach Hyman. We can’t say Hyman is underrated, per se. But he has 16 goals in the playoffs (the most by any active player in a single postseason), and he tends to light the lamp in a timely fashion to boot. That’s going to be key for Edmonton in Game 7. Florida will be zeroed in on containing McDavid and Draisaitl, which should continue to give Hyman opportunity to do his thing. If the Oilers need a consistent performance in any facet of the game, they can count on Hyman to deliver. And he’s just fun to watch.

Wyshynski: Stuart Skinner. ​​Were it not for McDavid rewriting the record books, Skinner would have a legitimate claim to the Conn Smythe Trophy for his late-series mastery in every round. Skinner has a 10-0 record, a 1.50 goals-against average and a .940 save percentage in Games 4-7 in the postseason. He’s 5-0 when facing elimination this postseason, only the eighth goalie to win five elimination games in a single postseason. In Edmonton’s past three wins, he has a 1.67 GAA and a .942 save percentage. Heck of a Mario Kart player, too.

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Zach Hyman credits Oilers ‘unshakeable belief’ after Game 6 win

Zach Hyman praises the Oilers’ resilience throughout the season that prepared them for the high stakes playoff moments.


The final score will be _____.

Clark: 4-3 Oilers. For one, that score line depicts the amount of games won by each team in the Cup Final. Even with that prediction, there are questions. The Oilers have averaged six goals over their past three games against the Panthers. Can they have another offensive outburst, or will the Panthers have finally found an answer? Then there’s another question facing the Panthers with this scenario: Can they create the sort of consistency that allows them to keep pace with the Oilers, or could they be forced to climb out of what would be another sizable deficit in Game 7?

Matiash: 4-2 Oilers. After picking the Panthers to win Games 5 and 6, I’m still marveling that we’re even in the position to prognosticate scores for the final-for-sure game of the season. But give Kris Knoblauch’s crew full credit for fully figuring out how to chisel its way back into this thing. The optimistic chatter flowing out of Florida’s camp — “feeling positive” and “feeling excited” were phrases uttered to the media — isn’t sounding as convincing as earlier. Understandably so, as the Panthers have been outscored 18-5 since taking a 3-0 series lead.

Öcal: 3-2 Oilers, in overtime. Because that’s what this series needs. It has been a surreal journey to get here. The cherry on top would be one goal to award the Cup.

Shilton: 4-3 Panthers, in overtime. Listen, it would not surprise me in the least if Edmonton pounds its way to a historic Cup victory here (and more power to them if that’s the case; what a ride it has been). After all, I thought (and predicted) the Panthers would close this thing out two games ago. But here we are in Florida’s building, where the Cup won’t be leaving this time until it’s cradled in the arms of a player who just won it. When you talk about big moments — of the career- or franchise-defining type — this is it. The Panthers have no excuse. For one last time I’m betting that gives Florida a whisper-thin edge over Edmonton.

Wyshynski: 5-2 Oilers. I thought the Panthers would close out this series in Game 6 because they thrive when being counted out and getting to play the underdog. So there’s always a chance they channel that at home in Game 7. But that would also require a reversal of fortune for 90% of their roster that has been outplayed by the Oilers for the majority of the series. This feels like Edmonton’s moment. This feels like Canada’s moment. The Oilers just sent this thing to a seventh game without needing McDavid to carry them there — that should scare the whiskers off the Panthers. Edmonton wins the Cup, makes sports history and bestows shame upon this Florida team.

Notes from ESPN Stats & Information

Game 7 fast facts:

  • Monday will be the 18th Game 7 in Stanley Cup Final history, and the first since 2019 (St. Louis Blues defeated the Bruins in Boston)

  • Road teams have won three straight Game 7s in the Stanley Cup Final; home teams are 12-5 all time.

  • The Oilers will play in their third Game 7 in the Stanley Cup Final (defeated Philadelphia Flyers in 1987, lost to Carolina Hurricanes in 2006).

  • Edmonton will be playing in its 13th playoff Game 7 in franchise history, and second this postseason (defeated the Vancouver Canucks 3-2 in Game 7 in the second round). The Oilers are 8-4 overall in playoff Game 7s.

  • The Panthers will be playing in the fourth Game 7 in franchise history (2-0 on road, 0-1 at home). The home loss was to the New Jersey Devils in the 2012 conference quarterfinals.

Past teams to come from down 0-3 to tie a series 3-3

More on the Oilers

  • Edmonton scored 18 goals over the past three games to even up the series, tied for the second-most goals in a three-game span in a Stanley Cup Final. The Oilers held the Panthers to five goals during that span, giving them a plus-13 goal differential in Games 4-6, tied with 1984 Oilers (plus-13 vs Islanders in Games 3-5 to close out the series) for the largest goal differential in a three-game span in Stanley Cup Final history.

  • The Oilers improved to 5-0 this postseason when facing elimination, the most such wins in a single postseason in franchise history and tied for the fourth most by any team in a single postseason. Only the 2014 Kings — who went 7-0 when facing elimination — have more wins without a loss in that situation a single postseason.

  • The Oilers have recent history across sports on their side. The last home win in Game 7 in the championship series for MLB, the NBA or the NHL was by the Miami Heat in 2013. That is six straight Game 7 wins by the road team (2019 World Series, 2019 Cup Final, 2017 World Series, 2016 World Series, 2016 NBA Finals, 2014 World Series). The current six-game losing streak in Game 7s across the World Series, NBA Finals and Cup Final by home teams is the longest ever. The previous long was four straight between May 1974 (Bucks lost to Celtics) and October 1979 (Orioles lost to Pirates). This is also the longest gap in terms of time. Game 7 on Monday will be 4,022 days since the Heat won at home in June 2013. The previous long gap was 3,286 days between Oct. 21, 1973 (Oakland Athletics beat New York Mets), and Oct. 20, 1982 (St. Louis Cardinals beat Milwaukee Brewers).

More on the Panthers

  • The Panthers are going for their first Stanley Cup title in their third attempt (lost in 1996 and 2023) and are one of 11 active franchises to not have won the Stanley Cup. They can become the fourth expansion team over the past 40 seasons to win the Stanley Cup, joining the Lightning (2004, 2020-21), Ducks (2007), and Golden Knights (2023).

  • With a win, Florida becomes the third team in the expansion era (post-1967) to win the Cup the year after losing in the Final, along with the 2009 Penguins and 1984 Oilers. Last season, the Panthers lost to the Vegas Golden Knights in five games, including a 9-3 blowout in the Cup clincher.

  • Overall, it’s the 18th Game 7 in Stanley Cup Final history, with the home team owning a record of 12-5. The past three have been won by the road team, with the Penguins winning at Detroit in 2009, the Bruins topping Vancouver in 2011 and the Blues beating Boston in 2019. Don’t expect a high-scoring contest. The most goals any team has scored in Game 7 of the Cup Final is four, done on five occasions, most recently by the Blues in 2019. The most combined goals in Game 7 of a Stanley Cup Final is seven in 1950 (Detroit 4, Rangers 3).

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Mets’ Diaz ejected for having foreign substance

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Mets' Diaz ejected for having foreign substance

CHICAGO — New York Mets closer Edwin Diaz is facing a 10-game suspension after he was ejected from Sunday night’s 5-2 win over the Chicago Cubs for having an illegal substance on his pitching hand.

Diaz, 30, was thrown out by crew chief Vic Carapazza before he took the mound in the bottom of the ninth inning.

“I touched his hand,” Carapazza said in a pool report after the game. “Grabbed his hand. The substance was extremely sticky. Discolored … it definitely wasn’t rosin and sweat. We’ve checked thousands of these. I know what that feeling is. This was very sticky.”

Diaz claimed he uses only rosin, sweat and dirt on his hands.

“I use the same thing, always,” he said. “I rub rosin, sweat and I put my hand in the dirt a little bit so I can have some grip on the ball. … I was really surprised because I didn’t have anything on my hand, glove or belt. They always check everything.”

Carapazza confirmed there were no sticky substances on Diaz other than on his hand, but that’s enough to get a player ejected. In recent years, Major League Baseball has cracked down on pitchers using foreign substances other than rosin because they allow for better grips and more spin on the ball.

Carapazza added that the Mets really didn’t argue the ejection or explain what happened.

“I told them I have a job to do,” Carapazza said. “We’re supposed to check it, and that was too sticky. I can’t ignore the substance that was on there.”

Diaz now faces an automatic 10-game suspension for use of an illegal substance. He can appeal but said he isn’t sure if he will.

“It’s tough to let my teammates down for 10 games,” Diaz said. “That sucks.”

Mets manager Carlos Mendoza lamented the loss of Diaz; by rule, the Mets have to play short a man for the length of the suspension.

“We have to move on,” Mendoza said. “Guys are going to have to step up.”

Drew Smith and Jake Diekman did that Sunday night, combining to pitch a scoreless ninth inning after Diaz was tossed as the Mets won for the ninth time in 11 games.

Diaz has struggled this season, with just seven saves and a 4.70 ERA. He missed all of last season with a knee injury suffered while celebrating a Puerto Rico win in the World Baseball Classic, and spent about two weeks on the injured list this season with a shoulder issue before being reinstated June 13.

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Bell victorious at New Hampshire, uses rain tires

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Bell victorious at New Hampshire, uses rain tires

LOUDON, N.H. — Christopher Bell raised a broom over his head and clutched a 24-pound lobster in victory lane all because he earned his third Cup win of the season in an outcome that would have been impossible before this NASCAR season.

Heck, it still looked pretty grim for most of Sunday at a rainy track.

Once the skies cleared, NASCAR busted out its latest creation it had saved for a rainy day — wet weather Goodyear tires that allowed the race at New Hampshire Motor Speedway to continue all the way to a thrilling end.

Bell mastered the Cup Series’ first race that ended with cars running on rain tires and pulled away after a 2-hour, 15-minute weather delay to beat darkness and the field and win Sunday at New Hampshire.

He also swept the weekend at New Hampshire following Saturday’s win in the Xfinity Series.

“Hopefully that was entertaining because it was something different, something new, and nobody knew what to expect and what to do,” Bell said. “The guys that figured it out the quickest were the most successful.”

On Friday, Bell spoiled the reveal that Chase Briscoe is joining him at Joe Gibbs Racing in 2025. Then he ruined Briscoe’s best shot at his first win of the season, holding him off over the final two laps of the overtime finish.

With darkness falling, Bell cruised past Josh Berry and Briscoe and remained the driver to beat at New Hampshire. He has four wins in the Xfinity Series at Loudon and won a Cup race at the track for a second time.

This time, he won with 86 laps raced on the new tires.

“It was dark. It was very, very dark. That was creeping up in a hurry to being too dark to race,” Bell said. “Certainly there were dry parts on the track, but there were still a lot of wet parts on the track, too. I can’t tell you how far away it was, but in my opinion I didn’t think it was ready for the dry tires yet.”

Bell was used to the rain — he won last month’s rain-shortened Coca-Cola 600 with 151 laps left in the race.

New Hampshire actually needed four extra laps. Briscoe was second and Berry third. Kyle Larson and Chris Buescher completed the top five.

“I think we could have probably started with the track a little bit wetter,” Briscoe said. “The beginning was pretty fun. We were all over the place. Five wide at times and slipping and sliding around.”

Even with the start of the race bumped up a half-hour, New Hampshire was a mess about from the moment the green flag was dropped. The race was marred by wrecks that wiped some of NASCAR’s biggest stars out of contention — all while the rest of the field tried to remain in contention and beat the looming rain that hovered over the entire weekend.

Tyler Reddick, who won at Talladega this season, held the lead when the race was red-flagged because of rain with 82 laps left in the scheduled 301-lap race.

Fans fled the grandstands and drivers went back to their motorhomes with seemingly no chance of a return as the gloomy weather worsened. New Hampshire and NASCAR waited out a tornado watch, nearby lightning strikes and a severe thunderstorm warning before it could resume the race after a delay of more than 2 hours – and after crew members swept standing water off pit road – and cars all hit the 1.058-mile track on new tires.

NASCAR let teams use wet-weather tires for the only second time in a points race this season. Teams had a maximum of four sets of wet-weather tires to race on the damp oval track. Teams had to take rain tires during pit stops and their position could not be affected.

They also had no choice of tire.

They were also no match for Bell in his No. 20 Toyota for Joe Gibbs Racing.

Oh, as for that spoiler that Briscoe was headed to JGR, Gibbs said all was forgiven.

“Somebody asked me about that in the winner’s circle, and I said, ‘Christopher Bell can do anything he wants,'” Gibbs said with a laugh.

Busch’s woes Kyle Busch‘s dismal day ended with his Chevy getting towed off the track.

Busch hit the wall running the caution laps to end his race and continue what is shaping up as the worst season of his Cup career. Busch had already tagged the wall just past the halfway point and was running 24th late in the race when he was collected in another wreck. He finished 35th in yet another rough outing this season driving for Richard Childress Racing.

A two-time Cup champion with 231 NASCAR wins, Busch has yet to win a race this season driving for RCR. Busch raised some eyebrows last week when he suggested he would be open to returning to two of his former Cup teams, though he said he remained committed to RCR next season.

The 39-year-old Busch is on a 39-race winless drought. It’s the worst losing streak of his career.

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