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DENVER — Ryan McMahon drew a bases-loaded walk on a full-count, pitch-clock violation by Kyle Finnegan as the Colorado Rockies scored two runs in the ninth inning for an 8-7 victory over the Washington Nationals on Saturday night.

It was the first game decided by a pitch-clock violation in major league history. Nationals closer Finnegan leads the league with nine pitch-clock violations this season.

“I’m just trying to focus on the pitch and then location,” Finnegan said. “I thought I picked up the clock. I guess by the time I picked up and looked at the catcher and delivered the pitch, I was just a hair too late. Those situations, it just can’t happen. We deserved to win, and I wasn’t able to do my job.”

Colorado had four straight singles to open the ninth off Finnegan (2-4) to bring up McMahon, who fell behind 0-2. Hunter Goodman and Jake Cave singled to open the inning, and Brenton Doyle singled to tie it after fouling off two bunt attempts. Ezequiel Tovar hit a line single to right to load the bases. Finnegan had converted 21 of his previous 23 save chances.

“You hate to see a game decided that way, but I’m happy it worked out in our favor,” McMahon said. “I’m never looking [at the clock]. I’m letting the umpire do his job. I didn’t know what was going on until the umpire said something.”

The pitch clock was adopted in 2023, but the time between pitches with runners on base was shortened from 20 seconds to 18 this season.

“Kyle has had some trouble lately with the clock,” Washington manager Dave Martinez said. “It hadn’t really cost him to that point, but it’s something that we’ve kind of felt like might come back to haunt him at some point. He could have stepped off, but it’s a tough situation.

“That’s something that he has to be mindful of. He’s just slow. So it burned him today. Typically it hasn’t burned him.”

Luis Garcia hit two-run homer to give Washington a 7-5 lead in the eighth inning, and CJ Abrams had three hits including his 12th home run. The Nationals had won 10 of 13.

Abrams finished a triple short of the cycle while extending his hitting streak to 13 games. He had two RBIs and scored twice.

Brendan Rodgers, Goodman and McMahon homered for the Rockies, who tied it on Goodman’s homer in the seventh off Jacob Barnes. Goodman has five homers in the past eight games. McMahon had three hits, and his bases-empty homer in the eighth inning brought the Rockies within a run at 7-6.

“The Rockies and the Nationals are part of history,” Colorado manager Bud Black said. “How about that?”

Tovar had two hits, two walks and two runs. He scored on catcher Jacob Stallings‘ single in the first inning and on Rodgers’ three-run homer for a 4-2 lead in the third. Rodgers played his first game since June 7, when he suffered a hamstring injury. He hit cleanup for the eighth time this season.

Abrams and Lane Thomas singled in runs for a 5-4 lead in the seventh inning, but the Nationals ran themselves out of more when Abrams and Thomas were thrown out attempting to steal second. Thomas had two hits.

The Nationals are third in the majors with 104 stolen bases but have been thrown out a major league-high 38 times. Stallings threw out three of four Nationals runners attempting to steal, all at second.

“Getting thrown out is not going to stop us from being aggressive on the base paths,” Abrams said. “We’re going to keep doing what we are doing.”

Nationals starter Mitchell Parker gave up four runs and six hits while striking out eight, including the final five he faced. He had not given up more than three earned runs in any of his previous 12 starts.

Colorado starter Cal Quantrill gave up three runs and seven hits in six innings for his ninth quality start. He left with a 4-3 lead.

Washington left fielder Jesse Winker was ejected by plate umpire Hunter Wendelstedt after taking a called third strike for the second out in the fifth inning. Winker briefly argued with Wendelstedt at the plate and was ejected after going into the dugout, his sixth career ejection.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Rockies: RHP Jake Bird (groin tightness) was removed from the game after facing three batters in the seventh inning. … RF Sean Bouchard (back soreness) was replaced after three innings. … RHP German Marquez (Tommy John surgery) gave up one hit in four scoreless innings in a rehab start for Class A Spokane on Saturday. He struck out three, walked two and threw 50 pitches.

UP NEXT

Colorado LHP Kyle Freeland (0-3, 13.21 ERA) is expected to be activated from the injured list to make his fifth start Sunday, and first since April 14, after missing nine weeks a left elbow strain. He will oppose Nationals RHP Jake Irvin (5-6, 3.24).

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Lightning: Stamkos will officially ‘test’ market

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Lightning: Stamkos will officially 'test' market

The Tampa Bay Lightning cleared plenty of cap space Saturday, but apparently not to re-sign captain Steven Stamkos.

General manager Julien BriseBois said the team and Stamkos have decided to let the Lightning star hit unrestricted free agency on Monday. That’s after two trades on Saturday at the NHL draft that opened up significant salary cap space, as the Lightning sent defenseman Mikhail Sergachev ($8.5 million average annual value) to Utah and forward Tanner Jeannot ($2.665 million AAV) to the Los Angeles Kings.

CapFriendly now projects the Lightning to have $16.5 million in available cap space. There was plenty of speculation that the increased cap space was earmarked for a new contract for Stamkos, but that wasn’t the case.

BriseBois said he spoke with Stamkos’ agent, Don Meehan, on Saturday after the trades were made but did not increase the team’s offer to its star forward. Multiple reports claim that the Lightning have made a long-term offer to Stamkos but with an average annual value of only $3 million.

“The plan is for Steven to test the free agent market. Our respective positions haven’t changed following today’s trades. I understand that when you get this close to free agency it can be tempting to see what the market has to offer to you. That was a risk I was taking when I didn’t go to Steven a year early to try to lock him up and get a contract done,” BriseBois said.

The general manager also told Meehan that “it’s the best interest of our organization to explore all options in the coming days, whether it be via trades or by getting into free agency.”

There was heavy speculation at the draft in Las Vegas on Saturday that the Lightning could target Carolina Hurricanes winger Jake Guentzel in free agency, who is five years younger than Stamkos. The Hurricanes have been attempting to retain Guentzel but have yet to ink him to a new contract.

“We have this cap space. We can allocate it in different ways by either getting volume or quality. I don’t know yet how we’re going to do that. I know the priority is going to be to address our forward group,” BriseBois said.

Stamkos, 34, had been a key part of that forward group since the Lightning selected him No. 1 overall in the 2008 draft.

Stamkos has spent 16 seasons with the Lightning and is the club’s career leader in goals (555), points (1,137) and games (1,082). He has won two Stanley Cups (2020, 2021) with the franchise and has 50 goals and 51 assists in 128 playoff games.

This past season, Stamkos had 40 goals and 41 assists in 79 games. It marked the seventh time he has scored 40 or more goals. A seven-time All-Star, Stamkos also authored his first career four-goal game this past December.

Stamkos came close to becoming a free agent in 2016 before signing an eight-year, $68 million deal just before the start of free agency. But this time, he’s headed to the market.

“We have to see what’s best for the Lightning organization and Steven has to do what’s best for him, his career and his family,” BriseBois said. “So unless something changes between now and July 1 — and it doesn’t look like it will — then we will get to July 1.”

The Lightning also are hopeful of working out a contract extension with defenseman Victor Hedman, who has one season left on an eight-year, $63 million contract. Hedman, 33, had 13 goals and 76 points in 78 games this season, his 15th with the club.

“We’ve had discussions with Victor’s agents about an extension,” BriseBois said. “In his case, we have more runway before we have to get a deal done, as he still has one year left on his current agreement. That being said, the plan remains to be in a position to announce an agreement on a new contract for Victor in the coming days.”

Information from Field Level Media was used in this report.

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Maple Leafs acquire negotiation rights to Tanev

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Maple Leafs acquire negotiation rights to Tanev

The Toronto Maple Leafs acquired the signing rights to defenseman Chris Tanev in a trade with the Dallas Stars on Saturday, in exchange for a 2026 seventh-round draft pick and prospect Max Ellis.

Tanev, 34, is set to become an unrestricted free agent on July 1, and by grabbing his rights now from Dallas, the Maple Leafs have an exclusive opportunity to sign Tanev before he hits the open market.

Toronto rightly anticipated Tanev would have several suitors as a free agent. The veteran is a coveted right-shot defender who would instantly take on a top-pairing role for the Maple Leafs. Toronto has been desperate to match Morgan Rielly with a new partner and Tanev could be the right fit as a one-two punch with Rielly on the Maple Leafs’ back end.

The Maple Leafs had interest in getting Tanev at the March trade deadline as well but weren’t able to get a deal done. Tanev was instead traded from Calgary to Dallas, where he collected one goal and five points in 19 regular-season games while averaging nearly 20 minutes per game.

Toronto general manager Brad Treliving has a history with Tanev from their time together with the Flames from 2020 to when Treliving left Calgary’s general manager post in 2023. Treliving spoke about his team’s acquisition from the NHL draft in Las Vegas on Saturday, saying the Leafs wanted to “jump the queue” when it looked like Tanev wouldn’t be re-signing with the Stars.

“He’s an elite defensive player,” Treliving said. “He’s an absolute warrior. He’s a culture carrier for your room. I know the player well. We’ll get to work on [a contract] now and I’m at least excited to have an opportunity to speak directly with him.”

The Maple Leafs would be able to sign Tanev — who hails from the Toronto area — to a maximum seven-year deal.

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Sabres buy out Skinner with 3 years left on deal

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Sabres buy out Skinner with 3 years left on deal

Jeff Skinner‘s time with the Buffalo Sabres is over after general manager Kevyn Adams told reporters Saturday the club will buy out the veteran winger.

Skinner had three years remaining on an eight-year contract he signed in 2019 as a free agent that saw him earn $9 million annually.

Once the buyout has been completed, it will result in the Sabres having dead cap space on their books for six seasons. It will cost the Sabres $1.44 million in cap space in 2024-25, according to CapFriendly, a figure that will rise to $4.44 million in 2025-26 before increasing another $2 million to $6.44 million in 2026-27. It will then cost the Sabres $2.44 million over the next three years until coming off the books after the 2029-30 season.

With the buyout, the Sabres head into free agency, which kicks off Monday, with $31.743 million in available cap space.

The decision to buy out Skinner comes as the Sabres are trying to make the playoffs for the first time since the 2010-11 season when they lost in the first round to the Philadelphia Flyers.

One of the reasons why the Sabres signed Skinner to that eight-year deal was the belief he could help them get back into the postseason. A six-time 20-goal scorer who also had three 30-goal seasons with the Carolina Hurricanes, Buffalo hoped Skinner would give them a consistent goal-scoring threat.

He was just that in the first year of the deal. Skinner scored a career-high 40 goals while tying his previous career high of 63 points in 82 games. But the next few seasons would prove challenging as Skinner scored just 21 goals and 35 points over 112 games between the 2019-20 and 2020-21 seasons.

He bounced back to score 30 goals and 63 points in the 2021-22 season and another 35 goals and a career-high 82 points in 79 games during the 2022-23 season.

But the 32-year-old finished the 2023-24 season with 24 goals and 46 points for his third-fewest goals in his career when playing more than 64 games; his 46 points were the second fewest in a season in which he played more than 64 games.

Although the Sabres bought out Skinner, his production at a lower cost could result in him becoming an attractive option for a Stanley Cup contender in need of scoring depth at a certain price.

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