Author: rb809rb

  • James Harden and the honeymoon stage: The Cavaliers are rolling, but can the good times last?

    There is no doubt, for now, the Cleveland Cavaliers are better with James Harden.

    “Bringing James on has given us a renewed confidence, if that makes sense,” Cavs coach Kenny Atkinson told reporters Tuesday, when his charges whooped the New York Knicks 109-94. “We understand that we’re a better team, and that spirit — that confidence, it for some strange reason makes you play harder and compete harder. And compete harder defensively.

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    “And I felt like we were kind of missing that edge, that belief, so I feel like we’re regaining that.”

    We probably should have anticipated this, if we weren’t on the record with it already. This is what happens when Harden joins a new team. He makes his new team better. For a period.

    The question is whether the Cavs can capitalize in the meantime. How long that meantime lasts, as Harden turns 37 years old in August, was the risk Cleveland’s front office ran when it dealt 26-year-old two-time All-Star Darius Garland for a member of the NBA’s 75th anniversary team.

    When Harden left the Houston Rockets for the Brooklyn Nets a few weeks into the 2021-22 season, the Nets won 32 of 41 games upon landing him, at one point winning 14 of 15, with a historic offense for its time. And then he strained his hamstring, an injury he blamed, in part, on poor conditioning, which ultimately aided in their downfall during his one playoff run in Brooklyn.

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    When Harden essentially demanded a trade from the Nets to the Philadelphia 76ers the following season, they won their first five games with him in uniform, finishing 14-7 down the stretch, before he flamed out in the second round of the playoffs against the Miami Heat.

    They fared no better the following season, when Harden once again failed to meet his highest standard as a series’ stakes increased, as his Sixers lost a seven-game set to the Boston Celtics.

    When the long-term contract offer he desired never came, Harden called Philly executive Daryl Morey “a liar” and sought a trade to the Los Angeles Clippers. He helped deliver a pair of 50-win seasons, only to lose consecutive first-round series to the Dallas Mavericks and Denver Nuggets.

    Harden has played in nine Game 6s or 7s since leaving the Rockets, and his scoring averages in those contests — 16 points on 38.1% shooting — are of serious concern, if you believe in track records. After all, Harden’s playoff performances in big games were no different for the Rockets.

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    Then again, Harden helped get his teams to those big games, and in Cleveland they are hoping Donovan Mitchell can carry them home once they get there. And early returns suggest they can get there. They are 6-1 since scoring Harden, including wins over the Knicks, Nuggets and red-hot Charlotte Hornets. Their lone loss came against the mighty Oklahoma City Thunder.

    Harden has helped transform Cleveland’s offense from a solid outfit (117.6 points per 100 possessions) to an elite one (121.7) in a small sample size. This is no different from his efforts for the Nets, 76ers and Clippers. He is one of the great offensive talents in the game’s history.

    There is no doubt the Cavs belong among the Eastern Conference’s elite once again. They are now tied with New York for the East’s third-best record, trailing only the Celtics and Detroit Pistons. It would be a shock if those teams were not the conference’s final four standing.

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    But are any of those teams really scared of Cleveland in the second round? That is precisely where the Celtics and Indiana Pacers have stopped the Cavaliers in each of the past two years.

    The Cavs are exhibiting some of the same traits that past Harden-led teams have shown. While the offense is elite in the regular season, they are playing slower and passing less often, so any slippage in efficiency, which often occurs in the playoffs, is only magnified in fewer possessions.

    In that same small sample size, Harden’s defensive on/off numbers are the worst in the NBA, according to Cleaning the Glass, as opponents have been 21.6 points per 100 possessions better on offense when Harden is on the floor. He was not much better for the Clips in a larger sample size, as opponents’ scoring increased by 7.9 points per 100 possessions when he was on the floor. He is, essentially, a defensive liability, and we have known this for some time, too.

    The Cavaliers traded for Harden with the belief that they can mask that, as well, as both Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen are rim-protecting forces. With Mobley, Allen and Dean Wade on the court, Cleveland is allowing 101.5 points per 100 possessions, almost five points better than the league’s best defense, regardless of who is on the court with them, per Cleaning the Glass.

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    But did the Cavaliers really trade a young star for Harden, only to hope that Mitchell can mask his inefficiencies on offense in the highest-leverage situations and Allen and Mobley can make up for his deficiencies on defense? Absolutely not. They traded for Harden not only to get back to the second round of the playoffs, but to advance further — and compete for a championship.

    They traded for Harden to come through when it matters most, and the next time he does may be the first. There is beauty in this honeymoon stage, as every team enters its partnership with Harden believing this time will be different, only to be disappointed in the end. Will this time be different? We will not know until the playoffs. Enjoy the love for him in Cleveland while it lasts.

  • March Madness 2026: Biggest college basketball futures wagers still alive

    The calendar is about to flip to March, which means that college basketball conference tournaments and March Madness are right around the corner. Last year, all four No. 1 seeds reached the Final Four, culminating in the Florida Gators winning the title 65-63 over the Houston Cougars.

    Both of those teams will be back in the tournament again this year, but it’s the No. 3-ranked Michigan Wolverines (+375 at BetMGM) that are the current favorites to cut down the nets. The Wolverines (26-2) had been ranked No. 1 before losing 68-63 to the Duke Blue Devils on Saturday. Duke is now the nation’s top-ranked team, and second favorite at BetMGM at +425. The second-ranked Arizona Wildcats (+450) and fifth-ranked Houston Cougars (+950) are the only other teams with single-digit odds.

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    Houston is the biggest liability to win the NCAA championship at BetMGM, thanks in large part to a $50,000 wager on the Cougars at +900 odds.

    There will be plenty of large wagers between now and Selection Sunday, but here are the biggest reported futures wagers at legal sportbooks:

    Biggest NCAA championship futures bets (by liability)

    1. $1,000 on Miami (OH) RedHawks to win NCAA title at 500-1 odds (Caesars)

    Bet wins $500,000

    2. $50,000 on Houston Cougars to win NCAA title at +900 odds (BetMGM)

    Bet wins $450,000

    3. ~$59,025 on Duke Blue Devils to win NCAA title at +700 odds (DraftKings)

    Bet wins ~$413,175

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    • Bet was $80,740 Canadian Dollars on Duke

    4. $25,000 on Houston to win NCAA title at 11-1 odds (BetMGM)

    Bet wins $275,000

    T-5. $50,000 on Arizona Wildcats to win NCAA title at +450 odds (BetMGM)

    Bet wins $225,000

    T-5. $25,000 on UConn Huskies to win NCAA title at +900 odds (BetMGM)

    Bet wins $225,000

    7. $10,000 on Houston to win NCAA title at 14-1 odds (DraftKings)

    Bet wins $140,000

    8. $10,000 on UConn to win NCAA title at 10-1 odds (DraftKings)

    Bet wins $100,000

  • Miami edge rusher Rueben Bain Jr., a likely top-5 pick, says he believes he’s the best player in NFL Draft

    A big topic for many NFL teams entering the draft is how much a prospect loves football.

    Miami edge rusher Rueben Bain Jr. will speak their language.

    Bain is one of the players in play to be the second overall pick of the NFL Draft to the New York Jets, along with Ohio State linebacker Arvell Reese and a few others. One theme Bain kept mentioning during his media availability at the NFL scouting combine on Wednesday was how dedicated he is to football.

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    In fact, he said he doesn’t really care about anything else.

    “I eat, sleep and breathe football. That’s all I do,” Bain said at the podium, via Chat Sports. “I don’t have no other hobbies, no other real interests outside of football.”

    That attitude will appeal to teams near the top of the draft. Bain also has the talent to match that mindset, which is why he’s in play for the second overall pick of the draft (in the latest mock draft from Yahoo Sports’ Nate Tice, Bain is projected to go second to the Jets).

    Rueben Bain Jr. speaks to the media during the NFL scouting combine. (Photo by Justin Casterline/Getty Images)

    Rueben Bain Jr. speaks to the media during the NFL scouting combine. (Photo by Justin Casterline/Getty Images)

    (Justin Casterline via Getty Images)

    Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza will almost certainly go first overall in the draft, because quarterbacks are in higher demand than edge rushers. But Bain could go second, and it would be a surprise if he falls out of the top five.

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    Bain said he doesn’t care where he goes, but he said he believes he’s the best player in the draft.

    “No matter where I go, I don’t really care for the number,” Bain said. “I just know whatever team ends up picking me will get the best out of me, will get the best player in the draft in my opinion.”

    Bain plays with power, which helped him win ACC Defensive Player of the Year with 9.5 sacks for the Hurricanes. He mentioned his versatility as a plus.

    “I say I’m a football player, I’m not a pass rusher,” Bain said.

    The one knock against Bain might be his arm length. He was asked often about the notion that his arms aren’t long enough at the combine, but he said he hasn’t heard that directly from teams.

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    “None of the teams seem to be too concerned with it,” Bain said. “As long as I just talk the talk, walk the walk, play with technique, nobody really asked me about it.”

    The intangibles with Bain could help him in the draft process. He spoke a few times about his work ethic, and also mentioned his football IQ. He said when he meets with teams it has been comfortable due to his knowledge of the game.

    “I came in knowing what to talk about and what to say, knowing football like the back of my hand, knowing football like my last name,” Bain said.

  • Yahoo Fantasy x Arena Club Basketball Slab Packs Week 18 drop – Luka Dončić KABOOM! Horizontal among chase cards

    We’re back hoops fans with another Yahoo Fantasy x Arena Club drop for Week 18. Yahoo Fantasy Basketball Slab Packs are a brand-new weekly drop featuring real, graded trading cards of the hottest fantasy performers in the NBA.

    If you’re new to Arena Club, here’s the lowdown. Arena Club is the premier online marketplace for sports cards, giving collectors a way to rip packs virtually, buy and sell graded cards and track their entire collection — all in one place. Whether you’re in it for the hobby, the thrill or the chase, Arena Club brings the excitement directly to your screen.

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    [Rip your exclusive Yahoo Fantasy + Arena Club slab pack here]

    Each week, Arena Club curates real, graded NBA cards and builds two types of Yahoo Fantasy Slab Packs:

    Every pack contains a graded card of an active NBA player — but the real treasure is the weekly Chase Cards, featuring some of the top fantasy basketball performers from the past week. These limited-edition hits can reach values up to 20x the cost of the pack.

    Weekly NBA Slab Packs go live every Wednesday at 1 p.m. ET and remain available through Friday at 1 p.m. ET (or until they’re gone). It’s the ultimate mid-week boost for fantasy hoopers and collectors alike.

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    To top it off, use promo code YAHOO at checkout for 20% off your first slab pack or card purchase on ArenaClub.com or the Arena Club app.

    Rip a slab pack today for a chance to pull one of the week’s biggest fantasy basketball stars:

    Nikola Jokić, Nuggets

    Jokić has been working his way back from a knee injury the past month or so and has been more passive on offense. He’s back to his old ways with back-to-back games of 30+ points, including a 35-20-12 line for 94 fantasy points in High Score vs. the Dubs to close out last week.

    Anthony Edwards, Timberwolves

    Ant Man is on another scoring binge with 30+ points in seven of his past 10 games. The T-Wolves remain well-positioned to make the playoffs and avoid the play-in tourney.

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    Victor Wembanyama, Spurs

    Looking 100%, Wemby is back to being more consistent on the fantasy end, posting at least 52 fantasy points in five straight games in Yahoo High Score. San Antonio is on a nine-game heater as a result and eyeing the top seed in the West, trailing the Thunder by just 3.0 games.

    Kevin Durant, Rockets

    KD and the Rockets suffered a tough two-point loss to the Knicks at The Garden last weekend with the forward dropping a game-high 30 points.

    Luka Dončić, Lakers

    Dončić wasn’t very active during All-Star Weekend due to a nagging hamstring issue. He’s played in three straight games since, one of those outings a 38-point effort in a win over the rival Clippers.

    Weekly Drops. Real Cards. Real Value. Real Thrill.

    With new cards releasing every week based on real fantasy performance, the Yahoo Fantasy x Arena Club partnership delivers a constantly refreshing lineup of NBA stars — and the chase cards you’ll be talking about all season.

    Don’t miss this week’s release.

    Rip your slab pack, hit a chase card, and upgrade your collection today!

    [Get your Yahoo Fantasy Basketball Slab Pack now]

  • For the Love of the Game: Mara Brock Akil Recalls Her Rise Through 1990s TV Before Creating ‘Girlfriends,’ ‘Being Mary Jane,’ ‘Forever’

    For the Love of the Game: Mara Brock Akil Recalls Her Rise Through 1990s TV Before Creating ‘Girlfriends,’ ‘Being Mary Jane,’ ‘Forever’

    Mara Brock Akil remembers the moment she gained the confidence to become a showrunner with the precision of someone who has turned it over in her mind a few thousand times.

    She was not long out of Northwestern University, working as a writer’s trainee on the buzzy Fox dramedy “South Central” in 1994. The series, from writer-producers Ralph Farquhar and Michael J. Weithorn, attracted a hotshot writing staff — and on this afternoon all but one of them were preoccupied with other projects.

    Brock Akil sat in a nearly empty writers’ room with Weithorn and one other scribe. Weithorn noticed Brock Akil had a lot of notes in the margins of the script she was holding.

    “‘Mara, if there’s ever a time you have a thought, now would be it,’” Brock Akil recalls Weithorn saying. “He saw the script — and he goes, ‘You could read any of that on there.’”

    Brock Akil was in fact the picture-perfect writer to contribute to “South Central,” having grown up in Compton. A love of writing drove her to earn a degree in journalism from Northwestern’s Medill School of Journalism. After graduating, she returned to Los Angeles to pursue a career in entertainment — specifically television writing, at a time when the field wasn’t very welcoming to Black women. But that was changing.

    Weithorn “gave me that one permission that was critical, just to hear my voice in that room. He provided space and made it safe for me to give my voice when the world said, ‘Don’t do that.’”

    Brock Akil made the most of the wings she grew that day on “South Central.” On Feb. 28, the showrunner and creator — known for such series as “Girlfriends,” CW and BET’s “The Game,” BET’s “Being Mary Jane” and most recently, Netflix’s Judy Blume adaptation “Forever” — will be recognized with the Norman Lear Achievement Award from the Producers Guild of America. She’ll receive the kudo at the 37th annual Producers Guild Awards in Century City. In addition, Amy Pascal will be honored with the David O. Selznick Achievement Award; Jason Blum, producer and CEO of the prosperous Blumhouse film and TV banner, will receive the Milestone Award for his contributions to the industry.

    After “South Central,” Brock Akil wound up working for Farquhar on the UPN sitcom “Moesha.” She had no shortage of story ideas for the domestic comedy that she steadily pitched in the writers’ room. Farquhar had a habit of telling her, gently, “Save it for your pilot.” Finally, one of the ideas that she couldn’t stop pitching became the basis of Brock Akil’s first hit series, UPN/CW’s “Girlfriends” (2000-2008).

    In the 1990s and early aughts, “the culture around making TV was so beautiful. It was so team-oriented and team-spirited,” Brock Akil says. “And having the audience right there can be the arbiter of a note. You can use the audience to help you on different things because sometimes with a script you just don’t know until you know.”

    Brock Akil is juggling multiple project including Season 2 of “Forever.” She’s also focused on working with the next generation of writers and creators, many of whom haven’t had the kind of early-career writing and producing experiences that shaped her into an A-list showrunner.

    “I had a safe place to watch and to understand and to apply all of that knowledge,” she says.
    Now, it’s important to Brock Akil that everyone working on her shows appreciates the privilege of telling stories that travel around the world.

    “It never misses me how many people get to put their fingerprints on it. So I’m very proud, whether it’s 100 people helping us do a show or whether it’s around 400 with ‘Forever,’” Brock Akil says. “Four hundred families are affected by this one story that you sit down and you make. I can’t think of a better way to organize and work — economically, for the community. I think TV is a collaborative art form that really celebrates human ingenuity, integrity, intention, imagination, creativity, just hard fucking work — and coffee and matcha.”

  • Bears reportedly give 2-time Pro Bowl LB Tremaine Edmunds permission to seek trade

    The Chicago Bears have given linebacker Tremaine Edmunds permission to seek a trade, according to NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport.

    Edmunds became a two-time Pro Bowler with the Buffalo Bills, who drafted him 16th overall out of Virginia Tech in 2018. He’s spent the past three seasons with the Bears.

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    Even though Edmunds missed four games during the 2025 campaign with a groin injury that he sustained late in a Week 11 win over the Minnesota Vikings, he still finished the regular season with a team-leading 112 total tackles. He’s gone over the century mark in that department in each of his eight NFL seasons.

    The Bears have Edmunds under contract for the 2026 season at $15 million, according to The Chicago Tribune’s Brad Biggs.

    He will turn 28 in May.

    This story is being updated.

  • ‘The Traitors’ Breakout Candiace Dillard Bassett Signs With CAA (EXCLUSIVE)

    ‘The Traitors’ Breakout Candiace Dillard Bassett Signs With CAA (EXCLUSIVE)

    Reality star Candiace Dillard Bassett, who first graced viewers’ television screens on “The Real Housewives of Potomac,” has signed with CAA. The move follows Dillard Bassett’s latest reality stint on Season 4 of Peacock’s “The Traitors.”  

    Dillard Bassett made her “Real Housewives” debut in 2018, joining the cast of “Real Housewives of Potomac” during Season 3 of the Bravo series. She remained on the series for six seasons, departing in 2024 following Season 8.

    On the Emmy-winning Peacock show “The Traitors,” which premiered earlier this year, Dillard Bassett added a competition series to her résumé, being tapped as a Traitor alongside fellow “Real Housewives” alum Lisa Rinna and “Love Island” star Rob Rausch. She was banished in Episode 8, after going toe to toe with Rausch, whom she memorably called a “snake.” 

    A multi-hyphenate entertainer, Dillard Bassett’s career has extended to the world of scripted television, where she was a series regular for two season of ALLBLK/WeTV’s drama series “Hush,” Netflix’s “Family Reunion” and BET’s “The Christmas Lottery.”

    In 2021, Dillard Bassett released “Deep Space,” her debut album (and headlined a tour for it). The ‘90s R&B-inspired album earned Billboard chart recognition, and “Drive Back,” the lead single, has amassed millions of streams. She’s toured with Live Nation and Femme It Forward, and made an appearance on Tamar Braxton’s “Love and War 10th Anniversary Tour.”

    She’s also an entrepreneur, having co-founded a beauty and lifestyle brand portfolio and co-hosting the “Undomesticated” podcast in partnership with Audacy. Dillard Bassett was Miss United States 2013, but she began her career in public service as a former White House staffer.  

    She will continue to be represented by Nyerere Davidson.

  • Colorado defensive coordinator Robert Livingston taking assistant job with the Denver Broncos

    Deion Sanders is heading into the 2026 season with two new coordinators.

    According to multiple reports, the Denver Broncos are hiring Colorado defensive coordinator Robert Livingston. The former Bengals assistant spent two seasons in charge of the Buffaloes’ defense.

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    Livingston will serve as the Broncos’ defensive passing game coordinator under Denver defensive coordinator Vance Joseph. The two worked together with the Bengals, as Livingston was the team’s defensive backs coach from 2016 through 2023.

    Colorado went 3-9 in 2025 as the defense allowed 6.1 yards per play and 30.5 points per game. Colorado ranked 112th out of 136 teams in scoring defense.

    The Buffaloes’ defense was much better in 2024. As Colorado went 9-4 and had star defensive back and wide receiver Travis Hunter, the Buffs gave up 23.1 points per game and 5.1 yards per play. Both sides of the ball took a major step back in 2025 as Colorado had its worst season of Sanders’ three in charge.

    Colorado previously hired offensive coordinator Brennan Marion after the 2025 season. Marion came to Colorado after one season as the head coach at Sacramento State — a team moving to the top level of college football and the MAC in 2026.

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    Before he was at Sacramento State, Marion was the offensive coordinator at UNLV. Former NFL head coach Pat Shurmur was the team’s offensive coordinator to start the 2025 season but tight ends coach and passing game coordinator Brett Bartolone was calling plays in November.

    The Buffaloes had an eye toward the future late in the season, too. Freshman QB JuJu Lewis sat out at the end of the year to preserve his redshirt. Colorado started three different quarterbacks in 2025 as Kaidon Salter, Ryan Staub and Lewis all got starts. Staub transferred to Tennessee while Salter is out of eligibility.

  • Former Legendary Exec Deborah Kaufmann Joins Sipur Studios as Global Content Chief

    Former Legendary Exec Deborah Kaufmann Joins Sipur Studios as Global Content Chief

    Former Legendary Entertainment exec Deborah Kaufmann has joined Sipur Studios as its new chief of global content. The position is new for the studio, which recently added former Paramount Global chair Shari Redstone as part of its management team as chair.

    At Sipur, Kaufmann will handle development projects, as well as finding IP for the studio, acquisitions and creative partnerships in film, TV and publishing.

    Kaufmann previously served as senior VP of literary affairs at Legendary, overseeing IP acquisitions for its film and TV divisions, along with its European joint ventures. Projects she bought in included “Alchemised,” and Annie Jacobsen’s “Nuclear War” (for filmmaker Denis Villeneuve).

    “Whether in publishing or in film and television, Deborah’s career has been defined by identifying exceptional stories and the people behind them, and ensuring those stories travel powerfully across borders,” Sipur CEO Emilio Schenker said in a statement. “She is an extraordinary addition to our studio. Deborah brings to us unmatched talent, achievement and industry stature, and with her addition to our team we have gained tremendous strength in realizing our broader ambition of becoming a significant global film and television studio.”

    Recent Sipur projects include Netflix’s “Bad Boy,” the medical thriller “Heart of a Killer,” the Emmy-winning doc feature “We Will Dance Again,” the docuseries “Munich ’72” and the World War II series “Etty.” Film projects include Paul Schrader’s “Oh Canada,” the Marc Maron doc “Are We Good?” and the Cristin Milioti horror feature “Buddy.”

    “Sipur has cemented its place in the industry as a destination studio for some of the most brilliant creative minds in storytelling today, and I am thrilled to join former Paramount Global Chair Shari Redstone, Emilio and their stellar team at such a pivotal moment,” Kaufman said. “I look forward to building on these impressive achievements and bringing my deep commitment to cross-cultural storytelling to further champion the company’s bold and original work, which has already positioned Sipur as a true tastemaker on the global stage.”

  • Orioles’ Pete Alonso invites comedian John Oliver’s son to a game after breaking young Mets fan’s heart

    Pete Alonso broke a lot of New York Mets fan’s hearts when he signed with the Baltimore Orioles during the offseason. One fan who was upset was the eight-year old son of comedian John Oliver, who really got into baseball during the 2025 season and was excited for the team’s 8-3 start.

    Of course, the rest of the regular season didn’t go as expected as the Mets finished 83-79 and failed to make the postseason.

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    During an appearance on NBC’s “Late Night with Seth Meyers” this week, Oliver, the host of HBO’s “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver,” told a story how of he had to explain to his son that he couldn’t change his favorite baseball team even when things go bad.

    Things got worse when Alonso, Oliver’s son’s favorite player, left the Mets after seven seasons to sign a five-year, $155 million deal with the Orioles — a move that Oliver said he anticipated was going to happen.

    “Watching [my son] fall in love with this guy — he has a signed ball [from Alonso] — and having to go into his room and say, ‘Pete Alonso’s going to Baltimore,’ and he said, ‘Are you sure I can’t be an Orioles fan?’” Oliver said. “‘We’ve had this discussion.’”

    In an attempt to make up for breaking the heart of a young Mets fan, Alonso took to social media on Wednesday to try and smooth things over — and get Oliver’s son to ignore his dad and convert his fandom to the Orioles.

    “I saw what your son had to say about being upset of me signing with the Orioles, but, hey, he could always become an O’s fan,” Alonso said. “[I] would love to extend an invitation to you and your family to come down to Camden [Yards] for a game this year and you guys can get out on the field for batting practice. Hopefully you guys come down and have some fun. Hope to see you soon. Go O’s.”

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    Alonso will be back at CitiField this season when the Orioles visit for a three-game series in September. The first game back will be sure to be an emotional evening with Mets fans paying tribute to the slugger and Oliver’s son revealing whether Alonso’s influence will have him wearing Orioles gear instead of Mets paraphernalia.