
John Tortorella’s tired act may have finally met its expiration date
NY Post
If you think that winning two playoff series with John Tortorella behind the bench over the 12 years after he left Broadway in 2013 looks good on his résumé and is worth the angst that always accompanies one of his administrations, be my guest and by all means hire this coach who essentially fired himself again last week in Philadelphia.
The brush paints the same broad strokes every time, whether in Tampa, New York, Vancouver, Columbus or Philadelphia. The Canucks represented a complete washout, but there was at least fleeting success everywhere else until Tortorella no longer could get out of his own way — which he never intends to do, anyway.
It is all about Tortorella everywhere he goes. There will always be a specific incident — apparently this time, as reported by The Athletic, a one-on-one interaction gone wrong with a 24-year-old player named Cam York — or a preponderance of evidence that the coach’s old-school approach has reached the diminishing-returns portion of the program.
In a league where the most consistently successful teams have coaches who lean young, or at least trust young, will you please identify the last marquee prospect to have soared under the scared-straight philosophy of Tortorella, who finally has just become another recyclable in the overstock bin?

SAN DIEGO — As you may have seen elsewhere in this newspaper (and also if you haven’t deleted me yet from your social media), I have a book coming out Tuesday called “The Bosses of The Bronx.” Much of it details the 37 years’ worth of antics, winning, losing, winning again and overall mania of George Steinbrenner’s time with the Yankees.

Cade Cunningham, almost inarguably the best player in the East this season, is likely out for the remainder of the regular season. That’s the word out of Detroit following the depressing news that Cunningham punctured a lung when he took a knee to his side Tuesday from Washington’s Tre Johnson while chasing a loose ball.

Wednesday was another positive day at Yankees camp. For the first time since March 6, 2025 — an outing in which he knew “something wasn’t right,” which began a weeks-long saga that ended on the operating table for Tommy John surgery — Gerrit Cole was back on a mound and facing hitters in game action.










