Monday, March 16, does not bring the volume of a weekend slate, but it does carry several events with direct postseason implications across international baseball, the NBA and the NHL. The top game on the board is the World Baseball Classic semifinal between Venezuela and Italy, with a place in Tuesday’s championship game on the line. After that, the focus shifts to the NBA, where the Western Conference race remains compressed from the top seeds into the play-in line, and to the NHL, where Detroit’s home game against Boston has immediate playoff relevance.
World Baseball Classic Semifinal
The biggest event Monday is Venezuela vs. Italy in the World Baseball Classic semifinals at loanDepot park in Miami. First pitch is set for 8 p.m. Eastern, and the game will air on FS1 in the United States. MLB lists Keider Montero as Venezuela’s probable starter and Michael Lorenzen as Italy’s probable starter.
Why it matters is simple: the winner advances to the championship game on Tuesday, March 17. That alone gives this game the highest stakes of the day, but the matchup also arrives with a broader tournament storyline. Reuters reported that Venezuela reached its first WBC semifinal since 2009 by eliminating defending champion Japan, while Italy advanced to the semifinals for the first time after beating Puerto Rico. Italy entered the semifinal unbeaten at 5-0, and Venezuela arrived at 4-1.
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NBA Western Conference Race
The most important NBA game Monday is the Los Angeles Lakers at Houston Rockets. The tip is at 9:30 p.m. Eastern at the Toyota Center in Houston, with Peacock carrying the broadcast. The Lakers enter the game at 42-25 and the Rockets at 41-25, with Los Angeles third in the West and Houston fourth.
This game matters because there is almost no margin between the top half of the Western Conference bracket and the teams trying to avoid a slide. The Lakers are only a half-game ahead of Houston and are currently on a five-game winning streak after Luka Dončić’s overtime winner against Denver, while Houston has been trying to protect position in a crowded conference.
The other Western game to watch is San Antonio at the LA Clippers at 10 p.m. Eastern.
What is on the line differs for each side. San Antonio is chasing Oklahoma City at the top of the conference; the Spurs are second in the West, three games behind the Thunder. The Clippers, meanwhile, are eighth, with little separation from the teams behind them in the play-in range. That makes the game relevant both to the race for home court near the top and the race to stay out of the bottom half of the West’s playoff picture.
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NBA Eastern Conference Positioning
Phoenix at Boston also carries weight Monday night. The tip is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Eastern at TD Garden, with Peacock as the listed broadcast outlet. Boston enters at 44-23 and Phoenix at 39-28.
For Boston, the stakes are tied to the top of the East. The Celtics are in second, trailing Detroit by 4.5 games. For Phoenix, the importance is different but no less real. The Suns begin the night seventh in the West, one of several teams trying to climb out of the play-in zone.
Orlando at Atlanta, set for 7 p.m. Eastern on NBA League Pass, is another game with direct seeding implications. The Magic are trying to stay in the guaranteed playoff field, while the Hawks are still trying to improve their play-in position and close ground on the teams above them.
NHL Playoff Race
The NHL’s clearest Monday game is Boston at Detroit. The puck drops at 8 p.m. Eastern on ABC.
This game matters because Detroit is in the middle of a crowded playoff chase. After Friday’s Islanders win over Calgary, New York was tied with Pittsburgh and Detroit in the playoff standings. Detroit then lost in overtime to Dallas on Saturday, while Boston ended a seven-game road winless streak by beating Washington in a shootout. That leaves Monday’s game as a direct opportunity for the Red Wings to gain ground and for the Bruins to strengthen their own late-season push.
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