Blue Jays Draft Recap: Day 2

Jun 26, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Raptors first round pick in the NBA draft Allen Graves throws out the first pitch before the Toronto Blue Jays host the Texas Rangers at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images | Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images

The second 80% of the 2026 MLB amateur draft occurred yesterday afternoon. The Blue Jays made 16 additional picks following the three they had yesterday.

The theme today was cutting deals. The Jays will likely need to come up with extra money to pay Cole Carlon and Will Brick, both of whom were generally expected to be taken higher than they were and might be able to command over slot bonuses. Brick in particular has the leverage of honouring his commitment to Mississippi State and potentially going in the first round three years from now.

As a consequence, Toronto spent rounds 5-10 picking up college players, mostly seniors who lack the leverage of going back to school. They’ll sign for less than their slot values, freeing up the money the Jays need. It’s worth noting that while these players are lesser known, that doesn’t mean that they aren’t talented. You only need to look at Danny Thompson jr., who signed as a fifth year super senior for just $5,000 last year and has already forced is way up to AA with excellent results in his first full pro season, to see how some of these guys might pop.

The other theme is contact. They selected several elite contact hitters. Of course, being later in the draft, getting elite contact came with questions about defensive homes and typically little to no power, but the Blue Jays clearly value pure hitting ability very highly and have for years. When shopping the scratch and dent section of the draft, it makes sense that they’d be willing to accept some other limitations to get their favourite tool.

Here are the selections, in order:

  • 5th Round: Nolan Higgins, RHP, Michigan State The big (6’4”, 215lbs) right hander struggled through his first three seasons in East Lansing, but a move to the bullpen produced a hump in results this season. His 5.20 ERA isn’t shiny, but he struck out 62 batters in 45 innings against just 13 walks. His fastball is 93-95, occasionally reaching as high as 98. He pairs it with a quality low-80s curve that he can land in the zone for called strikes, and a two-plane slider with plus spin rates. Lack of a change-up and a history of command issues in the rotation suggest he’s a pure reliever, but he has the stuff to work in that role.
  • 6th Round: Gable Mitchell, SS, Iowa Mitchell has been a three year starter at Iowa. He’s walked more than he struck out in his college career, and did the same with wood bats during two summers in the Northwoods League. He doesn’t have a ton of over the fence power (just 5 home runs this past season), but he did hit 15 doubles and 5 triples this last season. Gable is an above average runner and solid defender who profiles as an OBP-based utility infielder.
  • 7th Round: Dean West, OF, UCLA Baseball America’s #302 prospect in the draft, West is a plus contact switch hitter who struck out just over 10% of the time in college and in the Cape Cod League, the top wood bat college summer league. At 5’9” and 185lbs, he’s not a power hitter, although he did manage seven home runs this past season, but he’s an above average runner who might work in centre field, can steal a base (27 for 32 in college), and could be an OBP-first table setter type.
  • 8th Round: Jake Bennett, C, Dallas Baptist Played two years at the powerhouse San Jacinto Junior College before transferring to Dallas Baptist. Hit 31 home runs in 309 PA after transferring, and has the easy plus raw power to back that up. Bennett’s approach is patient, sometimes crossing over into passive, which lead to a 15% walk rate but a high-ish for a lower conference 20% strikeout rate. He’s notionally a catcher but spent more time at DH in college, and probably plays there and at first as a pro.
  • 9th Round: Joey Urban, OF, U Southern Mississippi Urban had something of a breakout senior year at Souther Miss this season, cutting his strikeout rate from 20% to under 14% while increasing his walks and launching 15 home runs and 29 total extra base hits. He played all over the diamond as well.
  • 10th Round: Bryce Chance, OF, Mississippi State A three year starter at State, Chance almost never misses pitches inside the zone (95% zone contact this past season). That’s very impressive given the quality of SEC pitching. He also has an approach, having walked more than he struck out in college. That approach comes with almost no over the fence power (14 home runs in nearly 900 college PAs), but he produces his share of doubles. Chance plays all three outfield positions and profiles as a contact oriented utility guy.
  • 11th Round: Brayden Martin, 3B, Maryland The most extreme in a draft full of contact profiles. Martin almost never swings (30% this past season) and never misses when he does (a nearly unheard of 96% overall contact rate, 98% inside the zone). On the plus side, that means that with both metal and wood bats he strikes out less than 10% of the time and walks nearly twice that often. On the minus, he’s got just 5 home runs and 30 total extra base hits in 806 college PA and has never hit a homer with a wood bat in almost 400 PA. He’s a 70-grade runner who’s an effective base stealer, but a weak arm might push him to left field as a pro.
  • 12th Round: Santi Garcia, LHP, LSU Garcia began in community college before transferring up to Oregon, and then across to LSU as a junior. In his NCAA seasons, he struck out nearly a third of the batters he faced but also walked almost 20%.
  • 13th Round: Mathis Nayral, RHP, Kansas Nayral hails from Toulouse, France, and spent a couple of seasons at Cochise College in Douglas, AZ, before transferring to Kansas this season. He struck out 71 against 28 walks in 18 appearances (17 starts) and 69.0 innings.
  • 14th Round: Connor Kelley, RHP, UT San Antonio Split his time between the rotation and bullpen this season, striking out 73 against 22 walks in 66.1 innings.
  • 15th Round: Oliver de la Torre, RHP, Cal Berkeley Transitioned from a swing man role to the rotation this season, posting a 3.76 ERA while striking out 72 against 23 walks in 81.1 innings.
  • 16th Round: Carson Cormier, RHP Illinois State Played at TCU last season but failed to get much playing time, so he transferred down to Illinois State. Worked mostly in the rotation, striking out 74 against just 12 walks in 69.0 innings.
  • 17th Round: Landon Waters, RHP, Ole Miss working as a one inning reliever, struck out 25 against 12 walks over 24.0 innings in 2026. Also had a strong showing in the 2026 Northwoods League, with 25 punch outs on just 70 batters faced and only six walks.
  • 18th Round: Jake McCoy, LHP, South Carolina McCoy struggled to the tune of a 7.11 ERA during two seasons at USC, but had a huge breakout in the Cape Cod League last summer. He struck out 25 of 54 batters faced, allowing just three walks and 13 hits over 12.1 innings. Scouts viewed him as the best pitcher in the league that summer. McCoy is a little undersized at 6’1” and 185lbs. His fastball sits 93-94 and touches 98, with plus ride up in the zone that’s complemented by a low release point He pairs the fastball with a plus sweeper and a rarely used but potentially average change up. He blew out his elbow before the 2026 season, but at least per Baseball America was viewed as a potential top 5 round pick anyway. That he’s still on the board in the 18th round suggests he’ll be expensive to sign, and he likely represents an insurance plan in case the Jays are able to sign a higher pick for significantly less than expected due to medical or other issues.
  • 19th Round: Cole Travers, SS, St. Jon Neumann HS, Florida Perfect Game’s number 32 high school third base prospect, committed to Stetson University. Per PG’s grading system, a potential top 10 round draft pick. As with McCoy, unlikely to sign unless the Jays wind up with an unexpected amount of extra bonus money.
  • 20th Round: Eddie Rosado, OF, Holy Ghost Prep School, Pennsylvania Perfect Game’s number 75 high school outfield prospect, committed to St. Joseph’s University. Per PG’s grading system, was regarded as a high end college prospect with some potential to be drafted. Again, I would guess unlikely to sign.

Mets stumble into All-Star break after disastrous ending against Red Sox closes out 'unacceptable' first half

The Mets were three outs away on Sunday from salvaging the finale of their three-game series with the Boston Red Sox and entering the All-Star break on a rare high note.

A win wouldn’t have done much in the standings as New York is well out of contention in what has been a lost season, but the feeling in the clubhouse would’ve been positive after Zach Thornton pitched brilliantly in just his third major league start and in line for his first career win.

But even small wins are hard to come by for the Mets this season as Francisco Lindor and Devin Williams were unable to finish the job in the ninth. 

Lindor, who was responsible for driving in both New York runs with a first inning double and a solo shot in the sixth, couldn’t field a ground ball hit directly at him that could’ve easily been turned for a game-ending double play which allowed the inning to continue.

“The ball ate me up,” Lindor said after the game. “I went after it, it just took a hard hop and hit me on the palm of my hand – the palm and wrist area. I just didn’t make the play. It’s unacceptable.”

Williams went on to walk the next batter to load the bases and then walked another to bring home a run. Jarren Duran singled on a shallow fly ball that tied the game before a lineout double play bailed the Mets out. As it turned out, though, it only delayed what was coming.

New York couldn’t score in the bottom half of the inning which sent the game to extra innings where Boston scored in the 10th to take the lead. When it was their turn to bat, the Mets couldn’t even advance the free runner at second base and were swept in gut-punching fashion which culminated a first half that saw them go 40-57.

“Yeah that’s tough. Everybody in that clubhouse will tell you that right now,” said interim manager Andy Green. “Everybody’s out there wanting to win a baseball game putting everything out there.“

The blown save, while not completely his fault, was Williams’ third of the season and with one of the two runs he allowed being earned, he now has a 4.83 ERA. And after a magnificent month of June where he pitched to a 0.96 ERA across nine appearances, the right-hander has struggled again lately, owning a 10.80 ERA in four games in July.

Despite this, Green has no plans “at this point in time” of removing Williams from the closer role once the Mets resume play in the second half and pointed to the right-hander’s experience as to why.

“Devin’s done it for so long and he’s done it really, really well,” Green said. “We can look at this game scenario and say we got a double play ball, we didn’t defend behind him on that particular play. Got a blooper that fell in.

“This game is usually in our side of the ledger and it’s not and like I said it’s painful and frustrating for everybody in that clubhouse, but he did some positive things on the mound to get a double play ground ball in that situation.”

Even with the vote of confidence from his manager, Williams looked dejected after the game in what has been his second rough season in New York (the first one coming for the Yankees) after flourishing for years in Milwaukee.

“It hasn’t been fun. Not a lot of celebrating going on in this clubhouse right now, but we get to take a couple days off and show up and try to do it again,” he said.

As for Lindor, what could’ve been a great game for him and reason to believe he can turn his injury-riddled season around in the second half was completely erased following his error.

Not only is the shortstop slashing just .216/.298/.373 in 40 games this year, his defense and concentration has been suspect this season even before his injury – certainly odd for a two-time Gold Glove winner still in the prime of his career.

“Comes down to I gotta be better, I gotta execute,” Lindor said. “Pitchers are executing and I just gotta finish the play for them. I gotta be better, that’s what it comes down to.”

He continued: “I wasn’t able to capitalize on the good pitch that Devin made to finish the game. Ultimately that’s what it comes down to and I didn’t finish the play and it’s unacceptable. [I’m] not playing to the standard that I have, not playing to the organization’s standards. It’s just, I gotta get better.”

The Mets now have the difficult task of trying to flip the script of what was a terrible first half in the season’s final 65 games when they return to action on Thursday against the Philadelphia Phillies.

Had they won Sunday’s game that task would’ve been slightly less daunting, but now it’s going to take an entire team effort and even that might not be enough.

“It encourages us to fight, at the end of the day that’s the only thing we can do and we’re gonna try to be better,” Lindor said. “We’re gonna play as hard as we can in the second half and hopefully we put ourselves in a much better position because right now it’s not where we want to be.”

Virginia Tech baseball: 3 more Hokies selected in 2026 MLB Draft

CORAL GABLES, FL - APRIL 05: Virginia Tech pitcher Luke Craytor (19) pitches in relief in the seventh inning as the Miami Hurricanes faced the Virginia Tech Hokies on April 5, 2026, at Mark Light Field at Alex Rodriguez Park in Coral Gables, Florida. (Photo by Samuel Lewis/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

On Saturday, Virginia Tech pitcher Brett Renfrow heard his name called in the 2026 MLB Draft, selected No. 74 overall by the Minnesota Twins.

Major League Baseball wrapped up the draft on Sunday, and three more Hokies heard their names called. Here are those Hokies:

  • P Luke Craytor: Selected 255th overall (9th round) by the Chicago White Sox
  • P Griffin Stieg: Selected 378th overall (13th) round by the Pittsburgh Pirates
  • P Madden Clement: Selected 449th overall (15th round) by the Kansas City Royals

The 6-foot-5, 220-pound Craytor is a native of Charlottesville (Western Albemarle), and he spent his first two collegiate seasons at Lafayette. He played the last two seasons for the Hokies. In 2026, Craytor appeared in 21 games, going 4-0 with a 3.16 ERA and 30 strikeouts in 25.2 innings pitched. He allowed 22 hits and 13 walks.

Stieg, a 6-foot-4, 220-pound right-hander from McLean, Virginia (McLean High School), spent four seasons at Virginia Tech, finishing his collegiate career with a 6-7 record and a 6.32 ERA, with 124 strikeouts in 136.2 innings pitched.

The 6-foot-3, 210-pound Clement is a native of Butler, Pa., and spent three years at Virginia Tech. Clement finishing his career by pitching in 21 games, making 11 starts, finishing with a 2-1 record, a 4.74 ERA, with 41 strikeouts in 38 innings pitched.

Congratulations to all four Hokies who are beginning the next step of their baseball careers.

Top fantasy prospects selected in the 2026 MLB Draft: Grady Emerson, George Lombard among the best

The 2026 MLB Draft has come to an end, and now comes the fun part; seeing these players get a chance to take on professional pitching/hitting as they try and help their new organizations at the highest level. Some of these players will be ready to help in a year, and some will need far longer to develop; with the unfortunate reality that there will be players who never get a chance to play games in the majors.

Here’s a look at the top 10 prospects from a fantasy perspective who were drafted over the weekend, and a look at what categories they could potentially help in.

1. Grady Emerson, SS, Tampa Bay Rays

Emerson may have been the second pick of the draft -- and he ranked second on my MLB Draft big board, as well -- but from a fantasy perspective? He’s the best. He’s a left-handed hitter who has a chance for a double-plus hit tool, or 70 on the 20-80 scouting scale, because of his bat speed and smooth stroke. There’s above-average or better power in his bat as well, and the separator here is that Emerson is much more likely to steal bases. There’s a little more risk in his profile than the name below, but on paper, there’s no player with higher reward, and that’s why I’d take him first in any eligible draft.

Potential category help: AVG, R, HR, SB

2. Roch Cholowsky, SS, Chicago White Sox

Emerson might be the best, but Cholowsky is a close second, and you can make the argument he deserves the top spot. He was dominant in college, and he’s a hitter from the right side who already shows the ability to hit for average, and power. I’d go so far as to say that if Cholowsky was thrown into the big leagues right now, he wouldn’t sink. I wouldn’t do that, but that’s how advanced the tools are. He won’t steal a ton of bags, but he should stay at shortstop, and 30-plus homer seasons with a .275 or better average can quickly make up for it. If you want to sprinkle some safety with your ceiling, Cholowsky might be your guy.

Potential category help: AVG, HR, RBI

3. Jacob Lombard, SS, Miami Marlins

If you don’t give a flying hoot about safety, then Lombard might be your type of player. There’s significant risk in his profile -- note: there’s significant risk in any prospect but especially a prep bat -- as a hitter who has contact issues already. Those contact issues come with easy power from the right side that has already shown up in games, and the ball jumps off his bat thanks to his bat speed. He’s also a 65-grade runner, so 50-steal seasons to go with 30-homer campaigns is realistic. There’s so much volatility in this type of profile, but that volatility comes with the potential to be one of the best shortstops in baseball.

Potential category help: R, HR, RBI, SB

4. Vahn Lackey, C Minnesota Twins

Lackey saw his stock improve more than any college bat in the country ,and if the White Sox would have made him the top pick, it would have been far from a reach. The swing isn’t picturesque, but Lackey makes it work, and he’s the rare backstop that you could project a plus hit and power tool at the highest level. He’s a solid athlete that could provide a couple of handful of steals as well, although that is far from a guarantee as a player that is going to stay behind the plate. Lackey doesn’t have the ceiling of the three names above, but it’s not far off, and you could argue his floor beats anyone on this list, even Cholowsky.

Potential category help: AVG, HR, RBI

5. Drew Burress, OF, Athletics

Burress was Lackey’s teammate at Georgia Tech, and it was pretty surprising to see him “slip” to the number eight pick. Every tool for the outfielder projects as above-average, and while there’s no plus-plus tool nor the ability to play catcher or shortstop like the names above, he’s an outfielder that could realistically hit .280 with 25 homers and a similar amount of steals every year. Burress could easily be the first player to reach the majors, and proximity matters, folks. Even if he’s closer to an above-average player than a future star, the ability to contribute everywhere makes Burress a valuable -- and underrated -- fantasy prospect. The fact that he might have some awfully friendly hitting confines doesn’t hurt, either.

Potential category help: AVG, R, HR, SB

6. Jackson Flora, RHP, San Francisco Giants

Flora is not only the first pitching prospect on this list, but spoiler alert: he’s also the last. That being said, he’s an awfully good one, and he’d compete to be the first hurler off the board in many drafts. A product of UC Santa Barbara, Flora’s fastball doesn’t generate elite spin, but he commands it well, and it can get into triple digits without much effort. That heater is complemented with a swing-and-miss slider, and a change that isn’t far behind that offering. He locates all of his pitches for strikes, and the command should be plenty good to make him a part of a rotation. He’s not the next Paul Skenes and maybe not even the next Kade Anderson, but the stuff and ability to locate said arsenal is good enough to pitch near the top of a fantasy rotation someday.

Potential category help: W, ERA, WHIP, SO

7. Eric Booth Jr, OF, Baltimore Orioles

Booth is one of the fastest players in the class, and he has the type of wheels that you could see him lead the league in steals someday. In order to be able to do that, he has to get on base at a high-enough clip, and despite a swing that is a bit unorthodox ,he makes hard contact to all parts of the field, and he appears to recognize pitches well with a feel for the strike zone. There’s some power concerns -- although it’s worth noting he did with the Home Run Derby at the Perfect Game Classic -- but assuming he gets on at a high clip and puts that speed to good use, fantasy managers won’t need him to be a 30-homer guy. It’s not entirely out of the question he can reach that, but it’s the help in the other four categories that puts him on this list.

Potential category help: AVG, R, SB

8. Justin Lebron, SS, Cincinnati Reds

Lebron is back in Ohio, a joke that was only made 635,000 times on social media. The former Alabama star is not your typical college bat, as the reason for excitement has much more to do with the ceiling than his floor. He’s an elite base stealer who swiped 42 bases for the Crimson Tide while being caught just once, and those thefts come with some of the best power from the right side of any hitter in the draft regardless of being a prep or collegiate player. So why so “low” on this list? Lebron swings and misses a lot, and that hit tool may not be good enough to let those skills play. If they do, he has a chance to be a star and a steal as the 18th pick in last year’s draft, but there are so many possible outcomes for a hitter with his strengths and weaknesses.

Potential category help: HR, RBI, SB

9. Trevor Condon, OF, St. Louis Cardinals

Condon was a personal favorite coming into the draft, and while he didn’t slide far, the Cardinals should be thrilled he made it all the way to pick 13. He’s an outfielder out of Etowah High School in Georgia who gets rave reviews for his baseball acumen, but this is not a player who “makes the most of it.” He’s an easy 70-grade runner, and he’s one of the best defensive outfielders in the class thanks to that speed and ability to read the baseball off the bat. He also makes sound swing decisions and should be plus in the hit tool, with just enough power for it to be average. This might be several spots too low for Condon, and it certainly will be if the power takes a bump. But either way, Condon is someone fantasy managers should be targeting in drafts, whenever they take place.

Potential category help: AVG, R, SB

10. Ryder Helfrick, C, Arizona Diamondbacks

Being completely honest, Helfrick wouldn’t make this list if he wasn’t a catcher, but he is, so, he does. The right-handed hitting backstop isn’t going to hit for a high average -- barring something unforeseeable of course -- but he should get on base at a high clip, and he has the potential for 25-plus homer seasons as well thanks to his strength. He also shouldn’t have an issue staying behind the plate with a quality throwing arm and solid -- and improving -- receiving skills. It’d be surprising if he was a future superstar, but I’d be just as surprised if Helfrick wasn’t one of the top dozen or so catchers from a fantasy perspective in the next decade.

Potential category help: HR, RBI

Just missed: Derek Curiel, OF, Pittsburgh Pirates; Jared Grindlinger, OF, Los Angeles Angels; Ace Reese, 3B, Seattle Mariners; Zion Rose, OF, Kansas City Royals

Did Lakers lose or win free agency? Grading massive roster overhaul.

The Los Angeles Lakers have moved forward with the Luka Doncic era, spending the summer reconstructing the roster around the point guard.

The Lakers’ options opened up after veteran LeBron James told the franchise he wasn’t going to return to the team and test free agency.

The Lakers knew acquiring a talented center to complement Doncic on the roster would’ve needed to be a priority this summer.

Doncic had reportedly requested an "A-List" center, according to ESPN’s Dave McMenamin.

Deandre Ayton spent the past season as the primary player at the position and decided to pick up his player option for the upcoming season. After the Lakers made some of their offseason moves, Ayton was traded to the Washington Wizards.

The former No. 1 overall pick averaged 12.5 points and eight rebounds in 72 games for Los Angeles this past season.While most of the Lakers’ roster was reshuffled, the team did manage to re-sign Austin Reaves, who has continued to come into his own for Los Angeles after originally going undrafted.

Here’s how the Lakers did during free agency:

Austin Reaves, guard

There was always a level of certainty that both sides would try and make things work to stay together.

Reaves did deal with some injuries this past season that limited him to just 51 total games played (45 starts), but he did show when healthy that he can be a solid No. 2 option alongside Doncic in Los Angeles. 

He managed to get off to a fast start, scoring 51 points in his third game of the season (vs. Sacramento Kings) before following up with a 41-point game (vs. Portland Trail Blazers) the following night.

It will be up to Reaves and the Lakers to try and make sure he can improve on the defensive side of the ball as well, but he does have some physical limitations by NBA standards.

He signed a four-year deal worth $184.7 million.

Grade: A-

Walker Kessler, center

Walker Kessler signed a four-year, $130 million deal with the Lakers, but it’s what else the Lakers needed to give up that prevents the move from having a higher grade.

In order to secure the big man, the team acquired the rights to Kessler from the Utah Jazz for unprotected first-round picks in 2031 and 2033 and first-round swaps in 2028 and 2030. Kessler will sign a massive four-year, $130 million deal with the Lakers.

Grade: B-

Collin Sexton, guard

Sexton provides depth at guard and a potential scoring threat off the bench.

It's likely that he will have the opportunity to make multiple starts for the team during the upcoming season, considering Doncic and Reaves both missed time throughout parts of last season.

He signed a two-year deal worth $19.2 million.

Grade: B

Quentin Grimes, guard

Grimes agreed to a four-year deal worth $60 million. That will place high expectations on the guard, which some pundits already think the Lakers overpaid for.

Grimes started 19 of the 75 games he played in last season, averaging 13.4 points, 3.6 rebounds and 3.3 assists in 29.4 minutes per game.

Grade: C

Sandro Mamukelashvili, forward

Mamukelashvili has the ability to play both forward and center in the NBA. He started 13 of the 80 games he played in, averaging 11.2 points, 4.9 rebounds and 1.9 assists in 21.9 minutes per game for the Toronto Raptors last season. He finished 10th in the Sixth Man of the Year award voting.

Mamukelashvili is being viewed by some pundits as Rui Hachimura’s replacement. While there might be some size and statistical comparisons, Hachimura started 41 games for the Lakers last season.

Mamukelashvili agreed to a four-year, $52 million deal.

Grade: B

Kevon Looney, forward/center

Looney agreed to a one-year, $3.9 million minimum contract with the Lakers after spending the past year in New Orleans.

Looney adds depth to the bench as a player who can serve as a forward or a center. He averaged 2.8 points, 5.6 rebounds and 1.6 assists per game last season.

He will add championship experience to the roster, having spent the first decade of his career with the Golden State Warriors. He played in all 82 games in back-to-back seasons from 2021-2023.

Grade: C+

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Did Lakers lose or win free agency? Grading massive roster overhaul.

White Sox Minor League Update: July 12, 2026

COLUMBUS, OHIO - JUNE 04, 2026: Nolan Jones #34 of the Columbus Clippers bats during the fifth inning against the Omaha Storm Chasers at Huntington Park on June 04, 2026 in Columbus, Ohio. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images)
Nolan Jones went 2-for-4 with two homers and five RBIs in Sunday’s 12-4 win for the Knights. | (Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images)

We are currently in search of a new polling application to use with our updates, so please bear with our more naked feature today.


Charlotte Knights 12, Nashville Sounds 4
Completely redeeming themselves from Saturday, the Knights (49-44) popped off for 15 hits and blew out the Sounds (53-40), 12-4, splitting the series with three wins each. Two homers and five RBIs in the game from Nolan Jones and a grand slam from Michael Turner in the fourth accounted for nine of the 12 runs, and Edgar Quero blasted three hits and an RBI. Five of the nine Charlotte batters posted multi-hit days, as both Ryan Galanie and Caden Connor went 2-for-5, with the final RBI attributed to Mario Camilletti. The Knights also walked four times, with Rikuu Nishida accounting for three of them, scoring all three times he reached base, stealing one along the way.

After a pair of rehab starts with the Winston-Salem Dash, Shane Smith was officially reinstated to the Knights roster and tossed four solid frames with one run scoring on three hits and a walk, striking out five in the process.

Righthander Tanner McDougal made his third appearance since being activated from a longer IL stint, and he has yet to surrender a hit in his three innings, adding another scoreless frame today with two walks and two strikeouts. Lucas Sims ended up with his second win of the season after a hitless frame, though Sims hasn’t been consistent at all this season, holding an 8.10 ERA in 14 games and 13 1/3 innings.


Columbus Clingstones 7, Birmingham Barons 4
Neither side of the ball was positive for the Barons (32-55), as they struck out 12 times at the plate, went 2-for-9 (.222) with runners in scoring position, and the pitching allowed six in the first 4 2/3 innings to drop five of six to the Clingstones. Lefthander Lucas Gordon has struggled in 2026 with the Barons, reaching a 5.15 ERA in 18 starts (87 1/3 frames), and he wound up with his fifth loss of the season in Sunday’s series finale. The main issue with Gordon is a high (11.5%) walk rate, and he gives up a home run or two nearly every outing. Only five of his 18 starts have gone without a home run allowed, and his 1.73 HR/9 is nearly double last season’s (0.84 HR/9). Until he makes an adjustment to prevent the long ball, he could have a tough time working his way up to the majors.

Only two players were able to drive runs in, and Alec Briley started the scoring for the Barons with an RBI base hit in the top of the third that had cut the lead in half for Birmingham, 2-1, Columbus. The other three belonged to Brenden Dixon, who smashed a three-run shot in the seventh for his third home run of the year, but the offense left four on base and couldn’t close the gap.


Winston-Salem Dash 10, Asheville Tourists 4
Scoring in every inning except for the sixth, the Dash (50-37) outhit the Tourists (20-56), 11-7, to even out the series at three, 10-4. It also helped that Asheville committed an error that provided an unearned run to Winston-Salem, and thanks to five homers for the Dash, it didn’t matter that they went 2-for-14 with runners in scoring position with 10 left on base. Jeral Perez was a triple short of the cycle with three hits on the day, and Arxy Hernández led the team with three RBIs on two hits, including a three-run bomb in the fourth. Both he and James Taussig have homered in back-to-back games, with the other two stemming from Ryan Burrowes and George Wolkow.

Appearing in his sixth rehab appearance with the Dash, lefthander Tommy Vail made his first start since returning from the IL, tossing for 2 1/3 with two runs allowed (just one earned) on three hits and three strikeouts, but he struggled with free base runners with four walks on the day. In his 7 2/3 frames with Winston-Salem, Vail holds an 11.74 ERA with a frightening 2.87 WHIP, on top of walking three more batters (10) than he’s struck out (seven). Working as Sunday’s bulk reliever, righthander Jake Curtis took over for four scoreless, earning his third win of the season.


Delmarva Shorebirds 6, Kannapolis Cannon Ballers 5
The pitching couldn’t hold the Cannon Ballers (44-43) lead, as Marco Barrios blew the save in the sixth that allowed the Shorebirds (31-56) to take the lead and win the game, 6-5. The Ballers still won the series, but they ultimately lost a four-run lead, and Truman Pauley did not set Kanny up for success with four runs allowed in his 3 2/3-inning start. Barrios was the only rough part of the bullpen, however, as Ryan Schiefer, Jesus Mendez and Jordan Morales all finished with a scoreless outing.

All five runs came from two innings, though the Cannon Ballers couldn’t buy a run after the fourth. A squeeze bunt from Efren Teran and a two-run double from Jaden Fauske scored three for Kannapolis early in the top of the second, while Matthew Boughton recorded the other two RBIs with a two-run single just a couple innings later. Adrian Gil also walked twice, scoring both times, but none of the Ballers put up multi-hit days.


Multiple Former Red Wings Remain Unsigned And Available On The Open Market

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While the Detroit Red Wings await the decision from unrestricted free agent forward Patrick Kane, there remain several former members of the club who continue to be available on the open market. 

The most recognizable former Red Wings forward still up for grabs is Vladimir Tarasenko, who spent one season in Detroit and severely underwhelmed with just 11 goals before being dealt to the Minnesota Wild last offseason.

While he got off to a slow offensive start with the Wild, the acquisition of Quinn Hughes helped put things in gear; he finished the season with 23 goals and 47 points. 

Additionally, forward Anthony Mantha, who was once thought of as a potential cornerstone piece for the franchise, remains unsigned. He tallied a career-best 33 goals for the Pittsburgh Penguins last season on a one-year "prove it" style contract, but his camp is reportedly looking for a long-term pact. 

Other former Red Wings forwards on the open market include Robby Fabbri, Adam Erne, Luke Glendening, Gustav Nyquist, and Tomas Nosek.

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On the blue line, former Red Wings defensemen Nick Leddy, Jeff Petry, and Brendan Smith remain unsigned; all three are getting up there in age, and may be faced with retirement. 

Between the pipes, both James Reimer and Petr Mrazek are still looking for work. Mrazek, who was re-acquired by the Red Wings at the 2025 NHL Trade Deadline from the Chicago Blackhawks, was dealt to the Anaheim Ducks as part of the John Gibson deal last summer, but missed most of the season after yet another injury. 

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Two-time National Champion Gavin Guidry selected by Mets in 16th round

BATON ROUGE, LOUISIANA - MARCH 13: Gavin Guidry #8 of the LSU Tigers in action against the Oklahoma Sooners at the Alex Box Stadium on March 13, 2026 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. (Photo by Mitchell Scaglione/LSU/University Images via Getty Images)

LSU Baseball’s emotional leader since 2023, Gavin Guidry, was taken at #480 over by the New York Mets in the 16th round.

Guidry’s LSU career was full of success, but there were also some speedbumps along the way that tested his resolve.

After getting to Baton Rouge as one of the top-ranked shortstops in 2023, the Barbe product played sparingly behind Jordan Thompson in the infield. Halfway through the season, the Tigers pitching staff suffered two season-ending injuries to Chase Shores and Garrett Edwards, putting them in a tough spot. Guidry transitioned to the mound and hit the ground running. He became one of the most important pieces of that bullpen, even recording the final out of the 2023 National Championship.

He followed that up with a solid sophomore campaign in 2024, but the troubles began in 2025. After being scratched from an early season midweek start, he was said to be week-to-week with a back injury. He attempted to work his way back, but he continued to hit roadblocks and was eventually shut down for the year. The veteran then became an extra coach, often seen mentoring younger players on the team. Even from the dugout, Guidry was instrumental in Jay Johnson’s team winning their second title in three years.

His return on Opening Day of the 2026 was electric. He jogged out from the bullpen to a massive ovation from the Alex Box crowd and picked up right where he left off, striking out hitter after hitter with his “hammer” of a breaking ball. As the season went on, Guidry seemed to wear down and his performance slipped. He still has eligibility, but he said following the season that he was hoping to begin his professional career. He considered 2026 a “bonus year”, as he had hoped to move on after 2025 before he got hurt.

Guidry will go down as one of the most important players of the Jay Johnson era. At least the beginning of it. He stepped up time-and-time again and will almost surely head to the MLB with a lot to be proud of.

In three seasons for the Tigers, Guidry finished with a 10-3 record. He pitched 96.2 innings and had a 4.66 ERA. That number is only inflated by his late season struggles this past year. In his first two seasons, his ERAs were 3.77 and 2.59, respectively. He struck out 137 hitters in three years.

The New York Mets are getting a bulldog, who’s as competitive as they come.

Grayson Willoughby withdraws from 2026 MLB Draft and will play at Kentucky

After a season that left much to be desired for Kentucky Baseball, and primarily the pitching staff, all eyes were focused on the 2026 MLB Draft to see what would happen with Grayson Willoughby.

The star recruit has now decided to withdraw from the MLB Draft and head to Lexington for his collegiate career, UK has announced.

Now that the news of the coveted right-handed pitcher heading to Kentucky for his college baseball career is official, he will have to spend two seasons in school before being eligible for the 2028 MLB Draft.

By way of Trinity High School (Louisville, Ky), the 6-foot-2, 195-pound Willoughby has been committed to Kentucky since August of 2024. Since then, Willoughby has had quite a high school career: Back-to-back state championships with his Trinity Shamrocks, being named Mr. Baseball, and being named the 2026 MaxPreps National Player of the Year.

His advanced mid-80s changeup is considered his best secondary pitch, while his slider continues to develop into another quality offering.

What separates Willoughby is his command. He repeats a clean three-quarters delivery, consistently throws strikes, and already shows the ability to locate all three pitches. Scouts also believe there is additional velocity to come as he continues to add strength.

Although Willoughby starred as a two-way player at Trinity, his future is on the mound. He capped his senior season by throwing a one-hit shutout in the Kentucky state championship game, helping Trinity secure another state title.

Willoughby is also ranked No. 31 in his class in Perfect Game rankings. On their site, they described him as “Polished starter package with three quality pitches including a 92-96 mph fastball, slider and changeup, dominated at PG national.”

This is a massive pickup for the Bat Cats, especially since they were in dire need of more pitching.

Rays 2026 Draft: Rounds 11-20

Florida State pitcher Cole Stokes (24) in relief against UF, March 10, 2026, at Condron Family Ballpark in Gainesville, Florida.The Gators beat the Seminoles 6-3. [Cyndi Chambers/ Gainesville Sun] 2026 | Cyndi Chambers/Gainesville Sun / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The back half of the MLB Draft is where we leave the bonus pool minimums behind. Some players might sign for pretty decent amounts, but it’s the wild west and most will not demand much compensation to fill the Rays org needs.

Out of their 21 selections overall, the Rays took 17 pitchers, and that includes every pick in rounds 11-20. Here’s how it shook out.

RHP Logan Georges (HS, CA) – 11/323

The star of the show for picks 11-20, he’ll be in line to demand whatever is left of the Rays bonus pool. He’s 6-foot-5.

While Georges has long had size and arm strength, his path to being a high-level Draft prospect was anything but certain. As a sophomore at Clovis High School outside of Fresno, California, Georges blew out his elbow and required Tommy John surgery. He returned to the mound in time for league play as a junior in 2025, then put the injury further in his rearview by throwing at a myriad of summer showcase events, including Major League Baseball’s All-American Game, Perfect Game National and the Area Code Games. While Georges’ senior year has had some ups and downs, he still brings an ideal 6-foot-5 pitching frame to the mound with the chance to have a quality three-pitch mix with excellent metrics under the surface. He’ll throw his fastball in the 92-96 mph range; it can have carry and ride, and he also has a two-seamer with good sink. He’ll flash a plus low-80s slider that can miss bats, giving him an effective sinker-sweeper combination at times. He’s shown glimpses of a very solid 84-85 mph changeup with sink and fade he’ll throw to hitters on both sides of the plate. Georges hasn’t always thrown quality strikes this spring, and at times, things can snowball for him on the mound. He’ll also be 19 come Draft time, which might ding him in some teams’ models. Even so, his stuff and the data behind it could be enough to get teams interested in signing him away from his commitment to Texas Christian.

[MLB Pipeline – 126]

[…] high-spin pitch mix and a chance for multiple plus offerings. His fastball is regularly in the low 90s and has been up to 94-95 mph […] low-80s slider, which has impressive late biting action and easy plus potential. […] solid mid-80s changeup. […] a well-rounded starter profile.

[Baseball America – 288]

RHP Cole Stokes (4YR JR, Florida State) – 12/353

Surprisingly, Stokes is only the third Seminole drafted by the Rays in franchise history.

Stokes is a stuff monster with a pair of pitches that could be plus or better, but his command and pitchability hold him back. Stokes is a California native who spent two seasons with Oregon, then transferred to Florida State for the 2026 season. […] gnarly 22.7% walk rate. Listed at 6-foot-6, 230 pounds, Stokes has a big league frame and a quick, whippy arm that he delivers from a low slot. He throws a turbo sinker that’s consistently in the upper 90s and has touched 97. He pairs the fastball with a mid-80s sweeper with tons of gloveside break. Both pitches are swing-and-miss offerings, but he also has a career walk rate hovering around 20%, which would be unplayable in pro ball. If he can figure out a way to throw the ball over the plate more frequently, he could be a useful weapon in a major league pen.

[Baseball America – 385]

RHP Steven Gonzalez (HS, FL) – 13/383

A prep arm with extension that jumped his fastball into the low 90’s with consistency this season. He’s a Mater Academy HS (Hialeah Gardens in Miami, FL) graduate committed to FSU.

Ben’s take: 3/4 slot, easy mechanics with a fastball in the low 90s and feel for a couple breaking balls. 6’3 frame, projectable.

RHP Mason Bixby (4YR JR, Oklahoma) – 14/413

6′ 7″ 239lbs and 100 mph fastball. What more do you want?

RHP Ashton “Amp” Phillips (4YR JR, South Carolina) – 15/443

Ashton Michael Phillips, a.k.a. Amp, is a 6-foot-1 fireballer with a kick change.

[…] high-energy pitcher whose competitiveness is evident every time he takes the mound. He started his career at Spartanburg Methodist, but missed most of the 2024 season with a back injury, then transferred to South Carolina Upstate in 2025 and South Carolina in 2026, where he added plenty of volume as a starter […] reliable strike-thrower, but is a bit undersized with a compact, slight frame. Phillips averages 92-93 mph and touches 95-96 with his fastball. He has solid command of his fringe-average, slurvy slider in the upper 70s and low 80s, and will mix in a shorter, mid-80s cutter. Phillips has thrown a mid-80s changeup more often in 2026. While he pitched as a starter for two seasons, his size and fringy strikes could allow him to profile better as a reliever in pro ball.

[Baseball America – 342]

RHP Alex Philpott (4YR JR, South Carolina) – 16/473

An intra-SEC transfer from Florida to USC, going from bullpen to starter for his new school, he’s 6′ 6″.

He missed time early in the season with elbow discomfort, but returned to the mound in mid March and posted a 6.51 ERA over 16 appearances and 27.2 innings. […] up to 98 mph in the past with his fastball, though he mostly threw it in the 93-95 mph range in 2026. He has an assortment of solid secondaries, including an upper-80s changeup and cutter, a low-80s slider and a slower curveball in the upper 70s. He’s a below-average strike-thrower, and probably a reliever because of that, but there’s a lot in the tank to work with if a team can help him execute a bit more consistently.

[Baseball America – 463]

RHP McCarty English (4YR JR, Southern Mississippi) – 17/503

English put himself out there this morning hoping for a summer transfer away from USM, but found himself as draft selection instead. His video won’t embed for now, so here’s the link: https://twitter.com/MccartyEnglish/status/2062571192356139365

LHP Nate Smithburg (4YR SR, Oklahoma) – 18/533

A submarine southpaw, standing 6′ 2″ 257lbs, and profiled by Baseball America in “5 Deep Cape Cod League Sleepers With 2026 MLB Draft Upside”:

Fresh off helping Oklahoma win a national championship […] release height of roughly four feet. He generates above-average extension for a pitcher with his delivery and separates himself from most of his demographic with unusual velocity. His fastball sat 90-91 mph and touched 94 with massive armside run, high spin efficiency and movement that creates difficult looks for hitters on both sides of the plate. The pitch dives away from righthanders and runs in on the hands of lefties, generating five whiffs Thursday.

Smithburg complements his fastball with a low-80s cutter […], a mid-80s changeup with negative vertical break and armside run, and an upper-70s-to-low-80s sweeping slider that glides across the plate because of his extreme release point.

Though his high-major track record is limited, Smithburg is unusual even among submarine relievers because of his velocity, extension and assortment of distinct movement profiles. It is a clear bullpen projection, but one with enough deception and bat-missing ability to warrant consideration late in the draft.

[Baseball America]

RHP David Horn Jr. (4YR SR, Middle Tennessee State) – 19/563

6′ 5″ 235lbs, with velo that played up in the Draft League.

RHP Ivan Sabater (HS, FL) – 20/593

This West Broward HS graduate has already reached 95 mh and top spin rates, and stands to add more as a professional.

Frank Vogel expected to join Golden State Warriors' coaching staff

Former Los Angeles Lakers coach Frank Vogel is expected to join Steve Kerr and the Golden State Warriors this season.

Vogel will serve as an associate head coach on Kerr's staff, according to ESPN's Shams Charania, and will fill the vacancy left by Terry Stotts.

Stotts and Jerry Stackhouse were two of Kerr's top assistants this past season before departing. Another longtime assistant, Chris DeMarco, had also left Kerr's staff in January to become the New York Liberty's head coach.

Vogel is expected to serve as the Warriors’ primary defensive game-planner as part of his new role. DeMarco and Stackhouse were in charge of those responsibilities in recent years.

Vogel was most recently with the Dallas Mavericks as an assistant under Jason Kidd. He was head coach of the Lakers from 2019 to 2022, leading the franchise to its 17th NBA title in 2020 after beating the Miami Heat in six games while in the NBA bubble due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

He had also led the Indiana Pacers, as head coach, to two Eastern Conference Finals in 2013 and 2014.

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Frank Vogel expected to join Golden State Warriors' coaching staff

Mets' 2026 MLB Draft recap: New York replenishing farm system after 19 players selected

In addition to what likely will be a sell-off at the trade deadline, the 2026 draft was a very important draft to help the Mets replenish a farm system that dropped to the No. 24 ranked system in baseball according to Baseball America. 

The final tally for the Mets 2026 draft class:

19 Total Players Selected

17 College Players Selected

2 High School Players Selected

12 Pitchers Selected

7 Position Players Selected

It all starts at the top with the Mets selecting Arkansas right-hander Carson Wiggins with the No. 27 overall pick, who was a home run swing type of pick. While surprising to Mets fans based on public rankings, it wasn’t considered earth shattering in the industry that he went this high.

The Mets are banking on stuff, which Wiggins has an abundance of, as well as their player development system being able to mold him into a potential frontline starting pitcher. If that doesn’t come together, he can be a high leverage reliever that is capable of hitting 102 mph on the radar gun with a wipeout slider. Assuming he signs, he will be the first pitcher the Mets drafted and signed in the first round since David Peterson in 2017.

Day one of the draft for the Mets concluded with two value selections, starting with Texas outfielder Aiden Robbins in the third round, No. 92 overall, who received a ton of first-round buzz leading up to the draft, including being heavily linked to the Mets as an option at No. 27. 

Robbins’ college career was a tale of two different players. At Seton Hall he was a hit over power type of player, hitting .422 as a sophomore and slugging just 12 home runs across two seasons for the Pirates. 

Robbins then had a breakout performance with a wood bat at the Cape Cod League, where he led the league in average (.307), slugging percentage (.545) and OPS (.936). He transferred to Texas and became more of a power over hit player, doubling his career home run total at Seton Hall, hitting 24 home runs in his one season with Texas. There are some questions about his ability to consistently hit breaking balls as well as his future defensive home, but the Mets were ecstatic to land a player with above average power and a history of a hit tool at No. 92.

In the fourth round at pick No. 120 overall, the Mets selected Texas A&M left-hander Shane Sdao. Sdao had a breakout 2024 that had some believing he would be a top two round selection in the 2025 draft. Sdao ended up missing the 2025 season recovering from Tommy John surgery. Statistically his 2026 season was not what he expected (7.03 ERA in 71.2 innings), but his stuff continued to tick back up as he continued to get healthier as the spring wore on. 

The Mets believe there is some physical maturation still to come on his 6-foot-3, 185-pound build. As part of that, they think there is more in the tank for his fastball that touched 97 mph this year. His best pitch isn’t the fastball, but his low-mid 80s slider that grades out above average. 

Sdao may not have the stuff that someone like Wiggins does, but he is a strike thrower who locates a five-pitch mix, all of which look to be at least average offerings. He currently looks like a back-end type of starter, but it’s possible there is a little bit more there.

As day two kicked off, the Mets selected four college pitchers in a row, starting with Florida right-hander Luke McNeillie in the fifth round, who was mostly a reliever at Florida. In 18 appearances, he posted a 3.97 ERA with 48 strikeouts in 34 innings. He primarily throws a fastball that touched 99 mph and a mid-80s slider. He also has a changeup that he used exclusively against left-handed hitters. 

I think McNeillie could be the next in a long line of college relievers being converted to professional starters by the Mets. They did similar with Christian Scott, ironically also a fifth-round pick who had a similar repertoire while at Florida.

In the sixth round they selected Auburn right-hander Alex Petrovic. Petrovic has had to persevere through some tough injuries in college. He had two separate stress fractures in his throwing arm that limited him to 14 games his first two years at Auburn. He was fully healthy for the first time in 2026, and things really started to come together when he posted a 3.21 ERA in 17 starts as Auburn’s Sunday starter.

His stuff ticked up without sacrificing command, as Petrovic has always been a strike thrower. His fastball was up to 96 mph with a plus changeup and he also throws a sweeper and cutter. One scout told me: “Petro is a tough kid. I wouldn’t bet against him.”

In the seventh round, the Mets selected right-hander Aidan Keenan from Stanford. He only got into seven games this season for Stanford due to an oblique injury. He posted a 5.82 ERA in 21.2 innings with 25 strikeouts.

It is important to note that in the MLB Draft, teams are not drafting for college statistics. They are drafting traits and tools, and Keenan has traits. At the MLB Combine, he sat 96-99 mph with 19 inches of induced vertical break on his fastball and threw a mid-80s slider, low-90s changeup and a cutter. He has not been a consistent strike thrower, likely profiling as a reliever at the next level. The Mets could try him as a starter to begin his pro career just to get innings under his belt.

In the eighth round, the Mets took Ole Miss right-hander Landon Koenig. Koenig is from Mayville, North Dakota, a town with a population under 2,000. He attended North Dakota State before transferring to Ole Miss for his final season where his swing and miss took a big step forward pitching out of the Rebels’ bullpen.

In 2025 at NDSU, Koenig struck out 8.9 batters-per-nine. In 2026 at Ole Miss, that number spiked to 13.1 strikeouts-per-nine. The physical 6-foot-6, 245-pounder is a pure power reliever who sat 95-96 mph on his fastball and touched 98 with a hard slider and splitter. 

In the ninth round, the Mets drafted someone who will be catching all these pitchers in Cal Poly catcher Ryan Tayman. Tayman is an offensive minded catcher who was named the Most Outstanding Player in the Los Angeles regionals in Cal Poly’s run to the Super Regionals in 2026.

Tayman hit .357/.447/.672 with 18 home runs in 63 games for the Mustangs. He dominated fastballs, even high velocity ones in 2026. The questions are with handling breaking balls as well as the feasibility to stick behind the plate as a catcher long-term. 

The Mets closed out the top 10 rounds with their second Ivy Leaguer drafted in the last two years in Dartmouth right-hander Nate Isler. Last year they took Truman Pauley in the 12th round out of Harvard, who was traded last winter to the Chicago White Sox in the deal for Luis Robert Jr.

Isler posted a 4.85 ERA in 65 innings with 80 strikeouts for the Big Green. The 6-foot-6, 235-pound right-hander has a four-pitch mix, with a fastball up to 96, a curveball, slider and changeup, according to MLB.com’s Jonathan Mayo.

The MLB Draft as a concept is in a lot of ways a giant dart throw. Rounds 11-20 are the ultimate dart throws. Some of the Mets late picks that stood out to me: 

11th rounder, Arkansas outfielder Kuhio Aloy. He is the younger brother of Orioles 2025 first-rounder Wehiwa. Aloy has plus-raw power, it comes with swing and miss, but he hit a 97 mph fastball 469 feet at 117 mph off the bat this year. On a personal note, on his bio on Arkansas’ website, it says he can hit a golf ball 400 yards. I am quite jealous.

12th rounder, UC Santa Barbara right-hander AJ Krodel who has a low-90s fastball that will touch 96 mph with excellent shape. His primary secondaries are a sweeper and changeup that will flash plus at times while mixing in a curveball. Baseball America called him a player development opportunity.

13th rounder, catcher Jacob Madrid from Notre Dame high school in California. Notre Dame high school is the alma mater of Hunter Greene of the Cincinnati Reds and Giancarlo Stanton of the Yankees. The Oregon commit is considered a plus-defensive catcher, being lauded as one of the best defensive catchers in the entire class with both a strong and accurate throwing arm. 

He has some raw power, and a scout told MLB Pipeline “if he hits at all, he’s a big leaguer”. It remains to be seen if Madrid is signable. The deadline to sign draft picks is July 27 at 5 p.m. ET.

Given the Mets had the third smallest bonus pool in the league this year due to their first pick dropping 10 spots and losing two selections for the signing of Bo Bichette, I think the Mets fared well in this draft. I’d give it a solid B, bordering on B+. They went heavy with college talent, but not just the “they are what they are” type of college players, but ones where there is a vision for squeezing more potential out of.

They drafted some intriguing arms with big power stuff that may need some harnessing that are now in the hands of the player development staff that over the last three years has done an excellent job of developing pitchers. Despite some inconsistent results on the farm in 2026, they are still considered among the best pitching development groups in the sport.

The most exciting part about the MLB Draft is you never know when a prospect can be the next impact player for the Mets. They can come from any round and any signing bonus amount. While what they did in college and high school matters, their professional story begins now.

Cubs Minor League Wrap: Kepley leads South Bend past Kernels, 5-2

Mar 13, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Chicago Cubs outfielder Kane Kepley against the Chicago White Sox during a spring training game at Camelback Ranch-Glendale. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

If I can just rant about something, MLB knows that one of the things that draws in younger fans is the idea of new, young talent coming into the game. So why do we then play the Futures Game on a Sunday morning (OK, early afternoon Eastern Time) opposite an entire slate of MLB games and the Draft? And why is it only seven innings?

Futures Game

The American League beat the National League 6-1.

Josiah Hartshorn played right field and got two at-bats. He grounded out to first and he ended the game in the bottom of the seventh with a fly out to center field.

Mason McGwire faced two batters in the seventh inning. He hit the first one and then sent him to second on a wild pitch. He then struck out the next batter on a 96.3 mph fastball. McGwire then left the game and the runner on second scored and was charged to McGwire.

Iowa Cubs

The Iowa Cubs were excommunicated by the St. Paul Saints (Twins), 5-4.

Jordan Wicks started and took the loss after he allowed two runs on four hits over three innings. The good news was that Wicks struck out five and walked no one, although he did hit one batter.

Center fielder James Triantos hit a solo home run in the second inning, his seventh on the year. Triantos went 2 for 4 with the double and the home run.

DH Moisés Ballesteros cracked a two-run home run in the fifth. Ballesteros was 2 for 3 with two walks.

Triantos’ home run.

Mo Baller goes just to the right of dead center.

Knoxville Smokies

The Knoxville Smokies were cracked by the Biloxi Shuckers (Brewers), 3-1.

Brody McCullough had been on the injured list since April 0f 2024. Today he was activated by the Smokies and got the start. He didn’t pitch poorly, but he still got the loss after allowing two runs on two hits over four innings. Both runs scored on a two-run home run in the third inning by Blake Burke. One of the two runs was unearned. McCullough struck out four and walked two, but he also hit three batters.

Right fielder Alex Ramírez singled home first baseman Drew Bowser with the only Smokies run of the game. Ramírez was 1 for 4. Bowser went 0 for 2 and he was hit by a pitch.

The Smokies managed just three singles.

South Bend Cubs

The South Bend Cubs popped the Cedar Rapids Kernels (Twins), 5-2.

Jostin Florentino started his first game in almost two weeks. He was very strong, surrendering just one run on two hits over four innings. The one run came on a solo home run. Florentino struck out six and walked just one.

Eli Jerzembeck pitched the next two innings, didn’t allow a run and collected the win. Jerzembeck surrendered one hit. He didn’t walk anyone and struck out one.

Cole Reynolds got a three-inning save. Reynolds gave up one run on one hit and one walk. He struck out one.

Center fielder Kane Kepley scored a run in the sixth inning and hit an RBI triple in the seventh. He went 1 for 3 with the triple and a walk.

Second baseman Michael Halquist was 1 for 3 with a double and a walk. He scored once.

Kepley’s triple.

Myrtle Beach Pelicans

The Myrtle Beach Pelicans were vetoed by the Fredericksburg Nationals, 8-6.

Starter David Avita took the loss after getting knocked around for four runs on give hits over three innings. He walked two and struck out one.

The Pelicans were trailing the FredNats 8-0 going into the bottom of the ninth and they managed to score six times and get the tying run to the plate. Left fielder Ethan Conrad hit a two-run home run, his second on the year and first with the Pelicans. Conrad went 1 for 4 with a walk.

Catcher Ivan Cespedes was a perfect 2 for 2 with a a double and two walks. He scored on a wild pitch.

First baseman Edward Vargas hit a two-run double in the ninth. He went 2 for 4 and also scored on Conrad’s home run.

Third baseman Derniche Valdez was 2 for 5.

Conrad’s home run [VIDEO]

ACL Cubs

Off day.

Kade Anderson, Ryan Sloan make solid impression in MLB Futures Game

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - JULY 12: Kade Anderson #32 of the Seattle Mariners on the American League Team pitches during the 2026 MLB Futures Game at Citizens Bank Park on July 12, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images) | Getty Images

You might have missed it because MLB is terrible at marketing its own product, but today was the Futures Game, the de facto All-Star game for minor-leaguers. It was also the second day of the MLB Draft, covering sixteen rounds in a single day, and the final day of the Mariners’ current Road Trip From Hell, all conveniently happening at the same time – early on a Sunday here on the west coast. Like, 9 AM early. And also streamed on Peacock. Apparently while a helicopter hovered overhead directly next to the on-field mics. So it’s actually more surprising if you did watch the American League prospects defeat the National League prospects, 6-1.

If you did tune in, hopefully it wasn’t too late, because Kade Anderson appeared in the game for a flash. He was the AL squad’s starting pitcher, and needed just ten pitches for his first and only inning of work. The box score will tell you that Anderson threw six of his ten pitches for strikes and the box score is a liar, because HP umpire Alex Shears engaged in a bit of nominative determinism and clipped Anderson for two pitches at the bottom of the zone that should have been ruled strikes.

Anderson’s outing will likely be overlooked in favor of Pirates prospect Seth Hernandez – who might have been a Mariner if the Angels had actually taken Anderson as everyone expected them to instead of whatever it was they did in the 2025 draft – as Hernandez had a clean 1-2-3 inning with two strikeouts where his fastball touched 101 mph. Big stuff, very nasty (was gifted a strike call outside the zone, not that I’m counting).

But Anderson was a quiet assassin on the mound, a model of efficiency cutting through the top of the NL lineup. He elicited a weak contact popout from leadoff hitter Eli Willits of the Nationals on the second pitch of his at-bat on a perfectly located fastball up and in. Anderson fell behind his next hitter, the Rockies’ Roldy Brito, 2-1, as he couldn’t quite get the feel for his changeup, but then dropped in a slider Brito swung over for a weak contact comebacker cleanly fielded by Anderson. The Brewers’ Jesús Made ruined what should have been a clean 1-2-3 inning for Anderson, swinging at a 95 mph fastball in at his knees in a 1-1 count (should have been an 0-2 count) and managing to parachute it weakly into right field, where it dropped into no-man’s-land between the second baseman and right fielder. But Anderson recovered against Rockies prospect Charlie Condon, getting a first pitch flyout on a slider that was actually the hardest hit ball all day against Anderson at 97 mph. Maybe it’s a factor of pitching at Dickey-Stephens Park, but Anderson seemed to know without turning around that the ball was destined for an outfielder’s glove.

It was a stark contrast for Anderson from his last national showcase outing, the Spring Breakout game this spring training. The spring game between the Mariners and Brewers drew a lot of national attention, with one of the densest collections of Top-100 prospects in baseball, and Anderson did not perform well on the big stage. The normally pinpoint command Anderson walked an unheard-of four hitters in two-plus innings of work, struggling to land his fastball and falling behind in counts. He left pitches on the plate that got damaged, most notably a three-run homer on a hanging slider. It was a poor enough performance that it seemed to affect his prospect stock, with certain national prospect writers and fans alike quick to anoint Ryan Sloan – who pitched three perfect innings to open the game – the true ace of Seattle’s system.

Anderson has sufficiently silenced those critics as he’s torn through the Double-A level this year, obliterating hitters with his same strikeout stuff while actually cutting down his walk rate from college, making it easy to write off the spring breakout performance to the triple-digit Arizona heat and the fact that Anderson, a creature of routine, wasn’t the day’s starter. His performance in today’s Futures Game is an exclamation mark on what’s been a truly extraordinary first professional season for him, and an opportunity to stake a claim as one of the best pitching prospects in the game.

The thrill of having a two-headed pitching monster in the Futures Game means Mariners fans had to wait until the fifth inning of this seven-inning contest to see another Mariners prospect. Ryan Sloan came on in the fifth with the AL leading 6-1 and had to fight a little harder against the NL hitters. In a flip-flop from the spring breakout game, this time it was Sloan who seemed to have a little trouble with fastball command, pumping plus velocity – he was up to 100 mph on his fastball – but missing with it out of the zone.

Sloan had to battle his first hitter, Cubs top prospect Josiah Hartshorn, for seven pitches before dropping in a cutter for a groundout; the cutter was his friend again for a first-pitch groundout with his second hitter, the Giants’ Gavin Kilen. In a 1-1 count, Sloan tried to go back to the off-speed again against another Giants hitter, Dakota Johnson, who was coming in on a heater after a three-homer game for Eugene on Friday. Johnson caught a sweeper that got too much plate and was able to knock it down the left field line for a line-drive double (97.4 mph EV, not softly hit but not exactly the “laser” described on the broadcast). Sloan recovered to hang a zero for the inning, but it wasn’t easy against the Brewers’ Jesus Made – part of the same spring breakout lineup Sloan dominated this spring – who battled him for six pitches before flying out on a sweeper in on his hands. Like Anderson, Sloan also signaled for the inning-ending flyout, but couldn’t help but watch it to make sure it got caught:

It wasn’t the sharpest inning for Sloan but it was an exciting opportunity to benchmark the Sloan of the early spring against the Sloan of today. This spring, Sloan leaned almost exclusively on his heater, using it to annihilate the Brewers hitters. Today, lacking his usual fastball command, he was able to dig into a deeper arsenal, showcasing his cutter, sweeper, and changeup (Gameday is labeling it a splitter).

It’s been more of an up-and-down season for Sloan at Double-A this season – as one would expect for a pitcher as young as he is being challenged at the level – but he’s continuing to build volume and efficiency while still developing his arsenal and gaining experience against more advanced hitters, several of whom he saw up close at today’s event.

2026 Mets Draft profile: Alex Petrovic

Right-hander Alex Petrovic grew up in Cypress, Texas, a suburb of Houston, the son of parents who played basketball at Oberlin College. Alex’s physical gifts manifested themselves on the baseball diamond rather than the basketball court, and the youngster quickly began standing out on the sandlots around Texas. He attended Concordia Lutheran High School in Tomball, Texas, where he dominated as both a hitter and a pitch, earning TAPPS First Team All-State honors in 2022 and 2023. Inflammation in his right arm kept him off of the mound for the majority of his senior year, and may have cost him a selection in the 2023 MLB Draft; despite solid results, Petrovic was not considered an elite talent, and he ended up going undrafted, leading him to honor his commitment to Auburn University.

His career with the Tigers began inauspiciously, as the inflammation in his arm returned that fall. It calmed down to the point that, when the spring began, the right-hander was able to take the mound for his new team after missing the first three weeks of the season. Appearing in 7 games for Auburn, Petrovic allowed 7 earned runs in 11.0 innings, good for a 5.73 ERA, giving up 15 hits, walking 3, and striking out 17. There is a chance that the right-hander might have improved as the weather continued warming, but Petrovic sustained a stress fracture in his right elbow in early April, ending his season prematurely.

The right-hander had surgery on his elbow, having screws inserted into it, and returned to the mound at Plainsman Park for the 2025 season. Improbably, the exact same thing almost happened a second year in a row. The right-hander appeared in 7 games, starting 5, and posted a 4.34 ERA in 18.2 innings, allowing 13 hits, walking 4, and striking out 25, but once again, an injury on a different spot on his arm sustained in early April ended his season early. His velocity had backed up from the low-90s into the high-80s and his breaking balls did not look as sharp, and it was only a matter of time before something in his arm went off. A draft-eligible sophomore because of his age, Petrovic did not hear his name called in the 2025 MLB Draft.

When his arm felt better later that summer, the right-hander went to a baseball training facility in Lakeland, Florida- the Florida Base ARMory- and worked on making subtle changing his mechanics to put less stress on his arm and elbow and hopefully prevent a third-consecutive season-ending injury in 2026.

The 22-year-old returned to Auburn for his redshirt sophomore season armed with new mechanics and not only was he able to make it through the entire year without an injury, but Petrovic also had a very solid season. His fastball having gained a few ticks from the mechanical changes that were made and his secondary stuff looking sharper, he appeared in 17 games, starting all of them, and posted a 3.21 ERA in 92.2 innings, allowing 70 hits, walking 24, and striking out 92.

Standing 6’5” and weighing 235-pounds, the big Serbian is well-proportioned and athletic, not exactly striking an imposing figure. Likewise, his stuff is not exactly imposing, but it got the job done, as the right-hander was one of the best SEC pitchers in 2026. Petrovic throws from a high-three-quarters arm slot, working exclusively from the stretch with a high leg kick and long arm action through the back, throwing with downhill plane, getting good extension. Petrovic is a strike thrower, commanding his arsenal well and pounding the strike zone. He throws a four-seam fastball, circle changeup, sweeping slider and cutter.

Prior to the 2026, while he was pitching compromised and/or in pain, his fastball sat in the low-90s, often backing up into the high-80s. In 2026, the pitch was sitting more in the low-to-mid-90s, reportedly hitting as high as 96 MPH. In addition, the pitch featured above-average spin rates between 2400-2500 RPM, giving the pitch as much as 18 inches of induced vertical break, a well above-average, borderline elite measurement.

His changeup is his go-to secondary pitch, a high-70s-to-low-80s offering that features a high spin rate, giving it a ton of fade when he is able to turn the ball over properly in addition to . The pitch tunnels extremely well with his fastball, and the pitch gets a fair amount of whiffs against left-handed batters and right-handed batters alike. Thanks to the amount of run the pitch has, Petrovic can sometimes have trouble commanding it and can get gun shy about using it when behind in the count or with runners on base.

The right-hander’s sweeping slider sits in the high-70s-to-low-80s, while his cutter sits in the low-to-mid-80s. At present, his slider is a bit more advanced than his cutter, with the pitch being more likely to develop into an average offering; at present, the pitch relies more on big loopy movement rather than bite and batters going fishing for it outside of the strike zone, particularly right-handed batters.

While not exactly a groundball machine, Petrovic posted a strong 44.2% groundball rate in 2026, a consequence of batters making poor contact with his fastball, changeup, and slider.