Atlanta Braves News: Mauricio Dubon, Hurston Waldrep, Week Ahead, More

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - MAY 27: Mauricio Dubon #14 of the Atlanta Braves warms up before playing against the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park on May 27, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Paul Rutherford/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Many good things have contributed to the amazing start to the season for the Braves. One of the biggest factors is how well many of the depth position player signings and acquisitions have worked out for Atlanta, such as Dominic Smith and Jorge Mateo. But the best of all was the trade for Mauricio Dubon, whose versatility has been extremely valuable for the Braves. Alex Anthopoulos has always made good moves on the margins, and this year is no different.

Braves News

Hurston Waldrep looked decent to good in his first rehab appearance of the season.

Braves have some pitching matchups ahead this week versus the Blue Jays and Pirates.

The Braves sent Anthony Molina and Carlos Carrasco to the Stripers. Carrasco eventually elected free agency.

Tate Southisene continues to show good power potential in the minors.

Mark Bowman looks at when Spencer Schwellenbach could return for the Braves.

MLB News

Elly De La Cruz is likely out 2-4 weeks.

The Brewers continue to emerge as the best in the NL with the Dodgers and Braves with another impressive win.

The Feed

In a fun “Where are they now” segment, here is an update on Andrelton Simmons.

Tanner Scott and family receive death threats

Blown bullpen loses are never fun for anyone involved, but they are never to the level of life or death, especially in the month of May. While fans have always let players hear their displeasure at the outcome of the game, gambling and social media have unfortunately taken things to a different level.

Saturday, Tanner Scott came in to protect a two-run lead against the Philadelphia Phillies, and allowed a three-run homer, which ultimately gave the Phillies the win. On Sunday, Tanner’s wife Maddie Scott shared the messages she got, per Christian Orozco of the New York Post:

“When did it stop being a game?” Maddie wrote on her Instagram Story in response to a message from a user who said “gun shot your family tonight.”

“I don’t speak out often. Ever actually,” she said. “I promise you, you don’t know what it’s like unless you’re living it.”

Some of the messages got even more disturbingly graphic, with threats made not only to Tanner and Maddie, but also to their newborn son.

Social media allows fans to connect to each other and to players, but the dark side is the worst of humanity also come out via that medium. Steve Henson of the L.A. Times adds some additional thoughts on the why, here.

Fabian Ardaya of The Athletic has some news and notes on all things Dodgers, including this fun quote from Ryan Ward after his first major league home run –

“I’m probably going to smell for a little bit,” Ward said. “It was all over the place.”

That is in reference to the celebration in the clubhouse after the game on Sunday, which included alcohol and condiments, apparently.

The win on Sunday also gave manager Dave Roberts a birthday win.

The article also highlights the changes Roki Sasaki has made that are helping him to improve as a pitcher, and regain his fastball.

“It feels like it’s all put together right now,” Sasaki said Saturday through interpreter Kensuke Okubo.

By working with strength coach Travis Smith, Sasaki has filled out his frame and the team is seeing a return to the pitcher that Sasaki was in Japan.

“I think early this season, after every throw, he was looking at the radar gun to see what the velocity was,” Roberts said. “Now, there’s just a confidence that the throw is good, the feel is good, and that’s his validation”

Ardaya also has some notes on how Kyle Tucker might finally be coming out of his funk at the plate.

Chicago Cubs news — PCA, Brown, Busch, Bregman

Today’s Reflections

What a roller-coaster in St. Louis. Saturday night, it looked like things were returning to normal. Then the old/new bats of the 10-loss days returned, and Jordan Wicks doesn’t appear to be more than AAAA quality starter. Maybe the Athletics and Giants can bring six games of rebounding for the Cubs.

Jim Bowden speaks, stories get written, I normally roll my eyes. But I am here to provide the news for your pleasure, no matter what I think. 😉

Ben Brown has cemented himself as the Cubs’ No. 1 SP. By A LOT. Boyd’s return will be greatly welcomed. Busch, PCA, Bregman are starting to show life. Where have Hoerner and Suzuki gone, though? Will Swanson’s bat EVER show up? Will Palencia ever get more than one save opportunity a month?

*means autoplay on, (directions to remove for Firefox and Chrome). {$} means paywall. {$} means limited views. Italics are often used on this page as sarcasm font. The powers that be have enabled real sarcasm font in the comments.

Let’s enjoy the gushing from Saturday night’s game:


Skubal trade talk:



Food For Thought:

Peter Gage (born 12 February 1946) is a British blues vocalist, harmonica player and pianist. The younger Gage started his musical career as vocalist and harmonica player in a London band “The Sloane Squares”, led by Gwyn Headley, in the mid-1960s. The Sloane Squares were well known for their tight music and live shows, and were supporting Jimi Hendrix when they were spotted by Jet Harris, the former Shadows bass player, who asked them to become his backing band.

Please be reminded that Cub Tracks and Bleed Cubbie Blue do not necessarily endorse the content of articles, podcasts, or videos that are linked to in this series.

Tuesday Rockpile: Jake McCarthy finds his groove with the Rockies

DENVER, COLORADO - MAY 30: Jake McCarthy #31 of the Colorado Rockies runs after hitting a seventh inning RBI single against the San Francisco Giants at Coors Field on May 30, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Dustin Bradford/Getty Images) | Getty Images

When the Colorado Rockies traded with the Arizona Diamondbacks for outfielder Jack McCarthy back in January, their logic was fairly clear.

First, he brought a left-handed bat to platoon with righty CF Brenton Doyle; second, he has outfield versatility that would allow him to play all three positions and give Doyle a day off; and third, he is fast (99th percentile in sprint speed) with a career K% of 19.2%, which means he can play the kind of fast baseball manager Warren Schaeffer was looking to develop at Coors Field.

(Plus, the Rockies would have him for an even-numbered year, a point illustrated by his FanGraphs page, since he has historically struggled in odd-numbered years.)

With the season, roughly, one-third over, it’s worth taking a moment to consider how McCarthy has adjusted to baseball at elevation.

All numbers are current as of Sunday, May 31, 2026.

What the offensive numbers show

So far, McCarthy has appeared in 49 games and has 158 plate appearances. He’s slashing .282/.323/.444 with a 99 wRC+. Those numbers include 10 stolen bases and three home runs. And while Statcast indicates he does not hit the ball hard, he does get on base consistently.

Currently he has a 5.7% walk rate and a 19.0% strikeout rate. While the BB% is unremarkable among Rockies hitters, only Tyler Freeman and TJ Rumfield have better scores. He leads the Rockies in stolen bases.

He’s also shown an ability to hit left-handed or right-handed pitching. Against righties, he has a 126 wRC+, and against lefties, that number falls to a respectable 93 wRC+. So in that way, he has given Schaeffer the kind of platoon ability that the Rockies are committed to this season.

For McCarthy, that’s just part of his game.

“I think it’s an easy excuse to say, ‘You know, he was a tough lefty,’ and it’s hard to not swing at this pitch or whatever,” McCarthy said.

“But I’ve always wanted to get the opportunity to face (lefties), and I think all hitters feel that way. I just think it’s the same principles. It’s just getting good pitches to hit, putting a good swing on them, and maybe not giving them too much credit, where, ‘Oh, the ball is coming from behind my head,’ or ‘It’s a different type of angle.’ I think the fundamentals and the principles still apply, regardless of where (the pitch) is coming from.”

Plus, he’s enjoyed working with Rockies hitting coach Brett Pill.

“He’s a guy who definitely knows what he’s talking about,” McCarthy said, “but also understands how hard this game can be. I think it’s good to be around people who have been through it, and understand that sometimes it doesn’t make sense, and what you’re feeling or what you’re going through is is normal.”

McCarthy has also improved over the course of the season. In March and April, McCarthy had a 91 wRC+; that number grew to 104 in May, probably due, at least in part, to seeing more playing time with Doyle on the IL with an oblique injury.

And what does he think of Coors Field now that it’s his home park?

”I think it’s a really fun place to hit,” he said.

What the defensive numbers show

On the defensive side, McCarthy’s is holding his own as well.

The Rockies original plan involved using McCarthy primarily in left with occasional stints in center, and having Jordan Beck become the primary right fielder. However, injuries derailed that strategy, so here’s how the 354.2 innings McCarthy have spent in the outfield break down:

  • Left Field: 141.0 innings; -1 DRS; 0 OAA; 0 FRV; 1.000 FP.
  • Center Field: 202.2 innings; -1 DRS; -1 OAA; 0 FRV; .987 FP.
  • Right Field: 11.0 innings; 0 DRS; -1 OAA; 0 FV; 1.000 FP.

So by those metrics, McCarthy has been fine. (He has posted slightly better numbers than Troy Johnston, Brenton Doyle, and Mickey Moniak.)

One notable drawback is McCarthy’s arm, which ranks the worst among center fielders according to Statcast.

Still, he’s noticed the challenges of playing in Coors expansive outfield.

“Obviously, I think with the bigger field and the ball carries a little more, so maybe the outfield you could say is more challenging,” McCarthy said.

And he’s had to make adjustments.

“Maybe you’re in a place — like we went from New York in April — where it’s cold and windy, to here, so maybe the ball is probably going to carry more, especially when it’s warmer here,” he said. “So maybe you take that into your adjustment in the outfield, where your positioning, or maybe what your first step is.”

But becoming more familiar with his new ballpark helps.

“I think over time, too, we get used to it. We have the advantage of being here 81 games a year. So I think there’s acclimation.”

What the mullet shows

If there’s a thing Rockies fans appreciate, it a good mullet. After all, they had years of watching the respective flows of Charlie Blackmon, Connor Joe, and Troy Tulowitzki. (Read this for the definitive Rockies mullet analysis.)

And, as it turns out, McCarthy has a mullet of his own.

“I’ve had long hair for a while now,” he said, “but this past offseason, I was like, ‘Maybe I’ll just try to cut it into a mullet.’ My wife doesn’t mind, so I wear a hat for a living anyway, so even if it looks egregious, I just, you know…”

And then he laughed.

Combine McCarthy’s look with his “Stairway to Heaven” walkup song, and you’ve got a player with personality.

What McCarthy has contributed

Clearly, it’s too early in the season to draw too many conclusions. However, in trading for McCarthy, the Rockies needed a utility outfielder and a player who could get on base.

He has delivered on both fronts.

When Brenton Doyle, Jordan Beck, and Mickey Moniak went on the IL, McCarthy seamlessly slid into the centerfield job while making consistent contributions at the plate.

Now the question is whether he can continue at this level as the rest of the 2026 season unfolds.


This week on the internet

Okay, I thought this was funny.


The chatter’s box: Troy Johnston interview | Just Baseball

Patrick Lyons caught up with Troy Johnston to get his thoughts on a variety of subjects, including podcasting, joining the Rockies, and his time in the minor leagues.

Colorado Rockies 2026 Player Survey: Mickey Moniak | Mile High Sports

Drew Creasman checks in with Mickey Moniak. Among other subjects, he discusses the best play he’s made, how he prepares, and the ideal off-day.

Guess which Phillies outfielder is up there with Cobb & Hornsby? | MLB.com

This is not a piece about the Rockies — I get that — but Mike Petriello’s analysis of Brendan Marsh’s BABIP is worth your time.


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Kansas City Royals News: No sales tax estimates for new stadium yet

CINCINNATI, OHIO - JUNE 01: Michael Massey #19 of the Kansas City Royals celebrates after hitting a home run in the seventh inning against the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park on June 01, 2026 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Dylan Buell/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Kansas City is keeping stadium negotiations private for now and not revealing any figures.

Lucas and Vasquez have both said newly generated sales taxes from a taxing district around the proposed stadium would primarily pay for the bonds. Lucas told reporters that Kauffman Stadium’s sales taxes were used to help project how much that might be.

“Our projections are based off of revenues that are generated at Kauffman Stadium today, and it would be based off of ancillary development in the Crown Center/Washington Square Park area,” Lucas said in April, noting the funding to pay for bonds would not come from the general fund or the city’s earning tax.

“I’m proud of the city manager and his staff and what they’re building up, and I think that’s how we can deliver a good, fiscally responsible project that is based largely on people who are spending at a baseball stadium,” Lucas added.

On Sunday, Michael Wacha became the 10th active pitcher to reach 300 career starts.

“I think I’ve said a bunch of times, he’s the best starting pitcher teammate I’ve ever seen,” Royals manager Matt Quatraro said. “I mean, he’s into every single pitch in the dugout when he is not pitching. He’s extremely intense and into his starts, obviously, and he prepares as well as possible. He’s the consummate pro.”

Wacha loves pitching for the Royals and is hopeful to continue making starts as his career continues to unfold.

“Just love this game,” Wacha said. “And I love competing out there on the mound. You know, I’m already looking forward to the next one.”

Pete Grathoff brings up the famous Buddy Bell quote.

“I never say it can’t get worse,” Bell said after the Royals had lost to the White Sox 4-0 in April 2006. “This game is too hard to play. There’s always something lurking around the corner.”

It’s an oft-repeated phrase among Kansas City sports fans, and it unfortunately resonates today. Not only did the Royals lose that game Saturday, but third baseman Maikel Garcia, the WBC MVP, left with a hamstring injury.

And things just seem to be getting worse for the Royals.

David Lesky talks about who is to blame (or not blame) for the Royals’ poor performance.

One thing I would like to head off is spending the next four months pointing fingers and arguing over who is to blame. I am of the belief, and have actually lost subscribers over it (which is super fun), that Matt Quatraro isn’t the problem. As all managers do, he has done things I wouldn’t have, but my point has always been that managers, unless there’s clubhouse unrest or they’re making asinine decisions, are generally not THE problem. Ultimately, the game is played on the field. You don’t like the lineup? I’ve long been someone who gets beyond frustrated by lineup complaints. You don’t like a pitching decision? That’s fine, but I’ll say that your decision is all theoretical, while you know what happened in the decision was actually made, and if you’re upset, it was likely negative.

Matthew Swigonski at Kings of Kauffman also plays the blame game.

Caleb Moody at Kings of Kauffman is unhappy that the Royals will continue to trot out Erceg as closer.

He also talks about some of the historical indicators around the multiple losing streaks.

Jay Jaffe explores why the Tigers have fallen apart this season.

The posturing between the MLBPA and MLB owners as they begin negotiations on the new CBA continues.

Reds star Elly De La Cruz hit the IL with a hamstring strain.

Minnesota Twins pitcher Joe Ryan wanted no part of this bunt fielding play.

Old friend Dairon Blanco signs in the Mexican league.

Serena Williams is coming back to tennis.

Patrick Mahomes’ rehab seems to be going well.

We had two blockbuster trades in the NFL yesterday.

First, the Cleveland Browns traded EDGE Myles Garrett to the Los Angeles Rams for EDGE Jared Verse, a 2027 first round pick, and more.

Second, the Philadelphia Eagles traded WR AJ Brown to the New England Patriots for a 2028 first round pick and a 2027 fifth round pick.

The New York Giants are bringing back their former start Odell Beckham Jr.

Longtime NBA coach Rick Adelman died.

AI company Anthropic has filed for IPO.

GoPro is in danger.

I aspire to be like this Capybara.

Your song of the day is Hey I Don’t Know by KONGOS.

Tuesday BP: Jhonny Level promoted to High-A

View from behind of Jhonny Level kicking his leg before swinging.
SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA - MARCH 15, 2025: Jhonny Level #18 of the San Francisco Giants bats during the second inning of a spring training Spring Breakout game against the Texas Rangers at Scottsdale Stadium on March 15, 2025 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by Chris Bernacchi/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

The biggest news in San Francisco Giants promotions this week came on Sunday, when center fielder Jonah Cox was stunningly promoted to the Majors straight from AA Richmond. But it seems that the Cox move has kickstarted promotion season for the rest of the Giants Minor League Baseball players. Because on Monday — the off-day for all the non-rookie ball teams — the Giants reportedly promoted a trio of exciting prospects.

Most notable is shortstop Jhonny Level, who has been promoted from Low-A San Jose to High-A Eugene. Level is the total package, and has been flying up prospect lists lately — ESPN’s Kiley McDaniel just ranked him as the No. 41 prospect in all of baseball. Despite having only turned 19 two months ago — making him more than two years younger than the average competition he’s been playing against in the California League — Level laid waste to Low-A pitchers. Among the 64 Cal League hitters with at least 100 plate appearances this year, the switch-hitter ranked sixth in batting average (.325), 18th in on-base percentage (.392), second in slugging percentage (.576), second in home runs (10), and eighth in wRC+ (134). He also has just a 16.6% strikeout rate, has stolen 11 bases in 13 attempts, and is playing very strong defense at shortstop. His 10 home runs are the most in the Giants Minor League system this year.

While Level’s promotion is very exciting, it brings up some roster logistics questions, as he’ll now be sharing a Eugene roster with last year’s first-round pick Gavin Kilen. My guess is the Giants will do what they did with Level and Kilen when they briefly shared time on San Jose’s roster at the end of last year: have each play a little bit of time at second base, with some designated hitter thrown in there as well.

The Giants made some space in Eugene for Level by promoting fellow infielder Jean Carlos Sio to AA Richmond. Sio, a 22-year old left-handed hitter, had mostly played second base for the Emeralds this year, but had also seen time at shortstop and left field (in recent years he’s also played third base, right field, and center field). Sio got a late start to the year due to injuries, and had only played 16 games for Eugene this year … but he was phenomenal in those 16 games (.936 OPS, 154 wRC+, four home runs in 65 plate appearances), and they came after 28 stellar games at the level to end the 2025 season. He’s really started to turn into an exciting prospect.

Sio isn’t displacing another infielder in Richmond, but he is still displacing a player: left-handed pitcher Matt Wilkinson. The 23-year old southpaw, aptly nicknamed “Tugboat,” came to the Giants last month in the shocking Patrick Bailey trade. In nine AA starts split between the San Francisco and Cleveland organizations, Tugboat had a 1.87 ERA and a 2.93 FIP, with 49 strikeouts against 13 walks in 43.1 innings. Now he’ll get a chance to see how his stuff plays with AAA Sacramento, which has been piecing together games lately without a full rotation, with Trevor McDonald currently in the Majors and Seth Lonsway injured.

The Giants may be playing horrible baseball, but these are some exciting moves in the Minors!

What would it take for you to buy in on the 2026 Red Sox?

CLEVELAND, OHIO - MAY 30: Ceddanne Rafaela #3, Wilyer Abreu #52 and Jarren Duran #16 of the Boston Red Sox celebrate the team's 9-1 win over the Cleveland Guardians at Progressive Field on May 30, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Happy Tuesday, OTM! Our Red Sox start a three-game series with the Baltimore Orioles tonight, who are two games above last place in the American League East. This season hasn’t gone as expected for us, but we’re still just three games back in the Wild Card hunt (expanded playoffs are dumb). My question to you is, what would it take for you to buy in? Is it a trade for a bat? Is it a 10-game winning streak? Another manager firing? Theo Epstein himself taking the POBO role? I’m an optimist, so I’ll convince myself there’s a chance they make a run until at least August, but I’m also insane, so your mileage may vary.

Talk about what you want and be good to one another. Go Sox.

Today in White Sox History: June 2

18 SEP 1993: CHICAGO WHITE SOX BATTER JOEY CORA RUNS TO FIRST BASE AFTER MAKING CONTACT WITH A PITCH DURING THE WHITE SOX VERSUS OAKLAND A''S GAME AT THE OAKLAND COLISEUM IN OAKLAND, CALIFORIA.
It took Joey Cora 886 at-bats, but he finally hit his first career home run on this day, 33 years ago today. | (OTTO GREULE/ALLSPORT)

1925
The White Sox scored 15 runs vs. Detroit — and lost.

Ty Cobb was a villain, lining a one-out, full-count pitch from Ted Blankenship out of Tiger Stadium in the bottom of the ninth for the walk-off win. It was the second straight walk-off win for the Tigers over the White Sox, losing on a one-out homer in the bottom of the ninth the previous day as well.

Bibb Falk and Willie Kamm both lined four hits in the game for the White Sox, who tallied 21 in the game. Kamm drove in five runs as well.

Chicago trailed 7-1 and 15-5 in the game before rallying to tie the game at 15 in the top of the ninth on a two-run Kamm double.

The game tied the franchise record for most runs in a loss, along with identical scores in 1911 and 1934.


1958
In a 3-0 win over the White Sox, Yankees pitcher Whitey Ford tied an AL record by punching out six in a row, including striking out the side in the fourth inning. Jim Wilson held New York to six hits in a shutout loss that saw the White Sox tally seven hits.

In the third inning, Luis Aparicio was gunned down at second base by Yogi Berra on a botched hit-and-run with Nellie Fox, ending Luis’ streak of 26 consecutive thefts.


1959
Down through the seasons, when the White Sox played the Orioles strange and bizarre things seemed to take place. For the most part those instances took place in Baltimore, but on this night Comiskey Park played host to one that fans attending never forgot. 

Future Sox pitcher Hoyt Wilhelm was on the mound for the O’s in the first inning when a swarm of gnats descended on the pitching mound area. It was so bad he couldn’t see the plate, and the game was halted as trainers, the grounds crew, even umpires tried to get rid of the bugs. 

After a 16-minute delay, Sox owner Bill Veeck ordered the fireworks crew in from the center field bullpen to set up a launch site. One explosion later, the gnats were gone and the game resumed. 

Wilhelm and Baltimore won, 3-2.   


1967
The White Sox traded infielder Jerry Adair to Boston for two players, one of whom was pitcher Don McMahon. McMahon would pitch spectacularly out of the bullpen for the 1967 White Sox, going 5-0, grabbing three saves and having an ERA of 1.67 in 51 games in a little more than 91 innings for the “near-miss” White Sox.


1993
It took 886 at-bats, but Joey Cora slugged his first career homer in a 10-1 rout at Detroit. After Tim Raines walked to open the game, Cora crushed a 1-0 pitch from Mike Moore deep to right field in the first inning, putting the White Sox up, 2-0.

The White Sox would hit four homers in the game, including two by Ron Karkovice.


1995
With the White Sox having blown four straight games to Cleveland and off to an 11-20 start, manager Gene Lamont was fired and replaced by abrasive, taciturn third-base coach Terry Bevington. Bevington would turn out to be a disaster on the field and in the clubhouse, and the long-term effects of the way Lamont was dismissed would cause his mentor and former Sox coach Jim Leyland to turn down overtures by owner Jerry Reinsdorf to take over after Bevington was removed before the start of the 1998 season and replaced by first-time manager Jerry Manuel.


2024
A 6-3 loss at Milwaukee finished off a sweep, and marked a 11th straight loss and 15th in 16 games for the White Sox. But more than that, it dropped the club to 15-45, 30 games worse than .500, at the earliest date in franchise history. That record was tied for the seventh-worst start to a season in baseball history.

Tigers try to make it two in a row against Rays on Tuesday

The Detroit Tigers opened up June with a white-knuckle 10-9 win over the Tampa Bay Rays in St. Petersburg, as one of the worst teams in the majors took down the top squad in the American League. AJ Hinch’s squad went wire-to-wire in the victory, but the team nearly collapsed in characteristic fashion in the final innings.

The Tigers can string together two straight victories for the first time since the opening days of May on Tuesday, but they will have to do it with right-hander Jack Flaherty on the mound. To his credit, the 30-year-old has done an admirable job over the past starts, limiting his free passes to just one while keeping up his strikeout totals with 20 over the last 15 innings of work.

Still, Detroit is just 2-10 this season with Flaherty on the mound. The last time the Tigers won with him starting was back on April 15 against the Kansas City Royals in what was easily his best outing of the 2026 campaign — a six-inning effort that saw him cough up a run on two hits and three walks while striking out seven.

Up against him is left-hander Steven Matz, who had a string of three straight solid starts — two of them of the quality variety — snapped last time out against the Baltimore Orioles, who shelled him for six runs on seven hits (one home run) and two walks while striking out two over three innings.

The 35-year-old saw the Tigers thrice last season — once with the St. Louis Cardinals and the other two with the Boston Red Sox, all in relief — holding Detroit scoreless across four frames of work, surrendering just one hit and zero walks while striking out three. We will see if he can bring that same mojo to the mound on Tuesday night.

Detroit Tigers (23-38) vs. Tampa Bay Rays (36-21)

Time (ET): 6:40 p.m.
Place: Tropicana Field, St. Petersburg, Florida
SB Nation Site:DRaysBay
Media: Detroit SportsNet, MLB.TV, Tigers Radio Network

Game 62: RHP Jack Flaherty (0-7, 5.81 ERA) vs. LHP Steven Matz (4-2, 4.67 ERA)

PlayerGIPK%BB%GB%FIPfWAR
Flaherty1252.225.712.030.14.610.5
Matz944.119.09.233.64.770.3

FLAHERTY

MATZ

Phillies news: Brandon Marsh, lineup, Edwin Arroyo

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 25: Brandon Marsh #16 of the Philadelphia Phillies celebrates after hitting a two-run home run against the San Diego Padres during the seventh inning at Petco Park on May 25, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Phillies News:

MLB News:

Orioles news: The O’s take their show on the road

May 31, 2026; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; Baltimore Orioles pitcher Rico Garcia (50) hugs Baltimore Orioles catcher Samuel Basallo (29) after a game against the Toronto Blue Jays at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Mandatory Credit: Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images | Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images

Good morning, Camden Chatters.

Eleven days ago in this space, I wrote that the Orioles were beginning a season-defining homestand that, if it went well, would help them build some momentum and start to salvage their season — or, if it went poorly, could spell “stick a fork in ’em” time for the 2026 team. Truthfully, I was fully expecting the latter to happen, and that I’d be coming back in 11 days to write about which players the O’s should start putting on the trade market for the inevitable selloff.

Happily, the Orioles had other plans. They rattled off an excellent 7-3 homestand, with two series wins and a split, and they do indeed appear to have some momentum on their side for once. They’re not out of the woods yet, of course; the O’s are still four games under .500, so let’s hold off on printing the playoff tickets. But, as our Tyler Young pointed out, there was a lot to like about the Orioles’ performance of the last week and a half. The starting pitching has improved, their offense started scoring runs more consistently, and the O’s showed a lot of heart with some thrilling late-inning comebacks.

Now comes the tricky part: can the O’s bring their winning ways with them on the road? So far this year, the team has been utterly hopeless away from Camden Yards. The Orioles’ road record is just 9-17, and only one team in baseball (the Royals) has fewer road wins than the Birds. The majority of that damage happened in May, when the Orioles went a dreadful 3-10 on their two road trips, which included being swept by two AL East opponents, the Yankees and Rays.

This next road trip, too, will pit the Orioles against divisional foes, albeit two — the Red Sox and Blue Jays — who are having much worse seasons than New York and Tampa Bay. The Red Sox in particular have been awful at home, carrying a 9-19 record at Fenway Park, so theoretically these next three games should be ripe for the Orioles to take. That doesn’t mean they will. The Birds are going to need to continue the recent solid work from their starting staff and the improved plate approach from their hitters, and they’ll need to do it in hostile territory.

I’ll hold off on declaring this as a season-defining road trip, although obviously the worst-case scenario of six straight losses would leave the Orioles hopelessly buried in the standings. If the O’s can keep their wits about them and at least split the six games against two teams that they should be able to beat, then they’ll still be in position to gain some ground when they return to the friendly confines of Oriole Park next Monday.

Links

Orioles starters keying resurgence leading into next road trip – School of Roch

If you’d told me before the season that the Orioles would lose Zach Eflin for the season, Dean Kremer for who knows how long, and have Trevor Rogers post a 6.84 ERA, I’d have expected their rotation to be even more in shambles than last year. The fact that they’re holding their own — and even thriving of late — is kind of remarkable.

Why Orioles infielder Coby Mayo worked with a pitching coach – The Baltimore Banner

I don’t think Mayo will ever be a very good defensive third baseman, but you certainly can’t accuse him of not putting in the work.

Who has best outfield arm in Orioles history? | MAILBAG – BaltimoreBaseball.com

Some of these guys are before my time, but Nick Markakis is the name that jumped immediately to my mind, as it did Rich Dubroff’s. Any other suggestions, Camden Chatters?

Orioles birthdays and history

Is today your birthday? Happy birthday! Three former Orioles were born on this day: left-hander Jack O’Connor (68), infielder Bob Saverine (85), and the late outfielder Roger Freed (b. 1946, d. 1996).

On this date in 1958, Hall of Famer Brooks Robinson, then in his first full MLB season, grounded into a triple play against the Senators. It was the first of four triple plays he grounded into during his 23 seasons, setting a dubious major league record. His career turned out pretty okay anyway.

And in 2016, the O’s mashed seven home runs in one game, second most in team history, to defeat the Red Sox at Camden Yards, 12-7. The Orioles homered in every inning from the fourth through the eighth, with Mark Trumbo and Adam Jones each hitting two, while Manny Machado, Pedro Álvarez, and catcher Francisco Peña (in his O’s debut) bashed one apiece.

Random Orioles game of the day

On June 2, 2010, the Orioles suffered their seventh straight loss of what eventually became a 10-game skid, dropping a 9-1 blowout at Yankee Stadium. The O’s were out of the game almost immediately as starter Brad Bergesen coughed up six runs in just 2.1 innings, while the Yankees’ Phil Hughes dominated the Birds’ lineup for seven strong innings. The embarrassing contest featured Miguel Tejada getting thrown out trying to score on a double in the eighth when the Orioles were losing by seven runs. The loss dropped the Orioles to 15-38, by far the worst record in baseball, and they fired manager Dave Trembley two days later.

Kentucky Wildcats News: Jamal Crawford Watch and Milan Momcilovic Commits

SAN ANTONIO, TX - MAY 28: Jamal Crawford talks to the media before the game between the Oklahoma City Thunder and the San Antonio Spurs during Game Six of the NBA Western Conference Finals on May 28, 2026 at the Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photos by Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Good morning, BBN!

We have all been on Milan Momcilovic watch over the last few days as we wait for the top uncommitted transfer to announce where he will play his college basketball next season.

It finally came late Monday night when Momcilovic announced his commitment to the Kentucky Wildcats. It marks one of the biggest commitments in recent memory for the basketball program, as well as the biggest recruiting win Mark Pope has had as a coach.

It also saved Kentucky’s 2026-27 season. While the pre-Momcilovic roster had some nice potential, it’s hard to see that group doing anything more than maybe sneaking into the Sweet 16 with a good draw.

Now we can start thinking about a fun season that ends with a special March Madness run.

While Kentucky now has its roster pretty much set, should we also be on commitment watch for a new assistant coach?

Only one name has really been connected to the final assistant coach opening on Mark Pope’s staff as they have honed in on former NBA superstar and current announcer Jamal Crawford.

It has been over a month since Crawford was initially linked to the job, and according to the most recent reports by Jack Pilgrim and Jacob Polacheck of KSR, he is still considering it.

With his NBC duties now over as the NBA Finals move to ESPN and ABC, will we finally get an answer from Crawford? If we do, it should be coming soon, especially with the summer recruiting circuit heating up.

This once again has some similarities to the Tyran Stokes recruitment all-over it. How so? Well, if Crawford really does finally turn it down, they will enter summer basketball with an open seat. Now, although we haven’t heard any other names connected, you have to believe they have been doing their due diligence.

At least, that is what we can hope.

Now, we wait on the former NBA Sixth Man of the Year.

Tweet of the Day

What a walk-off.

Headlines

Kentucky Football is Building Sweat Equity to Start Summer Program- KSR

Should be a fun fall in Lexington.

Kentucky vs. Louisville WBB will be at Rupp Arena- KSR

This should be fun!

2026 Elite 11 Finals- Cats Pause

The UK commit shines at Elite 11.

Randall Cobb Named to 2027 College Football Hall of Fame Ballot- UK Athletics

Let’s go!

Kentucky still outside of Preseason Top 25s ahead of Milan Momcilovic’s decision- KSR

This would change a lot.

Eagles trade AJ Brown to Patriots- ESPN

Brown is reunited with Vrabel.

Myles Garrett traded to the Rams- ESPN

A blockbuster in the NFL.

2026 Women’s College World Series: Reigning champ Texas sweeps Tennessee, advances to WCWS finals- CBS

The Longhorns return to the finals.

The Knicks have achieved an era of prosperity. When will the Mets do the same?

May 25, 2026; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) lifts the 2026 Eastern Conference trophy with teammates after defeating the Cleveland Cavaliers in game four of the eastern conference finals for the 2026 NBA playoffs at Rocket Arena. Mandatory Credit: David Richard-Imagn Images | David Richard-Imagn Images

Last week, I had recap duties for the Mets’ series opener against the Reds. After the Mets suffered another in a long line of hapless losses, I chose to mostly write about the New York Knicks, who at that time were one win away from the NBA Finals. A dereliction of duty? Perhaps, but in my defense: Can you really blame me for preferring in that moment to talk about the Knicks—who went on to finish their sweep of the Cavaliers that night and be declared Eastern Conference champions for the first time since 1999, i.e. the first time since I’d started watching them in the mid-2000s—over a Mets team that has spent their 2026 trying—and mostly failing, despite a decent winning streak here and there—to simply hold their head above water?

I don’t even live in New York right now, but even hundreds of miles away it’s pretty clear that a certain blue and orange squad has taken over the hearts and minds of the city, and it ain’t the one we usually talk about on this site.

From my Mets fan point of view, 95% of me has appreciated having the Knicks as a diversion from the awful baseball we’ve been subjected to over the past couple months. No matter how terrible things have been at Citi Field, it’s been a comfort to know that all I needed to do was wait until the next game at Madison Square Garden to experience some significantly better vibes. I fear for what things will be like in the dog days of July and August when I will be forced to give all my attention to the Mets once more (perhaps some people could simply spend those months building up anticipation for football season, but as a Jets fan… well, yeah).

That other 5%, however, is a different story. That other 5% is looking at what’s happening with the Knicks and wondering when we will get to experience something similar with the Mets. And to be clear, I’m not just talking about making a championship run, though of course, that is the ultimate goal in all sports. But what I’m looking at is not just the last two months of basketball, but rather the past four years of it. During that time, the Knicks have accomplished something that the Mets have pretty much never accomplished during their entire history: continuous relevance.

Let’s back it up. Even those who don’t watch basketball probably know that the 21st century had not been kind to the Knicks before the 2020s. The organization spent the first two decades of the 2000s being a perennial laughingstock, putting up just three winning seasons in nineteen years from 2001 to 2020 and winning just one playoff series in those three winning seasons from 2011-2013. But then Leon Rose took over as team president in 2020, and a series of moves—most notably, the free agency signing of Jalen Brunson—transformed the team’s identity. They easily made the postseason in all four seasons since Brunson joined the team, and they had some measure of success once there in each of those seasons, as they won at least one playoff series in all four years before finally making it to the Finals this year. Now they are a mere four wins away from giving Knicks fans their first title since 1973, an event which would undoubtedly cause New York City to burn to the ground. If you need any more evidence for how thoroughly the team has taken over the city, look no further than Mayor Zohran Mamdani signing an executive order to repeal kids’ bedtimes for the Finals, a decision I was sure to inform my sister about so she could adjust my three-year-old nephew’s sleeping schedule accordingly.

Again, winning a championship is the final goal, and if the Knicks don’t manage to get it done this year or in the near future it will certainly limit the level of fondness we can feel about this era in the years to come. But there is still something to be said about rooting for a team that is always a factor come playoff time, that goes into each season genuinely believing that it has a chance at being the last squad standing. Having spent most of my life rooting for a team that was always a laughingstock of the sport instead of at the forefront of it, it has been a special feeling to get to experience the latter for a change and I have tried not to take that for granted.

The Mets, on the other hand? Making the playoffs four years in a row is something the franchise has quite literally never done. Their record is two straight years, which they’ve only accomplished twice (1999-2000 and 2015-2016). In theory, it should be easier than ever to finally break that streak nowadays with the expansion of the wild card. They had the chance to make the playoffs in consecutive seasons for the third time in history last year, but their collapse prevented that from happening. And barring a miraculous turnaround, odds are they won’t be making the playoffs this year, either, so the stretch of perennial irrelevance will continue for an unforeseen period of time. Despite playing in a league whose collective bargaining agreement is far more generous towards big market, deep-pocketed franchises in comparison to a salary cap league like the NBA, the Mets have simply never been able to establish the kind of year-to-year consistency that the Knicks have had for the past few years.

This should all be familiar enough to those of us who have rooted for the team for a while, so why complain about it now? Well, beyond the fact that the Knicks are now reminding us what extended success looks and feels like, there’s also the fact that this time a year ago, it really and truly seemed like things were finally changing for the better.

The Mets had their rich owner and a president of baseball operations who was seen as one of the best in the business. They were coming off a magical 2024 season in which they came up just short, but not before getting one over on some of the foes (the Braves and the Phillies, namely) who have historically been the ones to get the last laugh over the Mets. They had won a bidding war for one of the best players on the planet, beating the goddamn Yankees, of all teams. And in the first half of 2025, they were succeeding at the major league level while also boasting a strong farm system and improved player development apparatus. A World Series victory was not guaranteed, of course, but it seemed like another playoff berth was in store and that a string of them would still follow in the years to come. If you get enough bites at the apple, eventually it stands to reason that you’ll have a pretty good chance at winning it all.

Mets fans have certainly fallen victim to false hope before, but this didn’t feel like that at all. This felt sustainable. This felt real.

But we all know how things played out from there. The second half of 2025 was a slow-moving train wreck, and they missed the playoffs by one game. After a tumultuous offseason which still ended with most people feeling optimistic about how things would go this year, 2026 has largely picked up right where the end of last season left off. And now, 2024 looks like what 2015 and 2006 were before them: not the start of an exciting new era of Mets baseball, but rather a flash in the pan, an oasis of glory (and fairly limited glory at that, given that all of these seasons ended without a ring) amid a desert of ineptitude. Indeed, one good season a decade seems to be all that the baseball gods see fit to give us.

So while watching the Knicks has given me all sorts of joy over the past couple months, it has also made me look at the Mets and wonder: When is it their turn? When will we finally get to see not just a good season here and there, but rather an extended period of meaningful, important, and just plain good baseball? Every single time we think they’re on the verge, things go wrong. Players get hurt, prospects bust, managers and GMs get fired. All of this has happened before, and seemingly, all of it will happen again. And again. And again. It’s the sort of thing that can make a skeptic believe in curses.

So again: When it is the Mets’ turn? Usually when we ask a question like that, we’ll be able to offer some kind of attempt at a sensible answer. But I’ve got nothing for this one. All I can do is watch the Knicks and be reminded of what it is that we’ve been missing.

If there’s a silver lining here, it’s this: The current success of the Knicks showed how dramatically a franchise’s fortunes can change before you know it. One day you can be the worst-run team in the league, and then you hire the right person and sign the right player and suddenly you’re at the top of the organizational rankings. One day, perhaps we will look up and the Mets will have accomplished the same level of annual relevance that the Knicks have achieved over these past few years. Maybe it will even still be the current people in charge to get them there; after all, for all the things that have gone wrong over the past calendar year, they still have some bright young players on their roster, and their player development apparatus remains far ahead of where it was just a few years ago.

So yes, maybe we will finally see the Mets get over the hump if we just wait a little bit longer. But we have already been waiting so long, and despite all the positive steps they had seemed to have taken over the past few years, it still oftentimes feels like we remain so far away. 

Have Spurs exceeded expectations? Young squad more than just Wembanyama

Last season, with Victor Wembanyama shut down by mid-February with a blood clot, the San Antonio Spurs lurched to a 34-48 record.

Now, just four wins away from an NBA title, these young Spurs are on the cusp of recasting the balance of power in the league and announcing itself as a dynastic force.

Wembanyama is 22. Stephon Castle 21 and Dylan Harper 20.

The average age of the Spurs (25.06 years old) makes San Antonio the second-youngest team to reach an NBA Finals in the shot clock era.

Even their head coach, Mitch Johnson, is young; he’s 39 and in his first full season on the job. And if he can top the New York Knicks in the NBA Finals, which begin Wednesday, June 3, he would become the fifth-youngest head coach to win an NBA championship since 1970.

These Spurs, it would seem, are ahead of schedule.

That has been the predominating thought surrounding San Antonio’s ascension, but that framing is too simplistic. Yes, the Spurs are winning as a very young team, but that notion minimizes other qualities necessary in championship teams, qualities the Spurs have: commitment to an identity, maturity, a willingness to adapt, a willingness to sacrifice.

“People don’t talk as much about the habits, the character, the togetherness, the competitive response — the things we talk about in these media sessions every single day,” Johnson said May 30, after San Antonio dethroned the Thunder in Game 7 of the Western Conference finals. “And this team has now been pretty damn consistent for a long time, for over 100 games for the most part.

“When you look back at how we started the year, how we got to the (NBA) Cup on the road versus Denver and L.A., what we did in the Cup, playing (the Thunder) around Christmastime a few times, expectations. We’ve played in three playoff series, (at times) without Victor, without (De'Aaron) Fox multiple games — I don’t know who has as much experience as we do, this year, in terms of the 2025-2026 season.”

Whether you subscribe to the notion that this team is ahead of some nebulous schedule, the Spurs are nonetheless favored to win the Finals, primarily because of one thing: this team is much more than just Victor Wembanyama.

The Spurs showed that in Game 7, when they topped the Thunder, 111-103, on their home floor. Seven different players reached double-figures in scoring, and contributions from all over the rotation predominated.

Julian Champagnie, who finished with 20 points, dropped 11 in the third quarter. Backup center Luke Kornet, who played just six minutes, hustled back during a pivotal Thunder fastbreak to pin a momentum-changing block against the backboard in an eventual four-point swing. De’Aaron Fox was a menace on defense all night and collected three steals and later found his shooting stroke. Harper knocked down huge shots down the stretch and scored 12 points off the bench on 5-of-8 shooting. Backup Keldon Johnson, the NBA's Sixth Man of the Year, knocked down two massive 3-pointers in the fourth quarter, both of which came when the Thunder had trimmed the deficit to two points.

And then there’s Mitch Johnson, the coach who came up in the organization and who was hand-picked to be Gregg Popovich’s successor.

San Antonio has built a culture of hard work and discipline, of growth and learning, of consistency. Wembanyama and Johnson are merely the next stewards of that culture, but this front office recognizes that it’s about building a structure and empowering players to own their results.

The San Antonio Spurs celebrate with the Oscar Robertson trophy after defeating the Oklahoma City Thunder in Game 7 of the Western Conference finals on May 30, 2026.

The Thunder are still a force in the West. The Timberwolves, with Anthony Edwards, and the Nuggets (with three-time Most Valuable Player Nikola Jokić) are always lurking. But, first, it’s the Knicks who stand in the way of history.

And with NBA All-Defensive second-team selection OG Anunoby expected to be the primary defender on Wembanyama, and with Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns leading an offense that has posted the most dominant stretch in league history over any 11-game stretch, the challenge is daunting. Other Spurs will need to step up.

“Winning the Larry O’Brien, it’s a childhood dream,” Wembanyama said after Game 7. “Having a real shot at it. Having a chance — a tangible chance at winning it — at realizing a dream, it’s a lifetime chance. You never know when it’s going to happen again.

“The day we win it, speaking for myself, it’s going to be an amazing day of the realization of a dream. It’s hard to put into words. It’s almost like the meaning of my life.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Spurs reach NBA Finals with Victor Wembanyama, other young teammates

Knicks legend Jeremy Lin joining ESPN's NBA Finals coverage team | Exclusive

Jeremy Lin couldn’t have timed it better.

This week, the player responsible for perhaps the NBA’s most potent cultural phenomenon is stepping into a new broadcast role while the iconic franchise linked to his fame is competing for an NBA championship.

Lin, whose memorable play for the New York Knicks during the 2011-12 season sparked the international “Linsanity” craze, is joining ESPN’s NBA Finals coverage as an analyst. He will appear on "NBA Today," "SportsCenter" and possibly other network programs through the duration of the Knicks-Spurs series.

Lin makes his ESPN debut on Wednesday, June 3 on "SportsCenter" with Scott Van Pelt live in Washington D.C.

And yes, Lin told USA TODAY Sports in an interview on June 1, he is excited to see his former team four wins away from an NBA title.

“I always felt like Knicks fans deserve the best performances. They’re so passionate,” Lin said. “And as cool as it was for me to give good performances only for that stretch of time, I genuinely wish that I was able to do more. I genuinely wish I was able to stay longer, genuinely wish that I could have a lot more success and done things in the playoffs for the Knicks, but that never came to fruition.”  

Lin played in the NBA for nine seasons, including two-year stints in Houston and Brooklyn and part of the Toronto Raptors’ championship 2019 season, but he remains best known for his lone season with the Knicks. Current Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns, who grew up in New Jersey, even credited Lin for influencing his Knicks fandom.

Lin helped the Knicks turn around their season in February 2012 when he joined the starting lineup and led the team on a seven-game win streak while star Carmelo Anthony was out injured.  The Knicks made the Eastern Conference playoffs but, with Lin injured and unable to play, were eliminated in the first round.

“I don’t think people understand the agony – putting in that much, having the team be able to turn around and really find good rhythm, and then to not be there for the most important games,” Lin said. “It was really hard for me to not be out on the floor. I know that there were some reports at that time, but the reality was, I was doing everything I could to try get back and contribute, and I wasn’t able to do that.”

Lin went on to play in the NBA playoffs in four different seasons for three different teams and said he plans to lean on that experience in his analyst role with ESPN.

“The goal for me is really how do I bring my previous experience and distill the complexities into something simple and digestible for the fans?” Lin said. “And that’s not just the successes. It’s the failures of multiple first-round exits before I was able to be a part of a team that was able to win it all. And seeing what worked, what didn’t work or what was the differentiator in getting us over the top, those are the things that I want to talk about.”

The whole idea of TV came out of left field for Lin, who said that while playing he never contemplated a broadcast career. But last season, after Lin returned from playing basketball in China and decided to retire, he wanted to figure out his next steps.

This March, Lin made a guest analyst appearance on "NBA Today," which he said was effectively a three-day trial period. He wanted to find out whether he was passionate about broadcasting and whether a network would give him the chance. His analytical breakdown of Luka Doncic’s isolation play was well-received by viewers and answered his own questions.

“I think after those three days, the reception that we got from the fans as well as what I felt internally was definitely beyond what I expected,” Lin said. “So that was nice in the sense of like, oh, people had really appreciated the breakdown, but I also felt joy in being back in NBA basketball.”

He said he’s texted three former teammates-turned-analysts — Danny Green, Iman Shumpert and Steve Novak — for advice. He’s also relied on ESPN anchor Malika Andrews and Guy, the vice president of production, for constant coaching.

“I’m less of the super hot take, loud persona,” Lin said. “I try to be somewhat even keeled, I try to be educated and then I try to be uplifting, even if I have to criticize.”

Lin said he’s learned that broadcasting is harder than it looks, and that he wants to do it anyway. Although his current agreement with ESPN is only through these Finals, he hopes to continue his broadcasting career afterward.

“I definitely have serious interest in trying to do this more and to do this long-term,” Lin said. “Honestly, I’m just really grateful to ESPN for these opportunities and I know that it’s truly special that they were willing to carve the space for me in the Finals. I know that doesn’t grow on trees and is something extremely special, so I’m just very grateful.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Knicks legend Jeremy Lin joining ESPN's NBA Finals coverage team