Viggo Björck Emerging As ‘Dark Horse’ Candidate For Rangers at No. 5 Pick

 Nick Wosika-Imagn Images
 Nick Wosika-Imagn Images

With less than one week until the start of the 2026 NHL Draft, it appears that the New York Rangers are more likely to pick a defenseman at the fifth overall pick as opposed to a forward. 

If defensemen including Chase Reid, Carson Carels, Keaton Verhoeff, or Alberts Šmits are available for the Rangers to take at the No. 5 selection, it may be difficult for the team to pass up on. 

However, if the Rangers opt to go in a different direction, there is one obvious forward who would be their top choice. 

Peter Baugh and Vincent Mercogliano of The Athletic call center Viggo Björck a “dark horse” candidate to be drafted by the Blueshirts at fifth overall.

Björck is considered to be the consensus No. 2 center in the draft, only behind Caleb Malhotra, who is projected to be selected before the Rangers’ pick. 

This past season, Björck played 42 games in the SHL for Djurgårdens IF, recording 15 points and finishing the season in a top-line role.

“While his numbers will be nothing to lose your mind over, the fact that Björck played on the first line – often skating in more than 20 minutes a night – as a 17-year-old in one of the top leagues in the world is bonkers,” Steven Ellis of Daily Faceoff wrote. “Björck was electric at the World Juniors, showing a high-end blend of hockey sense and raw skill.”

The 17-year-old 5-foot-9 center made a name for himself competing for team Sweden at the 2026 World Championship, as he held his own against some of the top NHL’ers. 

Despite his smaller frame, Björck doesn't let it affect his game, making up for it with his high hockey IQ and elite-level playmaking.

“He's the guy who can survive everywhere he goes, even though he's a smaller body," NHL Director of European Scouting Jukka-Pekka Vuorinen said. "He showed that in the Swedish Hockey League and also on the men's national team. ... He's like a Sidney Crosby-type player, and his hockey intelligence shows through with clever movement and spatial awareness in tight areas, which will, in my mind, help him adjust to the NHL in the future.”

If the Rangers do decide to take a forward with the No. 5 pick, keep an eye out for Björck. 

Sabres Long-Term Extension For Zach Benson Could Signal Tuch’s Departure

Buffalo Sabres GM Jarmo Kekalainen indicated in his comments at the season-ending media availability last month that at the top of his agenda was to work on extensions for defenseman Bowen Byram and winger Zach Benson. A report this week from TSN’s Darren Dreger indicated that one of those items may be more difficult than expected, as Byram’s name has begun circulating in trade speculation, but ESPN’s Kevin Weekes reported on Friday that the Sabres are working on a long-term extension for Benson. 

The 21-year-old winger is coming off an impressive nine-point performance in the playoffs after his third NHL season, and according to Weekes, the Sabres are looking to sign him to a seven-year deal in excess of $7 million per season, similar to what the club inked linemate Josh Doan to during the season. Benson is a restricted free agent this summer and has played the third-most games of any player selected at the 2023 NHL Draft (only Connor Bedard and Adam Fantilli have played more).

"We locked up Josh early, because we saw the character, the competitiveness, and potential for a leadership role long to the future." Kekalainen said. "(Zach is a) true core piece that fills all the boxes, maybe not the height, (but) everything else. The way he plays, how he's just relentless, a dog on the bone. I can't say enough good things about Zach Benson. He's got skill, he's got hockey sense, he's got instincts. He's relentless, he's a competitor."

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The Sabres enter the summer with just under $12 million in available cap space, with Benson, and forward Peyton Krebs as restricted free agents and wingers Alex Tuch and Beck Malenstyn as unrestricted free agents.The Fourth Period’s David Pagnotta, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman, and The Athletic’s Pierre LeBrun all reported last week that there is a significant gap between the Sabres and Tuch on a new deal. 

The 30-year-old is expected to draw the most attention on July 1 and is reportedly looking for more than $10 million per season on a long-term deal. With the Sabres limited cap space this summer, if they lock up Benson to an extension, it would likely mean the end of any chance of re-signing Tuch, unless they clear out other contracts to make room. 

Buffalo could facilitate some return for Tuch, by trading him his negotiating rights before the start of free agency or doing a sign-and-trade at or around the NHL Draft, as Toronto did with Tampa Bay defenseman Darren Raddysh on Friday, but that would likely result in a mid-round pick, as the Lightning got for the pending free-agent blueliner. 

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Three U-25 NHL Trade Options The St. Louis Blues Can Explore

The St. Louis Blues could be active on the trade market this off-season, looking to offload veterans while bringing in younger talent.

Earlier, we covered which players may have played their final games in St. Louis and identified some possible destinations for them.

But if they do finally make those long-talked-about moves, who could they look to acquire with those players or the assets they receive? With the Blues’ desire to get younger and more skilled, we’ll take a look at three under-25 players the Blues could explore trades for.

Matthew Knies, LW, Toronto Maple Leafs

Matthew Knies has been surfacing in the rumor mill, and while Toronto Maple Leafs GM John Chayka mentioned that they aren’t actively looking to move him, they are willing to listen to offers.

The Blues could be a team that makes a play for Knies. His 6-foot-3, 232-pound frame is imposing, and he has no fear using his weight to win puck battles and get to the front of the net. In 2025-26, the 23-year-old posted 23 goals and 66 points in 79 games despite dealing with an injury for a large chunk of the season. 

Knies is the perfect top-six winger, able to play big minutes at even strength, the power play, and the penalty kill. It would take a lot to pry Knies out of Toronto, but the Blues have veterans like Jordan Kyrou and Colton Parayko who could help facilitate a deal. 

'We're Going To Evaluate Everything' Maple Leafs' John Chayka Speaks On Matthew Knies Trade Rumors'We're Going To Evaluate Everything' Maple Leafs' John Chayka Speaks On Matthew Knies Trade RumorsWith conversations regarding Matthew Knies and the possibility of him being traded, Toronto Maple Leafs GM John Chayka spoke to those rumors on Friday.

Mason McTavish, C, Anaheim Ducks

The Anaheim Ducks took a big step forward this season, but Mason McTavish didn’t. Following a difficult season that started with a contract dispute, McTavish could be on the move out of Anaheim. 

The Ducks will likely look for experienced players to improve their chances of a long playoff run. Although McTavish’s 17 goals and 41 points in 75 games weren’t all too impressive, there is still belief that a new environment can help him find his game again. 

Determining McTavish’s value is difficult. Despite the poor numbers, he’s still just 23 years old, plays as a center, and boasts a 6-foot-1, 219-pound frame. 

Insider Links Young Anaheim Ducks Center To The St. Louis BluesInsider Links Young Anaheim Ducks Center To The St. Louis BluesDavid Pagnotta of The Fourth Period has linked the St. Louis Blues to young Anaheim Ducks center Mason McTavish.

Bowen Byram, D, Buffalo Sabres

Following another career season in offensive production, Bowen Byram seems to be coming into his own. Yet, the Buffalo Sabres are once again willing to gauge the market on the 25-year-old defender. 

Byram finished the 2025-26 season with 11 goals and 42 points in 82 games, the second consecutive season in which he’s played 82 games. Injuries held Byram back early in his career, but he is healthy now and is thriving. He averaged over 22:00 of time for the second consecutive season and was a key part of the Sabres’ success in the playoffs, scoring four goals and seven points in 13 games. 

Sabres' Bowen Byram NHL trade rumors are back and louder than ever | Sporting NewsSabres' Bowen Byram NHL trade rumors are back and louder than ever | Sporting NewsDespite back-to-back career seasons with the Buffalo Sabres, Bowen Byram is reportedly back on the trade market, and rumors are louder than ever.

Byram is a 6-foot-1, left-handed defenseman who flies around the ice, makes excellent breakout passes, and has improved defensively, becoming an all-around defender. Byram has one season remaining on his contract before becoming a UFA, and reports indicate he is seeking a major pay raise.

If the Blues feel they can work out an extension with Byram, icing Philip Broberg and Bowen Byram on the left side of their defense provides a foundation to build from the back. 


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NHL Trade Rumors: Flyers Should Finally Pull Off Bowen Byram Heist

The Philadelphia Flyers have a history of targeting players they covet when the time is right, and they would be wise to do so again this summer.

At this point, it is no secret that the Flyers would like to add a No. 1 center, or even a top-six one, to start with.

But, at the same time, it is public knowledge that the Flyers also want to upgrade on defense, and one of their long-standing trade targets at the position is mired in trade rumors... again.

On Thursday, TSN NHL insider Darren Dreger reported that multiple teams were engaging the Buffalo Sabres in trade talks for defenseman Bowen Byram, who has one year remaining on his contract at a $6.25 million cap hit.

Byram, 25, is due for a big raise, and the Sabres, who need to pay players like Zach Benson while already having Owen Power, Rasmus Dahlin, and Mattias Samuelsson at left defense, may not be inclined to give it.

The former No. 4 overall pick just played 82 games for the second year in a row, seemingly putting the health issues that plagued him early in his career behind him.

It helps, too, that Byram just had a career-high 11 goals, 31 assists, and 42 points, as well as seven points in 13 playoff games.

Exclusive Q&A: Flyers GM Danny Briere on Matthew Schaefer's Calder, Top Prospects, and Free AgencyExclusive Q&A: Flyers GM Danny Briere on Matthew Schaefer's Calder, Top Prospects, and Free AgencyIn an interview with The Hockey News, Philadelphia Flyers general manager Danny Briere discusses his top prospects, former players, free agency, and more.

Seven of Byram's points came on the power play, though it's worth noting that he largely takes a backseat to Dahlin in that role.

With the Flyers, the opportunity would be much greater.

The Flyers have worked diligently to clear wasted cap space from their books, and while they do need to still re-sign and extend Dan Vladar, Trevor Zegras, and Jamie Drysdale, they have more than enough money to sign Byram long-term, too.

Still just 25, Byram could very well command north of $10 million on his next contract, and while the Flyers wouldn't just hand him that without seeing him play first, there is plenty of potential for them to bet on.

With any young player, you are betting on what they will be, not what they are.

(Evolving-Hockey)
(Evolving-Hockey)

If Byram has the potential to score 20 goals and 60 points with No. 1 or No. 2 minutes behind Travis Sanheim, and with adequate power play ice time, that is a worthy bargain for the Flyers.

For those worried about Byram's actual defending, the buccaneering rearguard has actually developed into a perfectly fine defender in the same way Drysdale has.

As we see in Evolving-Hockey's data above, Byram's work shorthanded could improve, but Flyers assistant coach Todd Reirden did fantastic work with a rather uninspiring group last season. Byram only adds more potential to the cupboard.

The Sabres may require a winger to replace pending free agent Alex Tuch, and/or a defenseman to replace Byram at a lesser cost.

Flyers like Tyson Foerster, Owen Tippett, and Rasmus Ristolainen, to name a few, would hypothetically fit the bill to varying degrees.

The Flyers already once tried to get Byram, when they offered Cutter Gauthier to the Colorado Avalanche 1-for-1, but now, several years on, seems like the right time to finally make it happen.

Former Canadiens Are Calder Cup Champions With The Marlies

On Friday night, the Toronto Marlies signed a 4-3 win over the Chicago Wolves to win the AHL Championship and lift the Calder Cup. If former Montreal Canadiens goaltender Cayden Primeau was on the wrong side of the defeat, three former members of the Habs’ organization are now Calder Cup champions: Brandon Baddock, Logan Shaw, and Michael Pezzetta.

While Baddock, who spent the best part of two seasons in the Canadiens’ organization playing mainly with the Laval Rocket and a single game with the Habs, didn’t play during the playoffs, he’s still a member of the organization.

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Unlike Baddock, Shaw and Pezzetta played big roles in the Marlies Calder Cup conquest. The former was the first one to lift the trophy, since he is the team’s captain. He put up 17 points in 24 playoff games and was assessed 28 penalty minutes. Shaw spent only part of a season with the Canadiens, playing 30 games in the 2017-18 season after the Habs, who were hit by a slew of injuries, claimed him off waivers. Eight of his 39 career NHL points were picked up while playing with the Sainte-Flanelle. He has played 232 NHL games so far, spending most of his career in the AHL, where he has played for seven different teams.

As for Pezzetta, a former sixth-round pick by the Canadiens at the 2016 draft, he skated in 23 playoff games this year, gathering five points and 82 penalty minutes. Unsurprisingly, he’s still relied on for his physicality and ability to drop the gloves. He turned pro during the 2018-19 season and went on to play 200 NHL games with Montreal, totaling 38 points and 241 penalty minutes. After playing only 25 games with the Canadiens in 2024-25, he signed with the Toronto Maple Leafs last offseason as a free agent but played only nine NHL games, spending most of the season with the Marlies.

As for Primeau, even if he lost in the final, he had a great season in the AHL with a 21-11-7 record, a 2.41 goals-against average, and a .916 save percentage. In the postseason, he was 9-9 with a 2.72 GAA and a .913 SV. While those are good numbers, his short stay in the NHL this season wasn’t great. In three games with the Leafs, he posted a 2-1-0 record but had a 4.30 GAA and a .838 SV. When he was waived, the Carolina Hurricanes claimed him, and that's how he ended up with the Wolves.  It might just be that the AHL is his ceiling and he can’t make the jump to the NHL.


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Blue Jackets Sign First-Round Pick To Contract Extension

The Columbus Blue Jackets are keeping one of their first-round picks in their system. 

The Blue Jackets have announced that they have signed defenseman Corson Ceulemans to a one-year, two-way contract extension. At the NHL level, the 6-foot-2 defenseman will have an $850,000 cap hit. He will have an AHL salary of $95,000.

Ceulemans appeared in 64 AHL games this past season with the Cleveland Monsters, where he set new career highs with eight goals, 16 assists, and 24 points in 64 games. It was a nice step in the right direction for the 2021 first-round pick as he continues to work on his development. 

Ceuelemans has yet to make his Blue Jackets debut, but that could change during the 2026-27 season. The potential for him to become a solid NHL-caliber defenseman is still there, and it will be interesting to see if he breaks through next season. 

In 157 career AHL games with the Monsters over four seasons, Ceuelemans has posted 14 goals, 31 assists, 45 points, and 90 penalty minutes.  

Next Up For Columbus: The NHL Draft is on June 26 and 27 in Buffalo, where the CBJ will own pick #14. 

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Yankees prospects: Oswaldo Cabrera’s six hits lead zany Scranton doubleheader split

Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders:L, 8-9 (8) and W, 8-6 (7) at Columbus Clippers

Game 1

C Austin Wells 0-4, BB, 3 K — no-contact day in this rehab game, as opposed to the two homers on Thursday
2B Marco Luciano 0-4, BB, K
3B Oswaldo Cabrera 4-5, HR, 2 RBI — great day for Waldo!
RF Yanquiel Fernández 1-5, HR, RBI, 2 K, GIDP — dinger in the seventh but Scranton ahead, butmisplay in right allowed Bo Naylor to walk off the doubleheader opener in extras (yes, the eighth constitutes extras here) with a two-run inside-the-parker, had to be seen to be believed!
1B Tyler Hardman 0-4, K, HBP
DH Payton Henry 3-4, RBI
LF Ernesto Martinez Jr. 0-2, K, HBP
PR-LF Duke Ellis 0-1, 2 SB — scored two runs though, and up to 30 stolen bases
SS Jonathan Ornelas 1-2, 2 BB, K, 2 SB
CF Kenedy Corona 2-4, 2B, 3 RBI, SB — two-run double in the eighth put Scranton up, and he did as well on Cabrera’s hit; the 8-5 lead wasn’t enough

Adam Kloffenstein 5 IP, 5 H, 4 R (4 ER), 4 BB, 4 K, HR
Angel Chivilli 1.1 IP, 1 H, 1 R (1 ER), 1 BB, 3 K, HR — allowed game-tying homer to begin the seventh
Yovanny Cruz 1 IP, 2 H, 3 R (2 ER), 1 BB, 2 K — as noted above, Fernández was somewhat the goat for the final play, but Cruz and Montero played their part as well with poor relief work; Cruz continues to throw hard with 13 pitches of at least 100 mph and one at 102 … but he has work to do
Rafael Montero 0.1 IP, 1 H, 1 R (1 ER), 0 BB, 0 K, HR (loss)

Game 2

SS Jonathan Ornelas 1-4, HR, 4 RBI — grand slam got Scranton back in it after trailing 6-0 through five
2B Marco Luciano 2-4, K
RF Yanquiel Fernández 1-4, HR, 3 RBI, K — hit go-ahead homer put Scranton up by one
3B Oswaldo Cabrera 2-4, K — six hits combined in the twin bill
1B Tyler Hardman 1-3, 2B, BB, RBI
DH Ernesto Martinez Jr. 0-1, 3 BB, K
C Payton Henry 0-4, K
LF Kenedy Corona 1-3, BB
CF Duke Ellis 1-3, BB

Danny Watson 1 IP, 5 H, 5 R (5 ER), 1 BB, 0 K, 2 HR — ouch
Carson Coleman 1.2 IP, 1 H, 1 R (1 ER), 2 BB, 3 K
Dylan Coleman 1.2 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 2 BB, 2 K, HBP
Bradley Hanner 2.1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 1 K (win) — excellent work for the W (for the most part)
Cole Gabrielson 0.1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 0 K (save) — Hanner and pitching coach Spencer Medick got ejected, so in came a position player for the save after the long day of RailRoders pitching … and he got it lol (walked one but then got a popup)

Double-A Somerset Patriots:L, 2-6 at Portland Sea Dogs

LF Jackson Castillo 0-4, K
CF Garrett Martin 3-4, 2B, HR, RBI — his 21st homer, cotinues laying waste to Double-A
RF DJ Gladney 1-4, K
1B Nicholas Torres 0-4, 3 K
3B Coby Morales 1-4, K, fielding error
C Tomas Frick 1-4, K, GIDP
DH Miguel Palma 0-3, 3 K
2B Connor McGinnis 0-3, 2 K
SS Owen Cobb 1-3, 3B, RBI, K

Chase Hampton 5 IP, 5 H, 5 R (5 ER), 1 BB, 2 K (loss) — the Tommy John rehab process is not for the faint of heart
Chase Chaney 3 IP, 2 H, 1 R (1 ER), 1 BB, 3 K

High-A Hudson Valley Renegades:L, 4-5 at Rome Emperors

2B Kaeden Kent 0-4, BB, 2 K
SS Core Jackson 1-4, 2B, K, SB
DH Eric Genther 0-3, BB
1B Kyle West 0-3, BB, RBI, K, SB
LF Wilson Rodriguez 0-3, BB, 2 K
3B Roderick Arias 2-4, HR, 3 RBI, K — run-scoring hit in the first and a two-run blast in the third (his first against a lefty of 2026)
C Josue Gonzalez 0-4, 2 K
CF Camden Troyer 0-3, BB, 2 K
RF Luis Durango 2-3, SB, sacrifice — only five hits total on the day from Hudson Valley

Allen Facundo 5.2 IP, 9 H, 3 R (3 ER), 2 BB, 5 K, WP
Brady Kirtner 1.2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 1 K, HBP
Bryce Warrecker 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 1 K
Andrew Landry 0.1 IP, 3 H, 2 R (2 ER), 0 BB, 1 K, WP (loss) — wild pitch allowed game-tying run to score in the ninth
Tanner Bauman 0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 0 K, HBP —gave up walk-off single to end it

Low-A Tampa Tarpons:W, 8-7 vs. Fort Myers Mighty Mussels

SS Jackson Lovich 2-5, HR, 2 RBI, 2 K — 13 homers and a .922 OPS in 51 games now, leading the Florida State League; his two-run bomb gave Tampa a 6-4 lead in the seventh
3B Bryce Martin-Grudzielanek 0-4, K
1B Hans Montero 0-4
LF Luis Puello 1-3, HR, RBI, SB, HBP — 416 feet on his homer, continuing hot streak from Tuesday
CF Willy Montero 1-4, 2B, K
DH Engelth Urena 0-4, 2 K
C Ediel Rivera 1-4, K
2B Luis Escudero 1-2, 2 BB, RBI, K
RF Gabriel Lara 2-3, 2B, BB, RBI, K

Henry Lalane 6.2 IP, 5 H, 4 R (4 ER), 4 BB, 8 K, HR — 12 swings and misses but only so much right outside of the K’s; that homer was a grand slam
Greysen Carter 1.1 IP, 1 H, 1 R (1 ER), 2 BB, 0 K (win)
Josh Tiedemann 1 IP, 2 H, 2 R (2 ER), 0 BB, 2 K, HBP, 2 WP (save) — struck out final batter with the tying run at second

Florida Complex League Yankees:L, 2-9 and L, 8-15 vs. FCL Blue Jays

Game 1 — completion of June 12th game, which was suspended in a 2-2 tie in the eighth

1B Richard Matic 1-4, BB, RBI, K, picked off — tied it in the seventh with an RBI knock
RF-CF Wilberson De Pena 0-4, K (June 12th)
CF Francisco Vilorio 0-1
C Queni Pineda 1-4, K, catcher interference error
2B Leni Done 0-2, 2 BB, K, SB
DH Robbie Burnett 0-3, K (June 12th)
DH Justin Capellan 0-1
LF-RF Estivenzon Montero 1-4, K
SS Dexters Peralta 2-2, 2 BB, fielding and throwing errors
2B Christofer Reyes 1-4, 2B, RBI, K — only extra-base hit of the game for FCL Yanks
CF Isael Arias 0-2, K (June 12th), outfield assist
PH Jose Castro 0-0, HBP (June 12th)
LF Diego Flores 0-1

Omar Gonzalez 4 IP, 5 H, 2 R (2 ER), 2 BB, 3 K, HBP, WP (June 12th)
Enixon Sanchez 3.1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 5 K (loss) (June 12th)
Austin Breedlove 0 IP, 1 H, 1 R (1 ER), 0 BB, 0 K (June 12th)
Rafael Arias 1.1 IP, 5 H, 5 R (5 ER), 1 BB, 2 K, 2 HR — let the tie game get out of hand
Carlos Rondon 0.1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 0 K — he’s a catcher

Game 2

3B Richard Matic 0-3
PH-1B Carlos Rondon 0-1, BB
CF Wilberson De Pena 1-3, 2 K — appears to have left with an injury after singling in the fifth; would be unfortunate, as the 19-year-old from the Oswald Peraza trade has hit .341/.393/.674 with a 1.059 OPS this year in his first 32 games stateside
PR-CF Isael Arias 0-2
DH Queni Pineda 2-5, HR, RBI, K — 10th homer in 35 games at FCL
2B Leni Done 0-2, BB, K, SB — replaced in the top of the sixth after striking out to end the fifth
1B-3B Diego Flores 1-2, RBI
RF Jose Castro 0-4, 2 K, HBP
LF Francisco Vilorio 0-3, 3 K, HBP — no-contact day (aside from the pitch making contact with him)
SS Dexters Peralta 1-4, HR, 2 RBI, K
C Justin Capellan 1-4, 2 RBI
1B-2B Christofer Reyes 2-4, 2B, 2 RBI, K — bottom of the order had the ribbies anyway

Omar Gonzalez 3.2 IP, 8 H, 9 R (9 ER), 2 BB, 3 K. 4 HR — it had been a week since that appearance, so yes he started this one too; it, uh, did not go well (FCL Jays pounded him in an eight-run third)
Enixon Sanchez 0.1 IP, 1 H, 5 R (5 ER), 8 BB, 1 K, HR, WP — then again, Gonzalez got more than one out and didn’t walk EIGHT, so
Edinzo Marquez 3 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 3 K, HBP
Brian Arias 1.1 IP, 0 H, 1 R (0 ER), 1 BB, 3 K, balk
Estivenzon Montero 0.2 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 2 BB, 0 K — an outfielder pitching

Dominican Summer League Yankees:W, 9-6 at DSL Arizona Red

CF Isaias Castillo 1-4, BB, 2 RBI, K
DH Stiven Marinez 1-2, HR, 3 BB, 5 RBI, 2 SB — clubbed a game-breaking grand slam in the seventh
RF Yostin Pena 0-4, RBI, SF
SS Juan Torres 0-3, 2 BB, 2 K, SB, fielding and throwing errors
C Juan Martinez 2-3, SB, GIDP — left one out into the sixth, wonder if there might’ve been a bad foul tip or something along those lines
C Edgar Jimenez 1-1, BB, SB
3B Abrahan Pichardo 1-4, BB, GIDP
1B Cesar Lopez 1-3, BB, HBP
LF Eliezer Adames 1-4, BB, RBI, K
2B Emmanuel Orozco 0-3, 2 BB, 2 K

Victor De Leon 2.2 IP, 4 H, 2 R (2 ER), 3 BB, 1 K, WP
Yunior Jerez 3.2 IP, 1 H, 1 R (1 ER), 4 BB, 3 K, WP, pickoff error (win)
Varis Villarreal 2.2 IP, 3 H, 1 R (0 ER), 0 BB, 3 K

Dominican Summer League Bombers:W, 7-5 vs. DSL Rockies

DH Mani Cedeno 1-3, 2 BB, RBI, K, SB
3B Carlos Bello 1-5, 2 K, GIDP, fielding error — not the cleanest of days on defense, but the Bombers won
RF David Carrera 2-3, BB, K
1B Poly Ojeda 1-4, K
SS Germayhoni Beltre 2-3, BB, RBI, SB, picked off, fielding error
C Jesus Guerrero 0-3, BB, passed ball
LF Sebastian Pinto 2-4, 2 2B, 3 RBI — tied game with RBI double in the fifth, and then did so again in the decisive five-run bottom of the eighth (plating two)
2B Stalen Ramirez 1-3, 2 K, throwing error
CF Alfiery Matos 0-3, BB, RBI, throwing error — drew bases-loaded walk to put Bombers ahead for good

Jose Sanchez 2.1 IP, 3 H, 1 R (1 ER), 1 BB, 3 K, HR, WP — pro debut
Higor Requena 3.2 IP, 2 H, 2 R (0 ER), 1 BB, 4 K
Jhon Castro 0.2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 3 BB, 0 K, 3 WP — effectively wild?
Oscar Vasquez 1.1 IP, 1 H, 2 R (0 ER), 1 BB, 1 K, WP (win)
Carlos Hampshire 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 2 K, 2 WP (save) — my favorite Hampshire, personally

2026 Cubs Heroes and Goats: Carson Kelly is the Superhero vs. the Blue Jays

These are the days when I’m super jealous of Al. A June afternoon at the park while the Cubs are playing pinball. To be fair, he’s watched a metric ton of bad baseball this year (and nine walk-offs too!). I’m sure I’m suffering from some recency bias, but this has felt like the weirdest ever season of Cub baseball. There doesn’t feel like any middle ground with this team. Epic wins. Terrible losses. So little ho hum. Typical baseball somewhere in my head is a 5-2 game or a 4-3 game. The Cubs don’t really play those games.

When you blog about baseball regularly, you start organizing your thoughts as the game unfolds. I remember thinking about how gifted this team is offensively. A 16-2 win doesn’t feel wacky. Because this offense is gifted. The offense jumped all over a talented pitcher on an afternoon when he just wasn’t executing. Then in the second act, they jumped all over the back half of the Blue Jays bullpen, forced to cover just too many innings.

But then I argued with myself. Is the offense actually gifted? Your mileage may vary. In the context I’m using it, gifted is a term of art, not necessarily a commonly accepted concept. In my head, a gifted offense is one that can, with some consistency, beat good pitching and teams. I would go a step down with the offense. They are a talented offense. But not gifted. A talented team has the capability of sustaining offense and producing lopsided scores with some frequency.

That collective skill is one of the reasons this team has so many come from behind wins. When this team faces a struggling pitcher, they tend to bury it. They piece together good plate appearance after good plate appearance. But they do also appear to struggle against good pitching, of any skill level, when it is executing well. I think of a game recently when they faced a young starting pitcher who’d yet to find any success at the major league level and couldn’t get anything going. I remember a pitcher (twice) recently who had pretty universally struggled all year long and not being able to mount any consistent offense.

I see Pete Crow-Armstrong as a gifted hitter. I see Michael Busch as a gifted hitter. I’m not super familiar with his body of work, but I believe Alex Bregman is historically a gifted hitter. To date, it looks like father time is winning the fight there and he is merely a talented hitter. Seiya Suzuki, Ian Happ, Carson Kelly, Nico Hoerner. Talented. But not gifted. It doesn’t mean they don’t sometimes come through against a pitcher who’s throwing well. But they don’t do so consistently. When the gameplan against them gets around the league, they may struggle for days and weeks at a time. We are watching so much of that happening.

This team has nowhere near enough starting pitching to stay competitive in a low-scoring environment. This team needs to score runs consistently. In an odd way, I think that any push that is going to be made by this team is going to have to come from the offensive side of things. Be it internal or external, I think that’s where this team can find a higher gear. This is why they have to continue to find spots for Matt Shaw and Pedro Ramirez. They’ve got to get Moisés Ballesteros right. Somewhere, they have to find more offense.

They score enough runs on the good days. When the other pitcher falters, this team pounces. But this team has to find more production on those days when the other guy is really executing. Offense has a cumulative effect. Success at the plate creates traffic on the bases. You can’t shift your defense in the same ways when runners are on base. You have to be more concerned about making the kind of mistake that can lead to an instant crooked number. You throw more pitches. You throw more pitches at max effort. That can wear you down. A team playing on a lead pitches different, defends different, hits different. It effects which relievers you use. It effects how aggressively you deploy your bullpen.

The Cubs have had such a cumulative negative effect over the last month plus. They are always behind. It forces their pitchers to have to try to be a little too perfect. It allows opposing pitchers to work a little more aggressively. Hitters press. Pitchers press. This team has become such a momentum team. But there are many different times of momentum. They roll hard when they roll. They fall harder when they don’t. We saw it one day last week. They had a wild come from behind win. Then they allowed so many runs early that there was no carryover what’s so ever.

The opportunity is still there. I don’t know where they could possibly find much more pitching. A healthy return for Matthew Boyd and/or Justin Steele, I guess. I think they’d have to give up too much to add meaningful amounts of pitching. But maybe if they could find enough offense, it would take some stress off of their pitchers. This team averages just under 4.75 runs per game. They are eighth in MLB in runs. To be fair, three of the teams ahead of them have done it in less games as have a few of the teams just behind them. But it’s not a wild exaggeration that this team has been one of the highest scoring teams. It’s all about consistency.

To be fair, I bet the vast majority of all of the teams feel that they need more consistency. So this isn’t a grand concept. It also isn’t a lever that can just be flipped. If it could, more teams would find it. But this team really does have one of the deepest groups of position players. That’s why sites like Fangraphs have consistently ranked them among the highest for expected WAR amongst the position player group. Of course, a significant chunk of that comes from excellent defense by so many of them. Almost every player is contributing positive defensive value. Now they just have to carry some of that over onto the offensive side. Or, sacrifice a little defense, at times, for offense.

Positives:

  • Pete Crow-Armstrong continues to lead the way. Three hits, two walks. A run, a run batted in, two steals. He jammed a box score. As I’m writing this, he sits 22nd in all of MLB in OPS.
  • Seiya Suzuki had three hits and a walk. Among his hits was a double. He drove in two runs and scored two more.
  • Carson Kelly had two hits and drew two walks. Among his hits was a grand slam. He scored three times.
  • Nico Hoerner had three hits, one a double. He scored a run.
  • Ben Brown, two runs allowed over six innings.

I could go on and on. Michael Conforto was really the only Cub who played who didn’t have some meaningful contribution. He only batted once.

Game 76, June 19: Cubs 16, Blue Jays 2 (40-36)

Reminder: Heroes and Goats are determined by WPA scores and are in no way subjective.

THREE HEROES:

  • Superhero: Carson Kelly (.182). 2-4, HR, 2 BB, 6 RBI, 3 R
  • Hero: Seiya Suzuki (.119). 3-5, 2B, BB, 2 RBI, 2 R
  • Sidekick: Ben Brown (.087). 6 IP, 22 BF, 4 H, 0 BB, 2 ER, 4 K (W 4-2)

THREE GOATS:

  • Billy Goat: Nico Hoerner (-.043). 3-6, 2B, R
  • Goat: Michael Busch (-.011). 1-5, BB
  • Kid: Michael Conforto* (.000). 0-1

*Michael Conforto draws the short stick. In reality, the Cubs emptied the bench and their lower leverage relievers. Six total players participated in a time in the game where there was basically no leverage and the teams were playing out the string. Three of them were pitchers who threw a scoreless inning. Two of them were hitters who had hits and run(s) driven in off of the bench. Michael was the one who would have a negative WPA under ordinary circumstances, however slight.

WPA Play of the Game: Carson Kelly with the rare first inning grand slam. It came with two outs and extended the Cubs lead to six. (.182)

Blue Jays Play of the Game: Kevin Gaussman’s first inning strikeout of Nico Hoerner with the bases loaded and one out, the Cubs already up two. This play was right before the grand slam. (.050)

*There were 21 plays in this game that registered no WPA score — positive or negative — because the game was essentially already over for all WPA purposes.

Cubs Player of the Game:

Game 75 Winner: Matt Shaw 88-55 over Javier Assad (159 total votes).

Rizzo Award Standings: (Top 5/Bottom 5)

The award is named for Anthony Rizzo, who finished first in this category three of the first four years it was in existence and four times overall. He also recorded the highest season total ever at +65.5. The point scale is three points for a Superhero down to negative three points for a Billy Goat.

  • Michael Busch +25
  • Ben Brown +13.5
  • Pete Crow-Armstrong +13
  • Carson Kelly +10.5
  • Michael Conforto +9
  • Edward Cabrera -9.5
  • Phil Maton -10
  • Caleb Thielbar/Dansby Swanson -11
  • Seiya Suzuki -19.5

Up Next: Game two of the three-game series Saturday afternoon. The Cubs look to win for their seventh time in nine games. Colin Rea (5-5, 5.45) gets the start for the Cubs. Colin is 0-2 with a 7.98 over three June starts to date. Our old pal Patrick Corbin (2-3, 4.57). The veteran lefty has 14 career appearances versus the Cubs, 13 of them starts (5-2, 4.60). The Cubs are 8-10 against left-handed starters, despite having the sixth highest OPS versus lefties of all MLB teams.

Braves Minor League Recap: Junior Garcia drives in seven in Augusta’s offensive onslaught

With eight games taking place down on the farm, there was no shortage of action. In five of the eight games, Atlanta’s minor league teams scored five or more runs, so there was plenty of offense to go around. Let’s dive in.

(37-34) Gwinnett Stripers 9, (37-33) Louisville Bats 8 (GAME ONE)

  • Jim Jarvis, SS: 1-3, 2B, RBI, R
  • Aaron Schunk, 1B: 3-3, 3 R
  • Jose Azocar, PH: 1-1, 3 RBI, R
  • Garrett Baumann, SP: 3.2 IP, 8 H, 6 ER, BB, 3 K

Box Score

In what was easily the most entertaining game of the day on Friday, Gwinnett won game one of their doubleheader against Louisville in extra innings.

Before we get to the theatrics, let’s figure out how we got to that point.

Garrett Baumann got the start in game one and took a step backwards after a string of solid outings at the triple-A level. In 3.2 innings of work, Baumann surrendered six runs on eight hits. The upside is that he only issued one free pass in the short outing.

It’s an unfortunate start following his first triple-A start on June 11 in which he spun five innings of one-run ball while striking out five. Hopefully it’s just a minor setback for Baumann as he continues to adapt to the competition at the level.

Trailing 6-2 in the bottom of the fifth, Aaron Schunk — who went 3-3 on the day — singled before advancing to second on a Ben Gamel walk to put a runner in scoring position. A sacrifice bunt moved both runners over before a Jim Jarvis sacrifice fly brought Schunk home and cut the deficit to 6-3. In the next at-bat, DaShawn Kiersey Jr. singled on a sharply hit ground ball to the second baseman to plate Gamel and make it a 6-4 game.

Heading into the bottom of the seventh down by two runs, Cal Conley would play the initial hero in this one.

Similar to the fifth inning, Schunk singled and Gamel walked to lead things off before Conley tripled both runners home to tie the game. While there were no outs in the inning with the winning run just 90 feet away, the Stripers failed to bring Conley home, sending the game into extras.

With Joel Payamps on the mound, Louisville tagged the righty for a pair of runs in the top of the eighth to take the lead once again.

However, Payamps offense luckily bailed him out with some late inning sparks.

With Brett Wisely starting on second base, Brewer Hicklen led off the frame with a walk and three batters later, Schunk worked a two-out walk to put the winning run at first base.

What proceeded could best be described as a gift by Gwinnett and a calamity for Louisville.

Jose Azocar — who pinch-ran for Gamel in the seventh — popped up to shallow right center field, during which the second baseman made a sliding attempt to catch the pop up. However, the ball ricocheted off his glove and got past the centerfielder, allowing Wisely, Hicklen and Schunk to score and give Gwinnett the walkoff 9-8 win to start their day.

(37-35) Gwinnett Stripers 0, (38-33) Louisville Bats 2 (GAME TWO)

  • Adam Zebrowski, C: 1-2, 2B
  • Jim Jarvis, SS: 1-3
  • Owen Murphy, SP: 6 IP, 5 H, 2 ER, BB, 6 K

Box Score

Hoping to build off the high of walking off game one, Gwinnett ultimately fell short after getting shutout in game two.

Despite a solid outing from Owen Murphy in which he tossed six innings, giving up two runs and striking out six, the Stripers offense must have used all of its magic in game one as Gwinnett totaled just five hits in the second game.

While there wasn’t much to write home about in the second contest, Murphy put up his second consecutive solid performance in which he has tossed at least six innings while allowing two or fewer runs. He has also struck out 16 across 12 innings, while only walking two batters.

It’s a small sample size, sure. But it’s still encouraging to see from one of the top arms in the system as he continues to try and adjust to triple-A.

(29-33) Columbus Clingstones 3, (33-30) Biloxi Shuckers 14 (GAME ONE)

  • David McCabe, 1B: 2-2, 2B
  • Patrick Clohisy, CF: 2-4, RBI
  • Cedric De Grandpre, SP: 1.1 IP, 5 H, 7 ER, 2 BB, 3 K

Box Score

Columbus didn’t have much of a fighting chance in this one as the Shuckers tagged the Clingstones pitching staff for eight runs in the second inning.

Cedric De Grandpre got the start and, simply put, had as bad of an outing as you’ll see. Across just 1.1 innings of work, Biloxi tallied seven runs on five hits while working a pair of walks in less than two frames. It was an abysmal start for De Grandpre, who was making his first start of the season at the double-A level.

Trying to battle back from an 8-1 deficit, the Clingstones really never had a chance to catch up offensively, as they were limited to just three runs compared to Biloxi’s 14.

David McCabe had the lone extra base hit on the night, a double, while Patrick Clohisy registered the only RBI for Columbus.

All in all, this was probably a game most of the Clingstones would rather forget.

(29-33) Columbus Clingstones 1, (33-30) Biloxi Shuckers 1 (GAME TWO/SUSPENDED)

  • Patrick Clohisy, CF: 1-2, R
  • Will Verdung, 1B: 0-0, sac fly
  • Brett Sears, SP: 2 IP, 3 H, ER, 3 K

Box Score

On an initial positive note, Columbus had a chance to redeem themselves in game two. However, Mother Nature got in the way and forced this one to be suspended in the third inning tied at 1-1.

Prior to the game being called due to the weather, Patrick Clohisy registered the only hit, while Will Verdung drove in the lone run for the Clingstones on a sacrifice fly.

Friday’s game two will be completed on Saturday prior to the regularly scheduled game.

(34-31) Rome Emperors 5, (30-35) Hudson Valley Renegades 4

  • Tate Southisene, SS: 3-5, 2B, R
  • Dixon Williams, DH: 2-4, 2 2B, RBI
  • John Gil, 2B: 2-3, 2 R, 2 BB
  • Eric Hartman, CF: 2-5
  • Briggs McKenzie, SP: 3.1 IP, 3 H, 4 ER, 5 BB, 4 K

Box Score

Much like their triple-A counterparts, Rome came away with a walkoff victory on Friday as well.

The Emperors had to battle out of an early 2-0 hole in this one as the Renegades tagged starter Briggs McKenzie for a pair of runs in the first inning, and two more later on in the third frame to extend their lead to 4-0.

While the baseline stats might not have been there for McKenzie, his stuff looked as excellent as ever — culminated with an excellent breaking ball to get an inning-ending strikeout in the bottom of the first inning.

Rome managed to cut the deficit to 4-3, but failed to produce any meaningful offense until their final trip to the plate.

Following a Collin Burgess strikeout to begin the inning, Tate Southisene and John Gil laced back-to-back singles to put the tying run in scoring position. Southisene proceeded to score on a wild pitch to knot things up before Owen Carey called game.

With the bases-loaded and one out on a 1-1 count, Carey took a fastball up in the zone and lined it into right field to plate Gil and give the Emperors the victory.

(36-31) Augusta GreenJackets 16, (31-36) Hub City Howlers 3

  • Alex Lodise, SS: 3-5, 2 HR, 2B, 2 RBI, 3 R, BB
  • Junior Garcia, RF: 3-3, HR, 2B, 7 RBI, 2 R, 2 BB
  • Luis Guanipa, CF: 4-6, RBI, 3 R
  • Tanner Smith, 3-4, HR, 3 RBI, 3 R
  • Landon Beidelschies, SP: 4 IP, 4 H, 2 ER, 3 BB, 3 K

Box Score

It was an all-around great day for Augusta on Friday as the GreenJackets got excellent pitching on the mound and a banner day at the plate en route to a 16-3 victory.

Before we get into the offensive performances, let’s talk about the pitching staff for Augusta.

Landon Beidelschies got the start and had one of his better performances this season. While it was only across four innings, the lefty allowed two runs on four hits and three walks while striking out three. The main thing for Beidelschies, however, is that he kept his offense in the game long enough for the GreenJackets to break out.

Reliever Adiel Melendez got the win after tossing three scoreless innings and allowing just one hit and striking out one in the process. Melendez has sneakily been excellent as of late, as the undrafted lefty out of the University of Montevallo has lowered his ERA to 2.45 across 21.1 innings to go along with 22 strikeouts. He’s a guy to keep an eye on to get the bump up to Rome in the near future given his age and recent success.

Fellow relievers Kade Woods (0.2 innings, one earned run) and Daniel Brooks (1.1 innings, three strikeouts) managed to keep Hub City at bay following the performances from Beidelschies and Melendez.

Back to the action at the plate, Augusta tallied 16 runs on 16 hits in what was one of the better offensive performances of the year.

To give you an idea of how good the bats were, the GreenJackets scored at least one run in every inning except for the fifth.

The bulk of the offense came courtesy of four guys — Alex Lodise, Luis Guanipa, Tanner Smith and the big man, Junior Garcia who had a career night.

Lodise homered twice and doubled while driving in three, and Smith registered three hits including a homer to go along with his three RBI. Luis Guanipa produced a lot for the offense as well, tallying four hits and crossing the plate three times on Friday night.

The biggest night belongs to Garcia who tallied not one, not two, not three — you get the idea — but seven total RBI on the night, thanks in part to a three-run homer in the bottom of the sixth to left center field to give Augusta an 11-2 lead at the time.

(11-24) FCL Braves 8, (21-14) FCL Rays 19

  • Diego Tornes, CF: 2-5, 3B, 2B, 2 RBI, R
  • Manuel Campos, SS: 3-4, 2B, 2 RBI, 2 R, BB
  • Mario Baez, 3B: 2-4, 2B, RBI, 2 R
  • Wuilinyer Tovar, SP: 3.1 IP, 3 H, 6 ER, 5 BB

Box Score

A loss for the FCL Braves resulted in one of the more unique box score you’ll ever see.

Despite the Braves outhitting the Rays 10-8, the Rays more than doubled the Braves’ score while walking a staggering 18 times over the course of nine innings.

The Braves got the offensive party started in the top of the first as Diego Tornes tripled in the first at-bat of the game. While Tornes was eventually gunned down trying to steal home, Manuel Campos later stole second and third base before scampering home on an errant throw to third on his steal attempt to make it a 1-0 game.

From there, things went back and forth until the seventh inning where the Rays tallied six runs, followed by four more runs in the eighth.

On the day, Tornes had a solid outing as he also laced a double and drove in a pair of runs and also scored a run. Campos went 3-4 with a double and two RBI as well, while third baseman Mario Baez doubled and scored a pair of runs for the Braves.

(2-12) DSL Braves 13, (4-10) DSL Red Sox Blue 15

  • Sherrintley Da Costa Gomez, LF: 1-4, HR, 2 RBI, 2 R, BB
  • Jose Nelo, C: 2-4, HR, 2 RBI, R, BB
  • Jorwin Pulido, DH: 3-4, 2B, 2 RBI, 2 R, BB
  • Starlyn De La Cruz, CF: 2-5, 2 R
  • Jesus Cova, SP: 1 IP, H, 3 ER, 2 BB, K

Box Score

There must have been something in the water on Friday as yet another minor league affiliate’s offense broke out in huge fashion.

Every member of the DSL Braves lineup registered at least one hit on Friday, while all but two tallied at least one RBI to their credit as well in what was a massive offensive showcase for both squads in this one.

While the Braves came up short by a 15-13 final, there were plenty of individual performances to write home about.

Sherrintley Da Costa Gomez and Jose Nelo each launched solo homers on the day to pace the offense, while Jorwin Pulido registered three hits including a double and two RBI to his credit as well.

Da Costa Gomez’ arrow continues to point upward, as he is carrying a .351 average along with an OPS of 1.192 — both of which lead the team.

Jose Manon also drove in two of the team’s 13 total runs, while Starlyn De La Cruz got a pair of knocks and scored twice himself. Meanwhile his plate discipline has also been sharp, as he has eight walks to 11 strikeouts in 33 at-bats thus far.

As most of these types of games are, the pitching left a lot to be desired. Jesus Cova got the start and lasted just one frame, giving up three runs on one hit and a pair of walks in the process.

It’s been a really rough go of it thus far for the DSL squad as they’ve only won two of their first 14 games this season. However, seeing an outing like this from the offense suggests perhaps things may be about to change in their favor moving forward.

Mariners News: Andrés Muñoz, Justin Verlander, and Jarred Kelenic

Mar 30, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Detroit Tigers pitcher Justin Verlander (35) throws against the Arizona Diamondbacks in the first inning at Chase Field. Mandatory Credit: Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images | Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images

Good morning everyone and happy Saturday!

The Mariners bats struggled to get going last night against the Red Sox, with left-hander Ranger Suárez tossing six no-hit innings in a 6-2 M’s loss. The squad will try to get back into the win column tonight against young lefty Connelly Early.

It’s looking like a sunny Father’s Day weekend in Seattle. What plans do you have on tap for the next couple of days?

In Mariners news…

Around the league…

Kansas City Royals news: Tyler Tolbert has a night

KANSAS CITY, MO - JUNE 19: Tyler Tolbert #2 of the Kansas City Royals reacts during the game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Kansas City Royals at Kauffman Stadium on Friday, June 19, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Kyle Rivas/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Blair Kerkhoff writes that Tyler Tolbert came up big in the Friday win over the Cardinals.

“You never know when your name is going to be called,” Tolbert said. “You just have to be ready.”

That was the case throughout the game for Tolbert. In the sixth inning, after failing to get down a pair of bunts with a runner on third, he drove in a run with a sacrifice fly to deep center.

“To stay in the moment and be able to concentrate on that pitch, that was big for him,” Royals manager Matt Quatraro said. “That ball was smoked.”

Anne Rogers has more on how Tolbert stays ready.

“It’s a mental thing,” Tolbert said. “A lot of people are like, ‘Save your energy.’ But for me, it’s a mindset thing. My whole life, I’ve been a starter. It just gets my mind and body ready, like, ‘Hey, we’re playing a game. Let’s get in that mode. We’re not sitting around and hanging out. Turn the switch on.’”

She also provides an update on the knee injury for Bobby Witt Jr.

If playing one game shorthanded means the Royals can give Witt more time to recover and see how he feels, they’ll do it. Avoiding an IL stint means they would avoid the minimum 10 days without their best player. But they also don’t want to risk a long-term injury, so there are a lot of factors at play.

“It’s going to be what the conversations are with him and [team] Doc [Vincent] Key,” manager Matt Quatraro said. “It’s not a surgical thing. I know they can put a brace on it. It’s going to be a lot of get the swelling out of there and understand how he feels, and those conversations are going to have to be honest between all of us.”

Thomas Harrigan at MLB.com writes about the starting pitcher trade market.

Kansas City made the playoffs in 2024 and won 82 games a year ago, but the club has cratered in ’26. The Royals aren’t going to launch a full-scale rebuild when they have Bobby Witt Jr. in his prime, but they badly need to retool.

With starters Cole Ragans (controllable through 2028) and Kris Bubic (pending free agent) both injured, their best chance to do that is dealing veteran hurlers Seth Lugo and Michael Wacha, each of whom is signed through 2027 with a ’28 club option.

Michael Baumann at Fangraphs examines the decline of Salvador Perez.

Perez’s power is gone. It just up and disappeared over the winter. And for a player who already couldn’t run, wasn’t much use defensively, and never walks, that was the last Jenga piece. The power was the only tangible skill Perez had left.

And it’s definitively gone. Last year, Perez’s barrel rate was in the 91st percentile and his hard-hit rate was in the 70th percentile. Those numbers are in the 45th and 44th percentiles now.

From last year to this, Perez has lost 1.4 mph of average bat speed and his fast swing rate has been cut nearly in half, from 30.5% to 16.9%. Another hitter could live with those numbers; Perez’s bat speed figures are in the same neighborhood as Kevin McGonigle’s and Kyle Tucker’s. But if power is your carrying tool, that little power won’t carry you very far. Maybe Perez is dealing with an injury from which he’ll recover, but for a 36-year-old who’s spent nearly 12,000 innings behind the plate, Occam’s Razor points in another direction.

David Lesky recaps the big offensive night on Thursday against the Cardinals.

Kevin O’Brien at Royals Keep writes that the offense has not been a problem this month.

Shohei Ohtani is out of the lineup while away on paternity.

Travel issues led to the Padres/Rangers game to have only two umpires.

Tigers pitcher Tarik Skubal and White Sox pitcher Mike Vasil exchange heated words.

Yankees pitcher Cam Schlittler strikes out 13 in a shutout win over the Reds.

Justin Verlander is out several weeks with a hamstring strain.

How Jacob Misiorowski became one of the best pitchers in baseball.

The Tigers call up the grandson of Jose Cruz, making that family the fifth to have three generations of MLB players.

Byron Buxton isn’t looking for a trade out of Minnesota.

Jazz Chisholm Jr. admits he has never worn a cup, after taking a ball to the groin.

The Giants may be ready for a firesale, but can they move those large contracts?

Oklahoma and North Carolina square off in the Mens’ College World Series finals this weekend.

Could the United States actually win the World Cup?

Will NFL officiating improve with a new “practice squad” of refs?

Be careful with your dog’s paws in hot weather.

A TV series based on the popular RPG novel Dungeon Crawler Carl is greenlit for Peacock.

Pizza Hut is sold to a private equity firm.

Your song of the day is The Replacements with I Will Dare.

How proposed MLB Draft changes could impact LSU

Jul 13, 2025; Atlanta, GA, USA; Xavier Neyens is drafted by the Houston Astros with the 21st pick during the first round of the MLB Draft at The Coca-Cola Roxy. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images | Brett Davis-Imagn Images

As Major League Baseball and the players’ association near the end of their collective bargaining agreement in less than 6 months on December 1, questions over a potential lockout loom. It was reported today that the MLB has proposed widespread changes to it’s annual draft.

The likelihood of the proposition being accepted as-is may not be high, but it confirms the rumors that sweeping changes could be made to players’ entry in to professional baseball and it could have massive effects on the future of college baseball.

First, the MLB wants to institute a separate international draft. Currently, international players are allowed to sign with whichever Major League team offers them a contract, with bonus pool limitations for spending, similar to the current draft. The signing period runs between January 15 and December 15, with prospects being required to be at least 16 years old to sign and turn 17 by September 1 of the next year. It’s basically free agency. An international draft would require players to be 18 and consist of 12 rounds.

How could that affect LSU? Well, instead of the process being essentially open game, it could bottleneck crops of players in particular drafts. It likely would not matter much to the top-end talent who will get paid on the higher end of slot values, but with middle-to-lower talent, prospects could choose to go to school for two years, earn NIL, and hope to develop within collegiate baseball programs to improve their abilities and, eventually, their draft stock. It would be fairly similar to the decision that high school players are faced with, although they are not only competing with their peers for draft positions, they’re also in the same crop as college players. Is it likely that college baseball sees a large influx of international players come to America to play college baseball? Probably not, but changes like this could certainly matter so some players from outside of the country.

You may have noticed that I mentioned that the international players could choose to go to college for two years. That’s because part of the proposed changes to the typical MLB draft entail changing the eligibility requirements to simply two years in college. Currently, players that attend four-year colleges are eligible upon finishing their junior year or turning 21 years old within 45 days of the draft. Although they’re the vast minority, there are some sophomores that make the cut for the age requirement, often referred to as “draft eligible sophomores” or “super sophomores”. Derek Curiel is a prime example.

The two year rule would go along with the most impactful change that would immediately affect NCAA Baseball. High school players would no longer be eligible to enter the MLB Draft. Every graduating senior must attend college and would be eligible after their sophomore season. In the 2025 draft, 96 high school baseball players signed professionally after being drafted. With the rule change, all of that top-end talent would enter the collegiate ranks, bettering college baseball as a whole.

While the entire sport would benefit from more high-level players taking the field from the SEC to the mid-majors, LSU, specifically, would be ecstatic to actually land all of the commitments that they receive. Over the years, they have been gutted by the MLB draft and, at times, forced to turn to the transfer portal as a saving grace. This past season was a perfect example. Jay Johnson lost 8 signees to professional baseball, a few of which were slight surprises. With a change like the one proposed, coaching staffs would have a much better idea of who will make it to campus, much like football and basketball.

To further illustrate the immense amount of talent that has skipped over LSU, here are the commits from Jay Johnson’s first four classes that signed professionally. Four have already made it to the MLB, three of which are everyday players (or in the rotation in Misiorowski’s case). For the others, their current level in the minors and their prospect rankings in their respective organizations are included, along with when they were drafted.

2022

OF Justin Crawford (1st rd, Phillies) – Made his MLB debut this season, playing in 69/75 games so far in 2026 with 200+ at-bats as Philadelphia’s center fielder.

RHP Jacob Misiorowski (2nd rd, Brewers) – After bursting on to the scene and making his Major League debut in 2025, Misiorowski has started 28 games over the past two seasons and has dominated. His ERA this season is 1.34 through 87.0 innings pitched and he has topped out at 104.5 mph just days ago.

LHP Robbie Snelling (1st rd, Padres) – Made his MLB debut in May for the Marlins with one start where he threw 5.0 innings. Currently ranked as Miami’s #2 prospect.

3B Tucker Toman (2nd rd, Blue Jays) – High-A/#40 Toronto

SS Mikey Romero (1st rd, Red Sox) – AAA/#11 Boston

LHP Michael Kennedy (4th rd, Pirates) – High-A/#18 Cleveland

2023

C Blake Mitchell (1st rd, Royals) – High-A/#1 Kansas City

2024

SS/OF Konnor Griffin (1st rd, Pirates) – Called up to make his MLB debut for Pittsburgh early in the season on April 3rd. Has played in 51 games and is hitting .270 with just under 200 at-bats while typically starting at shortstop.

LHP Cam Caminiti (1st rd, Braves) – High-A/#1 Atlanta

LHP Boston Bateman (2nd, Padres) – High-A/#9 Baltimore

3B Kale Fountain (5th rd, Padres) – A/#18 San Diego

2025

SS Brady Ebel (1st rd, Brewers) – A/#13 Milwaukee

SS Quentin Young (2nd rd, Twins) – A/#12 Minnesota

OF Dean Moss (2nd rd, Rays) – A/#29 Tampa Bay

SS Jaden Fauske (2nd rd, White Sox) – A/#7 Chicago White Sox

RHP Miguel Sime (4th rd, Nationals) – High-A/#17 Washington

LHP Briggs McKenzie (4th rd, Braves) – High-A/#6 Atlanta

C Landon Hodge (4th rd, White Sox) – Rookie ball/#19 Chicago White Sox

RHP River Hamilton (11th rd, Tigers) – Injured list/Ranking NA

It’s clearly visible how impactful just a fraction of these players could have been for the Tigers. Although the current state of the MLB Draft has not prevented Johnson from bringing two national championships home in his first five seasons in Baton Rouge, it’s hard not to imagine how incredible a few of these players could have been in purple and gold. Can you imagine a rotation in 2023 that included both Paul Skenes AND Jacob Misiorowski? Konnor Griffin and Steven Milam could have been one of the best middle infield in college baseball history. Briggs McKenzie and Miguel Sime would have been a revelation as starting pitching options as LSU’s entire rotation was injured at some point in 2026.

Johnson has been very vocal about how impossible it is for colleges to compete with the inflated amounts of money that MLB teams are offering high school prospects nowadays. They do their best, but when you have to get through 82 selections in the draft before the slot value drops below seven figures, it’s an uphill battle that they’ll never win.

Taking the option to sign professionally away from high school graduates would change that, though, and LSU would be set to benefit as much, if not more than anyone.

Minor league update for 6/19/26

BIRMINGHAM, ENGLAND - JUNE 20: Divine Duruaku of Harrow AC competes during the Men's High Jump Final on day one of the UK Athletics Championships at Alexander Stadium on June 20, 2026 in Birmingham, England. (Photo by Ed Sykes/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Hickory starter Daniel Keaney made his first ever full season league appearance and threw five innings of shutout, one hit ball, walking two and striking out six. Geury Rodriguez struck out three in two scoreless innings.

Yolfran Castillo was 3 for 5. Marco Argudin was 1 for 3 with two walks. Paulino Santana drew a pair of walks. Angel Arredondo had a pair of hits. Dewar Tovar doubled. Daniel Flames had a hit and a walk.

Hickory box score

Hub City starter Caden Scarborough allowed one run and two hits in 4.2 IP, walking one and striking out 9 of the 16 batters he faced. Aidan Deakins allowed a two runs homer in 3.1 IP, walking one and striking out two.

Hector Osorio doubled. Yeison Morrobel had a hit.

Hub City box score

Dalton Pence started for Frisco and allowed three runs in 5.1 IP, walking four, striking out four and giving up a homer.

Facing 2025 #3 overall pick Kade Anderson, the Roughriders mustered just two hits in the game, one of which was an Arturo Disla double.

Frisco box score

For Round Rock, Wilian Bormie struck out two and walked one in two scoreless innings. Emiliano Teodo allowed four runs in 1.2 IP, walking four, striking out three and giving up a homer. Gavin Collyer faced five batters, allowing two runs on a hit and three walks while striking out one.

Cam Cauley homered and walked. Blaine Crim had a hit and a walk. John Taylor had a homer and a walk.

Round Rock box score

ACL Rangers box score

DSL Rangers Red/Blue box score

Alek Thomas has best game since joining Dodgers

Mar 8, 2026; Houston, TX, United States; Mexico center fielder Alek Thomas (5) celebrates his run against Brazil in the fourth inning at Daikin Park. Mandatory Credit: Thomas Shea-Imagn Images | Thomas Shea-Imagn Images

Dodgers right-hander Brock Stewart pitched a scoreless inning for Class-A Ontario on Friday, the second straight night to complete the planned back-to-back outings that manager Dave Roberts said on Tuesday was coming this week.

Stewart in four games for Ontario during this rehab assignment has allowed one run on four hits in four innings, with five strikeouts and no walks. He’s been on the injured list since May 9 with a bone spur in his left foot.

Player of the day

Center fielder Alek Thomas had his best game yet in the Dodgers organization with four hits for Oklahoma City, including a double and home run.

Acquired by trade from the Arizona Diamondbacks on May 12, Thomas drove in two runs and scored twice on Friday,

Triple-A Oklahoma City

Thomas and Ryan Fitzgerald homered in the Comets win over the Sacramento River Cats (Giants).

Fitzgerald had two hits, as did third baseman Taylor Young. Second baseman Austin Gauthier had three singles and drove in a pair in the four-run eighth inning that gave Oklahoma City its winning margin.

Paul Gervase pitched two scoreless innings, and since getting optioned to Triple-A on May 31 has allowed two runs in eight innings with 10 strikeouts and five walks, with five of his six appearances scoreless.

Double-A Tulsa

Tulsa scored seven runs in the first three innings to rout the Northwest Arkansas Naturals (Royals).

Mike Sirota still has reached base every game since April 9, so he hasn’t exactly slumped much this season, though he needed extra innings to extend said streak this week on both Tuesday and Thursday. On Friday Sirota singled in the second inning then later added a double and single for his first three-hit game since June 4. His 57-game on-base streak is the longest minor league baseball this season.

Wyatt Crowell entered with a huge lead and dominated the final five innings with six strikeouts and only two walks allowed, and no hits to earn the win.

Like Sirota, Zyhir Hope (two walks, single), Jake Gelof (two singles, walk), and Kole Myers (two walks, single) all reached base three times, and combined to drive in five of the nine runs.

High-A Great Lakes

The first three Loons pitchers each allowed three runs in a loss to the Lake County Captains (Guardians) to open the second half of the season.

Infielder Eduardo Guerrero, as the designated hitter on Friday, had three hits, including a triple and a home run. First baseman Cameron Decker hit a two-run home run, his second homer in eight games since returning from the injured list.

Playing catch-up

Last Saturday, Loons reliever was one out away from finishing off a four-inning save, but was ejected after a tense interaction with Wisconsin pinch-hitter Marco Dinges. The two did not exchange blows, though Ayon certainly squared up, and benches did clear. Both players were suspended, Ayon for two games.

After the dust-up, pitcher Davis Chastain got the final out to close out Saturday’s 3-1 victory, and earned the save instead.

Class-A Ontario

Seven runs in the third inning and three more in the fourth were more than enough to beat the Rancho Cucamonga Quakes (Angels).

First baseman Easton Shelton, shortstop Mairo Martinus, and catcher Conner O’Neal each had two hits, including a home run. Chase Harlan doubled twice.

One start after allowing nine earned runs, Hyun-Seok Jang struck out a career-high nine and allowed only one run in his 4 2/3 innings. This came after a rough stretch in which Jang only struck out 12 of 63 batters faced (19 percent) over his last four starts, with 26 runs (23 earned) in only 10 innings.

Transactions

High-A: Infielder Logan Wagner was activated from the injured list after six weeks on the injured list. The switch-hitter played four rehab games in the Arizona Complex League.

Class-A: Outfielder Jaron Elkins returned from the injured list after missing eight games, and doubled twice. Starting pitcher Marlon Nieves, out since the end of April on the injured list, started a rehab assignment in Arizona. Nieves struck out three in his one inning of work, but also allowed two unearned runs on two hits and a hit batter in his first game action in seven weeks.

Friday scores

Saturday schedule

  • 4:05 p.m. PT: Tulsa (Adam Serwinowski) at NW Arkansas (Drew Beam)
  • 4:05 p.m.: Great Lakes (Brooks Auger) vs. Lake County (Melkis Hernandez)
  • 5:05 p.m.: Oklahoma City (Cole Irvin) vs. Sacramento (Blade Tidwell)
  • 6:05 p.m.: Ontario (TBA) vs. Rancho Cucamonga (Trey Gregory-Alford)

REPORT: Celtics listening on Brown, shopping for size

Detroit Pistons v New York Knicks

Jake Fischer reported early Saturday, June 20, that Boston is not actively shopping Jaylen Brown or Derrick White, but is fielding inquiries about both with greater openness than in previous offseasons. It’s a small distinction in wording, but the Celtics do seem to be building momentum toward some significant deck shuffling.

A Brown trade still appears most plausible as part of a deal for Giannis Antetokounmpo, a move which would theoretically raise Boston’s ceiling. Dealing away White would be a different story. The nine-year veteran supplies defense, shooting and connectivity that helped to keep Boston competitive while Tatum nursed his Achilles, yet his salary could be used to obtain size or rebalance the roster. 

According to Fischer, Boston wants frontcourt upgrades and has maintained interest in Isaiah Stewart of the Detroit Pistons. The Celtics have also previously inquired about Rudy Gobert, most recently at February’s trade deadline. Now Minnesota’s reported interest in White creates a speculative framework for further discussions. 

Replacing White’s contributions would be harder than replacing his box-score stats. He suited up for 77 games (starting all) and averaged 16.5 points, 4.4 rebounds, 5.4 assists, 1.1 steals, and 1.3 blocks in 34.1 minutes per game. Further, he shot 39% from the field (including 33% from three) and a career-high 90% from the free-throw line, while posting 98 blocks (noteworthy for a guard) and earning NBA All-Defensive First Team honors plus a 6th-place finish in DPOY voting. And, he received the NBA Sportsmanship Award

Not a bad regular season, at all. In Boston’s first-round playoff exit, however, White stumbled, averaging 11.1 points on 32.1% shooting (27.3% from three) over seven games.

As for the Gobert smoke, I dunno. . . . From Fischer: 

I don’t think that the Wolves are actively shopping Gobert, either way, but Minnesota is said to be as exploratory and open-minded as Boston when it comes to shaking up the roster around the team’s clear alpha (Edwards).

Minnesota seems content with their Eiffel Tower. Just because Boston inquired about him at the trade deadline and the T-Wolves now seem interested in White does not necessarily lead to the conclusion that a swap is imminent. But I’ll play along: Sure, the Shamrocks would gain a barricade around the basket while removing one of the guards who lent creedence to their perimeter defense. The problem would be replacing White, who’s been a gluey piece for them, and will he be enough to get the deal done? It seems like Minny might want more return on their investment. Rudy’s playing as well today as he was in 2022, and this is what they gave up for him back then:

  • Malik Beasley
  • Patrick Beverley
  • Leandro Bolmaro
  • Walker Kessler
  • Jarred Vanderbilt
  • a 2023 1st round draft pick (Keyonte George was later selected)
  • a 2025 1st round draft pick (Will Riley was later selected)
  • a 2026 1st round draft pick
  • a 2027 1st round draft pick
  • a 2029 1st round draft pick.

To me, Stewart seems like the more obvious get. He is entering the second year of a four-year, $60 million extension, with a guaranteed salary of $15 million for the 2026-27 season and a $15 million team option for 2027-28. His salary makes him far easier to acquire without touching one of Boston’s core guys, while also providing the defensive versatility and frontcourt depth they desire.

During the 2025-2026 season, Neemias Queta started 75 games at center and was a key contributor (averaging 10.2 PPG and 8.4 RPG). To back him up, Beantown nabbed Nikola Vučević (and a second-round pick) from the Chicago Bulls at the trade deadline, in exchange for Anfernee Simons and a second-round pick. It was crafty on Stevens’ part. The move used the Kristaps Porziņģis trade exception, helped them dip under the first apron for financial flexibility, and added veteran frontcourt depth behind Queta. Consider it a rental, though. A free agent and turning 36 soon, Vooch is most likely done with the club.

Meanwhile, our sister site CelticsBlog has had a lot to say about all this. Jack Anderson argues that Boston should not be trying to build a Big 3 around Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown, and Giannis Antetokounmpo. As Anderson states, building around three super max players, who make 35% of the cap, is not realistic.

Anderson argues (wisely) that it would likely cripple the Celtics’ ability to build a championship roster under the NBA’s apron rules. To acquire Giannis without trading Brown, Boston would likely have to surrender Derrick White, Payton Pritchard, Sam Hauser, future draft picks, and young prospects while becoming hard-capped at the first apron. The result would be three superstars consuming most of the payroll with little flexibility to add quality depth (similar to the Kevin Durant-Devin Booker-Bradley Beal Suns). Please, Brad, cripple the team!

From our vantage, we like that the Celtics are contemplating structural change instead of simply adding around the edges. This is not, say, sprinkling on a Jordan Clarkson to lend a dash of scoring to a team that’s READY TO WIN THE CHAMPIONSHIP. (You bet I plan to do that until they’re dethroned (which could be never).) Anyway, count on Boston to do something. If it’s Giannis, they improve their odds for a title; with Gobert, they upgrade the frontcourt but stand to lose a lot on the backend; and Beef Stew is a solid reserve who won’t break up the band or bank, but won’t significantly elevate the team.

Slather on your sunscreen, the offseason is just heating up. Prepare for all the slop!

Go Knicks.