Miz dominates the Rockies in Brewers 7-1 win

DENVER, CO - JUNE 6: Starting pitcher Jacob Misiorowski #32 of the Milwaukee Brewers delivers a pitch in the first inning against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field on June 6, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Box Score

Jacob Misiorowski is approaching his one-year anniversary of his Brewers debut. Tonight, he showed just how much growth he has made in that year.

Before Misiorowski could take the field, the Brewers staked him to an early lead. That came from Brice Turang, who hit the first pitch he saw 444 feet out to center field at 105.5 mph. The Brewers had a 1-0 lead early.

In the next inning, again with two outs, the Brewers added another solo home run. This came from David Hamilton, who also hit one out to center, though this one only went 426 feet with a 102.4 mph exit velocity.

Early on, Misiorowski depended on his defense more than his strikeouts. He didn’t record a strikeout in the first, then struck out his first batter in the second. There was a scary moment when Troy Johnston hit a ground ball right back at Misiorowski, and it deflected off his calf. After a check from the trainers, he was fine and remained in the game. The next pitch was a double-play ball from Exequiel Tovar that ended the inning.

Misiorowski was efficient through his first four innings. He had a clean third inning with a strikeout. In the fourth, he walked a batter but had another clean inning. He needed just 40 pitches for his first four innings.

The Brewers’ lead would be challenged in the bottom of the fifth, partially because of some sloppy defense. With two outs, Edouard Julien with a ground ball right to Joey Ortiz. He rushed the throw, and it was wide and past Andrew Vaughn. That allowed Julien to reach second. It was initially ruled a single and error, but later changed to just an error.

In the next at-bat, Kyle Karros hit a ball down the right field line. It would have been a single had Sal Frelick played it safely, but he misplayed it and the ball went to the wall. That turned it into a double that scored Julien (who might have scored on a single anyway). Misiorowski followed it up with a strikeout of Brett Sullivan, but the Rockies closed the gap to 2-1.

While the Brewers had built an early two-run lead, they missed opportunities to blow it open early. In the first, the Brewers had runners at first and second following the Turang home run, but did not score either. They had runners at first and second again in the fourth, but a strikeout of Jackson Chourio ended that inning.

Frelick drew a walk to start the sixth, but the Rockies picked him off first (following a video review). It would end up being a big review after Hamilton and Christian Yelich hit back-to-back singles, putting runners at first and third. Chourio struck out again to end that inning. The Brewers had a baserunner in each of the first six innings, but their only runs were the solo home runs.

The bottom of the sixth is where Misiorowski really started to struggle. Jake McCarthy led off the inning with a single. Next up was Tyler Freeman. On a 1-1 count, he threw a 98.6 mph cutter that hit Freeman squarely in the left side of his head. Freeman was shaken up and Misiorowski was rattled by it as well. After trainers checked on Freeman, he walked off the field on his own, with Sterlin Thompson entering to pinch-run. Pitching coach Chris Hook also talked to Misiorowski during this to help settle him down after that.

After TJ Rumfield flew out, Hunter Goodman drew a walk to load the bases with one out. It was looking rough for Misiorowski, but he recovered. Johnston swung at the first pitch he saw and flew out to Bauers in shallow left, which prevented McCarthy from tagging and scoring. Two pitches later, Tovar grounded out to Turang, who threw to Vaughn at first for the out. Misiorowski was out of the inning, but needed an additional 36 pitches between the fifth and sixth innings.

The Brewers’ offense would finally break through in the seventh. It started with a William Contreras solo home run off Brennan Bernardino, increasing the lead to 3-1.

After that, Bauers drew his fourth walk of the game, and Vaughn singled to put runners at first and second. Blake Perkins would pinch hit for Vaughn, and on the first pitch of the next at-bat, both runners ran with big leads. Both were safe to move runners up to second and third. Two pitches later, Frelick hit a ground ball to Rumfield, who bobbled it. Both runners scored and Frelick reached on the error.

The lead was up to 5-1 and Bernardino was pulled for TJ Shook. Ortiz hit a single off Shook, but the Brewers couldn’t build any more as Shook struck out Hamilton and Yelich.

Following a long layoff, Misiorowski came back out for the seventh inning. He started with a strikeout of Julien, but then walked Karros and allowed a single to Sullivan. At this point, Aaron Ashby was warming up, but Misiorowski told manager Pat Murphy in the dugout that he wanted to stay in the game. Misiorowski proved he could handle it, striking out McCarthy and Thompson to end the inning. It took 22 pitches but he got through the seventh.

While it might have been a night below Misiorowski’s recent standards, he still had a strong game. He allowed just one unearned run in seven innings. The Rockies did get their baserunners as Misiorowski allowed four hits and walked three. However, Misiorowski kept them mostly in check and added another eight strikeouts. He also maxed out at 103.7 mph, the fastest pitch thrown by a starter under pitch tracking.

Not wanting to waste his night, the Brewers offense added on more in the eighth. Turang remained hot with his second home run of the day, this one a solo home run to left field.

Two batters later, Jake Bauers recorded his first hit of the night following four walks. It might have been a pop-up fly ball in most parks, but in Colorado, it was a home run to left field. The Brewers now had a 7-1 lead.

Grant Anderson entered the game in relief in the eighth inning, just two days after taking a line drive off his arm. He walked a batter in the eighth but otherwise had a clean inning, striking out one. Drew Rom made his debut in the ninth, allowed a ground-rule double but that was all as he struck out two. A foul pop-up caught by Contreras ended the game.

As a team, the Brewers collected 13 hits and six walks. Bauers reached base all five times, hitting a home run to go with his four walks. Hamilton had a 4-for-5 day at the plate. Contreras, Turang, and Yelich added two-hit days as well. The only hitless starters were Frelick (who drew a walk and batted in a run) and Chourio (who went 0-for-5 with two strikeouts). Five of the Brewers’ hits were solo home runs. This all happened despite the team going 0-for-6 with runners in scoring position and leaving 12 on base.

This sets up a chance to sweep tomorrow afternoon in Colorado. Shane Drohan will face Kyle Freeland, with first pitch at 2:10 p.m.

Jared Young quickly becoming an unexpected Mets spark with power surge

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows New York Mets first baseman Jared Young (29) hits a single, Image 2 shows New York Mets first baseman Jared Young is high-fiving a coach after scoring a solo home run
Jared Young has turned into a dependable player for the Mets this season.

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Jared Young began the season as a player clinging to a major league job as a left-handed bat off the bench.

Since returning from surgery to repair a torn meniscus in his left knee May 26, he has gradually worked his way into an important role.

Young entered Saturday with three homers in his last six games, posting a .944 OPS in 55 plate appearances this season.

He gives manager Carlos Mendoza an alternative to the streaky Mark Vientos at first base but has also seen action at DH and the outfield.

Jared Young rounds the bases after hitting a home run during the Mets’ May 30 game. Corey Sipkin for the NY Post

It certainly doesn’t hurt knowing there is a good chance he will be in the lineup against right-handed starting pitchers.

“That helps, I am not going to ignore that,” Young said before the Mets faced the Padres on Saturday. “It’s easier when you get consecutive games to play and play more often, it gives us more chances to get out there and feel good.”

In Friday’s 5-0 victory over the Padres, he homered in his first at-bat and finished the night 2-for-4.

It was a third multihit game in his last six for Young, who had reached base in 11 straight games as play began.

Mendoza has not hesitated to bat Young in the cleanup spot.

The manager cited Young’s ability to control the strike zone as the key to his consistency.

Jared Young hits a single during the Mets’ May 30 game. Robert Sabo for the NY Post

“This is a guy who is going to go out there and he’s going to compete,” Mendoza said. “He’s going to give you quality at-bats because of his knowledge of the strike zone. He has got pop, but he’s got a pretty good idea in understanding what the pitchers are trying to do to him, so it’s just good to see it and he’s been an impactful bat for us.”

Young produced a .722 OPS in 22 games for the Mets last year, spending most of the season at Triple-A Syracuse after playing in Korea.

Young’s emergence has given Mendoza the option of reducing Vientos’ role.

Vientos, who began Saturday with a disappointing .630 OPS, didn’t play Wednesday and was used as a pinch hitter Friday.

Mendoza credited Young for adjustments that have allowed him to improve against velocity this season.



“He’s shorter to the ball and on time,” Mendoza said. “There was some swing and miss from him, especially against that pitch at the top of the zone, but we have seen him make some adjustments and that is what good hitters do. The more he continues to play it allows him to make those adjustments.”

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Young was off to a hot start this season, yielding an .841 OPS in his first 10 games before the meniscus tear and surgery.

It cost him six weeks, a stretch during which the Mets lost Jorge Polanco, Francisco Lindor, Luis Robert Jr. and Francisco Alvarez to the injured list.

Young steadily began contributing upon his return, and the power surge has followed.

“Baseball is a game of confidence, and you get a little confidence, and you get to play a little bit,” Young said. “You try and take it and run with it and that is kind of what I’m just keeping in mind.”

Is this the most confidence Young has carried onto the field in his MLB career?

“I don’t know about all-around,” he said. “I think it’s a good stretch and you kind of just keep your head where it is and baseball is a crazy game, things can change pretty quick so just keep things as even keel as possible.”

The Knicks sixth man in the Finals is time

SAN ANTONIO, TX - JUNE 5: Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs looks on during the game against the New York Knicks during Game Two of the 2026 NBA Finals on June 5, 2026 at 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(Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

“And David put his hand in his bag,” wrote the anonymous or eponymous author of the book of Samuel, “and took thence a stone, and slang it, and smote the Philistine in his forehead, that the stone sunk into his forehead; and he fell upon his face to the earth. So David prevailed over the Philistine with a sling and with a stone.”

David made due with what he had and it was enough. The NBA version of David would be the 2004 Pistons, who upset the Shaq/Kobe Lakers and their seemingly destined fate to four-peat. Los Angeles was a mess, what with Shaq hating Kobe, Kobe hating Shaq, both players hating Phil Jackson, the child rapist sexually harassing the accused rapist’s wife with a “joke” about little girls, etcetera. They were their for the taking, and the Pistons made sure they got took.

The Lakers lost Game 1 at home, then trailed by six with 36 seconds left before rallying to force overtime and win Game 2. But the next three games were in Michigan, one of the busiest hubs on the railroad that runs where dreams go to die, and whatever lingering fantasies they flew in with were laid to rest after three straight Ls. It’s not a perfect fit. It’ll do.

The San Antonio Spurs lost Game 1 of this year’s Finals at home, then very nearly staged an incredible comeback to win Game 2. To my knowledge Victor Wembanyama and De’Aaron Fox get along well enough. Mitch Johnson seems inoffensive, if not likable. And I’ve never heard a single salacious thing about Stephon Castle. So I’m not saying the Knicks and Spurs are David vs. Goliath II. I’m saying what New York’s has done/is doing is more impressive. A slingshot blast to the dome? That’s like porn, or Stalinism — effective, but only so far as you either ignore or adore the brutality.

The Knicks are doing unto others what’s been done to them the past two postseasons. When they played Indiana in 2024, Tyrese Haliburton led Pacers in minutes (235). Jalen Brunson, Josh Hart and Donte DiVincenzo all eclipsed that mark, with Isaiah Hartenstein nearly joining them. Nine Pacers averaged a dozen or more minutes over the seven games; only seven Knicks did. Multiply that over a couple of weeks and . . . well, you know what it looks like.

In these Finals the Knicks are the bigger, stronger, deeper team. They entered the series far more rested than the Spurs, a gap likely to continue expanding: the Knicks have no reason to fix what ain’t broke, whereas teams down 0-2 are historically more likely to change or shrink their rotation than expand it. Sean Elliott, Tony Parker and Kawhi Leonard aren’t walking through that door, and probably neither are Kelly Olynyk, Lindy Waters III or Bismack Biyombo.

These are the minutes played after two games:

Aren’t those pretty?

What’s clear in those graphs is that the team that’s down and clearly and understandably worn out is more top-heavy, minutes-wise, than their fresher opponent. But there’s something not immediately apparent that emerges with a little bit of a closer look.

The man from the government would tell you Wembanyama and Brunson have played nearly identical minutes (78 to 75). They haven’t. That’s one reason the Knick star has had enough in the tank to close both games out when the younger stud Spur hasn’t. And it’s one reason the Spurs are up against a more daunting uphill than merely coming back after dropping the opening two at home.

Brunson has played roughly 20,000 minutes in the NBA, regular-season and playoffs. Two games into the Finals, he’s played 6% more minutes than he did a year ago. Wembanyama just passed the 6,000 minute mark this spring. Last year, deep vein thrombosis ended his season before the All-Star break, so his workload from 2025 to 2026 is up 64%. Even if you go back to his prior career high in 2024, his total minutes are up 20%. I don’t know how to calculate the added intensity of playoff minutes, but however you frame it the picture’s the same: the biggest man in a league of big men is working more than ever.

And as the season’s advanced, he’s playing way more minutes way more often. There’s no real difference between Brunson playing 37-plus minutes in 50% of his playoff games and Wembanyama doing so in 47%. But Brunson played that many minutes 42% of the time in the regular season. He’s done it eight times in the playoffs. Wembanyama did so five times in the entire regular season, 8% of his games.

Hack-a-Mitch is the free throw story getting the most press in the series, but Wembanyama’s attempts are noteworthy. He had nine in the first two games against Portland (he left the second game early due to a head injury), five against Minnesota and 15 versus OKC. The Knicks sent him to the line 21 times. Those add up over time. Long as those fouls aren’t coming from KAT or Mitch, they’re fine continuing to send him there.

When the legs are gone, the fight usually is, too. The Knicks being the Knicks — in particular Towns being as unique a 7-footer as Wembanyama — is forcing the young giant to answer questions that weren’t in the reading, to push past limits he’s never tested before, limits no human that big maybe ever has. If the Knicks are partying in the Canyon of Heroes this June, their silent sixth man will be a big reason why.

Goliath’s Achilles heel was his head. Shaq was awful at the line. The Knicks are relying on talent and grit in this series. They’re also relying on time wearing on Wembanyama. Head shots are automatic flagrants these days, and he’s making nearly 90% of his free throws in the playoffs. A rock to the noggin won’t work against this particular strain of mutant. Time itself is grinding on him. The Knicks are skilled and gifted on both ends. They’re two wins from a title because they’re stronger and tougher, too.

24-41 Chart

Jun 6, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; Milwaukee Brewers starting pitcher Jacob Misiorowski (32) delivers a pitch in the first inning against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images | Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

Brewers 7, Rockies 1

Leverage Index & Box Score

Brewers @ Rockies Leverage Index (6.6.26)Brewers @ Rockies Box Score (6.6.26)

Graphics via FanGraphs.

I wear my sunglasses at night: Blas Castaño, +0.14 WPA

It’s not what you want: Brennan Bernadino, -0.22 WPA

Game thread comment of the day

Game Thread Comment of the Game (6.6.26) Only one strikeout through two innings for the first time in Miz’s career. There we go, Rockies! Sam Bradfield

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No. 6 Texas blasts No. 11 Oregon, 11-3, to open Austin Super Regional

In front of the largest crowd to ever watch the burnt orange and white at UFCU Disch-Falk Field, the No. 6 Texas Longhorns delivered an impressive performance, thrashing the No. 11 Oregon Ducks 11-3 to open the Austin Super Regional behind 10 strikeouts from sophomore left-hander Dylan Volantis and five RBI supplied by sophomore shortstop Adrian Rodriguez.

Oregon out-hit Texas nine to eight, but the Horns were patient at the plate and delivered timely execution, drawing eight walks, getting hit by three pitches, and driving in three runs on sacrifice flies, adding home runs by junior third baseman Casey Borba and junior designated hitter Ethan Mendoza.

Clutch pitching mattered, too, as Volantis battled persistent command issues, but combined with three other Texas pitchers to strand 17 base runners as Oregon went 0-for-14 with runners in scoring position and 2-for-20 (.100) with runners on base. Two Ducks — right fielder Angel Laya and catcher Burke-Lee Mabeus — each stranded six runners.

“I didn’t think he was sharp tonight, compared to a lot of the other outings that we saw, and yet he gutted it out. He showed the makeup that a true warrior shows when he needed to in the big spots,” Oregon head coach Mark Wasikowski said of Volantis.

After Volantis retired the Ducks in the first with a strikeout to strand runners on first and third, walks drawn by junior right fielder Aiden Robbins and freshman left fielder Anthony Pack Jr. set the Horns up to strike, and Rodriguez took advantage with two outs and two on when he lashed a 2-1 cutter into the left-center gap. With the Oregon outfielders playing shallow, the hit got to the fence and Pack scored from first to make it 2-0.

In the second, an opposite-field approach by Oregon designated hitter Junior Lauaki produced a bloop double down the field, but Lauaki was too aggressive trying to take third on a chopper to Volantis and got caught in the run down. Another softly-hit ball challenged Pack and Rodriguez with the Texas left fielder getting a good jump to make the catch and avoid a collision.

With one out in the bottom of the inning, Longhorns junior third baseman Casey Borba extended the lead to 3-0 with a 395-foot blast to right-center on a 97-mph fastball, a rare opposite-field shot for the pull-heavy slugger who took focused work in batting practice to that direction on Thursday.

A walk issued to redshirt senior center fielder Dariyan Pendergrass also came back to haunt the Ducks when Pendergrass stole second and third, then scored on a sacrifice fly by Robbins.

Up 4-0, Volantis dealt with a massive jam in the third, giving up an 0-2 single to lead off the inning before briefly losing his command, issuing one-out and two-out walks, then falling behind 3-1 with the bases loaded before beating Brayden Jaska swinging on a fastball and the type of big-time curveball expected from Volantis. The Texas ace left the bases juiced by inducing an inning-ending groundout to second.

Through the first three innings, Volantis held Oregon scoreless despite issuing three walks and throwing three wild pitches by stranding six runners. The Californian dealt with more traffic in the fourth after allowing a leadoff single up the middle by Lauaki and a double down the left-field line to put runners on second and third with no outs.

But Volantis’ curveball got him out of two more at bats, his fourth and strikeouts with a runner in scoring position, and a groundout to first to end the inning sparked a rare explosion of emotion from the lanky lefty.

One-out and two-out walks drawn by the Horns put runners on first and second for Robbins in the fourth, who worked a full-count walk to bring up junior catcher Carson Tinney. For the big at bat, the Ducks brought in seldom-used lefty Jonah Barkoff for his sixth appearance this season. After throwing a first-pitch strike to Tinney, Barkoff’s balk sent Borba home from third, but a 3-2 breaking ball in the dirt was enough to get Tinney to offer and end the inning.

After retiring the first two batters in the fifth, Volantis looked like he was finally at cruising speed before consecutive singles increased the stress again before another big-time curveball stranded two more runners by retiring Lauaki for the first time.

With Oregon out-hitting Texas 7-3 entering the bottom of the fifth, the Longhorns put one-out hits together with Becerra doubling to right center and Rodriguez singling to left center to make it 6-0.

Texas scored another run after Mendoza was hit by a pitch, junior first baseman Ashton Larson drew a walk, and Pendergrass was hit by a pitch to force in Rodriguez.

At 96 pitches, Volantis came out for the sixth, but his command faltered again by allowing a leadoff double down the right-field line, a full-count walk, and spiking a first-pitch curveball off the foot of the next batter. For a final time, Volantis recovered, striking out Laya with three swings before departing to a deserved standing ovation as junior right-hander Thomas Burns came on in relief.

Burns got three swings and misses for the second out, but couldn’t find the zone on back-to-back walks on some pitches wildly out of the zone, ending his outing in favor of redshirt senior left-hander Luke Harrison in his second consecutive relief appearance. Despite getting squeezed on a 2-2 curveball, Harrison left no doubt with a swing and a miss on a cutter to strand three and leave the Horns with a 7-2 lead.

A single by Pack and a walk by Becerra put runners on first and second for Rodriguez in the sixth before both advanced on a wild pitch. Rodriguez made the Ducks pay after Pack was nearly picked off on a pitch out, hitting a sacrifice fly to center. And then Mendoza caught a hanging breaker up and over the plate, launching it 438 feet to left center for his 10th home run of the season.

Harrison went 1-2-3 in the seventh to end his effective outing and remains available to start on Monday if necessary or appear out of the bullpen again on Sunday. Freshman right-hander Brody Walls came for the eighth and worked around a solo home run.

In the ninth, Texas added a run on a sacrifice fly by Rodriguez, whose execution at the plate followed a single by Pack and a double by Becerra.

The Longhorns can advance to the College World Series on Sunday with first pitch at 8 p.m. Central on ESPN with senior right-hander Ruger Riojas (5-2, 3.86 ERA) set to take the mound against Ducks right-hander Will Sanford (9-2, 3.46 ERA).

Dodgers hang 9 runs on Angels in first after Myles Garrett throws out first pitch

The Los Angeles Dodgers jumped on the in-state rival Los Angeles Angels with a big first inning at Dodger Stadium on Saturday, June 6.

Shohei Ohtani led the Dodgers’ offense in the top of the first inning, scoring the first run of the game after Andy Pages hit a two-run home run 394 feet to left field.

It was just the beginning of what was to come for Ohtani against his former team. The Japanese superstar spent the first six years of his career with the Angels.

Ohtani later added a two-run home run in the first, blasting a ball 406 feet to center field. Alex Freeland scored on the play. The Dodgers took a 9-1 lead into the top of the second inning.

Ryan Ward had added to the score with a double to center that brought in Freddie Freeman and Mookie Betts to score. It also moved Max Muncy over to third. Muncy would not have to stay at third long, as he was brought in after Freeland grounded into a fielder's choice to the Angels' shortstop, Zach Neto. Ward managed to score on an error and Dalton Rushing scored after a throwing error by Neto.

The Angels held an early 1-0 lead after the top of the inning thanks to Oswald Peraza's triple to center that brought in Wade Meckler to score.

The Dodgers never actually scored again, but cruised to a 9-2 victory.

Myles Garrett throws out first pitch for Dodgers

The Dodgers welcomed Myles Garrett to Los Angeles with the opportunity to throw out the ceremonial first pitch before the game.

Garrett was traded to the Los Angeles Rams last week after spending the first nine years of his career with the Cleveland Browns.

Garrett was named the NFL's Defensive Player of the Year after recording an NFL single-season record 23 sacks during the 2025 season.

Blake Treinen creates highlight in bullpen

Dodgers pitcher Blake Treinen created a highlight in the first inning after catching Pages' home run while standing in the bullpen.

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Dodgers hang 9 runs on Angels in first inning

Raise your hands if you hit two home runs today, part two

Jun 6, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Chicago Cubs center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong (4) gestures after he hits a home run during the ninth inning against the San Francisco Giants at Wrigley Field. Mandatory Credit: Matt Marton-Imagn Images | Matt Marton-Imagn Images

A day after a trio of Giants clubbed a pair of home runs each in an 18-3 frolic, they were outdone and undone by a sole Cub clubbing a pair of his own. 

Pete Crow-Armstrong launched two equalizers towards the El tracks in right  over the course of Chicago’s 3-2 extra-inning win on Saturday: the first in the 6th inning off Landen Roupp, and another with two outs in the bottom of the 9th off closer of the day Keaton Winn. 

Prior to those fireworks, starting arms Ben Brown and Roupp do-si-doed over 5 scoreless innings.

For Roupp, the performance was a welcome return to form after allowing 8 runs on 8 hits and 5 walks during his last outing in Milwaukee. He got himself in and out of trouble in the 1st after a couple of two-out walks and settled in nicely after that. Cubs hitters managed just two singles off of him, limited in part by the soft hands and rangy defense of Willy Adames, Luis Arraez, and Roupp himself.  With the speedy PCA at first,  Roupp turned a weakly hit bounder that looked to be a surefire productive out into a double play with an aggressive throw that nabbed the lead runner. 

On the other side of the hill, Ben Brown proved to be the wet blanket that always seems to await this offense after an outburst. 19-run feast against Colorado on Sunday, Monday they were scrounging for scraps. After posting 18 runs on 19 hits, the 26 year-old right-hander held the Giants to just a 1st inning single and walk as he pitched into the 6th.  But nearing 90 pitches on the day as he tentatively embarked on his third time through the order, Chicago skipper, Craig Counsell, decided he’d rather not see the recently converted starter face Rafael Devers again. The move made somewhat sense on paper — it just didn’t quite work out that way as turned on a 1-2 fastball from Caleb Thielbar and punched it through the headwinds and into the stands. 

The one-run lead didn’t last long.

Three pitches into the bottom half of the 6th, Chicago had answered.

Crow-Armstrong teased this outcome when he fouled off the first two pitches of the at-bat. The first, a change-up, had the distance to clear the wall but sailed wide. The second, a cutter, PCA deflected into the screen behind home plate before he shouted a choice monosyllabic word after the follow-through spun him around. He made a meal of his frustration at missing the offering. He tucked his bat under his arm and paced around the plate muttering to himself as he removed his arm padding and tore at his batting gloves. Typically this kind of batter’s box bluster precedes a third strike. The foul ball that just skirts being a home run is almost always a kiss of death. Maybe Roupp bought into that superstition as well. Maybe for PCA it was all an act, pretending to be annoyed and disgruntled and out-of-sorts in order to bait Roupp into another fastball. 

Roupp walked the next batter, Michael Conforto, who then stole second, giving the Cubs their first at-bats with a runner in scoring position since the 1st and a real chance to take their first lead of the series. They’d have to wait. Roupp locked back in and struck out the next two hitters, but at 98 pitches, Tony Vitello decided to dip into his pen rather than see his starter try to close out the frame — a decision that got him a North Carolinian glare Giants fans and coaches have long been familiar with.

Reliever Caleb Kilian loaded the bases with a walk and a single (kept admirably on the infield by Adames) but ultimately got Nico Hoerner to fly out to end the threat, keep the game tied, and close the book on Roupp. 

The score stayed knotted at 1 until the 9th when the Giants scratched another run home after one-out singles from Jung Hoo Lee (his second of the day, hitting streak to 14 games), and Bryce Eldridge (streak to 9 games) before Matt Chapman’s sacrifice fly. Solid situational baseball all around. Lee had a great read on the ball in play and went from first to third on the hit to Seiya Suzuki in right. Speedster Jonah Cox pinch ran for Eldridge and stole second, eliminating the possible inning-ending double play while also putting himself in scoring position. And Chapman stayed back on a center-cut fastball, saw it deep, and made sure he put it in play. If the 2-1 score held, and San Francisco won this game, that sequence at the plate and on the base paths would be the reason why. Looking back on it now, it’s just the inning in which a key runner was stranded at second, in which a clutch hit — in such ample supply yesterday! — didn’t occur. Eric Haase lined a fastball 330 feet with the ball leaving his bat at 104 MPH, but instead of splitting a gap or clearing a wall, it found a defender’s glove. 

The one-run would have to do…and it didn’t.

To be clear, Keaton Winn is having a solid year. Few batters get satisfaction from putting one of his pitches in play. The contact is off-barrel, weakly hit, often in the ground. In terms of physicality and stuff, Winn reads as a late-inning reliever — but so far he’s underperformed when thrust into a save situation. His overall ERA is in the mid-2.00, while his ERA in the 9th inning is now 4.50 with a 1.50 WHIP. Opponents are posting a .869 OPS (40 PA) in situations Baseball Reference defines as “high leverage” — and that number doesn’t include today’s results.

Here’s today’s result. 

Winn got the first two guys out in the 9th before this splitter he banana-ed out over the heart of the plate to PCA, forcing extra innings. 

Extra innings didn’t go well. Victor Bericoto pinch hit against lefty Ryan Rolison for Drew Gilbert, who has yet to get a hit against a southpaw this season, and logged at an at-bat worthy of Gilbert’s ineffectiveness. Three pitches — he swung at two curveballs well-below the zone before taking a 95 MPH fastball. Without a productive lead-off hitter in the 10th, scoring the Manfred Man from second requires a knock, and San Francisco bats just couldn’t find a way. They had went out and spent all their scoring mojo on Friday and came up skint on Saturday, going 0-for-6 with runners in scoring position. 

Turning it over to Chicago, the Cubs just needed one batter in the 10th to finish it. Michael Busch singled to right and Bericoto, brought in for his bat, was forced to use his glove, and in his rush to ensure the winning run didn’t score, he booted the ball, ensuring it did.      

The 2026 San Francisco Giants have yet to win four games in a row.

Cubs Minor League Wrap: Knoxville explodes with 6 HR

Knoxville Smokies infielder Jefferson Rojas (2) hits the ball during a Minor League baseball game between the Knoxville Smokies and Birmingham Barons at Covenant Health Park in Knoxville, Tenn., on June 2, 2026. | Angelina Alcantar/ News Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The Cubs signed right-hander Andrew Wantz and assigned him to Triple-A Iowa.

Iowa Cubs

The Iowa Cubs split a doubleheader with the Toledo Mud Hens (Tigers), winning game one 7-5 and losing the second one 8-1.

The good news in game one is that Matthew Boyd started and got the win. The bad news is he allowed three home runs over five innings. But as I always say about a rehab appearance, the most important thing is how the player feels afterwards. Both Boyd and Craig Counsell said they expect Boyd’s next start to be with the major league squad.

Boyd’s final line was five runs on seven hits over five innings. He struck out five and walked one. Boyd threw 80 pitches and 56 of them were strikes.

Tyler Ferguson pitched the other two innings and got the save. Ferguson gave up two hits, but no runs. He struck out three and walked no one.

Center fielder Brett Bateman went 3 for 4 with a double and a steal. He scored one run and drove in one.

Right fielder Justin Dean was 2 for 3 with a double. He had two RBI and scored two runs.

Matt Shaw played this entire game at first base in a rehab stint and was doubled in a run in the third inning. Shaw went 1 for 3 with a walk, one RBI and one run scored

Boyd with a strikeout.

The hit by Shaw was ruled a double.

Two-run double for Dean.

Bateman’s RBI double.

Vince Velazquez gave the I-Cubs a good start in game two, allowing just one run on one hit over three innings. Velazquez walked two, hit one batter and struck out four.

Things fell apart when Paul Campbell pitched the final three innings and allowed one run in the fifth, five in the sixth and one more in the seventh. He allowed four home runs in those three innings. Campbell finished with seven runs on eight hits over three innings. He walked one and struck out one.

Catcher Eric Yang was 1 for 2 with a walk in game two.

Knoxville Smokies

The Knoxville Smokies were in open rebellion and overthrew the Birmingham Barons (White Sox), 14-5.

Tyler Schlaffer started game one and gave up five runs on seven hits over four innings. He walked three and struck out seven.

Jace Beck threw the next three innings and got the win. He allowed neither a run nor a hit, but he did walk two batters. Beck struck out three.

Tyler Ras was six up, six down over the final two frames in a non-save situation. Ras struck out two.

The Smokies hit six home runs in this game. Third baseman Jefferson Rojas connected for two home runs today: solo shots in both the first and seventh innings. Rojas was a perfect 3 for 3 with a double and the two home runs, which were the seventh and eighth of the season for him. Rojas also walked once. He scored three times and drove in three runs.

DH Owen Ayers hit a two-run home run in the third inning, his ninth on the year. Ayers went 3 for 4 with a double and the home run. Ayers walked two and struck out two.

Left fielder Carter Trice connected for a two-run home run in the fifth inning, also his ninth. Trice went 1 for 3 with a walk.

Later on in the fifth inning, center fielder Andy Garriola hit his team-leading 11th home run with two men on. Garriola went 2 for 5 and scored twice.

Finally, Edgar Alvarez hit a solo home run in the eighth. It was his sixth on the year. Alvarez went 1 for 4.

Catcher Ariel Armas was 4 for 5 with a double and one run scored.

Rojas’ first home run was historic for the reasons listed in this post. It was a long home run.

The Carter Trice home run.

Garriola went to dead center.

The second home run by Rojas may have went even farther.

South Bend Cubs

The South Bend Cubs incarcerated the Quad Cities River Bandits (Royals), 13-2.

Will Sanders pitched the first four innings without allowing a run. Sanders gave up two hits. He walked three and struck out three.

JP Wheat just pitched the fifth inning, but he got the win because Sanders didn’t go five. Wheat gave up two hits but no runs. He also did not record a strikeout or a walk.

Koen Moreno threw the final four innings for the save. Moreno gave up a two-run home run in the eighth to ruin the shutout, but those were the only runs he allowed. He gave up six hits, but no walks and he struck out six.

Center fielder Christian Olivo hit a two-run home run in the fourth inning, his fifth on the year. Olivo was 1 for 4.

Three batters later in the fourth, right fielder Josiah Hartshorn homered with the bases empty. It was his ninth home run this year and fourth in just 12 games in High-A. Hartshorn went 3 for 5 with the home run and a two-run double in the first inning, giving him three RBI.

Two batters after Hartshorn in the fourth with a man on, left fielder Miguel Useche hit the third South Bend home run of the inning. Useche went 1 for 3 with two walks. He scored twice.

Shortstop Ty Southisene was 2 for 5 with a steal. He scored twice.

Second baseman Drew Bowser went 2 for 4 with a double and an bases-loaded RBI walk. He also scored once.

Hartshorn’s two-run double.

Olivo’s home run.

Hartshorn showing opposite field power.

Useche’s home run.

Myrtle Beach Pelicans

The Myrtle Beach Pelicans were carried downstream by the Charleston RiverDogs (Rays), 4-2.

Dominick Reid pitched the first five innings and allowed two runs on five hits. He walked one and struck out one.

Edwardo Melendez closed out the game and got the loss after he gave up two runs on just one hit over three innings. Melendez only walked one, but he also hit two batters while striking out just one. Both runs came in the bottom of the eighth.

The Pelicans managed just two hits, both singles. Center fielder Darlyn DeLeon was 1 for 2 with a walk and one run scored.

ACL Cubs

Lost to the Giants, 5-3.

Braves News: Eric Hartman, series win, more

TAMPA, FLORIDA - MARCH 21, 2026: Eric Hartman #64 of the Atlanta Braves bats during the second inning of a spring training Spring Breakout game against the New York Yankees at George M. Steinbrenner Field on March 21, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

The Braves now have two top 100 position-player prospects in high-A Rome. Eric Hartman continues to hit the cover off the ball with a tantalizing power-hit-speed package as a 19-year-old who was taken in the 20th round of the 2024 draft. That seems like incredible value and frankly incredible luck that the Braves still signed him, as usually those prep players in the last couple rounds can be more backup plans than realistic signing expectations. He is joined by shortstop Tate Southesene who is looking like a complete player and a really savvy pick underslot in the 2025 first round. His underslot signing enabled the signing of Briggs McKenzie, who struck out 8 in his full-season ball debut. Things are looking really promising on the farm right now, with a nice set of draft capital and reportedly a huge international free agent incoming.

Braves News

The Braves took another series, beating the Pirates 6-3 behind strong offense and a middling Spencer Strider performance.

MLB News

The Reds are hoping to have star pitcher Hunter Greene back starting games in the majors before the All-Star break.

The Twins are bringing Royce Lewis back to the majors, as the former top overall pick has been tearing up triple-A pitching.

The Red Sox are reportedly shopping catcher Connor Wong, as they have a surplus at the position.

Ben Rice denies having any extra pressure to carry Yankees’ offense with Aaron Judge out

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows New York Yankees first baseman Ben Rice hitting a solo home run, Image 2 shows New York Yankees' Aaron Judge (99) looking on from the dugout
Ben Rice said he doesn't feel any extra pressure to produce with Aaron Judge out.

Ben Rice has found himself in the American League MVP conversation for much of the season.

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That’s even with a healthy Aaron Judge — or so we thought — hitting in the same lineup and looking for his third straight MVP.

But now Rice, like the rest of the Yankees lineup, is facing a new challenge: hitting without Judge’s bat to protect them.

For Rice, it’s especially true, as he’s hit directly in front of Judge for much of the year.

In the four games prior to Saturday’s rainout against Boston, Rice instead had Paul Goldschmidt hitting behind him.

Goldschmidt, still a dangerous hitter — particularly against lefties — doesn’t offer quite the protection Judge did.

Ben Rice connects on a home run during the Yankees’ June 5 game. Robert Sabo for the NY Post

“He’s a big presence to not have in our lineup,” Rice said after Friday’s loss in The Bronx. “It’s definitely gonna hurt us, but all we can do is keep moving forward.”

Asked if not having Judge’s bat behind him might add pressure to his at-bats, Rice said, “No. I focus on today. We’ll evaluate it at the end.”

And not having Judge — even the limited version he said he’s been since late April, when he believes he first injured the right rib that will likely sideline him for two months — will surely impact the way pitchers approach the Yankee lineup.

As to whether he thinks he’ll be pitched to differently in Judge’s absence, Rice said, “It’s not for me to say. We’ll see what happens. All I can control is the pitches I swing at and don’swing at.”

Aaron Judge reacts during the Yankees’ June 5 game against the Red Sox. Corey Sipkin for the NY Post

In four games without Judge, Rice is 4-for-14 with three walks and six strikeouts and had a double and a homer.

Hitting coach James Rowson recently praised Rice’s work ethic behind the scenes, especially with his willingness to study how opposing pitchers pitches to him.

“That’s part of what’s made him better,’’ Rowson said. “It’s not just talent. A lot of guys are talented. The great ones prepare differently and I see how he prepares behind the scenes.”

His process has worked well so far, as Rice entered Saturday with an OPS of 1.051 on the season, trailing only Houston’s Yordan Alvarez.



Rice’s walk rate is up from a year ago, as is his strikeout rate, but he’s about to be tested this season as he hasn’t before.

He’ll be expected to be the biggest bat in the lineup, likely until Judge returns later in the season.

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While the Yankees have been careful not to apply a timeline to Judge’s injury, his injury won’t be imaged again for at least another month and he’ll need to built up before he’s back in games.

In Friday’s loss, Rice had a homer and went 2-for-3 as the No. 2 hitter, but the three batters behind him, Goldschmidt, Cody Bellinger and Jazz Chisholm Jr. combined to go 0-for-11.

That stopped the Yankees from putting much together offensively outside of solo homers by Rice and Trent Grisham, who hit one spot ahead of Rice.

The Yankees will need more production throughout their lineup to remain near the top of the AL East with Judge out, but Rice is as important as any hitter to make sure that happens.

Report: Penguins Defenseman To Sign Two-Year Contract In KHL

A Pittsburgh Penguins defenseman looks poised to leave the organization at the conclusion of the 2025-26 season.

According to Hockey News Hub, which reports a lot of KHL news, defenseman Alexander Alexeyev is set to sign a two-year contract with Salavat of the KHL.

Alexeyev signed with the Penguins as a free agent last July and has spent the entire 2025-26 season with the AHL's Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins, who are in the Eastern Conference Final. He finished the AHL regular season with three goals and 12 points in 38 games and has one goal and five points in 10 Calder Cup Playoff games. 

Prior to the 2025-26 season, Alexeyev played 80 NHL games with the Washington Capitals, totaling one goal and eight points.

The Capitals selected him with the 31st overall pick in the 2018 NHL Draft. 


Bookmark THN - Pittsburgh Penguins on your Google News tab to follow the latest Penguins news, roster moves, player features, and more!   

Giancarlo Stanton takes live batting practice again with Yankees hoping for return ‘sooner rather than later’

Giancarlo Stanton in the New York Yankees dugout.
Giancarlo Stanton is pictured during the Yankees' June 3 game against the Guardians.

For the second time in four days, Giancarlo Stanton was on the field at Yankee Stadium early Saturday afternoon, taking live batting practice against Angel Chivilli.

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The Yankees hope it is not too much longer before Stanton is in the batter’s box for real games, and not just simulated ones, though he still has more boxes to check in the coming week or two before that can happen.

After taking four at-bats against the rehabbing Chivilli, Stanton did some running on the field — in a straight line in the outfield and then starting halfway up the first base line and taking a turn around first base as he works back from a right calf strain.

“Hopefully sooner rather than later,” manager Aaron Boone said of Stanton’s potential return Saturday. “But he’s continuing to build up the running portion.”

Giancarlo Stanton is pictured during the Yankees’ June 3 game against the Guardians. Robert Sabo for the NY Post

Boone has already said that Stanton will not join the Yankees on their upcoming road trip that starts Monday in Cleveland and ends next Sunday in Toronto, with the veteran DH expected to stay in New York to continue his running progression.

It is possible Stanton will not need to go on a rehab assignment before rejoining the Yankees, because he is not playing the field, but he is not close enough for the team to have to make a decision on that yet.


Camilo Doval offered the Yankees a reminder of his tantalizing potential Friday night, retiring the side in the ninth inning on nine pitches (eight strikes), with two strikeouts.

That lowered Doval’s ERA to 5.79 through 27 games, though his underlying metrics have been more promising, offering some hope that he can straighten things out to strengthen the bullpen more consistently.

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“That’s what’s been tough, because we’ve seen a lot of that, even in some of the outings where he’s given it up,” Boone said. “It’s just about being consistent, because there is a lot of really good happening there with Camilo — the way he’s thrown the ball, the strike throwing that’s as good as he’s maybe ever been. It is very close to being in line with what we saw [Friday] night. That’s what he’s capable of. He’s working hard at it and we’re continuing to work hard around him to try to get him to be that. Because when he’s like that, he can be an impactful back-end guy.”


After going 0-for-4 with a strikeout in his first rehab game Friday night as the DH at Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, Jasson Domínguez is expected to play the outfield in his second rehab game Sunday.

He will likely need a few more games next week before he returns from a mild AC joint sprain in his left shoulder.

Guardians Dominate Rangers Behind Bibee’s Gem

Jun 6, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Cleveland Guardians starting pitcher Tanner Bibee (28) pitches in the second inning against the Texas Rangers at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Dustin Safranek-Imagn Images | Dustin Safranek-Imagn Images

The offense came alive tonight but the story of the game was Tanner Bibee’s phenomenal outing. He tossed 8 scoreless innings and had only 87 pitches, I really wish they would’ve game him a chance to complete the Maddux. He lowered his ERA all the way down to 4.09 from this outing. If Bibee can find this version of himself more consistently, the version we’ve seen for years, this team will be a force in the playoffs.

The offense was super fun to watch tonight, there were contributions from nearly everyone. Jose hit his team leading 10th HR of the season. Rocchio hit a bomb off the foul pole in a 2-4 effort. DeLauter and Schneemann also both had two hits. Manzardo had a double and two walks. It was super nice to see the offense have a game like this.

The Guardians will look to win the series tomorrow. It will be Joey Cantillo vs Jacob DeGrom at 2:35 pm ET.

Tyler Freeman exits Rockies-Brewers game after being hit in head

DENVER, CO - JUNE 6: Tyler Freeman #2 of the Colorado Rockies is hit with the ball in the helmet during an at-bat in the sixth inning against the Milwaukee Brewers at Coors Field on June 6, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. Freeman exited the game under his own power. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images) | Getty Images

There was a scary moment in the sixth inning where Rockies right fielder Tyler Freeman took a 98.2 mph cutter off the helmet from Brewers right-hander Jacob Misiorowski.

The extra helmet flap helped, but it hit him directly on the ear. Luckily, Freeman turned his head so it didn’t hit under the visor.

He was immediately embraced by catcher William Contreras and met by the Rockies coaching staff. He was awake and looking around — and even seen mouthing, “I’m fine” — but Keith Duggar and Heath Townsend rightfully pulled him out of the game.

Sterlin Thompson entered the game in his place.


This is a developing story and Purple Row will provide more information as it becomes available.