Scherzer calls daughter's letter to Blue Jays 'the cutest thing you can possibly imagine'

DUNEDIN, Fla. (AP) — Max Scherzer says the note his daughter composed asking the Toronto Blue Jays to re-sign the three-time Cy Young Award winner arose as his kids were writing letters to Santa Claus in December.

After Scherzer agreed last week to a $3 million, one-year contract to return to the Blue Jays, his wife posted on Instagram the handwritten note from their 8-year-old daughter, Brooke.

“It’s the cutest thing you can possibly imagine when you read that, how much it meant to her to be in Toronto,” Scherzer told reporters Tuesday after his deal was finalized.

Scherzer said his kids were writing letters expressing what they wanted from Santa when Brooke approached him and his wife, Erica May-Scherzer. The 8-year-old asked for a stamp and then put it on a sealed envelope that she handed to her parents.

After Brooke went to bed, her parents opened the letter to see what she had written.

“Dear Blue Jays,” the note began, “I am so sorry that you didn’t win the World Series. I hope that you win next time. I hope my dad is back on the team. My whole family loves spending time in Toronto with our dad. We loved the aquarium, the (CN) Tower and of course the stadium. I am looking forward to come back next season. Love, Max Scherzer daughter."

Scherzer noted he and his wife didn’t send the letter to the Blue Jays.

“That’s a bad negotiating tactic,” Scherzer said with a laugh.

Scherzer, 41, wanted to return to Toronto after the Blue Jays came so close to winning the World Series last season. The Blue Jays led in the ninth inning of Game 7 before falling 5-4 to the Los Angeles Dodgers in the 11th.

“Obviously we came as close as you possibly can to winning the whole thing - something you can never get over, forget or anything of that nature,” said Scherzer, who won World Series rings with Washington in 2019 and Texas in 2023. “That was a huge reason why I wanted to come back. This team can win. I wanted to be a part of it.”

Scherzer said he’s right on schedule for the start of the season after dealing with a thumb injury for much of last year.

“I feel healthy,” Scherzer said.

Scherzer went 5-5 with a 5.19 ERA in 17 regular-season starts last year. He also was the winning pitcher in Game 4 of the AL Championship Series with Seattle and made two starts in the World Series.

He wanted to return to Toronto but understood the uncertainty that comes with being a free agent. His deal with the Jays includes $10 million in available performance bonuses for innings,

“Free agency is a weird animal,” Scherzer said. “I’ve been through it many times. You think it’s going to go one way and it goes another way. I kind of knew not to get my hopes up, but like I said, I was going to be picky about where I went. I wasn’t just going to sign with anybody. There was only a couple of teams I’d sign with at this point in time, and obviously Toronto was one of them.”

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AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Braves' Jurickson Profar to be suspended 162 games by MLB after second PED offense, per report

Jurickson Profar upended his career and the Atlanta Braves' season for a second consecutive year after testing positive for a banned substance, a second offense that will result in a 162-game ban for the 2026 season, ESPN first reported March 3.

Profar, 33, was entering the first season of a three-year, $42 million contract when he was suspended March 31 after a positive test for a fertility drug classified as a performing-enhancing substance. He was suspended 80 games and returned July 2, hitting 14 homers with a .787 OPS over the remaining 80 games.

This suspension, which The Athletic reported will be appealed by the MLBPA, will be far more costly.

Profar will lose his entire 2026 salary of $15 million, bringing his docked pay for his two positive tests to $18 million over two seasons. He's also ineligible to represent the Netherlands in the upcoming World Baseball Classic.

Profar was entering his 13th major league season after debuting as a 19-year-old in 2012. He earned his first All-Star appearance in 2024 for the San Diego Padres, establishing career bests in home runs (24) and OPS (.839), prompting the Braves to sign him as their left fielder entering 2025.

Now, he won't be seen on the Truist Field diamond until 2027.

Profar joins five other players to earn at least a 162-game ban under MLB's policy, most notably Robinson Cano, who earned two suspensions amid a $240 million contract he originally signed with Seattle, the bans sidetracking what looked like a Hall of Fame career.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Jurickson Profar suspended: Braves outfielder banned again for PEDs

Spring GameThread: Team Canada @ Jays

Mar 2, 2026; Dunedin, Florida, USA;Toronto Blue Jays third baseman Addison Barger (47) is congratulated by third baseman Riley Tirotta (87) and teammates after he hit a grand slam during the fifth inning against the Boston Red Sox at TD Ballpark. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images | Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images

And you thought the Jays were Team Canada.

This is a 1:00 Eastern start and it is on Sportsnets

The Jays lineup has a bunch of the regulars:

  1. Springer, DH
  2. Lukes, RF
  3. Varsho, CF
  4. Barger, 3B
  5. Schneider, 2B
  6. Sanchez, LF
  7. Valenzuela, C
  8. Nimmala, SS
  9. Keys, 1B

And Kevin Gausman is starting.

Hazel Mae posted the Team Canada lineup:

Team USA is playing the Giants at 3:00 Eastern. I don’t think that one is on TV. And Vlad and his fellow Dominicans are playing the Tigers at 6:00 Eastern. That will be on the MLB Network.

Beyond that, there isn’t much for Jays’ news. They have officially announced the Max Scherzer signing, which means he passed the physical.

New York Yankees vs. Team Panama: Max Fried vs. Jorge Garcia

TAMPA, FL - FEBRUARY 25: Max Fried #54 of the New York Yankees pitches during spring training at George M. Steinbrenner Field on February 25, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The World Baseball Classic is almost upon us. As the international tournament gets ready to upstage spring training, their teams will play in exhibition games against MLB teams today and tomorrow before the Classic begins later in the week. The Yankees will host Team Panama this afternoon at Steinbrenner Field. Unfortunately, it doesn’t appear this game will be televised; not even on the Gotham App.* With that said, let’s discuss the matchup ahead, which you’ll seemingly have to follow live on social media.

*If you’re curious, Aaron Judge and Team USA will square off with the Giants on ESPN at 3:08pm ET, while Austin Wells and the Dominican Republic face the Tigers on MLB Network at 6:05pm ET.

Panama will play their games in San Juan, Puerto Rico as a member of Pool A. Their opponents in pool play will be Canada, Colombia, Cuba, and the hosts, Puerto Rico. It’s a fairly wide open group, especially compared to the others—you can read our preview of Pool A here. Indeed, there is a familiar face donning Panama’s colors: José Caballero will be leading off for them today.

Max Fried will make his first start of the spring against an unconventional spring training opponent. Pitching has been the hot topic of camp for the Yankees, with impressive performances from Will Warren and Luis Gil inviting optimism about the rotation even with Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodón sidelined to begin. That doesn’t make Fried any less vital to this ballclub; and health will obviously be the top priority.

Of course, there’s one notable absence in the Yankees’ lineup today: Aaron Judge has joined Team USA, who are set to play the Giants in an exhibition matchup later this afternoon. There’s still a good representation of starters here today. Trent Grisham will lead off, Ben Rice will follow, and Jasson Domínguez, hitting well in camp as he bids to make the roster, hits third. Giancarlo Stanton has had some worrying stories around him this spring but will bat cleanup today for his first in-game appearance of camp.

Interestingly, Ryan McMahon is listed as starting at shortstop in Caballero’s place, with Paul DeJong sliding to third base (perhaps a test of McMahon’s ability to partially back up at the six with Oswaldo Cabrera unlikely to be active at the start of 2026). J.C. Escarra will catch and bat seventh, followed by second baseman Max Schuemann and right fielder Yanquiel Fernández.

Panama’s starter will be righty Jorge Garcia, a former Giants prospect who most rcently pitched in the Mexican League and Venezuelan Winter League in 2025 and 2026. The 23-year-old had a 5.70 ERA in 10 starts for Durango and a 4.01 mark in 11 for Margarita, and both were better than league average — though he does not get many strikeouts. Panama’s lineup contains a gaggle of current and former big leaguers, as well as a promising prospect. As mentioned, Caballero will hit leadoff; Johan Camargo, a former teammate of Fried in Atlanta, will bat fifth. Enrique Bradfield Jr., a top prospect and Orioles first round pick, rounds out the starting nine. This is a speedy crew without a ton of power (where have you gone, El Caballo?), so a more ’80s style of baseball should be their identity.

How to watch

Location: George M. Steinbrenner Field — Tampa, FL

First pitch: 1:05 pm ET

TV broadcast: N/A

Radio broadcast: N/A

For updates, follow us on Twitter and Instagram, and like us on Facebook.

Can young guns like Sal Stewart and Chase Burns help get the Reds to the next level?

Last season was a huge success for the Cincinnati Reds. They secured their first playoff appearance in a full-length season since 2013 and tied for their most wins in a season since that same 2013 season. Still, there is more work to be done. The Reds haven't advanced in a playoff series since 1995, and that was also the last year they won a home playoff game. But two players who weren't even born then could be the driving force in getting the organization back to those heights.

Chase Burns, who was born in January of 2003, is one of the most exciting young arms in baseball. He packs a 99 mph fastball that makes him and Hunter Greene perhaps the hardest-throwing starting pitcher duo in the Majors. In 43.1 MLB innings last year, Burns struck out 67 hitters and posted an impressive 16.7% swinging strike rate (SwStr%). But his debut season was not without its worries.

One of the biggest worries centers around Burns' health. Last year, he suffered a flexor strain in mid-August and was placed on the injured list. When he returned, the Reds used him exclusively out of the bullpen, and there is some concern that, due to his elevated fastball velocity, Burns could be at increased risk of that flexor strain being the precursor to larger arm issues. However, the 23-year-old is confident that it won't be an issue.

"It was kind of a minor thing," he said before a spring training game in Arizona. "I just worked my way up [to the Majors] and was throwing with such high intensity in a short amount of time, short amount of rest. It was fine once I came back and hasn't been bothering me at all, so it's been a pretty healthy offseason."

⚾️ Coming soon: MLB returns to NBC and Peacock in 2026! In addition to becoming the exclusive home of Sunday Night Baseball, NBC Sports will broadcast MLB Sunday Leadoff, “Opening Day” and Labor Day primetime games, the first round of the MLB Draft, the entire Wild Card round of the postseason, and much more.

The way Burns worked his way up was also impressive. The second overall pick in the 2024 draft, Burns started 2025 at High-A but made only three starts before being promoted to Double-A. In eight starts at Double-A, he posted a 1.29 ERA, 0.71 WHIP, and 36.4% strikeout rate, so the Reds moved him up to Triple-A. In just two starts there, he allowed three runs on seven hits in 12.1 innings while striking out 14 batters, and the Reds felt like he would be a huge help to their postseason push.

Yet, that quick rise to the big leagues came with some jarring changes for Burns: "I went through like, 40-something innings in the bigs," he recalled. "That shorter off time throughout the week, and throwing more high intents on a bigger stage is a lot different."

That increased intensity and limited rest time could have played a part in his mild flexor issue, but it also taught the young right-hander an important lesson in getting his body in the best place possible this offseason.

"I'm just making sure I'm staying on top of my body and listening to what my body says," he detailed, when asked about his offseason focus. "Staying flexible and loose, and taking care of the arm. Staying healthy, of course, is a big [focus], so I'm working on everything that I need to work on to build up for the season, because I know it's a long season."

In addition to potentially impacting his health, the quick rise to the big leagues also caused Burns to alter his pitch mix. In particular, Burns dialed back on the usage of his changeup, which was a larger part of his arsenal in the minors. In his 43 MLB innings, Burns threw the changeup just 5.8% of the time, but it was an impactful pitch, particularly against lefties, with a 17% SwStr%.

"I feel like I had all my pitches in the minors," Burns said. "With using a different ball and trying to get to the bigs as quickly as possible, I knew the best way was getting outs and getting strikeouts, so my focus was just trying to get to the bigs at that point. But now that I know what it takes to get up there, I feel like I need those other pitches to help me out."

That has led to a "renewed focus" on his changeup, as he looks to make it a bigger part of his arsenal. It has also led Burns to play around with both a sinker and a curveball as well: "I experimented a little bit last year with [a sinker], just because my four-seam cuts and has ride, so there's something a little bit different for the hitter to see. But another big one is my curveball, just having a slower pitch. I throw everything kind of hard, so just messing with the hitter's tempo and timing a little bit."

Of the trio of pitches, the changeup and sinker might be most impactful for Burns. Last season, he induced fewer whiffs against lefties than righties, and he seems to command his slider much better to righties, so the changeup would give him another swing-and-miss offering to lefties and reduce some of the emphasis on his slider. The sinker would also keep hitters off the four-seam fastball. While Burns throws hard, and his four-seamer can absolutely miss bats, he also allowed a nearly 48% Ideal Contact Rate on the pitch last year, which was 25th percentile among starting pitchers. Adding a different fastball variation will make it harder for hitters to make that kind of contact on his four-seamer.

Yet, at the end of the day, Burns' rise to potential stardom will likely fall on the back of his slider. It's already one of the better ones in the majors. It's 91 mph with just about five inches of horizontal movement, so it's more of a gyro slider than a big sweeper, but Burns has tremendous command of it. Not only does it register elite swinging strike rates, but its overall strike rate is high because Burns can put it in the zone if he wants or bury it off the plate, depending on the situation.

"I'm actively thinking and looking at a different spot," he explained about his slider placement. "For in-zone, I'm trying to throw it at the hitter's elbow, but late in the count, I'm trying to throw it right down the middle and just let it move naturally. I have a tendency of trying to do too much with it, trying to get that big swing and miss. The biggest thing for me is just staying directional and staying through the target. Then it takes care of itself."

That's another lesson that Burns learned in his brief MLB sample size after going up against hitters whose approach was far superior to anything he had seen in the minors.

"Triple-A to the bigs is the biggest jump for sure," he admitted. "There are pitches that I'll throw that I'm thinking they're gonna swing and miss, and they don't even bat an eye at it. These guys in the bigs are the best of the best. It doesn't get any better than this, so just working on that and using that to my advantage, setting up hitters for certain counts, and making sure that I throw everything hard through the zone."

The big jump between Triple-A and the big leagues is also something that Sal Stewart experienced firsthand last year. The Reds' first-round pick in 2022, Stewart is the Reds' top prospect and the 22nd-ranked prospect in all of baseball, according to MLB Pipeline. He began last year in Double-A, but after 80 impressive games, the Reds promoted him to Triple-A, where he hit .315/.394/.629 with 10 home runs, 36 RBI, and four steals in 38 games. The Reds decided that was enough to bring him up to the big leagues.

"These are the best pitchers in the world, from all over the world, and their stuff's good," Stewart said about his first impression of MLB pitching. "They locate well. A lot of them have been there for a while, so they know how to get it done. So you kind of just have to keep adjusting as the season goes on."

Which was something Stewart did just fine last year. In his first eight games, Stewart was 4-for-24 with two home runs, three RBI, and an 8/0 K/BB ratio. Over his final 10 games and 34 plate appearances, Stewart went 10-for-31 with three home runs, five RBI, eight runs scored, and a 7/3 K/BB ratio. That increased success as the season went on taught him valuable lessons about his own process: "That my preparation is enough. Everything I do before the game starts is enough, so I just got to trust that and go out there and be me, do what I do. Go out there, play hard, play to win."

What Sal Stewart does is hit the ball hard. He posted a 51.3% hard-hit rate in Triple-A and then came to the big leagues and registered a 52.5% mark with a 17.5% barrel rate and 95.4 mph average exit velocity. Stewart has good bat speed, but it's not among the tops in the league; yet, his approach is designed to do damage.

"I'm in the game to change the game," Stewart said matter-of-factly. "I'm not in the game to do anything other than that."

Stewart does that in a few ways. For starters, in his brief MLB sample last year, the 22-year-old was among the league leaders in Pull Air%, which measures how often hitters get the ball in the air to the pull side. From 2022-24, 66% of all home runs were on balls pulled in the air. Yet, at the same time, he chases outside of the zone less than the league average and has always posted swinging strike rates around 10% and zone contact rates about 85%, which are good marks for somebody with his raw power.

"I just try to hit the ball hard up the middle," he said about his approach. "If I'm a little out in front, then I pull it. If I'm a little late, then I go the other way. I just try to use my legs and stay behind the ball. Obviously, I take my walks, and I walk a lot, but I'm ready when the ball comes in the zone. From pitch one, I try to be ready to go, and if they come into the zone, then I get ready to go. If not, I'll take first."

Taking first is also something Stewart looks to do defensively as well. After playing the vast majority of his minor league games at third base or second base, the Reds started to move Stewart to first base late in his Triple-A season when a call-up seemed possible. With Ke'Bryan Hayes at third base, Eugenio Suarez at DH, and Matt McLain at second base, first base will need to be Stewart's new home if he plans to get regular at-bats, but the Reds have also talked about using him at second base when McLain needs a day off. Not that any of that matters to Stewart.

"You got to do whatever Tito says. I'm surrounded by a lot of good teammates and great players, so wherever Tito puts me that day, I'll go play defense, and I'll work on my game. When you have a lot of really good players, you've got to do whatever it takes for the team to win. So I don't see that as a problem at all [with moving positions]."

That team-first mindset is not rare for a young player who is looking to make his first Opening Day roster, but it is prevalent up and down the Reds' roster and the sign of a team that knows that last year isn't the final destination but just a small stepping stone.

"Team-wise, we want to go past what we did last year," said Burns. "I think we had a good foot forward, and we added Geno and a lot of good guys, and I think that we can make a special run with these guys."

It's a sentiment that Stewart shares: "Obviously, everyone has personal goals, and the better you play, the more you help the team. So, yeah, I have personal goals, but the main goal is to help the team win. That's my main focus."

With these two young stars locked in and prepared to take their games to another level, the 2026 season may be the one where the Reds turn the clock back to the '90s.

Jurickson Profar being suspended, again

NORTH PORT, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 20: Jurickson Profar #17 of the Atlanta Braves poses for a photo during Spring Training photo day at CoolToday Park on February 20, 2026 in North Port, Florida. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Jurickson Profar, the Atlanta Braves OF/DH who missed 80 games in 2025 due to a suspension for performance enhancing drugs, is facing a 162 game suspension for a second positive test, per Jeff Passan. Aside from missing the entire 2026 regular season and forfeiting his salary for 2026, Profar would also be ineligible for the playoffs, should the Braves make it to the postseason, as well as the World Baseball Classic.

Profar, 33, was, once upon a time, the crown jewel of the Texas Rangers’ farm system, someone whose precocity and advanced skills had him debuting in the majors at age 19, and led to the Rangers trading Ian Kinsler after the 2013 season so that Profar would have a place to play every day.

Profar ended up missing all of 2014 and most of 2015 due to a shoulder injury, and upon his return to the majors, did not initially hit. A solid if unspectacular season in 2018 was followed by a trade to the Oakland A’s. Profar spent most of the 2020-24 seasons with the San Diego Padres, and a breakout .280/.380/.459 slash line in 2024 — by far the best of his career — led to him signing a 3 year, $42 million deal with Atlanta.

Why the national media has not caught on to the Penguins season yet

PITTSBURGH, PA - MARCH 01: Bryan Rust #17 of the Pittsburgh Penguins celebrates his second period goal against the Vegas Golden Knights at PPG PAINTS Arena on March 1, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Objectively speaking, the 2025-26 Pittsburgh Penguins appear to be a really good hockey team. By every major piece of data that exists to evaluate hockey teams, the Penguins rate extremely well across the league through their first 59 games this season.

Entering play on Tuesday their .636 points percentage is the sixth-best in the NHL and the third-best in the Eastern Conference.

Their plus-30 goal-differential is fifth-best in the NHL.

They have 27 regulation wins, which is sixth-most in the NHL.

They are 9-3-3 against teams with a top-10 record.

They have a 51.7 percent expected goals share during 5-on-5 play, a rate that ranks eighth-best in the NHL. They are top-10 in pretty much every, goal, scoring-chance and possession-based metric during 5-on-5 play.

They have the NHL’s second-best penalty killing unit and the NHL’s third-best power play unit.

The goaltending has been, at the very least, competent.

They have a No. 1 center (when Sidney Crosby is healthy, that is), a No. 1 defenseman that has rediscovered his game, excellent scoring depth, good veterans, good young players, a lot of salary cap space in the future and more draft picks to work with than pretty much every other team in the NHL.

If you knew nothing of the Penguins preseason expectations, or what they were supposed to play like this season, you would look at all of that and not hesitate to say, “wow, that team must be a legitimate Stanley Cup contender and in a really good position long-term.”

That would be a logical conclusion. It would be a sensible conclusion. It might even be the correct conclusion.

Yet, when you have watched the Penguins play on a nationally televised broadcast this season, or listened to a national writer or analyst talk about their approach to the trade deadline, you would never guess where this team is in the standings. They played two nationally televised games this past weekend and the first of those games on Saturday started off with a discussion about Evgeni Malkin’s future, and asking Kyle Dubas if there was any chance Malkin would be traded before Friday’s NHL Trade Deadline.

There is a constant rumbling of whether or not the Penguins will sell players like Anthony Mantha, or if veterans could be on their way out due to the ongoing rebuild or re-tool.

You had T.J. Oshie saying they will fall out of a playoff position because of the injury to Sidney Crosby and how that will impact their power play, and Paul Bissonnette talking about how Sunday’s game against the Vegas Golden Knights was going to be a bad time for them. There still seems to be a sense of, “hey, they could maybe make the playoffs,” when it should probably be, “hey, what can this team potentially do when it does make the playoffs?”

This is not meant to be critical of those two guys for their predictions, or in Bissonnette’s case, getting a pre-game prediction badly wrong. Because we all do that. As Smooth Jimmy Apollo once said, when you are right 52 percent of the time, you are wrong 48 percent of the time.

It is meant to just point out that very few people outside of Pittsburgh have really paid much attention to what this team has actually played like and what it is doing. Honestly, I am not even fully convinced all of the city of Pittsburgh realizes how good this team has been so far.

It is almost as if everybody had an expectation in mind for what this team was supposed to look like this season and how it was supposed to play, and then nobody really took any time to pay attention to what they were actually doing or change their narrative.

This is, admittedly, easy to do when you are working in a national setting and trying to focus on 32 different teams. Sometimes things slip through the cracks. I know first-hand how difficult that can be because I have spent the better part of the past 18 years trying to write and blog about teams and sports on a big-picture, national level. It is a lot to try and look at. I do not expect every person covering the sport of hockey to have an in-depth knowledge of every single player and storyline on every single team. Again, over 32 teams that is nearly impossible to do on the same level as a local beat writer. You are just getting a basic, big picture view before you move on to the next game.

The Penguins have also made it kind of easy on themselves over the past few years to go unnoticed. They have not won a playoff series since the 2017-18 season. They have not actually made the playoffs in three years. This is supposed to be a rebuilding season. No matter what big names and future Hall of Famers you still have on your roster, it is still a results oriented business. The Penguins have simply not produced much in the way of results over the past few years.

The other issue potentially at play: Nobody likes to admit they are wrong. Nobody wants to look like they are waffling or changing their opinion.

But you still need to be able to adapt and at least pay closer attention to what is actually happening.

Do I know every detail of the Anaheim Ducks roster this season or what their third-defense pairing looks like on a nightly basis? No. I do not. Did I think they would miss the playoffs again before this season? Yeah, I did. But I do know they are currently a pretty good team, in a position to make the playoffs, perhaps in a position to win the Pacific Division, and I would not be treating them as the same bad, rebuilding team they have been the past few years. You would not be looking at them as sellers right now or questioning if they should trade, I don’t know, Troy Terry. Because they are now good. They have changed the narrative around their team and season.

The Penguins have done the same. It has just taken a long time for people to catch on to it because they have not done much over the past seven seasons and had very little in the way of expectations coming into the season. There is still a quarter of the season to play, and they still need to get Crosby back. They still have to keep collecting points and maintain this level of play. We will see if they can. In the meantime, they look the part of a really good team right now. Perhaps even a contender. They should probably be treated as such until they do something to show they are not.

Watch Trae Young get ejected from Wizards game before he ever played in one

Trae Young has yet to suit up for the Washington Wizards, that debut will come Thursday night.

Monday night, before ever playing a game for the team, Young got ejected.

Everything started late in the third quarter with a confrontation between Houston's Tari Eason and Washington's Jamir Watkins. Young, in street clothes on the bench and walked out on the court to complain to the officials about the play (Eason was ejected as well). Walking onto the court violates the league rules and Young was shown the door.

Young thought the whole thing was pretty funny.

Dodgers on Deck: Wednesday, March 4 vs. Mexico

Feb 26, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Tyler Glasnow against the Chicago White Sox during a spring training game at Camelback Ranch-Glendale. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

There is no Cactus League game for the Dodgers on Wednesday, but they still have a game on their schedule, an exhibition within the exhibition of spring training. They will host Team Mexico on Wednesday afternoon at Camelback Ranch, one of a handful of games for teams in preparation of the World Baseball Classic.

Across Arizona and Florida, there are 31 games on the docket Tuesday and Wednesday this week featuring a World Baseball Classic team playing a major league team. Tournament play for these teams — in Pools A, B, and D in San Juan, Houston, and Miami, respectively — at the WBC begins on Friday.

Tyler Glasnow makes his second start this spring. He threw 33 pitches in two-plus last Thursday against the Chicago White Sox, facing one batter in the third inning by design. Glasnow and Yoshinobu Yamamoto, who got to three innings before leaving for the World Baseball Classic, are the two Dodgers starting pitchers stretched out the most so far this spring.

Wednesday game info
  • Teams: Dodgers vs. Team Mexico
  • Ballpark: Camelback Ranch
  • Time: 12:05 p.m. PT
  • TV: SportsNet LA
  • Radio: none

Dodgers send Jack Suwinski outright to minors

Jul 12, 2024; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Pittsburgh Pirates outfielder Jack Suwinski (65) catches a fly ball hit by Chicago White Sox catcher Korey Lee (26) during the seventh inning at Guaranteed Rate Field. Mandatory Credit: Matt Marton-Imagn Images

The Dodgers on Monday sent Jack Suwinski outright to the minors and off the 40-man roster after the outfielder cleared waivers.

Suwinski was claimed off waivers from the Pittsburgh Pirates on February 21. He hasn’t yet played in a Cactus League game, but was getting work in on the backfields at Camelback Ranch. On Friday, Suwinski was among the group of hitters who faced Emmet Sheehan in a simulated game, which was captured on video by the fine folks at Dodger Blue.

It’s not all that surprising that the Dodgers would try to get Suwinski through waivers, as he was below replacement level the last two seasons, hitting a combined .169/.271/.297 with a 59 wRC+ in 455 plate appearances in 2024-25 after a strong first two years with the Pirates, and he’s out of options.

That roster gambit didn’t work with catcher Ben Rortvedt (twice duringthis offseason) nor infielder Andy Ibáñez, both of whom were claimed. That Suwinski got to the Dodgers, who are 26th in waiver priority for now based on last year’s records, in the first place made it unsurprising that he cleared waivers this time around.

Now, Suwinski remains in the organization as outfield depth, and leaves 39 players on the Dodgers’ 40-man roster. There’s no real urgency yet to fill that spot, but it removes an extra burden should an opportunity arise. Like if Rortvedt inevitably becomes available yet again, or if someone like non-roster invitees Santiago Espinalor Cole Irvin play their way onto the roster over the next three weeks.

Mets vs. Nicaragua: Lineups, broadcast info, and open thread, 3/3/26

PORT ST. LUCIE, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 13: Mark Vientos #27 of the New York Mets looks on during spring training workouts at Clover Park on February 13, 2026 in Port St. Lucie, Florida. (Photo by Rich Storry/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Mets lineup

  1. Marcus Semien – 2B
  2. Jorge Polanco – DH
  3. Bo Bichette – 3B
  4. Francisco Alvarez – C
  5. Brett Baty – 1B
  6. Mike Tauchman – RF
  7. Ronny Mauricio – SS
  8. Cristian Pache – CF
  9. Ji Hwan Bae – LF

SP: Jonah Tong

Nicaragua lineup

  1. Chase Dawson – CF
  2. Jeter Downs – 2B
  3. Ismael Munguia – RF
  4. Mark Vientos – 3B
  5. Emanuel Trujillo – 1B
  6. Omar Mendoza – LF
  7. Cheslor Cuthbert – DH
  8. Freddy Zamora – SS
  9. Ronald Rivera – C

SP: Erasmo Ramírez

Broadcast info

First pitch: 1:10 PM ET

GDT: If a game doesn’t have a TV broadcast, did it really even happen?

Feb 27, 2026; Port Charlotte, Florida, USA; Tampa Bay Rays manager Kevin Cash (16) looks on during the second inning against the Toronto Blue Jays at Charlotte Sports Park. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images | Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images

It’s split squad day with one contingent of Rays traveling to take on the Twins and another contingent remaining in Port Charlotte to take on the Phillies.

No TV today but the Twins radio team will cover that game and the Rays will have radio coverage of the game in Port Charlotte. We will have both Brody Hopkins and Shane McClanahan starting for the Rays.

First pitch against the Minnesota Twins is at 1:05 at Lee Health Sports Complex, and then 1:05 at Port Charlotte against the Phillies.

Today’s highlight package is from June 19-20, 1999 when the Devil Rays took on the Twins.

Spring Training Game #12: Team Colombia vs. Pittsburgh Pirates

BRADENTON, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 18: Bryan Reynolds #10 of the Pittsburgh Pirates poses for a portrait during the 2026 Pittsburgh Pirates Photo Day at LECOM Park on February 18, 2026 in Bradenton, Florida. (Photo by Geoff Stellfox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Team Colombia vs. Pittsburgh Pirates, March 3, 2026, 1:05 p.m. ET

Location: LECOM Park, Bradenton, FL

How to Listen: 93.7 The Fan, 100.1 FM, AM 1020 KDKA, Sports Net Pittsburgh app SNP 360


The Pittsburgh Pirates are hosting the Colombian national team in their preparation for the World Baseball Classic.


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Nikola Jokic rode Keyonte George like a horse in dangerous NBA play

College basketball might take the spotlight in March, but the idea that NBA teams aren’t playing hard in the run up to the playoffs has always been a fallacy. Look no further than the Denver Nuggets vs. Utah Jazz game on Monday night. The Jazz are playing out the string in another lost season, and their main objective at this point is to protect their draft pick. The Nuggets have been hit with the injury bug all year, but they’re still fighting for seeding in the Western Conference. What could have been an afterthought matchup turned into a super hard-fought, dramatic finish that also included a controversial play from the game’s best player.

The Nuggets beat the Jazz, 128-125. The most memorable moment of the game happened in the first quarter, when Utah guard Keyonte George tried to box out Nikola Jokic for a rebound, and ended up having the NBA’s heaviest player resting entirely on his back.

George is listed at 185 pounds. Jokic is listed at 284 pounds, with only Zach Edey and Jusuf Nurkic (who are both out for the season with injury) listed heavier. Watch Jokic and George fight for the rebound here.

This is a dangerous play. Jokic is a joy to watch, but the stress of this season is clearly getting to him. Jokic is sick of teams taking cheap shots against him, and we all saw how he reacted to Lu Dort’s dirty play against the Thunder last week.

To me, this is a clean box out by George. He’s keeping Jokic away from the rebound exactly how you’re taught: get low, stick your butt into the offensive player’s mid-section, and control the leverage game as you wait for the rebound. Jokic falling on his back is not the right way to handle this, and it could have resulted in injury.

George looked just fine on the night, scoring 15 of his team-high 36 points in the fourth quarter. George almost out-dueled Jokic and Jamal Murray (who dropped 45 points in the win), but the Nuggets are just too good. Maybe next year, Utah.

In fairness to Jokic, he gets hit harder than anyone in part because he’s bigger than everyone. The Thunder played extremely physical defense on Jokic in last year’s playoffs led by Alex Caruso defending him in Game 7. Caruso was giving up so much size in that matchup that he essentially fouled Jokic every time down the floor and dared the refs to call it. They’re only going to call it so many times.

The 2026 playoffs are going to be so good, but let’s make sure it’s a safe, fair game for everyone.