Subway Series opener, loss of Clay Holmes exemplifies dichotomy of Mets-Yankees seasons

The ball went off Spencer Jones’ bat at 111.1 mph and ricocheted off Clay Holmes’ lower leg toward the first base foul line. At the time, as the Yankees rookie hustled down the line for a hit, Jones had no idea he’d broken Holmes’ fibula.

But he did recall this: “It sounded loud.”

After the game, a game in which Cam Schlittler dominated the Mets en route to a 5-2 win for the Yankees at Citi Field Friday night, Jones seemed surprised to see a crowd of reporters gather at his locker. He hadn’t heard the damage his liner had done to Holmes, not to mention the Mets’ season, and he seemed stunned when a reporter relayed the news to him.

It hit hard in part because Holmes is one of the good guys in the sport, one who has pitched for both the Mets and Yankees, and perhaps even more so because Jones considers him a friend, one with whom he works out in the offseason in Nashville.

“I didn’t know,” he said quietly. “I’m sorry to hear that. He’s a tough guy. He went back out there and pitched on a broken leg. That’s incredible.”

Indeed, that may be the most stunning part of all. Holmes not only pitched to five more hitters in the fourth inning, after the Jones liner, allowing no runs, but told Carlos Mendoza in the dugout he was fine and went back out for the fifth inning, striking out Cody Bellinger before showing signs of the fracture with his delivery that forced the manager to take him out of the game.

Mendoza seemed practically sick to his stomach as he announced the injury in the interview room, and didn’t try to downplay it in the slightest.

“It’s a huge blow,” he said.

There wasn’t much else to say. Only Juan Soto spoke in a group interview in the Mets clubhouse, and he’s not one to throw compliments around for sound bites, so when he praised Holmes as “one of the hardest workers I’ve seen in my career,” it told you much the pitcher’s teammates were feeling for him.

So on a night when much of the Subway Series buzz died quickly at Citi Field as quickly as the Yankees took an early 3-0 lead and Schlitter shut down the Mets’ offense, it was hard not to compare and contrast the sights and sounds from the two clubhouses, as well as the state of the Mets’ and Yankees’ seasons.

The Yankees room was full of noise, smiles, and good vibes after the win. They haven’t played well lately, but there’s no question this team knows it’s going to the postseason, with Ben Rice emerging as a masher to ride shotgun for Aaron Judge, and Schlittler continuing to make a statement as the early AL Cy Young Award favorite.

“It’s really something to watch him pitch,” Rice said.

On the other side, you got the sense that the shock of losing Holmes was settling in through the clubhouse.

Just when the Mets were finally showing signs of life, with the sweep of the Detroit Tigers this week, they lost the guy who has been their best pitcher this season, a dominant force in his own right.

In truth, it’s hard to see how they recover from this one, especially with all of their other injuries, considering there is no telling yet how soon the likes of Francisco Lindor, Jorge Polanco, Luis Robert Jr. and others will be back.

As it is, their better play over the last couple of weeks was difficult to measure. For four straight series, the Mets played teams that were each in long losing streaks, playing their worst baseball of the season, and the 5-4 record on their nine-game road trip actually felt like a disappointment.

But then came the energy and hope that came with A.J. Ewing’s call-up, and the sweep of the Tigers finally offered evidence that perhaps the Mets aren’t as bad as they’ve played this season.

In that respect, this Subway Series loomed as a litmus test of sorts. The Yankees have been slumping themselves, but if the Mets could play well against them this weekend, it would validate the Tigers sweep to a degree and further their momentum.

Well, one game down, and maybe they can shrug it off to the brilliance of Schlittler, who is shutting everybody down this season.

They have two more games to prove they’ve raised their game against more hittable starters in Carlos Rodon and Ryan Weathers.

Yet suddenly it’s not just the offense that is the problem, but a starting rotation that has a huge hole in it, due to the Holmes injury.

Holmes, Nolan McLean, and Freddy Peralta were the only reliable starters for most of the first several weeks of the season. David Peterson has been better lately, but only when used after an opener, for whatever reason, in relatively short stints. And Christian Scott offers promise but plenty of uncertainty.

Even with Ewing and Carson Benge providing a spark, these Mets need pitching depth and a fair amount of dominance to have any chance of winning with the consistency it will take to get back into contention.

Soto, for one, didn’t want to believe the reality of the Holmes injury.

“We’re going to miss Clay for maybe a month,” he said. “Hopefully less.”

Nobody wanted to tell him a broken fibula likely means Holmes will miss three months or so.

By then, the trading deadline will have come and gone, and at the moment, that feels like a day that will be significant for these Mets for all the wrong reasons.

Mets reliever Luke Weaver has ‘fond memories’ of Yankees tenure

New York Mets relief pitcher Luke Weaver (30) gestures after retiring the side in the eighth inning against the
New York Mets relief pitcher Luke Weaver (30) gestures after retiring the side in the eighth inning against the

In his last experience facing the Yankees’ best hitter in a major league game, Luke Weaver was schooled on proper etiquette. 

Then pitching for the Reds in 2023, Weaver caught flak from Aaron Judge for not acknowledging him with a head nod when Judge came to bat for the Yankees. 

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The two were teammates in the Cape Cod League as collegiate players. 

“We hadn’t seen each other in quite a bit,” the Mets reliever said Friday before the Yankees beat the Mets 5-2 at Citi Field. “Aaron Judge was at the plate, and I was in a bit of a trying season, so I needed all the energy I could muster. We had a laugh about it, and he made it a big deal, but in a light, kind-hearted way.” 

Weaver spent the past two seasons as Judge’s teammate but has reverted to wearing an opposing uniform. He entered Friday with a 4.15 ERA in 17 appearances for the Mets this season. 

New York Mets relief pitcher Luke Weaver (30) gestures after retiring the side against the Tigers. Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

The Mets signed Weaver to a two-year contract worth $20 million last winter after he received limited interest from the Yankees following a rough final stretch with the club. 

“There was some light communication, I think respectful communication and just like staying in touch,” Weaver said. “But I think they were wanting to go in a different direction, and so there wasn’t anything major in our discussions about returning.” 

New York Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge (99) hits a single during the third inning during the Subway Series at Citi Field on Friday, May 15, 2026. JASON SZENES FOR THE NEW YORK POST

Weaver, who pitched to a 9.64 ERA last September before he had two ugly postseason outings in three appearances, said he holds no animosity toward the Yankees for wanting to move on from him. 

“I have a lot of great, fond memories,” said Weaver, who pitched for the Yankees in the 2024 World Series. “For me individually down the stretch, it didn’t quite click the way it did the year before. Circumstances change and roles change and obviously results sometimes change.” 


Manager Carlos Mendoza is expected to use Huascar Brazobán to pitch in the opener’s role Saturday, with David Peterson in a bulk relief role. Brazobán served as the opener Sunday in Arizona and allowed two earned runs over one inning. 

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The Mets held a moment of silence for former Yankees radio voice John Sterling, who died last week.

San Antonio vs. Minnesota, Final Score: Castle and Spurs close out Wolves 139-109, advance to West finals

May 15, 2026; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; San Antonio Spurs guard Stephon Castle (5) dunks the ball past Minnesota Timberwolves forward Jaden McDaniels (3) in the first half during game six of the second round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Target Center. Mandatory Credit: Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images | Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images

Stephon Castle (hitting his first five threes consecutively) put up his most impressive shooting night of his young career and his team responded emphatically to Minnesota’s one extended push at the end of the first half. A Spurs squad that was primed for this closeout opportunity out-shot (56% to 38%) and out-rebounded (60-29) the Wolves in a dominant performance – all while throwing a block party (13 to 2) – before Anthony Edwards helped stage Minnesota’s one comeback try late in the second quarter. San Antonio’s starters doubled up their Wolves’ counterparts 101-50 in this decisive victory.

San Antonio’s Castle (32 points, 11 rebounds, and 6 assists) and De’Aaron Fox (21 points, 9 assists, and 2 blocks) supplied the necessary leadership and playmaking to win Game 6 decisively. Dylan Harper (13 points and 5 rebounds) again performed beyond his years. Victor Wembanyama (19 points, 6 rebounds, and 3 blocks) seemed content playing the facilitator role. Carter Bryant (3 points and 6 rebounds) capitalized on his important minutes and kept Spurs’ possessions alive while shortening Minnesota’s at the same time.

Until Anthony Edwards (24 points and 3 steals) got going later on, Naz Reid (18 points and 7 rebounds) and Terrence Shannon (21 points) valiantly kept Minnesota in the game. Jaden McDaniels (13 points and 3 assists) made his contributions in a third quarter where San Antonio outshined the Wolves 36-23. Julius Randle was a non-factor.

Wembanyama, Castle, and Castle combined to hit six of their first eight shots, including a driving lay-up for Fox, and two threes for Castle. Of large concern were two ticky tack fouls committed by Fox and Castle, and a touch foul on Vassell that gifted Edwards an and-1. Edwards, operating against single coverage, was able to knock down a relatively easy seven points. Spur irritant Reid hit his first three shots to bring Minnesota within five. Castle (14) and Fox (9) figured strongest in helping San Antonio stay safely ahead, but Reid’s 10-point outburst prevented a blowout from occurring.

San Antonio pieced together a 20-0 run to start the second period that resembled the closing flourishes the 2003 titlists did to their opponents than the fireworks that they had eliminated Portland with. Shannon put up a quick five points, and Reid’s and-1 shaved the 29-point deficit to 21. After several minutes of the teams trading baskets, Edwards took the offense into his own hands and the Wolves bit into the Spurs lead. Fox, after helping stabilize San Antonio in the closing minutes, suffered a lower body injury, and the team held onto a 13 point lead.

Fox pleasingly returned to action to start the third, and put up a handful of points. In anticipation of another Wolves run, San Antonio forced two unforced turnovers on Edwards and Reid. Despite the sustained moments of Minnesota scoring throughout the quarter, the Spurs truly anchored themselves on defense to crate the necessary distance with finality. Once the Wolves resorted to surges of 1:1 play, San Antonio ran a lay-up line around and over the bedraggled Wolves.

Observations

  • Edwards went down to the Spurs huddle to congratulate the team in its entirety with eight minutes remaining. Okay, I like him.
  • The pre-game walkup interview with a player is a nice snippet for halftime of the opening game – Johnson was the guest tonight with Cassidy Hubbarth.
  • Stan Van Gundy stated late in the opening half that “Fox has 13 points on perfect shooting.”
  • Simmons (on his podcast this morning) listed Devin Vassell and Julian Champagnie (21-for-63 from 3 together) as one of his five (he paired them together) players to watch heading into Game 6 – noting that ‘you can beat San Antonio if they miss their threes.’ The pair teamed up for five triples tonight.
  • Two memorable second quarter moments – 1) Harper looked down Reid and calmly knocked down a straightaway three, and 2) Castle backed down Conley the full 20 feet from the 3-point line to the box and willed a double-pump banker over the grizzled veteran.
  • Champagnie’s three first quarter misses were ‘off,’ ‘oof,’ and ‘woof.
  • I don’t think Terrence Shannon is nearly the great defender he thinks he is. Not every contact on defense has to result in a charge.
  • When things don’t go his way, Randle is easily the most clear ‘I just can’t even’ guy in the league.
  • My dad would have started singing Dean Martin’s “Let’s Put Out the Lights and Go to Sleep’ at the start of the fourth quarter.
  • Sequence of the Game #1: On transition halfway through the opening stanza, Johnson got stood up by Edwards deep in the paint, pumpfaked somewhere between 9-18 times, and then lofted a feather to Wembanyama for a Nerf-lob.
  • Sequence of the Game #2: With the first San Antonio possession of the second period looking doomed, Harper found Champagnie as a release valve crosscourt, and then the forward whipped a pass to the rookie for a nifty lay-up.
  • Sequence of the Game #3: As part of a 16-0 run to start the second, and after a missed Bryant free throw, he somehow came down with his own carom. The ball pinged around to what the viewers might have thought would end with a Wembanyama triple, but he re-directed the ball patiently to a waiting Vassell at the top for a swish. After Wembanyama deterred an Edwards floater at the other end, Castle rewarded Bryant for his hard work with a beautiful lob to the rookie.
  • Sequence of the Game #4: To close out that now 20-0 run in the second, Bryant wrested an offenisve rebound away from a Wolves player, and whipped a dime to Harper on the left baseline for a spinning lay-in.
  • Sequence of the Game #5: After McDaniels doinked a third-quarter dunk attempt, Fox had more than enough time at the other end to gauge and knock down a catapult three to make it 102-76.

Game Rundown

Champagnie’s first shot fell very short, but Castle – with Gobert assigned on him – tossed a lob to Wembanyama and followed that with a three from above the break. Fox opened things with a three and a contested lay-up around Dosummu. Unlike Champagnie, Vassell hit his first three attempt. Castle’s second three put the Spurs up ten. The referees – surprise, surprise – missed a left elbow by Randle into Wembanyama’s back, and the Wolves forward drew a foul on Johnson seconds after. Harper made his first lay-up, and Castle’s and-1 put San Antonio up 11. Reid made an instant impact – his eight points caving in the Spurs’ deficit. Castle’s third three stalled out Reid’s personal run. A tip-in by Kornet caused Ian Eagle to declare ‘cleanup on Aisle 7!“ Fox’s two baskets stunned Minnesota enough to get San Antonio to 36-27 after one.

Reid finally missed from distance, which coincided with an brazen Spurs run. Wembanyama received a leakout pass from Fox and Edwards was whistled for a shove on the superstar’s dunk. Wembanyama then converted a lay-up over Edwards fromBEHIND THE BACKBOARD to make it 43-27. Castle ripped an offensive rebound over Reid and Dosummu and converted a manly and-1. Bryant looked like a veteran glue guy – particularly on defense and the boards. It took a difficult Shannon and-1 to finally end the Spurs’ 20-0 detonation. Shannon put up a 9-point microburst, and Conley’s second three brought the Wolves within 18. Kornet and Vassell swatted away Shannon’s next two tries. Edwards caught fire late in the frame and Fox appeared to tweak his ankle with 80 seconds left. Champagnie saw four free throws go in, which aided him with a corner three late in the half, and San Antonio led by 13 at halftime.

Fox, visibly hobbled, returned to action and hit a corner three to start the third. McDaniels responded with his first field goal. Wembanyama swatted away a Gobert dunk attempt, and then tossed in a lefty Duncan over his fellow Frenchman to push the lead back out to 18. Fox encouragingly guided home a 16-foot floater. The Spurs’ assertiveness was rewarded with the foul bonus in less than five minutes. Vassell answered McDaniels’ three with one of his own, while Shannon and McDaniels attacked the basket at-will. Castle’s fourth three looked confident, and his fifth three kept the San Antonio at 20. After Gobert missed a 18” hook, Harper glided to the other end and banked in a lay-up. Harper also appeared to rattled Edwards with a cool demeanor and handle. San Antonio went to the fourth up 110-84.


For the Wolves fan’s perspective, please visit Canis Hoopus.

Player Grades: Cavs vs Pistons Game 6 – Donovan Mitchell has to step up

CLEVELAND, OH - MAY 15: Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers drives to the basket during the game against the Detroit Pistons during Round Two Game Six of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on May 15, 2026 at Rocket Arena in Cleveland, Ohio. 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 Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers couldn’t close out their series with the Detroit Pistons. Now everything is on the line Sunday night.

All grades are based on our usual expectations for each player.

Donovan Mitchell

18 points, 4 rebounds, 3 assists, 1 steal, 3 turnovers

The Cavs are waiting for Mitchell to be a superhero again. He took a giant step backwards in the last two games, struggling in Game 5 and bringing that into tonight. He couldn’t find any luck inside the arch, shooting 4-14 on two-point attempts and opting for difficult floaters instead of drawing contact to get to the line.

Mitchell had 3 assists and 3 turnovers tonight. His assists per game have been cut in half since the regular season, and he’s yet to even hit that average in a single playoff game. That’s not sustainable for long-term success.

Grade: F

James Harden

23 points, 7 rebounds, 4 assists, 4 steals, 8 turnovers

Harden’s isolation scoring and foul-drawing have gone a long way to ensuring the Cavs never fully let go of the rope. He’s stabilized them throughout the postseason, even if his carelessness with the ball can contribute to some of their opponent’s runs.

The Cavs leaned on Harden in the third quarter. He repeatedly got to the line and put Cleveland in the bonus with five minutes remaining. That extra effort is the only reason the Cavs lost that quarter by 11 points instead of 20 or more.

Ultimately, this team wasn’t built for Harden to carry them. He’s supposed to be the cherry on top. Other players needed to step up.

Grade: D

Evan Mobley

18 points, 6 rebounds, 2 assists, 2 steals, 2 blocks

Mobley will get dinged for the things he didn’t do tonight, but truthfully, he gave enough for them to win this game. His all-around impact was comparable to the previous two games, with Mobley contesting shots and racking up four stocks.

On offense, he was aggressive, going towards the basket and got to the line eight times. He only made half of his attempts from the charity stripe, so we can knock him for that. But most of the problems that plagued the Cavs tonight were not Mobley’s fault.

Grade: C+

Jarrett Allen

13 points, 8 rebounds, 1 assist, 1 steal, 1 block

Allen, for the most part, did his job tonight. It wasn’t anything phenomenal, but he cleaned the glass and protected the rim while finishing nearly every touch given to him on offense.

The Cavs could have used a more active game from him on either end of the floor, though there was nothing too out of the ordinary here. Allen was solid.

Grade: C

Dean Wade

3 points, 3 rebounds

Wade finally hit a shot for the first time since Game 3, attempting two triples in a span of 30 seconds and connecting on one from the corner. In typical Wade fashion, he didn’t take another shot the rest of the night. He’s truly tested the limits of how often you can play a player who refuses to look at the basket on offense.

Grade: D

Max Strus

6 points, 8 rebounds

Strus gives as much effort as anyone in the NBA. His non-stop hustle contributed to some of the most important plays of the night. He grabbed 8 rebounds, 3 offensive, and worked relentlessly to get under Cade Cunningham’s skin. A better shooting night (2-7 from deep) would have made this another classic game from Strus.

Grade: B

Dennis Schroder

0 points, 3 assists, 2 rebounds, 3 turnovers

Schroder had 3 turnovers in his first six minutes tonight, including a double-dribble and traveling violation. You can’t afford those types of mistakes in a closeout game.

Grade: D

Sam Merrill

10 points, 1 rebound, 1 assist

Merrill looked like he was going to find his stride tonight. He connected on two of his first three three-point attempts and even got downhill for a tough layup in the third quarter. But Merrill missed his next two three-point attempts and wasn’t able to help the Cavs when they were being pounded on the defensive glass.

Grade: C

Dodgers lose Blake Snell but slug 3 homers in bullpen game shutout win

May 15, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers center fielder Andy Pages (44) is greeted by teammates after hitting a home run during the fourth inning against the Los Angeles Angels at Angel Stadium. Mandatory Credit: William Liang-Imagn Images | William Liang-Imagn Images

It was a short trip down the 5 Freeway to Anaheim to start the nine-game road trip, but the Dodgers had to battle on without Blake Snell in the series opener. The bullpen and the offense stepped up to shut down the Angels in the series opener Friday with a 6-0 win.

The Dodgers used eight pitchers who combined for nine shutout innings of work. On the other side, the offense powered three home runs in the first game of the Freeway Series for their third straight win.

There was an umpire belt buckle delay before first pitch, but home plate umpire Jim Wolf’s mic was finally secured. Shohei Ohtani offered his belt advice as well.

Ohtani entered the game having two straight days off at the plate, but right-hander Jack Kochanowicz struck him out with his sinker to start the series. Kochanowicz also struck out Mookie Betts.

Klein served as opener for the Dodgers, and he didn’t disappoint in his first major league start. The 2025 World Series hero struck out two in two innings pitched and allowed just one hit to Josh Lowe.

Hyeseong Kim got the Dodgers their first base hit against Kochanowicz with two outs in the top of the third. The offensively struggling Ohtani got another opportunity at the plate with a runner on. Ohtani drew a walk to give the Dodgers consecutive base runners. Betts grounded out to first base to end the inning and strand two.

Edgardo Henriquez took over for Klein in the third and got back-to-back strikeouts including a whiff of the swinging variety from Mike Trout.

Pages and Muncy have carried the team offensively this season, and their back-to-back home runs in the top of the fourth at the Big A was a microcosm of what these two sluggers have done.

Pages went into the game 3-for-24, but he unloaded for a 407-ft. three-run home run to center field on a 3-0 count. The Dodgers finally broke through with the big hit to make it 3-0 for the first lead of the series.

Then Muncy went deep thereafter, and the lead increased to 4-0.

Ohtani collected his 200th career double to lead off the fifth inning. The Dodgers bullpen shut down the Halos offensively, but their defense made some impressive plays to save runs.

Teoscar Hernandez took a Kochanowicz sinker deep to the opposite field for his first home run since April 15. The two-run homer gave the Dodgers a commanding 6-0 lead. Finally, Hernandez got sunflower seeds thrown in his face in celebration of his big hit.

Old friend Kirby Yates shut down the Dodgers in order in the seventh.

Blake Treinen, Wyatt Mills, Kyle Hurt, Alex Vesia, and Jack Dreyer all stepped up out of the Dodgers bullpen and contributed to the shutout win.

While Muncy and Hernandez continued to have good nights with another walk and base hit, Dalton Rushing’s frustrations continued. Ryan Johnson struck him out swinging, and both runners were stranded.

Charlie Barnes made his Dodgers debut in the bottom of the ninth to close it out, the eighth pitcher of the night for the Boys in Blue.

Friday particulars

Home runs: Andy Pages (10), Max Muncy (12), Teoscar Hernandez (5)

WP — Edgardo Henriquez (2-0): 1 IP, 1 hit, no runs, 2 strikeouts (17)

LP — Jack Kochanowicz(2-3): 6 IP, 7 hits, 6 runs, 4 strikeouts, 2 walks (96)


Up next

The Freeway Series continues Saturday at (6:38 p.m., SportsNet LA).Justin Wrobleski (5-1, 2.42 ERA, 0.99 WHIP) looks to continue his impressive season on the mound thus far for the Dodgers. José Soriano (6-2, 1.66 ERA, 1.05 WHIP) toes the rubber for the Angels. 

Yankees rookie Spencer Jones had a ‘good plan’ at plate in strong Subway Series debut

New York Yankees right fielder Spencer Jones connects on a RBI single against the New York Mets in the fifth inning during the Subway Series at Citi field in the Queens, New York, USA, Friday, May 15, 2026.
New York Yankees right fielder Spencer Jones connects on a RBI single against the New York Mets in the fifth inning during the Subway Series at Citi field in the Queens, New York, USA, Friday, May 15, 2026.

Spencer Jones’ first week in the majors was eye-opening for the slugger who turned 25 on Thursday. 

He made his MLB debut in Milwaukee on May 8, picked up his first hit in the big leagues two days later and on Friday appeared in his first Subway Series game, serving as the DH against the Mets. 

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And after going 1-for-12 in his first five games, Jones singled twice and had an RBI in a 5-2 win at Citi Field

“I felt good about the at-bats [and had] a good plan,’’ Jones said. 

There have been other signs of progress, as he walked in his last two plate appearances Wednesday and hit some balls hard. 

Jones’ recent approach stood out to Aaron Boone. 

“He has struggled this week, like a lot of our team has,” Boone said before Friday’s game. “I definitely think he’s been better than one hit and a couple walks.” 

New York Yankees right fielder Spencer Jones connects on a RBI single against the New York Mets in the fifth inning on Friday, May 15, 2026. JASON SZENES FOR THE NEW YORK POST

He reached in the fourth inning, when he drilled a 111-mph comebacker that hit Clay Holmes — which ended up fracturing Holmes’ right fibula — and followed that with a run-scoring single to right with two outs in the fifth to extend the Yankees’ lead to 4-0. 

Jones was rattled by the news about Holmes’ injury, noting they work out together in the offseason in Nashville. 

But Jones also showed that he wasn’t overwhelmed by playing in his first game in the Subway Series. 

“It was awesome,’’ Jones said of the experience. “The crowd was energetic and super loud.” 

Jones is still trying to prove himself at this level after being a polarizing prospect for the Yankees, one with tremendous power coupled with way too many strikeouts. 

Boone noted that he believed Jones has been fine at the plate as he finds his way after being called upon to fill in for the injured Jasson Domínguez. 

“I feel if you watch his at-bats every day, they’ve been competitive,’’ Boone said. “He’s not chasing a lot. He’s been on some pitches and just missed a handful of pitches. I think he’s looked OK. He just hasn’t gotten results yet.” 

New York Yankees right fielder Spencer Jones (78) reaches on an infield single in the fourth inning. JASON SZENES FOR THE NEW YORK POST

Perhaps that’s beginning to change. As both Boone and Jones pointed out, the 6-foot-7 slugger had a rough entry into the big leagues, facing Milwaukee fireballing right-hander Jacob Misiorowski in his debut. 

“That first day was eye-opening,’’ Jones said of going up against perhaps the hardest-throwing starting pitcher in MLB history. “To face a guy with one of the best fastballs in Major League Baseball the first time I got into the batter’s box was tough. I saw he was pitching and told myself, ‘Get ready for the fastball.’ ’’ 

Then he went up against sidearming lefty Kyle Harrison of the Brewers. 

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“Those first two draws were tough,’’ Boone said. 

He hit two balls over 100 mph and picked up his first hit Sunday before a rough series in Baltimore. 

“I’ve gotten a lot of reassurances,’’ Jones said. 

And he’s trying to not change the way he’s played coming up through the Yankees system. 

“The biggest thing for me is being comfortable in doing what I do and knowing that will translate,’’ said Jones, who’s soaking up as much as he can from veteran hitters like Paul Goldschmidt, Aaron Judge, Trent Grisham and Cody Bellinger. 

“I’m picking the brain of these guys and just grateful for the opportunity,’’ Jones said. “And I’m learning that everybody here is really good and here for a reason.”

Spurs, 139, Timberwolves 109: That’s All Folks

SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS - MAY 12: Anthony Edwards #5 of the Minnesota Timberwolves looks on from the bench during the fourth quarter against the San Antonio Spurs in Game Five of the Second Round of the NBA Western Conference Playoffs at Frost Bank Center on May 12, 2026 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. (Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images) | Getty Images

And just like that, it’s over.

The Minnesota Timberwolves came into Game 6 of their Western Conference Semifinal series against the San Antonio Spurs to replicate their series from two years ago against the Denver Nuggets and force Game 7. Instead, they repeated a different kind of history.

For the third straight year, the Timberwolves’ season ends with a blowout. Two years ago, it was a 21-point loss to the Dallas Mavericks. Last season, they lost to the Oklahoma City Thunder by 30 points. Tonight, it was 30 points at the hand of the Spurs.

It was clear right from the opening tip that the Wolves were in trouble. Amid countless defensive miscommunications and inept offensive possessions, the Wolves fell behind by 29 points early in the second quarter in a game they needed to win to keep their season alive.

Minnesota did put together a 34-18 run to close the first half and cut the San Antonio lead to 13 points, but the success was short-lived as the Spurs resumed drubbing the Wolves coming out of halftime, going up by as many as 28 points in the third quarter.

The Wolves would fall by a final score of 139-109. Anthony Edwards finished the game with 24 points on 9-26 shooting. Rudy Gobert didn’t score a single point, missing all four of his shots. Julius Randle wrapped up his awful second-round performance playing less than 24 minutes while scoring just three points on 1-8 shooting.

The habits a team has during the regular season will always show up during the playoffs. The Wolves, by their own admission, didn’t take the regular season seriously, and it’s shown up in this series. When they needed to make adjustments, they couldn’t.

The Wolves did “flip the switch” and were fantastic against the Nuggets, and if they had drawn a different matchup or been in the Eastern Conference, they could have made it to the Conference Finals or NBA Finals.

To win 4 straight playoff series, though, you have to be able to solve all the different matchups thrown your way and play with consistency from night to night and series to series. You can’t pick up that mentality during the playoffs; it has to be ingrained in who the team is. The work for that starts in the regular season.

In this series, the Wolves saw their mentality and game plan focus go in and out as the series went along. They were never able to solve their offensive issues when Victor Wembanyama was on the court, and got beat down the court numerous times by the Spurs after made baskets.

Ultimately, the Timberwolves were just outgunned in this series. It’s difficult to have confidence that they would have won this series if they were fully healthy, but with Edwards far from 100 percent and Donte DiVicenzo going down, advancing past the Spurs was also going to be an incredibly difficult task.

Unlike previous seasons, this offseason brings with it a ton of uncertainty for the Timberwolves. This Wolves team seems primed for a shakeup around Edwards, as it appears the team has hit a ceiling with the frontcourt pairing of Randle and Gobert.

The Wolves have been incredibly successful of late, making the Playoffs each of the last five seasons and winning at least one playoff series in each of the last three. It’s been the most successful era, while simultaneously being a step behind the best team or two in the league.

To get over the hump and win the championship, Minnesota will need to put together a team that is even better than the one they’ve had this past half-decade. It’s a tall task, but with a superstar like Edwards and surrounding young pieces like Jaden McDaniels and Naz Reid, the Timberwolves have the hard part figured out.

For now, Minnesota will have to stew with a third consecutive embarrassing blowout in an elimination game.


Up Next

The offseason is here. We here at Canis Hoopus will have you covered for all things Timberwolves this summer through the Draft, Free Agency, Summer League, and every move that is made in the coming weeks and months.

For everyone here at Canis, we want to say thank you for following our coverage of the Timberwolves this season and look forward to providing even more this offseason and next season.

Highlights

22-24: Chart

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MAY 15: Rob Refsnyder #30 of the Seattle Mariners reacts after striking out during the seventh inning against the San Diego Padres at T-Mobile Park on May 15, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Olivia Vanni/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Padres 2, Mariners 0

Mason Miller: Emerson Hancock, .15 WPA

Every other major leaguer: Jhonny Pereda, -.17 WPA

Game Thread Comment of the Day:

Jazz Chisholm Jr. breaks through in big night for Yankees — with another change of pants

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows New York Yankees second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. (13) hits a two-run RBI double during the third inning during the Subway Series at Citi field in the Queens, New York, USA, Friday, May 15, 2026, Image 2 shows New York Yankees second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. (13) reacts after he hits a two-run double
Jazz Yankees

Jazz Chisholm Jr. may be in his teammates’ pants for the foreseeable future. 

Trying anything to snap out of the malaise he has been in for most of the early part of the season, Chisholm is once again wearing a pair of baggy, short pants — first Trent Grisham’s, then on Friday, Giancarlo Stanton’s — and the results, once again, have followed. 

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The struggling Chisholm put together one of his more encouraging games of late, recording a three-hit effort and having a hand in three of the Yankees’ five runs in a 5-2 win over the Mets on Friday night at Citi Field. 

Chisholm also drew a walk and stole a base, reaching base four times for only the second time this season — though he ended his night on a down note, getting picked off at first base — as the Yankees bounced back from getting one-hit on Wednesday with a 10-hit night against the Mets. 

“It’s something about the baggy pants,” Chisholm said, shaking his head. 

After a brutal game on Monday night in Baltimore, when he went 0-for-4 with three strikeouts — three of those at-bats coming with runners in scoring position, Chisholm sat out Tuesday’s game against Orioles lefty Trevor Rogers.

Then he came back on Wednesday, sporting the baggy pants that Grisham wears on occasion, and had the Yankees’ only hit of the game, a double. 

New York Yankees second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. (13) hits a two-run double during the third inning during the Subway Series at Citi Field on Friday, May 15, 2026. JASON SZENES FOR THE NEW YORK POST

Chisholm, naturally, followed suit on Friday, going 3-for-4 with a double, run and two RBIs. Except he couldn’t find Grisham’s pants, so he borrowed a pair of Stanton’s. 

“We marked those No. 13,” Chisholm said of his number. “They ain’t his pants no more.” 

Chisholm had worn Grisham’s baggy pants for a series earlier this season in Houston, when he went 5-for-12 across three games — looking like he might be turning the corner from his season-opening slump. But they only lasted a series, as he went back to his own pants and soon went cold again. 

Regardless of his fashion choices, getting Chisholm on track is critical to the Yankees’ success, and not just because he has 30-30 potential. He also represents the hinge to the bottom half of the lineup that has too often been a black hole, especially of late, including himself: the second baseman entered Friday batting just .203 with a .607 OPS through 43 games. 

“Jazz is the guy,” said Cam Schlittler, who continued to dazzle with 6 ²/₃ dominant innings of one-run ball. “Regardless of the start of the season, he’s a great player. It’s good to see him go out there and get a few knocks.” 

New York Yankees second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. (13) reacts after he hits a two-run double. JASON SZENES FOR THE NEW YORK POST
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Chisholm’s biggest hit came in the third inning, after the Yankees had strung together three straight two-out hits to take a 1-0 lead, and he kept the line moving by smoking a double past the dive of first baseman Mark Vientos to make it a 3-0 game. He later drew a walk in the fifth and came around to score on Spencer Jones’ RBI single. 

“I’m just going to keep the same mindset of trying to go out there and win and not worry about what I’m doing,” Chisholm said. “Just going to keep on trying to go help the team and win the game.”

Royals drop fifth straight, falling 5-4 to the Cardinals in 11 innings

Kyle Isbel marches back to the dugout after striking out
May 14, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Kansas City Royals center fielder Kyle Isbel (28) reacts after striking out against the Chicago White Sox during the ninth inning at Rate Field. Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images | Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images

The Royals’ bats continued the vanishing act they have taken on the road so often this year, and the Royals dropped the series opener to the Cardinals.

Michael Wacha, for the first time since his last start, did his job. He pitched six innings, allowing three runs. Would you like more innings and fewer runs? Always. But the odds of getting either are very low, even with Wacha pitching as well as he has this year.

Dustin May, unfortunately, matched him, which made it a three-inning game between the bullpens. I don’t have the numbers in front of me, but my sense is that the Royals’ bullpen has done a pretty good job of holding leads, but they’ve been abysmal at keeping tied or losing games from getting worse.

The Royals got the scoring going in the fourth inning. Vinnie Pasquantino drew a walk; Salvador Perez hit a long single off the right-field wall. The broadcast noted that it took a good defensive play to prevent Vinnie from scoring on that hit. If Vinnie nearly scored from first, how did Sal not end up at second? One might imagine it’s the nagging hip and groin injuries he’s been dealing with all year. And still he plays almost every day and bats cleanup.

No problem, Carter Jensen hit a double into the left-center gap! Run scored and Salvy to third. Except, if Sal had been capable of running and at second, he could have scored on that play, too. No problem, Isaac Collins followed a Jac Caglianone walk with a deep fly to right to sacrifice Sal home. When I started this paragraph, I thought I had a point about how Sal’s inability to run had hurt the Royals in a way that isn’t obvious from the box score. If I had such a point, I’ve lost it. It’s late. Let’s just move on. The Royals had the bases loaded with one out and managed no hits and only one run from that point on.

Michael Wacha gave up a two-run home run to Jordan Walker in the bottom of the inning. Tie game.

In the bottom of the fifth, Pedro Pagés hit a home run to almost the same spot and gave the Cardinals the lead.

The Royals answered in the top of the sixth. Vinnie walked again. Sal flew out softly. Jensen and Caglianone singled on groundballs to the right side to load the bases. Once again, bases loaded one out. Once again, only one run scored. This time Collins hit a groundball to first and Alec Burleson chose to step on the bag before throwing home, but Vinnie beat the throw to tie the game.

Daniel Lynch IV opened the seventh inning by allowing a double; he struck out the next two and escaped unscathed. Nick Mears got the eighth and walked the leadoff guy before escaping without allowing a run. Matt Strahm got the ninth and also allowed the leadoff hitter on. He got a strikeout, a walk, and a flyout before John Schreiber was asked to get out the right-handed Iván Herrera. Never mind that Strahm has proven more effective in his career against righties than lefties. Schreiber gave up a hard liner to center and Kyle Isbel made a diving catch to send it into extras.

With Maikel Garcia starting on second, Bobby Witt Jr. immediately smashed a double into center. Nathan Church almost turned it into an inside-the-park home run with a terrible route but managed a diving stop. Vinnie popped up, Salvy struck out in yet another awful at-bat. Carter Jensen got intentionally walked. Now, why would you walk Carter to get to Jac? Oh, because Jac was out of the game. He was lifted for a pinch-hitter in the eighth with no one on and two out because a left-handed reliever was on the mound. At some point, pinch-hitting for Jac in situations like those has to be more damaging to his psyche than the occasional awkward at-bat against a left-handed pitcher. It’s not like the Royals even needed a contact guy at the plate to give them a better chance to drive in a runner before the inning had ended. There were two outs and no one on.

Also, Carter Jensen has a 54 wRC+ against lefties this year to Jac’s 58. So why doesn’t he get pinch-hit for? Make it make sense.

Anyway, with Lane Thomas due up, Carter got intentionally walked, and Lane took a predictably terrible at-bat against the right-handed Ryne Stanek. Lucas Erceg was brought in to preserve the one-run lead. His first pitch got lined into right to tie the game. He managed to prevent the Cardinals from scoring again, so to the eleventh we went.

This time, Lane Thomas started at second. Isaac Collins drew a walk – he had only two official at-bats in the game thanks to a pair of walks and a sacrifice fly. 0-2 with 2 RBIs has an argument as the best hitting performance in the Royals’ lineup tonight. Michael Massey came to the plate and attempted to bunt the runners over. He popped both of his attempts foul before hitting a moderately deep flyball to left. I would have liked to see Lane Thomas try for third there. The Royals weren’t getting hits, he’s fast, so why not see if he can get in range of a sacrifice fly? But he bluffed and didn’t go. Isbel grounded into a fielder’s choice – which could have scored a run if Thomas had been at third – and Garcia grounded out to end the “threat”.

Steven Cruz got the bottom of the eleventh. The Cardinals gifted him a sacrifice bunt before he got a chopper from Jose Fermín. Then, as the Royals have done so many times this year, he gave up the big hit he’d miraculously avoided until there were two outs. Yohel Pozo, pinch-hitting for the pinch-runner Thomas Saggese, smoked one through the shifted infield to right, and the Cardinals had won.

There’s not a lot of positives to build on out of this one. Wacha now has seven quality starts out of nine. But the Royals have now lost five in a row, and basically all the ground they had made up over the 11-5 stretch that followed their eight-game losing stretch is gone, but with 21 more games in the books. They’re still only 4.5 back in the division and 2.5 back of a Wild Card spot because the American League is ridiculous, but at some point, you have to think one of these teams will actually start winning some baseball games. With every loss, it feels less like that team might be the Royals.

Noah Cameron (5.55 ERA) will take the mound tomorrow afternoon to face Kyle Leahy (4.31 ERA). The game will air at 1:15 p.m. Central on Royals.TV. This is a friendly reminder that tomorrow is a continuation of Rivals weekend, and literally every game will be free on MLB.TV. If you’re fed up with KC, you have alternatives. Until tomorrow afternoon, good night and good luck.

Reds hang on for 7-6 win over Guardians in Ohio Cup opener

CLEVELAND, OHIO - MAY 15: Matt McLain #9 of the Cincinnati Reds hits a two-run home run during the eighth inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Progressive Field on May 15, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Cincinnati Reds got another solid start from lefty Andrew Abbott, got a homer from Matt McLain and one more huge performance from JJ Bleday, and managed to hand over a 6-1 lead to the heart of their bullpen on Friday night in the Ohio Cup opener against the Cleveland Guardians.

Sounds pretty straightforward, right?

Things went a bit sideways for the Reds when Graham Ashcraft took the bump for the Bottom of the 8th with said 6-1 lead, coughing up a 4-spot that made the rest of the game (with Cincinnati’s threadbare bullpen) a front-of-the-seat watching in Cincinnati’s eventual 7-6 victory.

Abbott labored a bit needing 90 pitches for just 5+ IP, but he kept Cleveland off the board entirely until Rhys Hoskins socked a solo homer off him in the Bottom of the 6th to end his day. McLain, meanwhile, bashed a pair of hits – one a 2-run homer – while driving in a trio of runs, said homer coming in the Top of the 8th and proving vital in this 1-run affair. He even swiped his 6th bag of the year. For all of that, we’ll give him the Joe Nuxhall Memorial Honorary Star of the Game award for the evening.

Bleday went 3 for 5 with a homer and a ribbie, doubling twice as his blistering start in a Reds uniform continues. Tejay Antone, meanwhile, was summoned for the save and converted it for his first one since back in 2021 on a totally different elbow.

Tony Santillan, meanwhile, fired a scoreless inning again, finally. He did allow a double to Jose Ramirez (who hasn’t?) but pitched around it with a K. The Reds are going to need him now more than ever with Emilio Pagan out, and hopefully he’s found the correction to his form.

These two will go toe to toe in Ohio Cup action again on Saturday, with Chris Paddack getting the start in his Reds debut after signing earlier in the week. We’ll all hope he catches lightning in a bottle. Gavin Williams of Cleveland will chuck out the game’s first pitch at 6:10 PM ET.

It’s a short one, but the Reds are on a win streak.

Diamondback 9, Rockies 1: Colorado gets bit early in homestand opener

DENVER, COLORADO - MAY 15: Starting pitcher Kyle Freeland #21 of the Colorado Rockies throws against the Arizona Diamondbacks in the first inningh at Coors Field on May 15, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images) | Getty Images

This was not the start to the homestand the Rockies were hoping for.

Colorado fell to Arizona 9-1 at Coors Field on Friday, dropping to 17-28 while the Diamondbacks moved to 21-22. The Rockies got bit early and spent the rest of the night trying to catch up, as Arizona turned an overturned call in the first inning into six runs and Merrill Kelly handled the rest.

Colorado did not strike out much, but they did not do much else either.

The first inning defined Freeland’s night

Kyle Freeland nearly avoided the first bite.

With two outs in the first inning, Corbin Carroll was initially called out trying to steal third. The call would have ended the inning. Arizona challenged, the call was overturned, and the Diamondbacks took full advantage.

Arizona followed with two walks, four straight run-scoring hits, and six runs before Freeland finally got out of the inning.

Freeland did not look sharp, but to his credit, he kept fighting after that. He stayed in the game into the fourth, which helped the Rockies avoid a full catastrophe for the bullpen. Freeland gave up plenty of loud contact, but it was the mix of softer contact and pressure on the bases that kept the Rockies out of rhythm and on their heels defensively.

On the night, Freeland gave up seven runs on eight hits and four walks. He struck out three and threw 81 pitches, 50 for strikes.

Agnos gives the bullpen length

Zach Agnos took over for Freeland and limited the fourth-inning damage to one run (charged to Freeland) before giving the Rockies some steadier innings from there.

Arizona got to him for two runs in the seventh, but Agnos ended up pitching through the eighth. Agnos covered 4.1 innings in total, allowing two runs on four hits with one strikeout. On a night when Freeland exited before the fourth inning was over — and with the rotation already facing uncertainty — that length helped keep the rest of the bullpen from being overworked.

Seth Halvorsen handled the ninth, working around a hit and a walk to throw a scoreless final inning. The last frame also included an ABS challenge, with Hunter Goodman getting a pitch call overturned for strike three and the second out against Gabriel Moreno.

Meanwhile, Merrill cruised along

Kelly did not give the Rockies many chances to climb back into the game.

Goodman answered Arizona’s six-run first with a solo home run in the bottom half, his 11th of the season.

But the Rockies did not build much from there. Ezequiel Tovar doubled, Mickey Moniak added another double late, and Colorado finished with just four hits. The Rockies did not draw a walk, went 0-for-3 with runners in scoring position, and never put together the kind of inning they needed.

Kelly did not overpower the Rockies. He struck out only three and did not issue a walk. But Colorado swung early in counts and made too much soft contact to turn the game back in their direction.

Vintage Kelly vs. Rockies.

Kelly ended up going the distance on 100 pitches, allowing one run on four hits with no walks and three strikeouts. He threw strikes, kept the Rockies quiet, and made the first inning stand up.

Final notes

Freeland took the loss, dropping to 1-5 with a 7.22 ERA, while Kelly earned the win to move to 3-3 with a 5.91 ERA.

Sterlin Thompson (No. 13 PuRP) also made his major-league debut, entering as a pinch-hitter in the eighth and grounding out in a brief first appearance.

The Rockies will look for a better result tomorrow as the homestand continues.

Up Next

The Rockies will continue their series against the Diamondbacks on Saturday at Coors Field.

Tomoyuki Sugano is scheduled to start for Colorado. He enters at 3-3 with a 4.07 ERA and 24 strikeouts. Arizona will counter with Eduardo Rodriguez, who is 4-0 with a 2.25 ERA and 33 strikeouts.

First pitch is set for 1:10 p.m. MDT.

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The Arizona Cardinals 2026 schedule surfaced. Get tickets to see Jeremiyah Love

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Arizona Cardinals running back Jeremiyah Love reflects on the field.
The Cardinals and rookie running back Jeremiyah Love face a challenging 2026 schedule.

With a little luck, the Arizona Cardinals would have had a much better 2025 season.

Unfortunately, very little went the team’s way last year and, after starting 2-0, they finished 3-14, ending the year on a torturous nine-game losing streak.

Yet, what that tawdry record doesn’t indicate is that a whopping games were lost by seven points or less.

Had they just gotten the job done, Kyler Murray and head coach Jonathan Gannon may have stuck around.

Sadly, that wasn’t in the…ummm…cards.

Instead, this year, Mike LaFleur inherits head coaching duties and Jacoby Brissett — who started 14 games in ’25 and went 1-11 — returns.

To add insult to injury, the squad has the third-toughest schedule of any team in the NFL.

Notable opponents dropping into Glendale, Ariz.’s State Farm Stadium this year include Jared Goff’s Detroit Lions (Oct. 11), Bo Nix’s Denver Broncos (Oct. 25), Matthew Stafford’s Los Angeles Rams (Nov. 15), Jalen Hurts’ Philadelphia Eagles (Dec. 6) and Brock Purdy’s San Francisco 49ers on Jan. 9 or 10 in the final game of the regular season.

Plus, Sam Darnold’s defending Super Bowl champion Seattle Seahawks will be swinging in too on Sunday, Sept. 20 aka the Cards’ home opener.

Thankfully, Brissett and the Cardinals got a bit of insurance in standout rookie running back Jeremiyah Love, as well as draft picks Chase Bisontis, Carson Beck and Kaleb Proctor.

Offseason acquisitions Devin Duvernay, Isaac Seumalo, Tyler Allgeier, Kendrick Bourne and quarterback insurance Gardner Minshew join them.

Franchise tight end Trey McBride, 2025 star signee Josh Sweat, starting wideout Michael Wilson, elite safety Budda Baker and offensive line anchor Paris Johnson Jr. return, too.

If you want to root yourself hoarse in the Valley of the Sun, tickets are available for all eight Arizona Cardinals 2026 home games at Glendale’s State Farm Stadium on SeatGeek.

SeatGeek is a verified secondary market ticketing platform, and prices may be higher or lower than face value, depending on demand.

Not familiar with SeatGeek?

They offer a 100% buyer guarantee that states your transaction will be safe and secure and your tickets will be delivered prior to the event.

Arizona Cardinals 2026 home game tickets

For those who prefer to pick and choose which home games make the most sense for you to attend, we’re here for you, too.

Below, you’ll find a list of all upcoming Arizona Cardinals home games at State Farm Stadium, including dates, start times and opponents.

Arizona Cardinals home game dates
Seahawks vs. Cardinals Sunday, Sept. 20 at 1:25 p.m.
Lions vs. Cardinals Sunday, Oct. 11 at 1:25 p.m.
Broncos vs. CardinalsSunday, Oct. 25 at 1:05 p.m.
Rams vs. CardinalsSunday, Nov. 15 at 2:05 p.m.
Commanders vs. CardinalsSunday, Nov. 29 at 2:25 p.m.
Eagles vs. CardinalsSunday, Dec. 6 at 2:05 p.m.
Jets vs. CardinalsSunday, Dec. 20 at 1:05 p.m.
Raiders vs. CardinalsSunday, Jan. 3, 2027 at 1:05 p.m.
49ers vs. CardinalsJan. 9 or 10, 2027 at TBD

Full Cardinals 2026 schedule

If you think you might find yourself traveling with Jacoby and the Cardinals this year, here’s where you can find them on the road once the 2026 season begins.

Arizona Cardinals away game dates
Cardinals vs. Chargers Sunday, Sept. 13 at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, CA at 1:25 p.m.
Cardinals vs. 49ersSunday, Sept. 27 at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, CA at 1:05 p.m.
Cardinals vs. Giants Sunday, Oct. 4 at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, NJ at 10 a.m.
Cardinals vs. Rams Sunday, Oct. 18 at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, CA at 1:05 p.m.
Cardinals vs. CowboysSunday, Nov. 1 at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, TX at 10 a.m.
Cardinals vs. SeahawksSunday, Nov. 8 at Lumen Field in Seattle, WA at 1:25 p.m.
Cardinals vs. ChiefsSunday, Nov. 22 at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, MO at 10 a.m.
Cardinals vs. SaintsSunday, Dec. 27 at Caesars Superdome in New Orleans, LA at 10 a.m.

But wait! There’s more!

The Panthers vs. Cardinals Hall of Fame Game goes down on Aug. 6 at Canton, OH’s Tom Benson Hall of Fame Stadium to kick off the season.

How to watch/stream Cardinals games

There is no shortage of ways to watch Cardinals games live from the comfort of your own home this season.

You can find LaFleur’s loaded roster on ABC, CBS, ESPN, Fox, NBC and the NFL Network on select dates.

Through the regular season, most NFC games will be broadcast on FOX.

For specialty games, “Sunday Night Football” can be found on NBC along with Peacock, “Monday Night Football” is reserved for ESPN and “Thursday Night Football” streams on Amazon Prime Video.

Huge concert tours in 2026

Before the Cardinals officially kick off the season (and a little after!), many of the biggest stars in music will be playing at arenas and stadiums all over the Valley of the Sun.

Here are just five of the concerts we’re most excited about in Phoenix these next few months.

• Daniel Caesar (July 16)

• Grupo Frontera (July 31)

• Earth Wind and Fire with Lionel Richie (Aug. 11)

• Zach Bryan (Sept. 5)

• Usher with Chris Brown (Sept. 29)

Need a little more entertainment in your life? Check out this list of all the events coming to the Mortgage Matchup Center to find the show for you.


Why you should trust ‘Post Wanted’ by the New York Post

This article was written by Matt Levy, New York Post live events reporter. Levy stays up-to-date on all the latest tour announcements from your favorite musical artists and comedians, as well as Broadway openings, sporting events and more live shows – and finds great ticket prices online. Since he started his tenure at the Post in 2022, Levy has reviewed a Bruce Springsteen concert and interviewed Melissa Villaseñor of SNL fame, to name a few. Please note that deals can expire, and all prices are subject to change.


Dodgers on Deck: Saturday, May 16 at Angels

Anaheim, CA - August 13: Relief pitcher Justin Wrobleski #70 of the Los Angeles Dodgers throws to the plate against the Los Angeles Angels in the sixth inning of a baseball game at Angel Stadium in Anaheim on Wednesday, August 13, 2025. (Photo by Keith Birmingham/MediaNews Group/Pasadena Star-News via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images

The Dodgers and Angels continue their weekend series at Angel Stadium in Anaheim with a Saturday matchup with two pitchers who got off to incredible starts this season.

Justin Wrobleski made one bulk relief appearance before stepping into the Dodgers rotation, then won his first five starts while allowing two total runs. Even after his clunker last Sunday, in which he still recorded 26 outs but while allowing seven runs, Wrobleski’s ERA still stands at only 2.42 in 44 2/3 innings.

José Soriano allowed only one total run in his first six starts, and had just one real blip with five runs to the Chicago White Sox on May 4. The right-hander enters Saturday with a 1.66 ERA in nine starts at 54 1/3 innings.

Saturday game info
  • Teams: Dodgers at Angels
  • Ballpark: Angel Stadium, Anaheim
  • Time: 6:38 p.m.
  • TV: SportsNet LA, KCOP channel 13 (Angels broadcast)
  • Radio: AM 570 (English), KTNQ 1020 AM (Spanish)

Clay Holmes injury update: Mets pitcher out 'long time' after hit fractures fibula

The New York Mets' disappointing season took its most disastrous turn yet Friday, May 15 when starting pitcher Clay Holmes suffered a fractured fibula after taking a line drive off his right leg. 

Holmes, 33, will be out "for a long time," Mets manager Carlos Mendoza told reporters Friday. New York Yankees rookie Spencer Jones hit a low line drive off Holmes' lower right leg leading off the top of the fourth inning; the ball's exit velocity was 111.1 mph. 

Holmes was examined by an athletic trainer and Mendoza and somewhat remarkably stayed in the game into the fifth. But X-rays revealed the fracture, robbing the Mets of arguably their best starting pitcher in this disappointing season. 

Despite giving up four earned runs in Friday's 5-2 loss to the Yankees, Holmes has a 2.39 ERA this season and has pitched into at least the seventh inning in three of his nine starts this year. The Mets came into Friday 18-25, yet 5-3 when Holmes starts. 

Holmes' injury casts doubt on both his and the Mets' future. Should the club fall further out of the race, Holmes likely would have fetched a significant return on the trade market; now, it is unclear whether he'll be healthy enough to market his wares before the Aug. 3 deadline. 

And while Holmes figured to opt out of the final year of his three-year, $38 million contract and test free agency again, that's under some doubt after this injury, although Holmes likely showed enough before going down to be a prized target on the market this winter. 

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Clay Holmes injury update after hit fractures Mets ace's fibula