The San Diego Padres have had a relatively quiet offseason, especially when it comes to addressing the needs on their roster. However, the Padres did make some news Thursday when they hired former club members Bud Black and Wil Myers. Thomas Conroy of Gaslamp Ball sees the hiring of Black as a positive for San Diego and its new manager Craig Stammen. The former reliever who got the job this offseason after former manager Mike Shildt retired, has never managed and will need to lean on coaches and front office personnel who have been in his position, which makes the hiring of Black a solid move by the Padres.
Padres News:
The Padres signed eight international prospects on Thursday and Cheri Bell of Gaslamp Ball provides information on each one. The international signing period is open until Dec. 15, and San Diego has money left to spend, so there could be additional signings as the year progresses.
AJ Cassavell of Padres.com provided some answers to various questions he has received from fans on Redditt. Some of the questions asked of Cassavell were about A.J. Preller and a potential extension, what players he sees the team adding via free agency and what his thoughts are on the Los Angeles Dodgers adding Kyle Tucker to their lineup. You can read all the Q&A here.
JP Sears is a pitcher who may find himself pitching a lot of innings for the Padres this season. He is also the focus of the ongoing Padres roster review by Jeff Sanders of the San Diego Union-Tribune.
Baseball News:
A day after Kyle Tucker signed with the Dodgers over the New York Mets and others, the Mets signed free agent infielder Bo Bichette on a three-year, $126 million deal. He joins a crowded infield and will play third base in New York, a position he has not played in MLB.
Framber Valdez is the top free agent pitcher on the market, but Justin Verlander is reportedly drawing interest from teams, including the Baltimore Orioles, who were considered to be one of the suitors for Valdez.
Star shortstop Elly De La Cruz declined an extension from the Cincinnati Reds last spring. The offer would have reportedly topped the 10-year, $225 million deal the team had with former first baseman Joey Votto.
The Los Angeles Angels who acquired Josh Lowe in a three-team trade Thursday, have said they are open to playing him in center field. In the same trade the Tampa Bay Rays acquired infielder Gavin Lux and the team announced Friday the plan is for Lux to be the team’s second baseman.
BCB’s Sara Sanchez will have a wrap of some of the key Cubs Convention sessions later today or tomorrow.
For those of you not attending the convention but following the live coverage on Marquee Sports Network (and the channel is streaming all the sessions), this is an open thread for you to discuss what’s happening at the Sheraton Grand Chicago. Here is today’s schedule (all times Central). It begins at 9 a.m.
I did want to mention, briefly, one thing I noticed about Friday night’s Opening Ceremony. During the ceremony the Cubs showed a couple of videos of highlights of the 2025 season. During these videos Kyle Tucker wasn’t shown — not even when the Cubs’ other two All-Stars, Pete Crow-Armstrong and Matthew Boyd, were noted.
Tucker’s not a Cub anymore, as we all know. But he was a significant part of the 2025 Cubs who won 92 games and made the postseason. He shouldn’t have been completely left out of the videos.
Bryan Mbeumo and Patrick Dorgu scored as Man Utd ran City ragged in Michael Carrick’s first game in charge
Michael Carrick is the first manager of United or City to begin a spell in charge with a Manchester derby.
This is how Man Utd’s post-Fergie managers fared in their first derby; all were Premier League games.
David Moyes 1-4 (A) 2013-14
Louis van Gaal 0-1 (A) 2014-15
Jose Mourinho 1-2 (H) 2016-17
Ole Gunnar Solskjaer 0-2 (H) 2018-19
Ralf Rangnick 1-4 (A) 2021-22
Erik ten Hag 3-6 (A) 2022-23
Ruben Amorim 2-1 (A) 2024-25
[On Man Utd’s tactics] No, I don’t know. They could play with a four or a back five; they could play with a false nine or Mbeumo up front. I’d love to know but we have to focus on ourselves.
[On the importance Rodri’s return] It’s not news! He’s so important. He was out for a long time, then he had a setback. We’re trying to manage his recovery.
CALGARY, AB -- New York Islanders goaltender David Rittich will get the start against the Calgary Flames on Saturday afternoon, the team that gave him his first opportunity to play in the NHL.
Rittich in the starter’s net at #Isles practice here in Calgary.
Back in 2016, a 24-year-old undrafted Rittich, who had been playing professionally in his native Czechia, signed a three-year entry-level deal with the Flames.
After playing the majority of the 2016-17 season in the AHL -- he made his NHL debut on Apr. 8, 2017, in relief of Brian Elliott -- he served as the club's backup from 2017-2021 before he was dealt to the Toronto Maple Leafs at the 2021 NHL Trade Deadline for a 2022 third-round pick.
Rittich played in 130 regular-season games for the Flames over that five-year span, owning a 63-39-15 record with a 2.83 GAA and a .908 SV%. He did make one postseason appearance, allowing three goals on nine shots against the Dallas Stars, who won 7-3 to advance to the second round of the 2020 Stanley Cup Playoffs.
Since leaving Calgary, he's played for Toronto (2021), Nashville (2021-22), Winnipeg (2022-23), Los Angeles (2023-2025) before signing with the Islanders this summer.
At 33, he's in the midst of a major bounce-back season, sporting an electric 2.39 GAA with a .910 SV% in 19 appearances.
Saturday will be Rittich's second start on this seven-game road trip, with this game being No. 5 of the trek. He stopped 26 of 27 in a 2-1 shootout loss to the Nashville Predators on Jan. 8.
Rittich is 0-3-2 in five career starts against Calgary, with a 3.89 GAA and an. 861 SV%.
After a rocky road trip, the Knicks (25*-16) return to Madison Square Garden tonight for a rematch with the Phoenix Suns (24-17).
Not ten days ago, New York lost in Arizona, 112-107. The game was tight until Phoenix hit the gas, leaning on Devin Booker’s shot-making and a timely third-quarter surge to seize control. Jalen Brunson led New York with 27, and the Knicks got balanced support from Karl-Anthony Towns, OG Anunoby, Miles McBride, and Mikal Bridges, but a 14–0 Suns run lopped off their heads.
New York’s offense runs through Brunson, whose sprained ankle makes him a game-time decision. When the Knicks stall, it’s usually because secondary creation dries up or the three-pointers aren’t falling. Or they turn over the ball too often. Or their defense degrades to one-ply. Or their bench players look like Encino Man discovering sports. Or their coach has a postgame, sideline rubdown with that night’s villain. For a team with championship aspirations (and Dolan’s expectations), the problems are manifold. When their troubles are all activated at once, as we saw on the recently completed road trip, the disappointment is spectacular.
Towns remains a confounding puzzle piece: his rebounding and interior scoring can fill up a scoresheet, but foul trouble, turnovers, and general aloofness are regular bugaboos. The eye test alone will tell you that something is off, and the numbers support it. Towns is shooting at, or almost at, career lows from the field and from deep. Furthermore, he is averaging below 21 points for just the third season of his career.
From our distance, we have no idea why the highly decorated big man is decomposing. He could be playing hurt, confused by the playbook, incompatible with his teammates, performing badly in Fortnite, getting old, annoyed by trade rumors, or anxious about his wedding engagement. Maybe he just wants a hug from Mike Brown, but instead watched the coach give that bully Draymond Green a full bear wraparound. Whatever it is must be addressed soon, for two reasons. First, the Knicks can’t win the Finals with their Number Two player underperforming like this. Second, he’s tanking his trade value. Has anyone else drawn a heart around February 5 on your calendar?
Is KAT alone to blame? Of course not. OG Anunoby has played inconsistently for a month, with some nice quarters (he tried to spark a rally on Thursday) offset by stretches when he looks positively wiped out. That can happen when you defend the opponent’s best player nightly, and clean up the slop let through by the point guard and center. The reticent Ogugua never spills tea, but aren’t you dying to know his thoughts about his teammates?
While I’m piling it on: the bench usually fails to contribute meaningfully. You can blame injuries to an extent. It definitely hurt to have Landry Shamet miss twenty-some games and Deuce McBride eleven. Mitch, I wrote about here.
The healthy guys haven’t been much help, either. Veteran Jordan Clarkson has logged a zero or less in the plus-minus column twenty times this season. He has recorded double-digit plus-minus figures seven times, but only three of those games came against teams with winning records. Fellow guard Tyler Kolek has by turns glowed like a savior and looked as lost as a jay-vee high schooler. Mohamed Diawara and Kevin McCullar Jr. both had fleeting moments in the sun, followed by disappearances. Who knows what’s up with Trey Jemison III? And I’m blanking on someone. Wasn’t there another kid, way down there on the pine, partial to baguettes? Pac Man something?
What does all this add up to? Me feeling less optimistic than ESPN.com is about today’s tilt, that’s what (they give New York a 65% chance). Maybe the oddsmakers factored in that Booker is a game-time decision due to a sore ankle. Ignore all that. Booker loves to play at the Garden, and Brunson knows his team needs a hero. I’d bet you a donut—if I knew you and had a donut—that both suit up.
Back home and looking to reset, the Knicks will need sharper defense and steadier offense. Controlling the glass, defending the arc, and finishing possessions are what it takes. Phoenix won the first meeting late by loading up on Brunson and capitalizing on 18 turnovers. New York must counter more strongly this time, and perhaps they will with the Garden crowd at their backs. Let’s predict that our heroes dig deep, wipe the smugness from Dillon Brooks’ and Grayson Allen’s faces, and prove they still got it down the stretch. Knicks by four.
Game Details
Date: Saturday, January 17, 2026 Time: 7:30 PM ET Place: Madison Square Garden, Manhattan, NYC TV: MSG Follow: @ptknicksblog and bsky
* Should be one more, but the Cup final doesn’t count.
Mike Francesa has a message for Steve Cohen after losing out on Kyle Tucker: You’re no Bobby Axelrod.
The popular former WFAN host ripped the Mets’ deep-pocketed owner and the team’s president of baseball operations, David Stearns, after they failed to land the No. 1 free agent in Tucker, who instead chose the Dodgers’ four-year, $240 million offer.
Francesa’s comments came before the Amazin’s pivoted to shortstop Bo Bichette, stealing him from the Phillies on a massive three-year, $126 million deal.
“He looks like a weak, ineffective billionaire, who doesn’t know what he’s doing and is being led astray by a guy (Stearns) who doesn’t understand what it means to have muscle and be in the biggest city in the world,” Francesa said Friday on his self-named podcast.
He added: “What (Tucker signing with the Dodgers) also does is it completely minimizes the importance and the strength and reputation of one Steve Cohen.”
While no one can question Cohen’s willingness to spend, the Dodgers — not the Mets — have been the team that seemingly signs any player they want in recent years.
Kyle Tucker swinging during the NLDS. AP
In prior offseasons, the Dodgers signed Shohei Ohtani, Freddie Freeman, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Roki Sasaki and Blake Snell, among others.
This offseason, fresh off two World Series titles, the Dodgers inked Edwin Diaz from the Mets and now prevented Tucker from landing in Flushing.
Cohen had a major win last offseason when he bested the Yankees to land Juan Soto on a 15-year, $765 million deal, the largest contract in North American sports history.
However, many expected after he became owner that he would simply not be denied for players he truly wanted since he could outspend them all.
He would simply be his “Billions” character in Bobby Axelrrod.
MLB even created the so-called “Cohen Tax” to try to prevent him from just winning every bidding war.
Yet, the Mets have now lost multiple bidding wars to the Dodgers for Ohtani, Yamomoto and Tucker.
“If you’ve never watched the character (Axelrod) that this man (Cohen) is supposed to be, he is supposed to be a ruthless, ‘I win every time,’ kind of guy, and he’s getting punched this way and that way and knocked down and humiliated in baseball right now,” Francesa said.
Francesa noted that Stearns may factor into how the team has operated in free agency, saying that it’s “not working” with the former Brewers’ top executive.
The Mets went to the NLCS in 2024 in Stearns’ first season, but endured one of their most disappointing campaigns ever in 2025 by missing the playoffs with an 83-79 record.
Francesa said Stearns seemingly wants to build a small-market team in a big market for Cohen.
“He looks like an ineffective, soft, middle-of-the-road owner who talked big game and doesn’t get the job done, Francesa said, “and puts people in place to do the same thing.”
Cohen responded to losing Tucker by flexing his financial might to land Bichette, a strong hitter who will man third base for the franchise.
Steve Cohen did not win a bidding war against the Dodgers. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST
The Mets still could use an outfielder and a starting pitcher despite already being in the highest luxury bracket, meaning they will pay 110 percent on any contract.
“He hasn’t been what everybody thought he would be. …The guy who was supposed to be Bobby Axelrod…,” Francesa said of Cohen.
“The bottom line is he was going to be (late Yankees owner) George (Steinbrenner) on steroids. Baseball was so worried about this guy’s Wall Street reputation and his outrageous wealth that they put in a guardian with him in (former Mets president) Sandy Alderson.”
The Minnesota Timberwolves lost a close one to the Houston Rockets on Friday, and the path forward doesn’t get any easier when they travel to Frost Bank Center to face the San Antonio Spurs on Saturday.
San Antonio is rested and healthy, and my Timberwolves vs Spurs predictions expect the home team to cover the spread and get back in the win column against the Wolves.
Here are my best free NBA picks for this Western Conference showdown on Saturday, January 17.
Timberwolves vs Spurs prediction
Timberwolves vs Spurs best bet: Spurs -6.5 (-110)
Anthony Edwards hit a game-winner to take down the San Antonio Spurs on Sunday at Target Center, but Ant-Man is banged up, and the Spurs are playing at home. Saturday’s rematch offers a great opportunity for San Antonio to deliver a win and cover the spread.
The Spurs are 11-7-1 ATS at home and 9-7-1 as the home favorite. The Minnesota Timberwolves are 9-12 ATS on the road, 3-4 as the road dog, and 5-9 with a rest disadvantage. The Spurs sport a +7.2 point differential per game at home, good for the sixth-best mark in the Association.
Minnesota is on the second leg of a back-to-back set and will play its third road game in four days. Anthony Edwards is questionable after sitting out Friday, and even if he plays, he’ll likely be at less than 100%. I'll take the healthier, rested Spurs and the points as they get revenge against the Wolves.
Timberwolves vs Spurs same-game parlay
The Wolves and Spurs are two of the NBA's best defenses. Minnesota has hit the Over in 13 of 21 games on the road, but San Antonio has done so in just seven of 19 home games, including five of 17 as the home favorite. The Spurs have hit the Under in eight straight, and I don't expect that streak to end against the tired legs of Minnesota. Add in Anthony Edwards' injury, and this looks like a low-scoring game.
Victor Wembanyama has scored at least 24 points in 14 of 27 games overall, including eight of 14 at Frost Bank Center. He posted 29 points against the Wolves on Sunday, and he delivered 34 in his final matchup of the 2024-25 campaign with them. The superstar has averaged 25.4 points across his last five at home.
Timberwolves vs Spurs SGP
Spurs -6.5
Under 228.5
Wembanyama Over 23.5 points
Our "from downtown" SGP: Wemby Spurs San Antonio to victory
Naz Reid is averaging 14.9 points per game this season, and he's scored 15+ in 22 of 42 games overall, and 11 of 20 on the road. Reid has reached the Over on this line in four straight games, including a 17-point performance against the Spurs on Sunday. With Anthony Edwards banged up, Reid could see a bump in offensive usage.
Timberwolves vs Spurs SGP
Spurs -6.5
Under 228.5
Wembanyama Over 23.5 points
Naz Reid Over 14.5 points
Timberwolves vs Spurs odds
Spread: Timberwolves +6.5 | Spurs -6.5
Moneyline: Timberwolves +210 | Spurs -260
Over/Under: Over 228.5 | Under 228.5
Timberwolves vs Spurs betting trend to know
The San Antonio Spurs have hit the 1Q Game Total Under in 29 of their last 40 games (+16.45 Units / 36% ROI). Find more NBA betting trends for Timberwolves vs. Spurs.
How to watch Timberwolves vs Spurs
Location
Frost Bank Center, San Antonio, TX
Date
Saturday, January 17, 2026
Tip-off
8:00 p.m. ET
TV
FDSN
Timberwolves vs Spurs latest injuries
Not intended for use in MA. Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.
This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here
The Yankees weren’t looking for much in December of 1997. After all, they had just won the World Series over the powerhouse Braves in a six-game series a couple of seasons ago, the franchise’s first title since their six-game victory over the Dodgers in 1978, and finished with a 96-66 record in 1997. Their roster wasn’t perfect by any means, but it was still good enough to finish only a couple of games behind the Baltimore Orioles for first place in the division.
Unfortunately, that meant a matchup with Cleveland, which, despite a worse record, could still be a pain at the time. They certainly were a thorn for the Bombers, rallying against young closer Mariano Rivera to send the Yanks packing in the American League Division Series.
Over the offseason, there didn’t need to be many changes, as the roster needed a few small tweaks. And that’s where former outfielder and designated hitter Chili Davis stepped up to the plate — from both sides, to be specific.
Charlie Theodore “Chili” Davis Born: January 17, 1960 (Kingston, Jamaica) Yankees Tenure: 1998-99
One of just five players in major-league history to hail from Jamaica, Davis actually moved to the United States with his brother and three sisters at the age of 10. Charlie Davis took to the baseball diamond to fit in with those in his Los Angeles schools. A catcher and a first baseman primarily at that age, he certainly proved his worth and was taken by the San Francisco Giants in the 11th round of the 1977 MLB Amateur Draft.
Davis took some time to develop in the minors before making his MLB debut on April 10, 1981 at the ripe age of 21. And after playing the first game of his career, he only played seven more in 1981, tallying just two hits across those eight games before management and the coaching staff in San Francisco had seen enough to believe the switch-hitter could be a part of the MLB roster full-time.
In 1982, Davis made the majors and didn’t look back for the rest of his career. He played 152 games and slashed .261/.308/.410 with an OPS of .719, which comes out to an OPS+ of just one point better than average at 101. In the grand scheme of things, that’s not bad at all for a 22-year-old on a Giants team that was just slightly above average. He finished fourth in the National League Rookie of the Year voting, losing out to the Dodgers’ Steve Sax, the Pirates’ Johnny Ray, and the Cardinals’ Willie McGee in a fairly competitive race.
Davis would spend the next five years of his career in San Francisco and earn two All-Star appearances in 1984 and 1986 before signing with the California Angels in the 1987 offseason. From 1988 to 1990, he stayed in California and had a few strong seasons, including 1989, when he grabbed a few down-ballot AL MVP votes. In 1990, Davis became a full-time designated hitter after back issues ailed him and prevented him from meeting the standards required in the outfield.
Davis signed with the Twins and continued to hit in 1991, slashing .277/.385/.507 for an OPS of .892 and the third-highest OPS+ of his entire career at 141, once again earning a smattering of down-ballot MVP support. He also won his first of three World Series rings while homering twice in that epic Fall Classic against Atlanta.
But, following that, he would not get any closer, despite putting up better numbers a few years later down the road when he returned to the Angels and posted almost 1.000 OPS figures in 1994 and 1995, with 1994 being the year he would make his third and final All-Star appearance.
In 1997, after his four-year (second) stint with the Angels ended, Davis made his way to Kansas City for a season. Then it was time for then-Yankees owner George Steinbrenner to make his splash in the 1997 free agent pool. When the Yankees signed Davis to a two-year deal worth $9.8 million with an option for a third season, it was all that Steinbrenner could have wanted, saying to Jack Curry, who at that point was a reporter for the New York Times:
We’re very happy with this guy because he’s a tremendous hitter and a tremendous influence in the clubhouse. We thought one of our problems last year was moving from DH to DH. You look at Davis, and he’s a professional DH. That’s what we lacked last year.
Was he the most flashy player of all-time? No. Did Steinbrenner have to shower him with big money and huge guarantees in order to bring him to The Bronx? Not at all.
Regardless, Davis was a valued member and team leader of the back-to-back World Series titles in 1998 and 1999. He played only 35 games on the record-breaking ‘98 team due to an untimely ankle injury and subsequent surgery, but still posted above-average numbers in those games and notched an .884 OPS across the final two rounds of the postseason, when the team needed him most — especially with primary DH Darryl Strawberry missing the playoffs to fight cancer. His finest hour came in the 1998 ALCS, when, in a crucial Game 5 in Cleveland, Davis came through with three RBI and a home run in a Game 5 that sent the Yankees back to the Bronx with a 3-2 series lead:
And in 1999, his final season in the league before retiring, Davis finished on a high note, appearing in 146 games for the Yankees and finishing the season with an OPS of .812 and an OPS+ of 108. He memorably broke up what could’ve been a 17-strikeout no-hitter by Pedro Martínez at Yankee Stadium on September 10th with a home run, and in one of the more amusing moments of the season, Chili hit a grand slam in the home opener against Detroit, mere moments after team legend Yogi Berra predicted it in the TV booth.
Davis walked away from the game as a three-time World Series champion (and a contributor to all three World Series winners) and a three-time All-Star. He retired at age 39 in December 1999 after the Yankees released him to pursue more flexible options at DH.
At the time of his retirement, Davis ranked third in MLB history with 350 career homers as a switch-hitter, trailing only Hall of Famers Mickey Mantle and Eddie Murray (he now ranks seventh). He was part of the Giants’ inaugural “Wall of Fame” class in 2008 and honored with a plaque in San Francisco. Davis has been busy since hanging up his cleats, serving as the big-league hitting coach for the Oakland Athletics (2012-2014), Boston Red Sox (2015-2017), Chicago Cubs (2018), and New York Mets (2019-2021).
Happy birthday, Chili!
See more of the “Yankees Birthday of the Day” series here.
The Rockets got back on the winning track on Friday night with a 110-105 victory over the Minnesota Timberwolves, who were playing without Anthony Edwards. Kevin Durant had a season-high 39 points to lead the way for the Rockets. Durant was 11-for-18 from the field, 6-for-8 from deep, and evem showed off some of his playmaking chops with 7 assists to go along with 4 rebounds, 2 steals, and a block. He did have 5 turnovers, however.
Houston also got a double-double from Alperen Sengun. He finished with 25 points, 14 rebounds, 3 assists, 1 steal and 1 block, while shooting 11-for-22 from the field. He also seems to finally be feeling better, as he was back to doing Alpie-like things.
The only other two Rockets in double figures were Amen Thompson, who finished with 14 points, 7 rebounds and 4 assists on 5-for-12 from the floor, while Reed Sheppard woke back up a bit, also finishing with 14 points. He was 5-for-9 from the field and 4-for-6 from three, though he’s still struggling getting minutes out of Ime Udoka, finishing with just 19 minutes of court time. As a comparison, Josh Okogie had 1 point on0-for-4 shooting, and he still played 33 minutes. Jabari Smith Jr. continued struggle, hitting just 3-for-12 from the field, he still played 38 minutes. Reed just can’t get any love, even when he’s playing relatively well.
Outside of Reed, Houston got just 8 more total points from its bench, with Dorian Finney-Smith throwing up another stinker with 0 points in 16 minutes.
The Rockets sat Steven Adams and only played Clint Capela 12 total minutes, so the Rockets actually lost the rebound battle in this one, but they shot 46 percent and were 12-for-28 from deep, so perhaps the offense is waking up a little bit.
The Wolves were led by Julius Randle with 39 points, and Naz Reid had 25 off of the bench, while Rudy Gobert had a 10-point, 12-rebound double-double along with 2 blocks, despite being put in a blender by Sengun.
The Rockets now move to 24-15 on the season and are in the five seed, three games back of the second seed. They’ll be back in action on Sunday versus the New Orleans Pelicans.
Welcome back to the 2025-26 edition ofSmash or Pass, in which we examine potential free agent and trade targets to determine whether the Red Sox should pursue them and what it would take to land them. Today we look at a Gold Glove infielder.
Who is he and where does he come from?
He’s Nico Hoerner and he’s currently a member of the Chicago Cubs, a team that, as Dan Secatore put it, just handed out a bad contract, a notion I agree with, albeit with sadness for the loss of a clubhouse leader. The 2018 first round draft pick (two picks ahead of Triston Casas) has been on a Major League roster since 2019 (two years longer than Casas, which isn’t an indictment on Triston as Hoerner is almost three years older). He’s primarily played at second base, logging 500 games at the position, though he’s dabbled at short, too, having played 210 games at that position.
Is he any good?
If you lamented Bregman’s departure from the team on account of his defensive ability, then you might like Nico Hoerner. In fact, he is the reigning Gold Glover at second, having also won in 2023, and his 2025 Outs Above Average (15) placed him in the top 98th percentile in the league. If you’re worried about the possibility of Ceddanne “Nuff Cedd” Rafaela covering second base despite being a world class center fielder, the acquisition of Hoerner will make you breathe easier.
Plus, Hoerner, who turns 29 in May, isn’t too bad at the plate either. He does lack power, mashing just seven home runs. But, I’m willing to forgive that since he gets on base to the tune of a .345 OBP and barely ever strikes out, as his career best strikeout percentage of 7.6% in 2025 also ranked in the top 98th percentile. Oh, and he stole twenty nine bags, so he’s quick, too. So, yes, Hoerner is really good. Which is precisely why he’s the valued starter on another team.
TLDR; just give me his 2025 stats.
.297/.345/.394, 7 HR, 61 RBI, 49 K, 39 BB, 29 SB, 4 FE in 156 games
Why would he be a good fit on the 2025 Red Sox?
I need to again state that, on a team that has been in shambles defensively for the better part of a decade and which has a stable infielder departing, Hoerner had ZERO throwing errors and just four fielding errors. He also missed just six games. That’s some stability that the team hasn’t seen in the infield in some time. Hoerner’s fWAR last year was 4.8. I’m in no way comparing Hoerner to Pedroia (unless I am?) but Pedroia’s average fWAR per 162 games played in his career was 5.6. To be that close to a just-shy-of-a-hall-of-famer’s numbers is a very, very good thing. And, at his worst, Hoerner in 2024 still hit .273 while dealing with a hand injury
Why wouldn’t he be a good fit on the Red Sox?
There are a few reasons, the first of which is the question of what the Cubs would want for Hoerner. They would certainly try for a high-end prospect like Tolle or Early, some other considerable names like Arias or Romero, and presumably one or two other lottery ticket prospects. Now, the Red Sox have enough depth enough to absorb dealing these names for a possible All-Star. But, it may scare off the measured Craig Breslow a bit.
Moreover, Hoerner will be a free agent next season. Bo Bichette’s 3 year, $126 million deal with the New York Mets drives up the price tag for all-star caliber infielders. Hoerner avoided arbitration with Chicago in 2024 by signing a 3 year, $35 million deal, but that was a Gold Glove and five points on the strikeout percentage ago. He will command a deal closer to Bichette next offsesaon (humor me with no lockout discussion, please.)
Plus, the Red Sox may simply want to see what they have in Marcelo Mayer at another position, and the outfield is already backlogged enough that we may see Rafaela or even Kristian Campbell (left field chatter aside) in the middle of the diamond at some point (or maybe both if, heaven forbid, the infield has any health issues). And, if you’re looking for a specific reason why trading assets would be tricky, it’s that Hoerner lacks power; Savant consistently has him in the lowest tenth percentile in barrel percentage and hard hit percentage. If you’re looking for more power after the Bregman departure, you may not want to bring in a guy who only hit 36 home runs in a six (or 6.014) year career.
Show me a cool highlight.
Here he is outsmarting the White Sox twice in about five seconds on an infield fly rule to turn two by letting a baseball drop to the ground. There’s also the fact that he has super quick reflexes with that arm.
Smash or pass?
I’m smashing, but I think he’ll start the season as a Chicago Cub rather than get dealt to a team that saddles up the assets to acquire him and is prepared to extend Hoerner in short order. The Cubs are in “win now” mode and so they may see how the season goes with a stacked infield full of studs. This Red Sox offseason, the Ranger Suarez signing aside, has seen a return to the “interest kings” mode of operations, as the team has been tied to a plethora of notable names, only to see them sign with someone else. But the 2026 second base position largely remains a question mark, as it would have even with Alex Bregman returning. For this reason, it’d suit the Red Sox well to throw a little bit of caution to the wind and get a proven All-Star caliber player to join their ranks. Whether they will? Well, that’s a different story… no pun intended.
Bo Bichette headed to the Mets on a 3-year, $126 million deal and J.T. Realmuto to the Phillies yesterday on a 3-year $45 million deal as the MLB free agent market continued to move. Cody Bellinger remains the last big free agent available.
Joel Hammond, former contributor here, had a great thread explaining why it’s not particularly reasonable to think the Guardians are pocketing a bunch of revenue and, again, debunking the idea that Paul has access to the entire Dolan fortune. Yes, he still thinks the Guardians should spend more. It’s worth reading:
For the mouth breathing DOLANZ people, this is a great explainer.
In baseball, LOCAL revenue is much more a factor than in NFL. Local revenue: TV deal, tickets.
Dodgers: $320M PER YEAR in TV revenue. Braves: $160M PER YEAR in TV revenue.
Paul Hoynes pointed out that Stephen Vogt didn’t sound super confident that Steven Kwan would be a Guardian come Spring Training. It is curious to me that Vogt said “I really hope he is in left field leading off for us” rather than “I expect he will be in left field leading off for us.”
Never underestimate how little the Guardians care about fan reactions and feelings, but I shudder to think what the backlash would be if they don’t add anyone significant AND trade Kwan before the season.
Mason Horodyski of WEWS/News 5 Cleveland posted a bunch of clips of Austin Hedges, Hunter Gaddis and Stephen Vogt talking about the upcoming season on his Twitter if you’re interested in viewing more:
Robertson last season had a 4.30 ERA with 52 strikeouts and 30 walks in 52 1/3 innings in 43 games in Triple-A between the Astros and Royals systems. The 27-year-old right-hander pitched in the majors for the Dodgers, Red Sox, Cardinals, and Blue Jays in 2023-24.
David Roth at Defector looked at the last few days, and how the Tucker signing spurred more action and reaction among some top-spending teams. The Mets, who were in on Tucker, pivoted to Bo Bichette, whom they plan to play at a new position. That left the Bichette-pursuing Phillies left empty-handed, and they re-signed catcher JT Realmuto.
Max Muncy’s wife Kellie gave birth to the couple’s third child on Tuesday, a daughter named Macie Grace, which was shared on Instagram:
Dončić injured his groin while warming up before a game against the Sacramento Kings on Monday. He'd managed to play in the three games since the injury, with the team going 1-2 during that stretch.
He is one of three players who have been ruled out for Los Angeles, along with Austin Reaves (left calf strain) and Adou Thiero (right MCL sprain).
Luka Dončić stats
Dončić has averaged 33.6 points, 8.7 assists and 7.7 rebounds per game in 32 games played this season. He ranks first in points and fourth in assists this season.
Who is Luka Dončić's backup?
Kobe Bufkin is listed as the primary backup behind Dončić at point guard, according to ESPN. Bufkin has averaged 1.5 points and two rebounds per game. Gabe Vincent would also be considered. He's averaged 5.1 points and 1.4 assists per game in just 19 games this season, averaging 20.1 minutes per game.
When do Lakers play next?
The Los Angeles Lakers will play the Portland Trail Blazers on Saturday, Jan. 17 at 10 p.m. ET (7 p.m. PT). The game will be played at the Moda Center in Portland.
Also, 23 years ago (2002), the Blue Jays traded Brad Fullmer to the Angels for Brian Cooper.
So it is a shared birthday/today in Jays’ history post.
About the trade:
Cooper was an RHP. He was 27 at the time. He pitched for the Angels for portions of three seasons, making 21 starts and 6 relief appearances. He reached 5-10 with a 5.33 ERA in 128 innings, 57 walks, and 58 strikeouts.
Fullmer was also 27 at the time of the trade.
It wasn’t one of J.P. Ricciardi’s better trades. Fullmer was always thought of as a disappointment. Maybe because, as an LHB, he didn’t hit lefties at all. Maybe because Brad really couldn’t play defense. But I wonder why J.P. gave him away so cheaply (perhaps he was tired of paying for cleaning chewing tobacco out of the Skydome’s turf?). Cooper wasn’t much of a pitcher, nor was Brad a great prospect, but Ricciardi must have seen something in Cooper that the rest of us missed. I can’t imagine what he thought he saw. Cooper had as many walks as strikeouts when we traded for him.
The Expos picked Brad in the 2nd round of the 1993 draft. He played two-plus seasons with the Expos and had been a disappointment. He wasn’t very good with the glove at first base, and his bat didn’t show quite as well as the Expos hoped. Nevertheless, he hit .276/.326/.459 with 25 home runs in 259 games with Montreal.
In March 2000, Fullmer was part of a three-team trade between the Expos, Rangers, and Blue Jays. The Rangers sent Lee Stevens to the Expos, the Jays sent David Segui to the Rangers, and the Expos sent Fullmer to the Jays.
Stevens did a good job for the Expos, hitting .243/.334/.450 with 57 home runs in 3 seasons. Segui hit .336/.391/.519 in 93 games, and the Expos traded him to Cleveland for Ricky Ledee. Segui was always good at getting on base, but didn’t have the power you’d like to have from a first baseman.
Fullmer DHed for the Jays for two seasons, hitting .284/.333/.499 with 50 home runs and 187 RBI in 279 games. He had an excellent season in 2000, hitting 32 home runs and driving in 104 runs. If the Jays had a better team, we’d consider Fullmer one of the better DHs in team history.
The trade with the Angels didn’t go well for the Jays.
Fullmer played two seasons for the Angels and hit .294/.367/.521 with 28 home runs and 94 RBI in 193 games. He also starred in the Angels’ 2002 World Series win. He hit .294/.351/.471 in 12 playoff games. Brad also stole home in game two of the World Series as part of a double steal. Pretty crappy defense there, Giants.
Brad signed with the Rangers before the 2004 season. In late June, he hit .233/.310/.442 with 11 home runs, but a knee injury ended his career.
Fullmer played 8 seasons and hit .279/.336/.486 with 114 home runs.
Chad Beck turns 41 today.
Chad was a 43rd-round draft pick in 2004 (the draft is now only 20 rounds). Beck pitched 2.1 innings in 2011 and 15.2 innings in 2012, and that was his career. Only 1 other player picked in that round in 2004 made the majors: Chris Schwinden, who threw 29.2 innings over two seasons. Gotta love guys who beat odds that long.
Also, on January 17, 2011, 15 years ago now, the Jays signed Jon Rauch, without whom we would have never had this:
Kyle Tucker joined the Dodgers, who offered him a cool $240 million for four years, with opt-outs after the second and third years.
More power to him. If you can get that kinda money, get right on it.
This even though I’ve hated the Dodgers from the git-go. I was raised by people who did not adore Brooklyn and were offended hugely by the way the move was done when they Greeley’d. Personally, it was Steve Garvey’s lantern jaw that I remember. It’s like the stinkin’ Cardinals… and that’s not the only parallel.
Now I look at the Dodgers much as I look at the early Cardinals, who owned the entire minor-league system (they were the principal architects of the system and maintained control until they were made to stop). They’re creating a new paradigm, for better or worse.
The Cubs have a new third baseman. You have to like his will to win, and let’s hope that rubs off.
“In October, it’s ‘Alex in Wonderland,’ and it’s a ‘Bregularly’ scheduled event, no doubt.” — Scott Boras.
Oh, and the Cubs Convention is under way. We’ll be back tomorrow, same bat time, same bat channel, with more of this.
*means autoplay on, (directions to remove for Firefox and Chrome). {$} means paywall. {$} means limited views. Italics are often used on this page as sarcasm font. The powers that be have enabled real sarcasm font in the comments.
The Chicago Cubs have signed Kotaro Tsunematsu to a minor league deal, according to his Instagram.
The 22-year-old outfielder was not selected in the NPB draft. He was later offered a job with Goldman Sachs but turned it down to join the Cubs organization.
“Literally the first second that free agency really opened I felt like we knew the Cubs wanted our family to be here, and we were excited about it,” Bregman, 31, said. “I thought it was trending that way, probably from the beginning of the offseason. They expressed right away that they wanted me. They made it extremely clear that they valued what I valued.”
Please be reminded that Cub Tracks and Bleed Cubbie Blue do not necessarily endorse the content of articles, podcasts, or videos that are linked to in this series. We will not wittingly publish A. I. – driven articles or clickbait, and insist on reputable sources.