The 2026 Cubs are creating echoes of 1970 and 1985

The Cubs are exactly one-third of the way through the 2026 season.

Nine games ago, at 29-16, they had a .644 winning percentage, which would be a 104-win pace for a full season.

Now? After 54 games and on a nine-game losing streak, their 29-25 record is on pace for just 87 wins.

So which is the real Cubs team? We will find out over the next 108 games, of course, but the way this team has won — and lost — is utterly confounding. Two 10-game winning streaks and a nine-game losing streak, all within the season’s first third?

BCB’s JohnW53 noted this after the eighth loss:

The Cubs have tied for the longest losing streak in MLB history by a team that also had multiple double-digit winning streaks. The 1916 Giants won 17, 14 and 12 in a row (the last two separated by a tie) and lost eight. The losing streak came before the winning streaks, making the Giants 1-9. They were 2-13 when they won 17. The two subsequent streaks came in September. They finished 86-66, in fourth place, seven games out of first. 

So now the Cubs stand alone in accomplishing that “feat,” something I’m sure no one connected with the team wanted.

This year’s Cubs aren’t alone in franchise history in roaring off to a great start, then posting a long losing streak.

In 1970, the Cubs began 1-3, then won 11 in a row — all but the last one at Wrigley Field, including two consecutive walk-off victories, one over the Phillies, one over the Expos. In that win over Montreal, the Cubs blew a 6-4 ninth-inning lead, using four different pitchers in that inning, and the Expos led 7-6 going to the bottom of the ninth. In that ninth, Willie Smith doubled in Boots Day to tie the game with one out, then the Cubs loaded the bases with two out with walks by Don Kessinger and Billy Williams. Ron Santo then ran the count full and Expos reliever Carroll Sembera walked him, forcing in the winning run.

The Cubs played around .500 ball for the next two months. Even with that, after defeating the Cardinals 8-3 on June 20, 1970 they were 35-25 and led the NL East by 4.5 games. It felt to many of us who lived through it that this version of the Cubs was going to make up for what had happened the previous year.

And then… the Cubs lost 12 in a row. The first seven of those were at home, including being swept in a doubleheader by the Mets. When the streak finally ended, the Cubs were 35-37 and 4.5 games behind.

They managed to pick up the pace — a little. They stayed close to first place much of the summer and on Sept. 13, they trailed the Pirates 2-1 in the bottom of the ninth when, with two out, Smith lofted a routine fly to center — and Matty Alou of the Pirates dropped it. Smith wound up on second, and three straight singles by Kessinger, Glenn Beckert and Williams won the game. The Cubs were 76-69 and one game out of first place. They won the next day, too, and at 77-69 and one game back, hopes were high.

They lost the next two games, but still trailed by only two games with 14 remaining.

1970 was the last year the Chicago Bears played in Wrigley Field. And by a scheduling agreement between the NFL and MLB, the Cubs were forced to play their final 14 games of 1970 on the road. They were a bad road team that year even while going a good 46-34 at home. On that 14-game road trip, though, they won the first three and at 80-71, were 1.5 games back with 11 remaining. Maybe… ?

Nope. The Cubs lost seven of those 11 and finished second, five games behind the Pirates. Apart from the wacky 1973 NL East race, they wouldn’t get that close to first place in September again until 1984.

What happened in 1970? The bullpen fell apart, mostly. The offense was great. Billy Williams hit .322/.391/.586 with a career-high 42 home runs (he’s the only Cubs left-handed hitter to have a 40-homer season) and had the Cubs won the division, he’d likely have been named MVP (he finished second to Johnny Bench). Jim Hickman was fantastic, batting .315/.419/.582 with 32 home runs and finishing eighth in MVP voting. The Cubs scored 806 runs, second-most in the NL; they hadn’t scored over 800 runs since 1937 and wouldn’t again until 1998. The pitching staff overall allowed 679 runs, third-fewest in the league. Their RS/RA projection was for 94 wins, which would have won the division easily.

The bullpen, though, was terrible. Phil Regan, who had started blowing saves near the end of the 1969 season, had 12 saves in 1970 — and nine blown saves. Right there, converting those save opportunities would have been enough to win the division. The team had 17 blown saves and six walk-off losses (all six in mid-June or later), and while the modern concept of “closer” did not exist back then, that was enough to doom the 1970 Cubs, who were probably a better team overall than the 1969 version. Plus, there was no real dominant team in the division — it was there for the taking. The Cubs just didn’t take it.

The Cubs sure could have used Ted Abernathy in 1970, but for some reason Leo Durocher didn’t like Abernathy. He was traded to the Cardinals for no one you’ve ever heard of and later went on to have three good years for the Royals.

A similar collapse happened to the Cubs in 1985 coming off the 1984 division title year. Rick Sutcliffe had been re-signed to a multi-year deal, which at the time made everyone happy. Ryne Sandberg was coming off his MVP season at age 25, and hopes were extremely high.

The Cubs started the year like they were going to repeat. They were 35-19 and led the NL East by four games after defeating the Expos on June 11, and many thought it could be a 100-win season.

And then… the team lost 13 in a row, which matched a franchise record that had been set in 1944 and equaled in 1982. No Cubs team has lost that many in a row in the four decades since. Four of the losses were by one run. After the streak ended the Cubs were 35-32 and 4.5 games behind the Expos, who were then in first place.

Sutcliffe had suffered a hamstring injury running the bases in a win over the Braves May 19. He came back after just a couple of weeks, but his pitching wasn’t quite up to his previous level. Later in the year he would suffer shoulder and groin injuries. It was the shoulder issues that eventually made Sutcliffe less than the pitcher he could have been.

And then the four other regular rotation Cubs starters also went down with injuries. Scott Sanderson, Dennis Eckersley, Steve Trout and Dick Ruthven all missed time with various maladies. No Cubs starter made more than 25 starts in 1985 (Sutcliffe), and so beyond those five, 59 games were started by Ray Fontenot, Lary Sorensen, Jay Baller, Steve Engel, Ron Meridith, Derek Botelho, Reggie Patterson, Johnny Abrego and whatever was left of Larry Gura, who had come up as a Cub in 1970 (of all years!), was later traded away for (again) no one you’ve ever heard of and who had good years for the Royals and Yankees, pitching in the World Series for K.C. in 1980. By ‘85 he was done and posted an 8.41 ERA in five games (four starts) for the Cubs late in the year.

So it was mostly the rotation going down in ‘85 that doomed the Cubs. They managed to stay marginally in the NL East race until Aug. 2, when a 5-4 win over the Mets made them 54-47 and had them 7.5 games out of first place. Then they lost seven straight and 12 of 14 and that, basically, was that. The Cubs offense did okay in ‘85, finishing fourth in the NL with 686 runs (in a lower-offense environment than 1970), but the pitching was horrific, giving up 729 runs. Only the 96-loss Braves (781 runs) allowed more.

Here are some video highlights from 1985, the title obviously referring to all the injuries:

There are, as you can see, some similarities between what happened in 1985 and what’s happening in 2026, with Cubs starters going down one after another. Only Jameson Taillon and Shōta Imanaga have not yet missed a start this year (and let’s hope they don’t!). The difference now is that the Cubs have better fill-in guys than the 1985 crew I listed above. and hopefully Matthew Boyd will return healthy, soon.

This year’s Cubs also have the advantage of multiple wild-card spots they could qualify for if they don’t win the NL Central, something that was not available in 1970 or 1985. Let’s hope it doesn’t come to that.

There are 108 games remaining. It would be good to end the nine-game losing streak… today.

Series Preview: Braves at Red Sox for Pitching Bonanza

ATLANTA, GA - MARCH 27: Atlanta Braves mascot Blooper is seen during the opening day walk prior to the game between the Kansas City Royals and the Atlanta Braves at Truist Park on Friday, March 27, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Todd Kirkland/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The Red Sox at Fenway Park in 2026 is a very on brand for the year 2026. You walk up Lansdowne Street excited for a game and then they actually start playing.

Boston opens the series at 22-30, last place in the AL East, against a Braves team that is 36-18 with among the best winning percentages in baseball. The Braves essentially put a starting rotation on the IL to open the season and their fans must have thought “here we go again.” Boston hasn’t had as many injuries, just guys who all forgot how to hit.

It’s Monster Week on NESN so Dave O’Brien, Lou Merloni, and Kevin Millar will be broadcasting from atop the famous left field wall on Tuesday. Expect to see Wally and other special guests at well. Will any be right-handed hitters? Mike Lowell was a guest one year I think. At age 36 in 2010 he slugged .367. Believe it or not, that mark, the lowest of his career, would place him fourth among regulars this year (after Willson Contreras, Wilyer Abreu, Ceddanne Rafaela, and Masataka Yoshida) and just ahead of Jarren Duran.

After making just two starts on the season before facing the Sox in Atlanta, Spencer Strider is now a whopping four starts into 2026. His last time out against the Miami Marlins the righty allowed 3 runs in 6.1 innings. All three were solo home runs. He’s given up 4 homers on the season, along with 2 doubles (both against Boston), and a triple. All the rest of his 12 hits allowed are singles. Ranger Suarez missed the Braves in Atlanta but has experience facing them with the Phillies. In three starts last year the southpaw allowed just 2 runs in 18 innings against Atlanta. If you say “but the Braves were bad!” well, uh, in 14 innings over three starts in 2024 he allowed 12 runs and 5 homers. So hopefully there’s a better plan.

Bryce Elder lost a game where he allowed 3 runs in 8.0 innings. The Sox only allowed two on May 16 and that was the game they took out of the three. Boston ran him up to 103 pitches and he was right back down to 87 over 6.0 innings against the Nationals the next time out. Connelly Early led the Sox to a win on May 20th with a 6.1 inning, 3 run performance. He allowed 2 home runs, he’s up to 9 on the season in 10 starts. A solo shot here and there isn’t the worst thing for a pitcher. It’s trouble when there are guys on base. That’s when the big swings start and the Sox offense simply can’t afford to fall behind.

Thursday is the gem of the series in terms of pitching matchups. The old, tall, lefty, former White Sox ace Chris Sale returns to face the new lefty pitcher in Payton Tolle. Wouldn’t a matchup with Crochet have been entertaining too? Well, we’re getting Sale vs Tolle which is no slouch either. Sale has 72 Ks in 62 innings. The Sox are lefty heavy and prone to striking out. He was roughed up by the Angels for 6 runs in early April. He’s been dominant in his other 9 starts. Tolle was the tough-luck loser against the Twins after allowing 3 runs in 6.0 innings but turned things over to a bullpen that had a bad weekend. Against Atlanta before that he went 8.0 innings while allowing just 2 runs. Bring it again, Tolle.

Good news/bad news…Drake Baldwin is on the IL but Ronald Acuna Jr. is back.

Matt Olson leads the league in doubles with 17.

Austin Riley has a .673 OPS on the season (I know, would be amazing at third base here) but it’s at .800 in May after a slow April.

Probable Pitching Matchups

Tuesday, May 26: Spencer Strider (3.00 ERA / 4.70 FIP) vs. Ranger Suarez (2.40 ERA / 2.98 FIP)

Wednesday, May 27: Bryce Elder (1.97 ERA / 3.29 FIP) vs. Connelly Early (3.33 ERA / 4.73FIP)

Thursday, May 28: Chris Sale (1.89 ERA / 2.94 FIP) vs. Payton Tolle (2.93 ERA / 3.73 FIP)

When/Where to Watch

Tuesday, May 26: 6:45 PM ET on NESN

Wednesday, May 27: 6:45 PM ET on NESN

Thursday, May 28: 4:10 PM ET on NESN

Weekly Pebble Report: Pedro Lopez takes himself and the Isotopes forward

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - MAY 22: Third base coach Pedro Lopez #71 of the Colorado Rockies looks on from the dugout before the game against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field on May 22, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. The Rockies defeated the Diamondbacks 3-2. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Original photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images 5/22/2026

Last Thursday night, Colorado Rockies manager Warren Schaeffer brought Pedro Lopez onto the field at Chase Field in Phoenix, Arizona with a hug. The 57-year-old from Puerto Rico was making his Major League coaching debut after more than 20 years of coaching in minor league and international baseball.

“I was already in my office back in Albuquerque when Schaeff called me, and you know, actually, we were talking about players,” Lopez recounted. “I never thought he was going to say this, and I kept it quiet. I didn’t tell anybody until maybe a couple of days ago when I held a meeting with the whole team telling them, ‘Hey, I’m not going to be with you guys on Thursday and Friday.’ I didn’t tell anybody where I was going until some of the guys saw me here.”

The Triple-A Albuquerque Isotopes manager had been “called up” to serve in the stead of Rockies third base coach Andy González, who had stepped away from the team to attend his daughter’s high school graduation.

For Lopez, his Major League coaching debut was also a reunion. Lopez served as both a hitting coach and a bench coach under Warren Schaeffer when the latter was the manager of the Isotopes in 2021 and 2022. Current Rockies assistant hitting coach Jordan Pacheco was also a member of the 2022 Isotopes coaching staff.

“It’s incredible. This whole thing has been special because Schaeff, he’s our manager, but he’s a good friend. He’s my brother. And then you’ve got Chec (Pacheco) in there too,” Lopez said.

“I rode to the ballpark with Schaeff and Giddy (Ron Gideon) and Schaeff brought me out. He said, ‘Hey, come here. I want to show you something.’ I actually thought he was going to talk to me about signs, or where he was going to stand, things to look for. And then we came out here in the dugout before the steps and he gave me a hug. He goes ‘Now you and I, we’re both in the big leagues.’”

It was a meaningful moment for Lopez.

“It meant a lot. It kind of brings tears to my eyes,” he said. “I was telling my wife [Gladys] and I was like, ‘Oh my gosh,’ you know? It was a really touching moment for me. What better time to do it with a friend, with a brother, and having Chec—and actually the whole staff? These guys, they have been amazing.”

Warren Schaeffer reflected on his friend’s special moment.

“That was awesome,” he said. “You know, ‘P-Lo’ has been waiting a long time to coach in the big leagues, and he’s wanted that for a long time. It just seemed like the right opportunity to have him come up and do it. He’s coaching third base every night down in Triple-A, so he’s the guy that’s most ready to take on that role if Andy has to leave. I’m just so excited for him to be able to come up and experience a couple big league games and be right in the thick of it. And I know how it feels to be down there, and you’re on an island down there coaching third base and right in it with the boys in the grind. It was special.”

The Rockies unfortunately lost on Lopez’s debut, but he was right back out there at third base the next day for a Rockies win where his players from Triple-A—Sterlin Thompson (No. 13 PuRP) and Chad Stevens—were heavily involved. Lopez had actually informed Thompson he was being called up earlier in the week.

“When we told Sterlin that he was coming up was pretty cool,” Lopez said.

“He actually made a baserunning mistake the day he got the call, so I brought him in and I told him, ‘If you pull that tomorrow in the big leagues, I’m telling you right now, you’re going to find yourself back in Albuquerque again,’ and he kind of looked at me. Sterlin and I, we go way back. I saw this kid from how he started last year in the first month, and how much progress he made. I keep saying it to this day, I thought last year he was the most improved player of all in Albuquerque. Just to see where he was to where he is now is incredible.”

With the game tied at 2-2 in the ninth inning, Thompson hit a double and was driven home via a Chad Stevens RBI single.

“He had the game-winning send, which was awesome, and the boys just made it so special for him,” Schaeffer said. “It was a great day. It was my favorite day, I think, in the big leagues so far.”

Meanwhile, Lopez was surprised with how he felt during his experience coaching at the big-league level.

“I thought that, ‘Well my knees are going to be shaking, and my heartbeat is going to be going 1,000 miles an hour.’ No, that didn’t happen,” he said. “It was actually cool that I was out there and it was just another game, but I’ll tell you what, it was awesome for me to experience this with Schaeff and Chec and the rest of the coaching staff. It’s incredible.”

Lopez returned to the Isotopes on Saturday, where he is in the midst of one of the team’s strongest starts in recent memory. The Isotopes are 28-23 with one of the best records in the Pacific Coast League. It’s a refreshing change of pace after finishing with 80 or more losses over the last three seasons as part of the Rockies’ bottom-heavy and struggling farm system.

He praised the pitching and defense as key factors in the Isotopes’ success.

“The pitching has been awesome this year if you will look at last year and previous years,” he explained. “One thing we’re doing this year is attacking the strike zone more, and that’s allowing our pitchers to put the ball in play, and the defense is playing well. So, I think that would be the biggest thing.”

Lopez also praised leaders in the clubhouse, many of whom are new arrivals to the organization.

“From the pitching, (Keegan) Thompson was one of [the leaders] and now he’s here. (Parker) Mushinski has been another guy that’s been awesome for us. Too bad right now he’s on the IL,” Lopez said. “If you look at the position players, Stevens is here now, (Blaine) Crim, Vimael Machín has done a terrific job with those guys as well. I think the culture is good. I think these guys are expecting to win every night. It’s a good atmosphere.”

When asked who else could step into a leadership role, Lopez didn’t hesitate to answer.

“I think Charlie will be perfect for that role,” he said. “I think Charlie Condon (No. 1 PuRP) has done a really good job for a kid his age. He handles himself better than anybody I’ve ever seen at that age. He’s really mature. He’s a guy that you don’t have to hold him by the hand to do anything. He goes out there, takes his ground balls — you don’t have to tell him — and then after he takes his ground balls he goes out to right field and gets his live reads during BP. It’s really incredible to me.”

Although temporary, Pedro Lopez was able to take the next step forward on his lengthy coaching journey. Now that he is back with the Isotopes, he can hopefully help the team and farm system take their own next steps as well.


Weekly Pebble Report: May 19th-25th

Triple-A: Albuquerque Isotopes (3-3, 28-23 Overall)

The Albuquerque Isotopes had to settle for a series split on the road as they faced off against the Las Vegas Aviators (Athletics). The roster itself saw a bit of shuffling as Blaine Crim was claimed off waivers by the Texas Rangers, and both Sterlin Thompson and Chad Stevens are currently with the big league team. Still, the veteran contingent propped up the offense while younger prospects like Nic Kent hit three home runs during the week. Pitching continues to be inconsistent, particularly from the younger starters, but Ryan Feltner did excel in his rehab start on Sunday, firing five innings and allowing just one run.

⬆️ Stock Up: Keep on Rolling

It’s becoming somewhat redundant to say the stock is up, but Cole Carrigg (No. 4 PuRP) keeps finding a way to keep his up. It was another strong week for Carrigg as he batted .400/.556/.700, going 8-for-20 with three doubles and a home run. His newfound patience at the plate this season continues to thrive as he drew seven walks and struck out five times. The most surprising thing was that he failed to steal a base in the series, getting caught twice. Through 47 games in Triple-A, Carrigg is slashing .358/.424/.551 with 30 strikeouts and 26 walks, and as June approaches, it may be time for the Rockies front office to start seriously considering when to call him up.

⬆️ Stock Up:Slump Buster

Bogged down by a hitting slump that wasn’t yielding results despite quality at-bats, Charlie Condon (No. 1 PuRP) got back into a rhythm in this series. He went 8-for-24, slashing .333/.407/.625, and extended his hitting streak to seven games. His power has been missing of late, but he managed five extra-base hits, including four doubles and a home run. He managed just two RBI and struck out 10 times against two walks, but he was making some better contact, which is a huge step forward after the last month he has had.

Upcoming:

The Isotopes are back home to welcome the El Paso Chihuahuas (San Diego Padres) for a new six-game series. Last time the two faced off in Albuquerque earlier this month, it was a series split.

Double-A: Hartford Yard Goats (4-1, 23-20 Overall)

The Hartford Yard Goats rocketed up the Eastern League standings with a dominant series against the New Hampshire Fisher Cats (Toronto Blue Jays), winning four of five contests. The series finale was postponed due to inclement weather. Both strong pitching and the offense clicking were the keys to success in the series.

⬆️ Stock Up:Welcome back, Wimmer!

Super-utilityman Braylen Wimmer played his first three games against the Fisher Cats after being reinstated from the Development List. Wimmer went 5-for-13 with three doubles, an RBI, and a stolen base while only striking out twice—both in one game.

⬆️ Stock Up:Goat Stu

After some emergency spot-starts on a depleted Albuquerque Isotopes rotation, left-handed pitcher Stu Flesland III was officially promoted from the High-A Spokane Indians up to Double-A Hartford. Flesland III pitched 3.1 innings in relief of a rehabbing Ryan Feltner, giving up just one earned run on two hits and tallying three strikeouts.

Upcoming:

The Altoona Curve (Pittsburgh Pirates) are in town as the Yard Goats introduce a throwback alternate identity for the New Britain Rock Cats, whom they played as from 1997 until 2015!

High-A: Spokane Indians (4-2, 19-26 Overall)

The Indians may still be below .500, but a 4-2 series split against their rival Vancouver Canadians (Toronto Blue Jays) certainly helped them regain some ground. While they did stumble in the series with an ugly 15-0 shutout, the offense also scored nine or more runs in three of their victories.

⬆️ Stock Up:The Jack Attack is Back, Mack.

Catcher and designated hitter Jack O’Dowd made a mighty first impression for Spokane fans. Freshly promoted to the Indians this week, O’Dowd hammered the ball for two home runs in his debut and finished the week hitting 7-for-15 with a double, two home runs, seven RBIs, and two walks.

⬇️ Stock Down:Hampered and Hammered

That 15-0 shutout I mentioned was a rough one for left-handed pitcher Bryson Hammer and right-handed reliever Tyler Hampu. Hammer pitched the first three innings and gave up seven earned runs on two hits and five walks, while Hampu gave up another five earned runs on two hits and three walks over 1.1 innings. Both pitchers gave up back-breaking home runs: a grand slam for Hammer and a three-run home run for Hampu.

Upcoming:

The Indians are on the road for a six game series against the Tri-City Dust Devils (Los Angeles Angels).

Low-A: Fresno Grizzlies (2-4, 25-20 Overall)

The Grizzlies remain atop their division for now despite a tough series against the Rancho Cucamonga Quakes (Los Angeles Angels) that featured multiple slugfests—the first two games of the series had a combined 34 runs scored—and close contests.

⬆️ Stock Up:Thach continues to smash

This week Thach went 13-for-24 with a double, a triple, two home runs, seven RBIs, four walks, and his first stolen base of the season. With an OPS of 1.004 and leading the team in doubles, home runs, and RBIs, and currently leading the California League in RBIs and slugging percentage, Thach might not have much left to prove at this level.

⬆️ Stock Up:Andujar goes far

With Ethan Holliday (foot) going on the injured list, the Grizzlies needed roster reinforcements. For the final game of their series they summoned 18-year-old infielder Ashly Andujar (no. 20 PuRP), who made an immediate and powerful first impression. In his first game outside of the Arizona Fall League, Andujar went 2-for-4 without striking out, had two RBIs, and clubbed his first home run in Low-A.

Upcoming:

The Grizzlies are back at home and looking to put some distance between themselves and the San Jose Giants (San Francisco Giants) for the division lead.

Arizona Complex League: ACL Rockies (4-1, 12-5 Overall)

The ACL Rockies rattled off four quick wins to stay atop their division in the Complex before getting humbled 9-1 yesterday by the ACL Angels (Los Angeles Angels).

⬆️ Stock Up:No argument here

18-year-old center fielder Cristian Arguelles had a strong week at the plate, going 10-for-19 with two doubles, a home run, and eight RBIs across five games.

⬆️ Stock Up:Saved by the Bell

Left-handed pitcher Zack Morris—who started the season on the injured list—has been turning in strong work on rehab assignment with the ACL Rockies. Morris turned in 3.2 scoreless innings over two appearances with six strikeouts, one walk, and three hits allowed. Over his assignment he now has four scoreless outings over 5.2 innings.


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A detailed breakdown of UNC Baseball ahead of the Chapel Hill Regional

Jun 7, 2025; Chapel Hill, NC, USA; North Carolina pitcher Jason DeCaro (29) pitches the ball during the first inning of the Super Regionals game against Arizona in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Mandatory Credit: Jaylynn Nash-Imagn Images | Jaylynn Nash-Imagn Images

The final postseason of the college athletic season is finally here, and once again, the Diamond Heels of the University of North Carolina will be hosting a regional in the NCAA Tournament. College baseball seems to be drawing more eyes than ever this year, but given that most regular-season games are still on streaming-only platforms and there are a ton fewer places that cover the sport (and especially from an ACC/UNC lens) than for things like football and basketball, I’m certainly not going to judge anybody who’s choosing now to start really paying attention to Scott Forbes’ team. For you, and perhaps for Tennessee/ECU/VCU fans wanting to check out the competition, this will function as the most thorough look at the Diamond Heels that you’ll find on the Internet, at least for free. And hopefully, even if you’ve been following the team and program more committedly than most this season, there will still be some things in here for you to learn and/or talk about ahead of the games in Chapel Hill this weekend.

Overview

For the second straight year, UNC is an arguably under-seeded 5th overall seed after a 45-plus-win season with an elite pitching staff and an offensive lineup that survived a bunch of turnover. They don’t have some of the superlatives of last year’s team; namely, they don’t have a starter as good and consistent as Jake Knapp was nor do they have a big-time power threat like Luke Stevenson provided, but they’re a gritty squad that finds a way to win games — they lost just one series all season, and that was to Virginia to open ACC play. They have probably the best series win in the country after having taken 2 out of 3 against Georgia Tech at home, and in a lot of ways entered the postseason playing their best baseball. They had an up-and-down ACC Tournament — the offense was as live as it has ever been, while starting pitching struggled in their first two games before the entire arm barn ran into the buzzsaw that was Georgia Tech — but still have established themselves as one of the country’s premier squads, as has become tradition for head coach Scott Forbes at this point. Polls have had them at #2 in the country for basically the last month, and Forbes should once again have a team that should be a favorite to make Omaha and a threat to make noise once there.

Lineup

Remember how going into last year, all the talk about UNC was about all the power they were losing and that the Heels were going to have to lean into a different brand of baseball that relied on balls finding grass and guys going station-to-station instead of swinging for the fences? Last year’s team kind of did that, but nowhere near to the extent that it was stated after they took 5 games to hit their first home run. I think this year’s team does it a fair bit more. The slugging percentages are nearly identical; .478 to .487, but the 2025 Heels had 87 home runs in 61 games compared to this year’s 76 in 57. Last year’s team relied a ton on stealing bases to get guys in scoring position; this year, it’s been much more about just making contact and advancing runners with hits — the lineup isn’t as deep with on-base threats as last year’s, but the guys who hit for average do so at significantly higher clips while maintaining similarly high walk rates. This team has the typical discipline of a Scott Forbes club, ranking 13th in the country in total walks and 18th in walk rate, but they’ve cut down some on the high-ish strikeout rates that have annoyed past groups, ranking a respectable 56th in strikeout rate and 20th in K:BB ratio. Here’s an individual rundown:

  1. SS Jake Schaffner (L/R, .362/.465/.580): Transferred to UNC from North Dakota State and has been a mainstay at the top of the lineup. Has a fantastic eye at the plate; has recorded 37 walks to 27 strikeouts. Rarely chases out of the zone and has a real knack for 2-strike hitting, where he can kind of just throw his wrists at the ball and flick it over the shortstop’s head. UNC’s best stolen base threat, has 25 on 28 attempts. Great defensive shortstop with plus range and an arm that plays well enough in college, and his speed has also helped him record 7 triples — the 3rd-highest total in the country.
  2. 2B Gavin Gallaher(R/R, .275/.367/.488): The lone everyday returner in the lineup and a team captain. Hasn’t had quite the draft season he would have hoped for, but the numbers are pretty much in line with where he was last year before his postseason heroic gene activated. His feel for and control of the zone have been spotty this year and his pole-to-pole power, while clearly there, hasn’t always played this year, though he’s hit 3 home runs in his last 7 games to bring his season total to 12. The two-time Chapel Hill Regional Most Outstanding Player will be aiming to play his best baseball come tournament time once again. He’s moved from playing 3rd the last 2 years to second base this year, and he’s been awesome there — statistically he’s been the best defensive second baseman in the conference.
  3. CF Owen Hull (L/R, .374/.487/.565): Transfer from George Mason and UNC’s batting average leader. Hull is the latest in a pretty legendary run of center fielders at UNC, and after a really slow start to the season, has lived up to the mantle. He’s built like a brick house at 6’4, 215, and while he doesn’t rake like the build suggests (7 home runs on the season), he consistently makes hard ground ball contact up the middle or to the opposite field that creates trouble for infielders. Sometimes he’ll just accidentally hit a rocket because there’s so much latent power in his body. Pairs all that with a decent eye (41:37 K-BB); the strikeouts have gone up as he’s gained more confidence in his swing after he started the season leading the country in walks. Pretty good defender in center field thanks to his athleticism, though he doesn’t have a standout arm or instincts at the position.
  4. C/DH Macon Winslow (R/R, .310/.455/.522): Cross-rivalry transfer from Duke after coach Chris Pollard left. Winslow was good at Duke and has leveled up at UNC, improving both his average and power numbers (10 HR, .967 OPS compared to 9 and .881 last year). Pull-heavy swing and a disciplined approach, working a lot of counts deep and leading the team with 43 walks (to go with 38 Ks). Good defensive catcher who doesn’t get run on very often, but he’s now coming back from an injured wrist that might have influenced him not getting in front of 3 run-scoring wild pitches in the ACC Championship game — his rust will be something to monitor.
  5. 3B Cooper Nicholson (R/R, .275/.452/.607): Junior college transfer from Iowa Central CC who has become the team’s power leader, with 15 home runs on the season. Swings for the fences on seemingly every pitch he sees in the zone, which leads to a fair bit of swing-and-miss (team-leading 51 Ks) but ends up being worth it as he leads the team in slugging. Power plays to all fields and he isn’t swinging blindly, with 38 walks. Also has a knack for getting hit by pitches, has racked up 21. Plays a pretty dynamic 3rd base but has had his share of errors — granted, it’s a tough position to play with metal bats, and he hasn’t been worse than Gallaher was last year (.909 fielding percentages for both. That’d be atrocious at any other position, but like I said, 3rd base is really tough in college).
  6. 1B Erik Paulsen (L/L, .285/.419/.464): Transfer from Stony Brook. Started the season red-hot and looked like he might just replicate Stevenson’s power and average production one-to-one, but cooled off mightily over the course of April and May. When the swing is working, he’s capable of both pulling inside fastballs and poking outside pitches to the opposite field, but there’s a lot more swing-and-miss lately for a guy who once had elite zone control. It’s rare to say this about a first baseman, but Paulsen is a genuinely great defender at first. He won the CAA’s DPOY award last year at a position that’s usually taken for granted, and watching him play the position it’s easy to see why with his quick actions, footwork, and glove.
  7. LF Tyler Howe (L/L, .250/.386/.368):A freshman from Huntersville who has settled into an everyday spot after some early-season shuffling at the corner outfield positions. The numbers aren’t fantastic but there’s a lot of promise here; he’s got fast hands and a compact, flat swing that reminds me a little of early-career Casey Cook, albeit without the elite zone control or contact rates that Cook already had. Good athlete on the bases and an okay defender with a big arm — has gunned down 3 runners at home from left field.
  8. DH/C Colin Hynek (R/R, .273/.357/.483): The transfer from Georgia Tech has split time with Winslow at catcher, but is usually in the lineup regardless of whether he’s catching or not. Had outstanding power numbers at GSU, but that hasn’t really shown up in Chapel Hill (7 home runs). He has hit 3 triples, though, thanks to a knack for finding gaps in the outfield. Takes his share of noncompetitive at-bats at this level, but when he makes contact, it’s usually very hard. Slightly worse as a defensive catcher and receiver than Hynek — Forbes says his arm is stronger but it doesn’t play as such in-game.
  9. RF Carter French (L/L, .231/.383/.288): For the second straight year, French has taken over as an everyday corner outfielder after the other options just weren’t consistent enough in the field or at the plate. It took him a while to get going this year; his average hovered around or just under .200 until near the end of April, since when he’s been closer to his old self. Controls the zone well and puts the ball in play, and is a plus athlete on the bases and in the field.

You may also see Rom Kellis V, who has been used as a corner outfielder against lefties and had a breakout game in the ACC Tournament semifinal, as well as guys like Jadyn Nunez, Perry Hargett, Michael Maginnis, and Sawyer Black, who have all seen some time as pinch-hitters or corner outfielders.

Pitching

Once again, these Heels have one of the best staff ERAs in the country, led by an ace starter, a second starter who’s been a little up and down but has certainly had big-time moments, and two stud relievers, supported by a deep staff that’s been inconsistent in comparison but decent in the big picture. The names are going to be familiar, as the Heels didn’t bring in a single transfer to the arm barn despite losing starters in Jake Knapp and Aidan Haugh, and so is the formula: starters who don’t have overwhelming strikeout numbers but limit walks and let their defense work, and relievers who get a little nastier and eat up the back innings.

  • SP Jason DeCaro (R, 2.30 ERA):In his third season as a starter in Chapel Hill, DeCaro has put together his best year yet. He’s looked more or less the same as ever, but he’s improved his consistency and pitchability to be the best version of himself he can be. The fastball sits 91-94 with high spin but not much corresponding movement, but he locates it well to keep hitters off him and set up his sweeper, curve, and changeup, the latter of which has been a money pitch of late. He’ll allow more baserunners than you’d expect, but consistently manages to get the outs he needs. You’d like to see him get a little more length in the postseason; even in very good starts against Georgia Tech and N.C. State to close the season he only went 5 innings.
  • SP Ryan Lynch (R, 4.44 ERA):Lynch’s transition from relief last year to starting this year has been a little rocky. He’s given the Heels length, leading the team in innings pitched, has the best K-BB of UNC’s high-use arms at 70:29, and has had a few good starts, but opposing offenses have had a lot more success against him as a starter than they did last year — his batting average against of .285 is really worrisome. Features a nasty 94-97 power sinker and a slider that has been off and on this season after being devastating last year, and has added a changeup this year that hasn’t really helped him. The stuff is clearly there to be elite, but it hasn’t been unlocked this season in his draft year — that said, he saved his best for last as a freshman.
  • RP Caden Glauber (R, 1.93 ERA): Big-time freshman arm who has maybe one-upped what Lynch did as a relief ace last year en route to winning ACC Freshman of the Year and racking up the country’s 3rd-best ERA. He’s pitched 70 innings in relief and has not yet pitched in a game his team didn’t win. Has a lively 93-96 heater with a lot of armside run, a good changeup to throw to lefties, and a decent sweeper/slider, but the money pitch right now is the fastball, which lets him get ahead in seemingly every count he faces. He’s also got a knack for inducing GIDPs when he needs them thanks to the sink on his heater.
  • RP Walker McDuffie (R, 2.82 ERA): Pitched his way into UNC fans’ hearts last year with his baby face and Wild Thing glasses, and has leveled up his game this year after a slow start. His sweeper continues to be one of the best putout pitches in the country and he leads the team in strikeout rate thanks in large part to it (79 in 60.2 IP). His 92-95 sinker continues to be underrated and he’s been locating it better of late, while he’s also added a changeup to the arsenal that’s been effective against lefties. Reliance on getting swing-and-miss on the sweeper means he walks a few more hitters than is optimal, but he gets enough whiffs that it rarely hurts him.
  • SP Folger Boaz (L, 7.30 ERA): Has returned to a starting role after pitching out of the pen last year, and results have varied. Got hit around the park in 3 of his last 4 starts, but in fairness those were against Georgia Tech twice and a good N.C. State lineup, and he put together one of his best starts of the season in between those against a dangerous Pitt offense. Throws a 91-93 fastball that’s run as high as 96 in-game as of late, as well as a nasty slider and a sharp cutter, but struggles to get righties out because the changeup lags behind his other offerings.
  • RP Jackson Rose (L, 2.82 ERA): Another freshman arm who’s been impressive, especially in relief. Hasn’t done great given midweek starting opportunities, but has thrived out of the pen with an 89-92 fastball that he locates well, to go with a nasty changeup. Has a batting average against under .200 and a WHIP comparable to McDuffie’s, albeit in lower-leverage situations and probably including work against worse lineups.

Other names to know include captain Matthew Matthijs, who has had an up-and-down season but is trusted to get outs late in games, and Cam Padgett, a flamethrowing righty who’s done some of his best work in the last month.

James Harden ‘100%’ wants to be back in Cleveland

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 19: James Harden #1 of the Cleveland Cavaliers in action against the New York Knicks during Game One of the NBA Eastern Conference Finals at Madison Square Garden on May 19, 2026 in New York City. 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 Sarah Stier/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers didn’t trade for a one-year rental. All indicators point towards James Harden returning to the team this summer after opting out to restructure his deal.

“Yes. 100%,” said Harden on whether he wants to be back in Cleveland. “Definitely want to be here. I think we found something. It’s tough not ending how we wanted to, but I think we found something.”

That’s as strong a commitment as you’ll get from a player in today’s NBA. That type of clarity on someone’s future can actually be relieving. Reports suggest the Cavs are just as certain that they want Harden back for next season.

“This is not theoretical, James Harden will be back with the Cavs next year,” said ESPN’s Brian Windhorst. “It will be for multiple years guaranteed.”

This should come as no surprise. It was unlikely that Cleveland would have traded Darius Garland for half a year of Harden. This was always going to be a multi-year relationship.

Harden averaged 19.2 points and 5.5 assists in 18 playoff games this year. Everything he did was on the fly after joining the Cavs midseason. In some ways, that makes their run to the Eastern Conference Finals impressive. But I don’t think anyone is handing out brownie points at this time.

“We showed a lot, we could have folded a few times, especially in the second round,” said Donovan Mitchell after the season ended. “Game 6 [loss to Detroit] was tough. That’s an organizational altering series, and for us to rally around each other and execute on the road, that tells you everything you need to know.”

The Cavs have work to do; New York made that painfully obvious. They don’t have the continuity or cohesion that’s required of winning at the highest level. Another year with Harden could help them achieve that. That’s what you have to tell yourself, at least.

Harden carries with him all the baggage of a legendary player who has never made it to the top of the mountain. This was understood before trading for him. Harden tied Karl Malone for the most playoff wins without a championship this postseason. That’s a narrative that’s come to define him for many fans.

“We ignore leadership, we ignore the human character of who he is, we ignore the empowerment he gives people, and we ignore his greatness in a major way,” said Mitchell. “It’s really unfair, now more than ever, now that I see it on a regular basis, we have a ‘ring culture’ society, and that’s just who we are.”

There’s merit to Harden’s on-court resume. He’s a first ballot Hall of Famer, no matter how hard you criticize him. Still, there’s always only been one way to shut people up. He has to win.

“I’m still here, right? Still alive, still going. That’s all I can do,” said Harden of his shortcomings in the playoffs. “As much as we want to feel sorry or doubt our journey, whether it’s you guys or me, you just gotta keep pushing.”

Dodgers vs Rockies Prediction: Odds, recent stats, trends, and best bets for May 26

The Dodgers opened the series with the Rockies with a 5-3 win as Freddie Freeman helped spark a four-run seventh inning on Monday. Los Angeles has won three straight and five out of the past six.

Colorado on the other hand are on a three-game losing streak and dropped six out of the previous seven. In the last week, Colorado is hitting .222 (18th) and has two home runs (last). The pitching staff hasn't performed well either with a 4.62 ERA in that span, plus a last place ranking over the last 14 days with a 5.44 ERA (10 games).

Los Angeles is 3-2 versus Colorado this season and won two straight. The Dodgers' pitching staff has an elite 2.11 ERA over the last 13 games (1st) and an MLB-best 0.94 WHIP and .187 OBA. In that stretch, the Dodgers have a 10-3 record.

Let’s dive into the matchup and find a sweat or two.

We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on the how to catch first pitch, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.

Follow Rotoworld Player News for the latest fantasy and betting player news and analysis all season long.

Game details & how to watch Rockies at Dodgers

  • Date: Tuesday, May 26, 2026
  • Time: 10:10 PM EST
  • Site: Dodger Stadium
  • City: Los Angeles, CA
  • Network/Streaming: MLB TV

Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out.

Odds for the Rockies at the Dodgers

The latest odds as of Tuesday:

  • Moneyline: Los Angeles Dodgers (-239), Colorado Rockies (+194)
  • Spread: Rockies +1.5 (-108), Dodgers -1.5 (-111)
  • Total: 9.0

Probable starting pitchers for Rockies at Dodgers

  • Tuesday's pitching matchup (May 26): Eric Lauer vs. Kyle Freeland
  • Rockies: Kyle Freeland

2026 stats: 38.1 IP, 1-5, 7.04 ERA, 1.70 WHIP, 35 Ks, 14 BB

  • Dodgers: Eric Lauer

2026 Stats: 36.1 IP, 1-5, 6.69 ERA, 1.49 WHIP, 26 Ks, 16 BB

Who’s Hot? Who’s Not

  • The Dodgers’ Shohei Ohtani is hitting .273 with 51 hits and 89 total bases over 187 at-bats
  • The Dodgers’ Will Smith is hitting .242 with 36 hits and 28 strikeouts over 149 at-bats
  • The Rockies’ Troy Johnston is hitting .323 with 52 hits and 71 total bases over 161 at-bats
  • The Rockies’ Ezequiel Tovar is hitting .217 with 39 hits and 50 strikeouts over 180 at-bats

Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!

Top betting trends & insights to know ahead of Rockies at Dodgers

  • The Dodgers are 28-26 ATS and 11-15 ATS at home
  • The Rockies are 29-26 ATS and 16-14 ATS on the road
  • The Dodgers are 31-23 to the Under, ranking third-best
  • The Rockies are 30-24 to the Under, ranking seventh-best
  •  The Dodgers are 16-10 to the Under at home, ranking fourth
  • The Rockies are 17-13 to the Under on the road

Expert picks & predictions for tonight’s game between the Rockies and the Dodgers

Rotoworld Bet Best Bet

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Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts.

Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Tuesday's game between the Rockies and the Dodgers:

  • Moneyline: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the Dodgers on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: NBC Sports Bet is leaning towards a play ATS on the Dodgers at -1.5.
  • Total: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the Over on the Game Total of 9.0

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Mariners News: Luis Castillo, Tatsuya Imai, and Jarred Kelenic

May 23, 2026; San Francisco, California, USA; Chicago White Sox right fielder Jarred Kelenic (24) hits a double against the San Francisco Giants during the fifth inning at Oracle Park. Mandatory Credit: Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images | Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images

Good morning and happy Monday everybody! Sorry about the late links! Traffic, am I right?

The Mariners offense took advantage of windy conditions in Sacramento while the piggyback tandem of Luis Castillo and Bryce Miller stifled the A’s offense to cruise to a comfortable 9-2 win. The squad will look to secure a series win behind Emerson Hancock tonight at 6:40!

In Mariners news…

  • The Mariners may have won a nice and easy one last night, but that doesn’t mean there weren’t bumps in the road. Luis Castillo started the game and pitched four innings allowing two hits and no runs. Upon learning that he was being lifted to get Bryce Miller into the game for his leg of the piggyback start, Castillo was visibly upset.
  • Bryce Miller said in a post game interview that he finds the whole situation to be “not very comfortable.” Miller went on to say that he’s grateful for any chance he gets to pitch, but it seems clear that the team’s solution to too many good pitchers, however logical it might be, is having some dire human consequences.

Around the league…

Spencer Strider takes the mound vs Boston

MIAMI, FLORIDA - MAY 21: Spencer Strider #99 of the Atlanta Braves delivers during the first inning against the Miami Marlins at loanDepot park on May 21, 2026 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Carmen Mandato/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Spencer Strider’s last outing for the Atlanta Braves was against the Miami Marlins on Thursday (5/21), making that his longest outing since coming off the IL this season. He pitched for 6.1 innings, allowed three runs on four hits and struck out nine batters.

So far, he’s been producing as someone getting back to the swing of things, gaining two wins across his four outings, and boasting a 3.00 ERA and 1.14 WHIP. He also, however, has a total of 12 batters walked in his return this month so far, so that will be something he’ll need to decrease against the Boston Red Sox, who might be struggling heavily on offense with an average of 3.7 runs per game, but can take advantage of drawing walks to secure their runs on the board.

The Ohio native is looking to continue his strong stint to kick the series off, but he’ll need the offense to follow suit and have a complete turnaround from their last series against the Washington Nationals.

Boston’s Ranger Suarez will be facing the Braves, currently holding a 2.40 ERA and 1.01 WHIP across his (2-2) nine games pitched.

If there’s a pitch that the Braves’ offense needs to look out for, it’s his 90.6 mph sinker. The lefty is dominant with it and takes up 30% of his arsenal. Against left-handed hitters, he touches the pitch almost 50% of the time, and it lands almost securely in the zone. He lowers it to around a 24% usage against righties.

The Braves’ offense will need to put on a show to blank the Sox early on and give Strider a quality game, but if they continue where they left off against the Nationals and Suarez gets the best of them, there might need to be a shakeup in the game plan for the remainder of the series.

Game Info

Game Time: Tuesday, May 26th, 6:45 pm EDT

Location: Fenway Park, Boston, MA

Watch: BravesVision/TBS

Radio/Audio: 680 AM / 93.7 FM The Fan

How great the Cincinnati Reds offense has become

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - MAY 20: JJ Bleday #22 and Sal Stewart #27 of the Cincinnati Reds celebrate after scoring on a two-RBI double by Nathaniel Lowe #31 (not pictured) in the seventh inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on May 20, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Emilee Chinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Nathaniel Lowe swatted a walk-off homer against the Detroit Tigers and future Hall of Famer Kneley Jansen on the night of April 24th, the final swing in a roller-coaster 9-8 victory. In that game, the Cincinnati Reds had overcome a 5-0 deficit only to give it back with a 3-run Top of the 8th by the Tigers, with Lowe rectifying things with one mighty cut in the Bottom of the 9th.

It was a game that’s something of a microcosm of the Reds season so far. It was a 1-run win. It featured the bullpen forking over the lead. It also featured dingers a-plenty, with Lowe socking two and Matt McLain swatting a pair in one of his precious few good games of the season.

Aside from that, it was something of a nondescript outing in the annals of baseball history. A good win, an entertaining one, but merely one data point in the billions of data points we’ve got in this great game’s vast history.

If you choose that data point to look closer at the offense of the Cincinnati Reds, though, you’ll begin to see something that’s both spectacular and completely unheard of through the lens we viewed their brutal start to the 2026 season as a team.

Counting that game, the Reds have played 28 games since dawn on April 24th, 2026. And since dawn on April 26th, zero teams have hit more homers than the 41 the Reds have launched. Zero! Their .191 ISO in that span ranks 3rd behind the New York Yankees and Washington Nationals (both at .194). Their .435 SLG ranks 2nd behind only the Bronx Bombers (.440), while their .333 wOBA similarly ranks behind only that of the Yankees (.341).

It’s not fluky, either – at least by xwOBA. The Reds sport the 2nd best expected wOBA in the game in that span at .340, ahead of the Yankees (.339) and behind just the Los Angeles Dodgers (.344). That’s right – for over a month of the season, it’s been the Reds sandwiched between the behemoths on both coasts for the honors of being the single best offense in the sport.

It’s a cherry-picked date, obviously. It’s also a date that fully encompasses the evolution of the regulars in the lineup, however. Each of Lowe and JJ Bleday have assumed almost daily use in that time, with Bleday having not even been a part of the offense since being called up for the first time on April 25th. We’ve also seen the gradual phasing out of TJ Friedl and Ke’Bryan Hayes, with the latter eventually landing on the IL over the weekend with lingering back problems. In other words, it’s cherry-picked, but pretty accurately overlaps with the Reds beginning to eschew their strict defense-first lineup decisions in favor of letting their big bats bat early and often.

And, it’s paying off in spades.

Yankees vs. Royals prediction: Odds, recent stats, trends, and best bets for May 26

The New York Yankees (32-22) and the Kansas City Royals (22-32) continue their three-game series tonight at Kauffman Stadium.

 

The Yankees enter tonight’s matchup against the Royals looking to build on last night’s 4-3 come from behind win. Anthony Volpe drove in the winning run with a clutch two‑run single in the ninth inning. Bobby Witt Jr.’s had broken a 2-2 tie with a home run in the eighth, but Kansas City closer Lucas Erceg could not hold the lead for Kansas City. The win was the Yankees’ twelfth in a row against the Royals.

Tonight, the Yankees hand the ball to Cam Schlittler, who takes the mound with a stellar 6–2 record and a 1.50 ERA. The Royals, meanwhile, are expected to deploy a bullpen game, leaning on a mix of relievers after Michael Wacha’s strong seven‑inning effort last night.

 

Offensively, the Yankees will look to ride the hot bats of Cody Bellinger (hits in three straight games and seven of his last eight) and Anthony Volpe (6-20 over his last six games). For the Royals, Salvador Perez and Bobby Witt Jr. continue to anchor the offense. Perez tied the game in the sixth with his 136th career homer at Kauffman Stadium, matching George Brett’s stadium record, while Witt’s eighth‑inning blast briefly put Kansas City ahead. Still, the Royals struggled with runners in scoring position, going 0‑for‑7 in key spots—an issue they’ll need to correct to keep pace tonight.

 

Lets dive into tonight’s matchup and find a sweat or two.

 

We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on the how to catch first pitch, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.

 

Follow Rotoworld Player News for the latest fantasy and betting player news and analysis all season long.

 

Game Details and How to Watch: Yankees vs. Royals

 

  • Date: Tuesday, May 26, 2026
  • Time: 7:40PM EST
  • Site: Kauffman Stadium
  • City: Kansas City, MO
  • Network/Streaming: MLB.TV, YES, Royals.TV

 

Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out.

 

The Latest Odds: Yankees vs. Royals

The latest odds as of Tuesday courtesy of DraftKings:

  • Moneyline: New York Yankees (-205), Kansas City Royals (+168)
  • Spread: Yankees -1.5 (-125), Royals +1.5 (+104)
  • Total: 8.5 runs

 

Probable Starting Pitchers: Yankees vs. Royals for May 26

  • Yankees: Cam Schlittler
    Season Totals: 66.0 IP, 6-2, 1.50 ERA, 0.86 WHIP, 75K, 13 BB
  • Royals: Bailey Falter
    Season Totals: 7.1 IP, 0-1, 9,82 ERA, 2.86 WHIP, 6K, 6 BB

Who’s Hot? Who’s Not! Yankees vs. Royals

  • Bobby Witt, Jr. is hitting .301 in May with 6 HRs
  • Sal Perez is 7-19 in his last 5 games with 2 HRs
  • Aaron Judge is hitting .247 in May
  • Ben Rice is 2-19 over his last 5 games
  • Ryan McMahon has 5 extra base hits in May (65 ABs)

 

Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!

 

Top Betting Trends & Insights: Yankees and Royals

  • The Royals are 23-31 on the Run Line this season
  • The Yankees are 26-28 on the Run Line this season
  • The OVER has cashed 23 times in KC’s 54 games this season (23-31)
  • The OVER has cashed 22 times in the Yankees’ 54 games this season (22-29-3)

 

If you’re looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our MLB Top Trends tool on NBC Sports!

 

Expert picks & predictions: Yankees vs. Royals

Rotoworld Bet Best Bet

 

Please bet responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, call the National Gambling Helpline at 1-800-522-4700.

 

Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts.

 

Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.

 

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Tuesday’s game between the Yankees and the Royals:

 

  • Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is staying away from a play on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: Rotoworld Bet is recommending a play on the Yankees on the Run Line.
  • Total: Rotoworld Bet is staying away from a play on the Game Total of 8.5.

 

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Cavaliers face huge dilemma after Knicks sweep: Blow it up or go for broke?

The end for the Cleveland Cavaliers was cruel, with Timothée Chalamet and Kylie Jenner celebrating on their court dressed in New York Knicks gear and embracing Knicks' players like they were part of the win. The Knicks' blowout put them in the NBA Finals for the first time since 1999 and sent the Cavaliers into an uncomfortable offseason.

Though Cleveland advanced to the Eastern Conference finals without LeBron James for the first time in almost 35 years, its unceremonious exit – and how arduous this whole postseason run seemed – has clouded what path the team should take in the weeks and months ahead.

The Cavaliers took perhaps the biggest swing of any team this year at the NBA trade deadline, flipping oft-injured 26-year-old Darius Garland for durable 36-year-old James Harden to pair with Donovan Mitchell in the backcourt. Cleveland had the most expensive roster in the league. Whether it worked – or can work – is up for debate. The final impression this season was a dud.

After blowing a 22-point lead in the fourth quarter of Game 1 against the Knicks, the Cavaliers lost the last three games of the Eastern Conference finals by an average of 22 points.

Harden said in the aftermath he is committed to remaining with the Cavaliers. Mitchell told reporters he has "no doubt this group can get there." They each expressed faith in coach Kenny Atkinson and the organization. They preached patience after only a few months with Harden in the fold.

But the modern NBA doesn't usually wait around for long. Team owner Dan Gilbert said as much in a postgame tweet declaring, "we took a step ahead this spring, but we are nowhere near where we need to be."

How that statement manifests itself could change the landscape of the entire NBA offseason, with the Cavaliers possessing perhaps the largest range of outcomes of any team in the league. They could stay the course, blow it up, or go for broke. These are the pressing questions facing the franchise:

Will Donovan Mitchell, Cavaliers sign new extension?

Mitchell just made his first trip to the conference finals in his ninth NBA season, and fourth with the Cavaliers. But there's a fork-in-the-road for the two sides, despite Mitchell's statements in the wake of Monday's loss that he remains committed to Cleveland.

The 29-year-old is eligible to sign a four-year extension worth as much as $272 million this offseason. He could also wait until next year and be eligible to sign a five-year deal worth as much as $350 million. If he chooses the latter path, he'd essentially play next season as a looming free agent because of the $54-million player option for 2027-28 in his current contract.

Are the Cavaliers comfortable devoting that much to a player who might not be a No. 1 option for a championship contender right now? The uncertainty shouldn't immediately invite trade rumors, especially given Mitchell's positive tone after being swept out of the playoffs. But there's a forthcoming negotiation that will determine how much Cleveland wants to spend to hitch its wagon to Mitchell for the foreseeable future.

What's next for James Harden, Cavaliers?

Harden has a $42.3-million team option on his contract for the 2026-27 season, but multiple reports at the trade deadline suggested Harden would not have agreed to be dealt to the Cavaliers without an understanding that he would be retained beyond this season.

He had another bumpy postseason, with a few notable performances in the first two rounds that got overshadowed when Knicks star Jalen Brunson feasted on him in the Eastern Conference Finals. Taking on Harden at his team option price tag would likely hamper what else the Cavaliers can do this offseason. A more team-friendly salary point, likely in exchange for an extra year or two on a new Harden contract, is expected to be the outcome.

That will tie Cleveland to Mitchell and Harden as a tandem. Harden sounded confident it can work.

"Definitely want to be here," Harden told reporters after Game 4. "I think we found something. It's tough. It's not ending how we wanted to, but I think we found something."

Will Cavaliers coach Kenny Atkinson be back?

Atkinson is just one year removed from winning NBA coach of the year, but his viral analytics moment before Game 4 reinforced his underwhelming performance on the sideline during the playoffs.

Telling reporters that Cleveland "analytically" won two of the first three games of the Eastern Conference Finals will go down in infamy among the more inopportune quotes uttered by a coach during a postseason series. It happened less than a week after Atkinson's timeout usage, or lack thereof, was questioned after the Cavaliers blew their 22-point lead in Game 1.

Cleveland was also taken to Game 7 in both the first round and conference semifinals after having a chance to end both series in Game 6. The accumulation of wear and tear, according to Atkinson, took its toll on the roster in the Eastern Conference Finals. Given Gilbert's postgame edict and expectations, Atkinson's leash appears to be short whether he keeps his job going into next season or not.

Can Cavaliers land LeBron James or Giannis?

These are the ultimate wild cards for this Cleveland offseason, and the most unlikely scenarios. One relies on James being generous. The other would be a huge bet on the present, potentially at the expense of the franchise's long-term fortunes. But James is a free agent and Giannis Antetokounmpo is reportedly on the trade market. One

In Evan Mobley, Cleveland has a young star the Milwaukee Bucks might be interested in taking back as a centerpiece in exchange for Antetokounmpo. The Cavaliers previously showed no interest in doing that. Did the Knicks sweep change their thinking?

James, meanwhile, has the option to add a closing chapter to his career by returning to Cleveland one more time. It would almost certainly have to come on a significant hometown discount given how much money the Cavaliers have committed. But if James is searching for another title and wants to leave the Lakers, he'd have an easier path in the Eastern Conference.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Cavaliers NBA offseason, free agency outlook includes LeBron, Giannis

Craig Kimbrel to Rays on MLB contract: Will nine-time All-Star get save chances?

Craig Kimbrel wasn't out of work for long, and he even got a nice boost in the standings.

Kimbrel, 37, signed a major league deal with the Tampa Bay Rays on Tuesday, May 26, The Athletic first reported, just four days after the New York Mets designated him for assignment. Ranked fifth on the all-time saves list, Kimbrel posted a 6.00 ERA in 14 appearances for the Mets and did not earn a save.

But ninth-inning chances might be more plentiful with Tampa Bay, and the Rays are in first place in the American League East, and not the cellar of the National League East. Tampa Bay has mixed and matched with veteran right-hander Bryan Baker recording 14 saves, but lefty Ian Seymour and a half-dozen others have saved games.

The Rays could use the immediate help - they played 13 innings on Monday in losing 7-5 to the Baltimore Orioles.

Kimbrel's 440 career saves are second among active players, trailing Detroit's Kenley Jansen, who has saved 483 games. The Rays will be his 11th major league team, and his eighth in the past six seasons.

MLB all-time saves list

(Through Monday, May 25)

  1. Mariano Rivera – 652 saves
  2. Trevor Hoffman – 601 saves
  3. Kenley Jansen – 483 saves (active)
  4. Lee Smith – 478 saves
  5. Craig Kimbrel – 440 saves
  6. Francisco Rodríguez – 437 saves
  7. John Franco – 424 saves
  8. Billy Wagner – 422 saves
  9. Dennis Eckersley – 390 saves
  10. Aroldis Chapman – 379 saves (active)

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Craig Kimbrel contract with Rays could impact Hall of Fame stats

Castellanos’s “Eventful” Return: Phillies 3 Padres 0

May 25, 2026; San Diego, California, USA; Philadelphia Phillies left fielder Brandon Marsh (16) hits a two-run home run during the seventh inning against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park. Mandatory Credit: Denis Poroy-Imagn Images | Denis Poroy-Imagn Images

After a 2-4 homestand against the Ohio teams, the Don Mattingly honeymoon officially ended as the Phillies traveled out west for their next six games against two of the better teams in the National League. The Padres, like the Phillies, possess an anemic offense that has been carried by plenty of front line pitching.

The Padres did not send one of their two front line starters on the mound Monday night, instead having Griffin Canning, who is trying to rebound his value after an ACL tear ended his 2025 season with the Mets. After a Trea Turner strikeout, Kyle Schwarber set the tone by somehow pulling a well located down and away changeup for a solo home run to right field.

Jesús Luzardo entered last night’s contest with a 2.73 ERA over his previous six starts. The BABIP luck and issues with runners on base regressed to the mean with not much else changing around it.

None of that seemed to matter in the first inning. Fernando Tatis jr hit a soft dribbler to no man’s land for an infield hit, Miguel Andujar poked a single into center field, and then Turner botched a Xander Bogaerts groundball. The bases were loaded with no one out and the middle of the Padres lineup at the plate.

Manny Machado could not keep up with a full-count comeback sinker and Jackson Merrill went down on three straight sweepers. It all set up the perfect opportunity for revenge with Nick Castellanos stepping into the box with the bases loaded and no one out.

Luzardo got ahead 0-2 quickly with a backdoor sweeper for a called strike and a swinging one on a down and away changeup. They tried to get Castellanos to chase on three straight pitches outside the zone but he laid them off. With a full count, Luzardo perfectly painted an inside fastball and Castellanos grounded out to shortstop.

The Padres once again got the first two runners on in the third with a Tatis single and an Andujar walk. Bogaerts hit a soft grounder to Bohm who got a forceout at second base. Machado stepped up again but rolled a first pitch fastball over to shortstop for an inning ending double play.

In the fifth, Luzardo once again had to work out of trouble. Rodolfo Durán got hit in the foot with a backfoot sweeper and then Tatis worked a walk. Just like the other innings, the Padres could not muster more to generate a run. Andujar hit a popup and Bogaerts hit a flyball to left field.

The Phillies did not record their second hit off Griffin Canning until the seventh inning when Kyle Schwarber singled to right field to reach base for a third time. Rookie manager Craig Stammen decided to leave Canning in to face Bryce Harper, who worked a five pitch walk.

Stammen kept him in for Bohm and it paid off with a groundball double play that sent Schwarber to third but with two outs.

And again, Stammen elected to leave Canning in for Brandon Marsh and the worst possible outcome occurred, a two-run home run to give the Phillies a three run lead in the late innings.

The Phillies stacked the final three innings with three of their handpicked reliable right handers to close the game out. Orion Kerkering got the seventh against the bottom of the Padres order and struck out a pair with a dotted fastball on the outside corner to Ty France and a nasty down and away sweeper to Ramón Laureano.

In the eighth, Brad Keller walked Tatis to leadoff the inning but got the next three outs including a Machado strikeout to end it.

Jhoan Duran entered the ninth with no lightshow or handpicked music because they’re on the road but had a special milestone on the line. He picked up his 100th big league save with Laureano swung through a full-count splinker.

The Phillies are back to the .500 mark with Aaron Nola getting the ball later tonight against Padres breakout starter Randy Vásquez. It’s probably as good a matchup for Nola as he will have this season.

(Yes, well aware how late this recap is. I’m very sorry, Ethan.)

Yankees prospects: Week 9 minor league recap

TAMPA BAY, - MARCH 16: Henry LaLane #58 of the New York Yankees pitches during the 2024 Spring Breakout Game between the Toronto Blue Jays and the New York Yankees at George M. Steinbrenner Field on Saturday, March 16, 2024 in Tampa Bay, Florida. (Photo by Mike Carlson/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

It was another story-driven week on the farm. Prominent relievers earned promotions all around, while top prospects started getting going. A few prominent starters struggled, while others shone. And even better, for the first time all year, nobody had a losing week!

Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders

Record: 26-23, 3.5 GB in the International League East after a 3-3 week against the Lehigh Valley Iron Pigs (Phillies)

Run differential: +24

Coming up: Home vs. Worcester Red Sox (Red Sox)

It was a topsy-turvy week for the RailRiders, who played just about every type of ballgame this week. They blew ‘em out on Tuesday, got blown out on Wednesday, and then split four consecutive one-run games to end the week. It’s the splittiest six-game split that you’ll ever see.

In Scranton, we’ve seen a lot of pop this past week, as guys like Yanquiel Fernandez, Seth Brown, and Ernesto Martinez Jr. traded big swings all week long. Marco Luciano was placed on the injured list midweek, but was replaced by Double-A call-up Tyler Hardman, who’s finally moving up after four years in Somerset. It was a better week for George Lombard Jr. (8-for-27, 7 RBI, 3 XBH), who picked up some big hits along the way as his peripherals continue to look excellent, but he’s still running into bad luck.

Brendan Beck made a pair of starts and allowed five runs in 10.1 innings in an unpleasant week for the rotation. Veterans Adam Kloffenstein and Dom Hamel struggled considerably, but they weren’t alone in bad weeks. Carlos Lagrange continued an up-and-down season by allowing five runs in five innings, while Elmer Rodríguez had a fascinating stat line: 3 IP, 2 H, 5 R (4 ER), 6 BB, 8 K. Not a lot of balls in play, huh.

Yovanny Cruz rode the Scranton Shuffle this week, but the big headline was the return of Eric Reyzelman to the level after a nightmare 2025 season prompted a reset in Somerset. He tossed two shutout innings on Friday, sitting 96 on the fastball while maxing out at 98.1.

Players of Note:

Oswaldo Cabrera: .212/.300/.333, 4 HR, 23 RBI, 11 XBH, 4 SB, 66 wRC+
George Lombard Jr.: .198/.358/.233, 9 RBI, 4 SB, 74 wRC+ (109 PA)
Brendan Beck: 3-2, 4.42 ERA, 4.24 FIP, 1.09 WHIP, 18.5 K-BB% (53 IP)
Carlos Lagrange: 0-2, 4.78 ERA, 4.93 FIP, 1.42 WHIP, 16.8 K-BB% (43.1 IP)
Elmer Rodríguez: 1-3, 2.48 ERA, 3.38 FIP, 1.21 WHIP, 16.5 K-BB% (29 IP)

Double-A Somerset Patriots

Record: 23-22, 1.5 GB in the Eastern League Northeast after a 4-2 week against the Chesapeake BaySox (Orioles)

Run differential: +49

Coming up: Home vs. Lehigh Valley IronPigs (Phillies)

Talk about a comeback. Chesapeake won the first two games of the series by scoring 18 combined runs, but Somerset rallied back to win four straight behind some excellent pitching. They allowed just five total runs in the final 36 innings.

While Hardman’s promotion continued to eat away at a hitting core that’s been among the best in all of Minor League Baseball to start the season, the holdovers continued to rake. Jace Avina has fully shaken off an early slump with an OPS over 1.000 in May, Garrett Martin leads the Eastern League in home runs, and DJ Gladney has re-emerged as a quality contact bat. The depth has really suffered from Lombard, Hardman, and Luciano’s promotions, but they’re still one of the best in the league.

After a rough start to the week, the rotation rounded into shape. Xavier Rivas continued a strong strikeout season (43 in 27.1 IP) with seven in 3.1 innings, Kyle Carr struck out eight in 5.1 shutout innings, and Chase Chaney tossed six scoreless innings. The struggles came with Jack Cebert (3.2 IP, 2 R, 6 K), Cade Smith (1+ IP, 4 R), and Trent Sellers (4 IP, 3 R).

Reyzelman’s promotion led to Chris Veach getting his turn in Double-A after a terrific start to the season. The only rough spot of the week for the bullpen came with Ben Grable’s blown save on Tuesday, but he rebounded with 1.2 scoreless innings on Friday. Will Brian and Chris Kean got back on the saddle after rough weeks last week as well.

Players of Note:

Jace Avina: .259/.340/.548, 12 HR, 32 RBI, 24 XBH, 133 wRC+
Garrett Martin: .266/.326/.572, 15 HR, 39 RBI, 8 SB, 133 wRC+
Coby Morales: .264/.341/.485, 9 HR, 37 RBI, 11 SB, 119 wRC+
Hayden Merda:
0-0, 2.29 ERA, 2.00 FIP, 1.12 WHIP, 32.9 K-BB% (19.2 IP)
Jack Cebert (HV/Somerset): 4-1, 2.61 ERA, 4.10 FIP, 0.92 WHIP, 21.9 K-BB% (38 IP)

High-A Hudson Valley Renegades

Record: 21-23, 8 GB in the South Atlantic League North after a 3-3 week against the Brooklyn Cyclones (Mets)

Run differential: +11

Coming up: Home vs. Bowling Green Hot Rods (Rays)

Hudson Valley’s inconsistent offense continues to struggle, being shut out twice. They put up seven runs in all three of their wins, including both in the Thursday doubleheader, but had nothing for the three losses.

Eric Genther finally got his power stroke going, blasting a big grand slam in a big bounce-back week. Outside of him and Josue Gonzalez continuing to be a revelation offensively, there’s not a whole lot of standouts, with Kaeden Kent’s strong start slowly tapering off. The son of a Hall of Famer is still hitting almost .300 with strong plate discipline metrics, but he seems to still need a bit more time at the level.

Bryce Cunningham got back on track on Tuesday to start the week, allowing one run in 4.2 innings as he continued to build up. Luis Serna pitched into the sixth but allowed five runs, and both Franyer Herrera and Sean Paul Liñan had uneven starts, but the two stars this week were Rory Fox and Allen Facundo.

Fox tossed the best start of his brief pro career, bouncing back after a rough first few starts by tossing a seven-inning complete game shutout with eight strikeouts. Facundo, on the other hand, tossed five innings and allowed three runs, but made up for it with a staggering 13 strikeouts, marking a new career high.

Veach’s terrific start to the season got rewarded with a promotion, so he left behind the likes of Tony Rossi and Jack Sokol, who continue to pitch well. Returning from rehab to bolster said pen is Bryce Warrecker, who was terrific at this level last season and tossed nine shutout innings in his rehab assignment in Tampa before being activated early last week.

Players of Note:

Kaeden Kent: .298/.368/.421, 3 HR, 22 RBI, 13 XBH, 13 SB, 111 wRC+
Core Jackson: .248/.354/.376, 2 HR, 11 RBI, 11 SB, 98 wRC+
Luis Serna: 2-1, 2.79 ERA, 2.76 FIP, 1.01 WHIP, 21.7 K-BB% (38.2 IP)
Bryce Cunningham: 13.1 IP, 7 H, 8 ER, 10 BB, 19 K
Sean Paul Liñan: 1-5, 4.18 ERA, 3.42 FIP, 1.14 WHIP, 25.7 K-BB% (32.1 IP)

Single-A Tampa Tarpons

Record: 22-23, 4 GB in the Florida State League West after a 3-3 week against the Clearwater Threshers (Phillies)

Run differential: -20

Coming up: Away @ Daytona Beach Tortugas (Reds)

After a Tuesday postponement and getting swept on Wednesday in a doubleheader, the Tarpons picked themselves up to win three of the last four games of the series in an overall solid week.

Jackson Lovich (7-for-20, 4 HR, 7 RBI, 2 BB) continued to be one of the hottest hitters on the planet, spearheading an offense that continues to improve with a three-homer game on Tuesday. Hans Montero has also been fantastic at the plate, blasting three bombs of his own. The 22-year-old should get a call-up sooner rather than later. Bryce Martin-Grudzielanek’s strong month, coupled with the juice that some FCL call-ups have given them in the last few weeks, has made this a sneakily exciting offense with the potential for more in the coming month or two.

It wasn’t a pleasant start to the week for the rotation, as the rehabbing Chase Hampton (3 IP, 3 R) scuffled, Justin West allowed four runs in a gritty six innings, and Mac Heuer continued to falter with his command, but things rebounded later in the week with a terrific start by Henry Lalane (more on him later) and Tyler Boudreau (5.1 IP, 0 R, 5 K).

The bullpen has seen better weeks. Saturday was an absolute catastrophe, as they wasted Lalane’s brilliant start with a six-run blowup in the ninth off the team’s best reliever, Pedro Rodriguez. The strongest weeks came from the likes of Brennan Stuprich, Greyson Carter, and Jose M. Rodriguez.

Players of Note:

Jackson Lovich: .302/.384/.633, 11 HR, 32 RBI, 22 XBH, 11 SB, 164 wRC+
Bryce Martin-Grudzielanek: .262/.373/.383, 4 HR, 17 RBI, 15 SB, 113 wRC+
Hans Montero: .278/.399/.549, 6 HR, 26 RBI, 19 XBH, 12 SB, 151 wRC+
Tyler Boudreau: 0-1, 2.94 ERA, 3.17 FIP, 1.07 WHIP, 22.2 K-BB% (33.2 IP)
Henry Lalane: 0-1, 4.97 ERA, 3.42 FIP, 1.54 WHIP, 13.0 K-BB% (25.1 IP)

FCL Yankees

Record: 9-8, 5 GB in the FCL North after a 3-2 week.

Run differential: +21

The story of the rookie ball Yanks has been their offense. Wilberson De Pena has been absolutely unreal to start this season, which makes Oswald Peraza’s hot start to 2026 a bit easier to stomach with the Yankees’ infield woes. He had seven RBI on Saturday and should be in Single-A in the next several weeks. One thing to watch with the offense is that Jose Castro, who started on fire through five games, hasn’t played in 10 days.

On the pitching side, Omar Gonzalez continued to be exceptional as he pushes for a full-season promotion, while Sabier Marte continues to struggle. We didn’t see any of Thatcher Hurd this week, but considering he’s getting promoted to Tampa today, that’s not a cause for concern.

Their path to the postseason would go through the FCL Blue Jays, whom they blew a lead to on Sunday afternoon. It would also help if they could take care of business against the other two struggling teams in the division more often.

Players of Note:

Wilberson De Pena: .379/.438/.727, 5 HR, 25 RBI, 12 XBH, 9 SB, 187 wRC+ (73 PA)
Jose Castro: .345/.568/.621, 2 HR, 8 RBI, 10 SB, 199 wRC+ (44 PA)
Richard Matic: .333/.481/.460, 6 XBH, 8 RBI, 7 SB, 132 wRC+ (81 PA)
Thatcher Hurd: 11.1 IP, 6 H, 2 ER, 5 BB, 12 K
Omar Gonzalez: 16 IP, 8 H, 5 ER, 3 BB, 21 K

Prospect of the Week: Henry Lalane

Weekly Stats: 5.1 IP, 3 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 8 K, 15 whiffs
Season Stats: 0-1, 4.97 ERA, 3.42 FIP, 1.54 WHIP, 13.0 K-BB% (25.1 IP)

It has not been a fun season, let alone three for Lalane, whose prospect stock has been steadily declining since his terrific two seasons in the Dominican Summer League. Injuries have limited him to just 53.1 combined innings from 2023-25, where he’s struggled to generate whiffs and put the ball in the strike zone, aside from a 21-inning sample back in 2023.

To start 2026, he allowed four runs in seven innings across two starts before briefly going on the injured list. Upon returning on April 26th, he’s had his moments, but he’s allowed some hard contact along the way, culminating in allowing nine hits in 4.2 innings last week against Dunedin.

This week, he did something he hasn’t done since July 2022 down in the D.R., and that’s pitching into the sixth inning. He managed his pitch count, racked up a career-high eight strikeouts, and shut down the Clearwater offense for 5.1 innings. His bullpen ultimately ruined his outing, but it was extremely encouraging.

What might’ve been more encouraging was the pitch data. He had an even four-pitch mix between his fastball, changeup, slider, and sinker. 14 of his 15 whiffs came on 34 combined pitches between his changeup and slider, as he kept opposing hitters off balance with his four-seamer, which had more life on it than we’ve seen in years. He sat 94 on it and finished off the fifth by touching 97 on the radar gun, showing the tantalizing velocity he displayed earlier in his pro career.

This Cavaliers team was never serious

May 23, 2026; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Cleveland Cavaliers guard Donovan Mitchell (45) huddles around teammates during the fourth quarter against the New York Knicks during game three of the eastern conference finals for the 2026 NBA playoffs at Rocket Arena. Mandatory Credit: Scott Galvin-Imagn Images | Scott Galvin-Imagn Images

Game 1 was a confirmation of a cultural problem. The Cleveland Cavaliers surrendered a 22-point lead in the fourth quarter, not gradually, not begrudgingly, but as if they had simply decided to stop. The New York Knicks didn’t steal the game so much as Cleveland left it unlocked, engine running, keys in the ignition.

What followed wasn’t a series. It was a confirmation.

The unbothered problem

All season, the word that kept surfacing around this team was resilient. They won back-to-back Game 7s, against Toronto, against Detroit, and the narratives wrote themselves. Mentally tough. Unbreakable. Built different.

But resilience and indifference are separated by a razor’s edge, and against New York, Cleveland spent four games on the wrong side of it. The same equanimity that helped them claw back from deficits became a kind of emotional flatness; an inability to register the weight of the moment when the moment demanded urgency. They twice held 3–2 series leads in earlier rounds and failed to close. No one seemed particularly alarmed. That should have been the warning sign.

Game 7 victories hid problems in plain sight. If you want to view both those series objectively, the Cavaliers struggled to close out teams that were much more flawed than a New York team that wasn’t going to succumb to anything but Cleveland’s best punch.

Roster construction and coaching will get their due; there is plenty to excavate there. But before any of that: the Cavaliers, for long stretches of this series, did not appear to be trying as hard as the other team. The Knicks ran. They dove. They celebrated. New York played like a city starving for something; Cleveland played like a team that had already made peace with however things turned out.

After every loss, the message was almost chalked up to an unlucky coin flip. The Cavaliers would convey all the lip service to make one think they took the loss to heart. Sure of the fact that this game would be put behind them, not far enough to not draw conclusions and improvements from, only to play identically both in scheme and effort, resulting in the same narrative for four straight games.

Game 4 was probably the most telling for me of where this Cavaliers team was, mentally and physically drained. All you want as a fan is to see your team fight for pride on its home court. Especially when your opponent can celebrate and lift hardware in front of your fans. It seemed the Cavaliers gave their “best” in the first eight minutes. When the Knicks continued to pile on the points and run in transition, that was the kiss of death for the Cavaliers’ season.

Hustle metrics, second-chance points, deflections by nearly every measure of effort that can be quantified, the Cavaliers came up short. That is not a coaching problem or a roster problem first. That is a pride problem.

James Harden absorbs a disproportionate share of the blame in these moments; always has, likely always will. Some of it is fair. Some of it is lazy. But pinning this collapse on any single player lets the other fourteen off a hook they should not be allowed to wriggle from. This was a collective failure. The Cavaliers were a soulless corpse long before anyone’s shot selection or defensive positioning became the story.

The question facing Cleveland this offseason isn’t whether to tweak the roster at the margins. It’s whether this team, in its current form, has the capacity for genuine desperation; for the kind of hunger that makes a Game 3 and 4 blowouts feel like a wound rather than a footnote. Until they can answer that honestly, the Game 1 collapses will keep coming.

If the Cavaliers are to get where they want to go, they need to realize the culture they built is one where contentment comes too easily. A culture where counter punches aren’t expected and where, once a lead is built, a loss can never follow. I think the poison from this mentality trickled from the top down, including coaching, stars like Donovan Mitchell and Harden down to the role players.

It’s an organizational issue, and if the Cavaliers want to become serious, they need to show it on the floor and not at the podium.