White Sox vs. Yankees prediction: Odds, recent stats, trends, and best bets for June 16

It’s a matchup of division leaders in the Bronx tonight as the Yankees open a three-game set against the White Sox. New York has won six of its last seven and sits atop the American League East with a record of 43-27. Maybe the biggest surprise in baseball, Chicago (38-32) takes the field tonight having won four of their last five and in first in the AL Central. Each team was impressive over the weekend as the Yankees took two of three against Toronto and the Sox did the same against the Dodgers.

 

This is the first meeting of the season between these teams, and it sets up as a legitimate measuring-stick series especially for Chicago as the Yankees boast one of the league’s top offenses (averaging over 5.1 runs per game) and pitching staffs (3.32 ERA).

Tonight’s opener features a duel of elite right-handers:

  • Yankees: Gerrit Cole (RHP)
    • 1–1, 2.45 ERA, 1.05 WHIP through four starts this season
    • His velocity and control have returned after missing last season and the start of this one due to Tommy John surgery.

 

  • White Sox: Davis Martin (RHP)
    • 9–2, 2.41 ERA, 1.10 WHIP, 79 K in 78.1 IP
    • The surprise Cy Young candidate has blossomed into the ace of the Chicago staff ranking among league leaders in wins and strikeouts.

 

New York’s offense has been just fine without Aaron Judge. The team leads baseball with 102 home runs and the American League with 358 runs scored. Ben Rice has been the catalyst with a .293 batting average including 19 home runs, and 47 RBIs. Over their last 10 games, the Yankees are hitting .240 with 15 home runs.

 

The White Sox do not possess the power of the Yankees in their lineup. They have relied primarily on contact posting a .241 batting average and a .325 OBP (Top 5 in baseball). Miguel Vargas does offer some power in the lineup, however, with 16 home runs this season.

 

The Yankees on paper are the stronger team but the Sox are riding high following the Dodgers’ series.

 

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: White Sox vs. Yankees

  • Date: Tuesday, June 16, 2026
  • Time: 7:05PM EST
  • Site: Yankee Stadium
  • City: New York, NY
  • Network/Streaming: MLB.TV, CSN, YES

 

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: White Sox vs. Yankees

The latest odds as of Tuesday courtesy of DraftKings:

  • Moneyline: Chicago White Sox (+123), New York Yankees (-149)
  • Spread: White Sox +1.5 (-175), Yankees -1.5 (+144)
  • Total: 8.0 runs

 

Starting Pitchers and their Stats: White Sox vs. Yankees for June 16

  • White Sox: Davis Martin
    Season Totals: 78.1 IP, 9-2, 2.41 ERA, 1.10 WHIP, 79K, 17 BB
  • Yankees: Gerrit Cole
    Season Totals: 22.0 IP, 1-1, 2.45 ERA, 1.05 WHIP, 18K, 6 BB

Who’s Hot? Who’s Not! White Sox vs. Yankees

  • Tristan Peters -2-9 against the Dodgers and 2-14 over his last 5 games
  • Miguel Vargas – has hit safely in 10 of 11 games in June (14-44)
  • Chase Meidroth - 13-for-38 (.342) over his last 10 games
  • Jazz Chisholm Jr. - 3 HR, 9 RBI over his last 10 games
  • Clay Bellinger – 2-14 this past weekend in Toronto
  • Jose Caballero – 5-16 over his last 4 games with 1 HR and 5 RBIs

 

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: White Sox vs. Yankees

  • The Yankees are 35-35 on the Run Line this season
  • The White Sox are 41-29 on the Run Line this season
  • The OVER has cashed 41 times in Chicago’s 70 games this season (41-27-2)
  • The OVER has cashed 32 times in the Yankees’ 70 games this season (32-34-4)

 

Expert picks & predictions: White Sox vs. Yankees

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 today’s game between the Yankees and the White Sox:

  • Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the White Sox on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: Rotoworld Bet is recommending a play on the White Sox on the Run Line.
  • Total: Rotoworld Bet is staying away from a play on the Game Total of 8.0

 

Follow our experts on socials to keep up with all the latest content from the staff:

  • Jay Croucher (@croucherJD)
  • Drew Dinsick (@whale_capper)
  • Vaughn Dalzell (@VmoneySports)
  • Trysta Krick (@Trysta_Krick)

Do the Orioles have a Gunnar Henderson problem?

Jun 6, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Baltimore Orioles shortstop Gunnar Henderson (2) waits for play to resume against the Toronto Blue Jays in the sixth inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images | Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images

It was a rough weekend for Orioles star shortstop Gunnar Henderson. With two outs in the bottom of the 9th Saturday, Gunnar took a fastball to the ribs from Padres reliever Ron Marinaccio, presumably as retribution for Xander Bogaerts being hit in the head by a pitch earlier in the game. That moment sparked a bizarre reaction from manager Craig Albernaz postgame, as the skipper seemed to defend the intentions of the San Diego reliever more than his player. Things didn’t get much better Sunday, as Henderson made two errors in the 9th that allowed an insurance run to score in another loss to the Padres.

His struggles against the Padres are not part of a developing situation with the former All-Star, but the continuation of a season filled with frustration and disappointment. The soon-to-be 25-year-old is on pace to set career-worsts in batting average, on-base percentage, slugging percentage, and walk rate while seeing noticeable dips in his average exit velocity and hard-hit rate.

That’s not to say he’s been an outright bad player. His .715 OPS is right around league average. His OPS+ of 100 is exactly at league average. Despite his obvious struggles at the plate, he is still only two behind Pete Alonso for the Orioles’ home run lead, is tied for second on the team with 68 hits and is third with 34 RBIs. He’s still on pace for a bWAR around 3.0, which would be well below his career rate of 6+ bWAR per season, but still make him an above-average starter.

But as we near the halfway point of the 2026 season, it’s clear that his performance hasn’t been good enough to elevate this Orioles team above mediocrity. And unlike many of his teammates, the shortstop doesn’t seem to be making significant strides as the season goes on. On May 11th, when we last spoke on this site about Gunnar’s underwhelming performance, the Orioles’ country boy was slashing .211/.269/.421 (.690 OPS) with 9 HR, 21 RBI and 56 Ks in 171 ABs.

In 32 games since then, we’ve seen the Orioles’ presumed best player pick up his game somewhat. In that time frame, he’s slashing .250/.333/.414 (.747 OPS) with 5 HR, 13 RBI and 24 Ks in 128 ABs. The strikeout rate falling from just shy of 33% to just below 19% is easily the stars’ biggest improvement over the last month or so. But even those improved numbers would represent career lows in average and slugging and a near career low in on-base percentage.

During that same time period, we’ve seen several of his fellow Orioles take significant leaps in their offensive output. From May 11th onward, Pete Alonso is slashing 301/.364/.520 (.885 OPS) with 8 HRs and a 22% strikeout rate. The much-maligned Coby Mayo is slashing .241/.310/.519 (.829 OPS) with 6 HRs and a 37% strikeout rate. Colton Cowser has also begun to turn his season around since the middle of May, hitting .263 with a .897 OPS, 7 HRs and a 29% strikeout rate.

This is not to blame Gunnar for all of the Orioles problems, nor to say that good teams can’t survive cool patches from their stars. If you look around the league, you can find plenty of examples of teams finding success with underwhelming performances from star players. Cal Raleigh and Julio Rodriguez are struggling in Seattle and the Mariners still find themselves atop the AL West. The Braves are the best team in baseball despite superstar Ronald Acuña Jr. battling through a hamstring injury that’s cost him 18 games this season.

However, the Orioles’ path to success was meant to go through the route of an elite offense that props up an average to above-average pitching staff. After their recent offensive upturn, the O’s currently sit 8th in MLB at 4.7 runs/game. Baltimore is 14th in batting average at .243 and 11th in OPS at .728.

And while the offensive numbers are certainly good, they are also distinctly not great, and having a great offense seems to be the only thing that can propel the O’s to the postseason. Currently, the Orioles sit two games out of the final Wild Card spot in the American League (three games in the loss column).

Without changing anything about their pitching staff, Bill James’ Pythagorean Theorem of Baseball says the O’s would have to score about half a run more per game to make up the difference between them and the Rangers/A’s for the final AL playoff spot. That increase would also catapult them from 8th to 4th, just behind the Nationals, Dodgers and Brewers, and just ahead of the Yankees.

And while, yes, Adley Rutschman continuing his recent hot streak, or Jackson Holliday finding some measure of consistency, would undoubtedly upgrade this offense, the biggest missing piece right now is a fully operational Gunnar Henderson.

The West Coast road trip that starts today should provide Henderson with an opportunity to show how locked in he can be going forward. It starts with a rematch against the Seattle Mariners, a team that Gunnar has a .845 career OPS against, but which held him to a 2-for-14 series last week at Camden Yards. The O’s then travel to the two-time defending champion Dodgers, a team that has stymied Henderson to the tune of a .546 career OPS. Make it past LA and he heads to Anaheim with his 1.203 career OPS against the Angels—his best mark against any single opponent. All three series should offer opportunities for him to continue to make adjustments against tough pitching and build confidence at the plate.

With 89 games left to play, the story of the 2026 season is far from complete for both Gunnar Henderson and the Orioles. But more than anyone, Baltimore needs their best player and face of the franchise to play like his best self if they want to improve upon their current 13.5% odds to make it to the postseason.

How are we feeling after the first All-Star voting totals were released?

Yesterday MLB released the first update of the voting totals for next month’s All-Star game which, if you haven’t heard, will be hosted at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia. We still have a lot of baseball to get through before we arrive to the Midsummer Classic, but the first vote totals paint a pretty good picture for the hometown Phillies as far as how many representatives will take the home field.

If voting ended today, Brandon Marsh would be a starter on the NL All-Star team. Obviously, it doesn’t, but it’s very encouraging to see Marsh’s fantastic season so far being rewarded with the recognition it deserves. He seems to be a safe bet to be at the game in some capacity. Ditto Kyle Schwarber, who in almost all likelihood will not pass Shohei Ohtani in votes for the NL designated hitter and therefore won’t start but looks likely to be the NL’s reserve DH as far and away the second most vote getter. Elsewhere, Bryce Harper is currently third in voting for first baseman with a decent gap between Matt Olson and Freddie Freeman ahead of him, but it’s not out of the question that the gap could be closed somewhat, as Harper’s numbers are either on par or superior to the other two. It’s possible he ends up as a reserve or a replacement.

After that, things get strange. Alec Bohm and Bryson Stott are both second at their positions in voting despite their poor starts to the season. Justin Crawford and Adolis Garcia are ahead of such players as Pete Crow-Armstrong and Jackson Chourio. Trea Turner, despite being one of the worst qualified hitters in the sport so far, is fourth in voting for NL shortstops. Of course, much of this is Phillies fans stuffing the ballot for the hometown team, but it’s an almost certainty that no one from this group will make the roster unless something drastic changes or Philadelphia commits to the bit.

So, now that we’ve seen the first voting update, how are we feeling about the NL vote leaders so far? How are we feeling about the Phillies possible representatives? Keep in mind that this of course does not include pitchers, of which the Phillies should have at least one nomination in Cristopher Sánchez. But still, these vote totals so far bode well for the Phillies chances of having multiple representatives for their home All-Star game.

Outfielder Brett Callahan is breaking out in Erie

BRADENTON, FL - MARCH 20: Brett Callahan #58 of the Detroit Tigers hits a single in the seventh inning during the game between the Detroit Tigers and the Pittsburgh Pirates at LECOM Park on Friday, March 20, 2026 in Bradenton, Florida. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Outfielder Brett Callahan has been an interesting though unheralded Detroit Tigers’ prospect for a few years now. Initially, he caught our eye with good pull power and a strong throwing arm. Over the last few seasons, his complete game has really come together. After a modest start in his Double-A debut this spring, he’sreally caught fire over the last month. Callahan has a strong enough all-around game, the kind of the Tigers sorely lack in their outfield, that if he even develops into an average hitter he’s going to be a pretty valuable. His speed and defensive ability lower the bar a bit, and at the same time the 24-year-old is now tearing up the Eastern League pretty well.

The Tigers selected Callahan in the 13th round of the 2023 draft. He played his college ball at St. Joseph’s University, a relatively small Jesuit run private college near Philadelphia. The Tigers have seemingly scouted smaller colleges, and the northeast in general, more than most MLB teams in recent years, and it has paid some dividends. They landed Callahan for just $197,500, and got a very good deal.

The left-handed hitter posted a solid full season debut in Single-A ball in 2024. His numbers didn’t leap off the page, and for a relative unknown on draft day, it takes a lot to get some attention. It didn’t help that a dislocated finger and a leg injury shortened his season. Still, he hit seven homers in 62 games with an 8.8 percent walk rate and an acceptable 21.2 percent strikeout rate, slashing .276/359/.439 while stealing 20 bases. That, combined with the built-in loft and pull tendencies in his swing got our attention here.

A quad injury in 2025 made for another somewhat abbreviated campaign, but he advanced to High-A West Michigan and remained productive despite being a little more limited in the speed department. His strikeout and walk rates moved just slightly in the wrong directions, but he still hit nine homers in 55 games, slashing .259/.316/.473, good for a 123 wRC+ and was clearly slowed by the injury a while.

That kept him enough on the radar that we ranked him 26th in the system with a 40+ grade over this past offseason. However, he still was unnoticed by most of the national prospect sites. His “pedigree” as it were, along with the injuries and an aggressive approach at the plate despite decent K-BB numbers, just never got him on the radar.

Things changed this spring, as Callahan made a few trips over to the major league side of spring training camp with the Tigers and did damage. Clearly healthy, running well, and with a little more muscle on his 6’0” 195 pound frame, Callahan launched a pair of homers in Grapefruit League action, as he and fellow Erie SeaWolves hitter, 2B/SS John Peck, both made an impression as more mature, physical players showing some signs of breaking out into really legitimate prospect territory.

That impression has proved accurate. Callahan now has 12 homers in 55 games, and while UPMC Park is a bit of a launching pad, the exit velocities have been strong. Even more importantly, Callahan has improved his plate discipline, walking 13.9 percent of the time against a very reasonable 20 percent strikeout rate despite the difficulty of the toughest leap in competition prospects face until they hit the big leagues. He’s hitting .278/.388/.527 and has collected 20 stolen bases. The Double-A rule allowing only one disengagement, rather than two as in the majors, has probably helped with that as fellow SeaWolves Peyton Graham and Seth Stephenson are both racking up huge stolen base totals as well, but Callahan has above average to plus speed, and that translates to covering quite a bit of ground in the outfield as well.

What really ties this all together is that Callahan isn’t just some wild swinging masher bound to flame out in Triple-A or the bigs. He’s really put together a much more disciplined approach and is chasing less and less, despite the fact that he will absolutely take his hacks when he sees something he likes. Despite the aggression, his swing is fairly compact as well, so he’s not as vulnerable to getting started too early the way many big swinging left-handed power hitters are. Even better, Callahan’s good speed and excellent arm strength and accuracy translate into a future as a pretty good right fielder. Even as a future role player, he has the well-rounded game to contribute even during cold stretches at the plate.

I’ve jokingly referred to Callahan as Kerry Carpenter 2.0 for a while now, and though he’s unlikely to be quite as dangerous a hitter as Carpenter at the major league level, the defense and base stealing ability give him dimensions to his game that Carpenter has never had to offer. And possibly the run he’s on says that a true breakout is underway that could give the Tigers the whole package.

Callahan has mashed five home runs over his last eight games alone, striking out just four times in that span against six walks. He’s trimmed his swinging strike rate down 2.5 percent to a pretty manageable 13.5 percent despite the tough leap in competition this season. His progress now bears close watch, as he’s angling toward a promotion to Triple-A Toledo sometime around the All-Star break, when the Tigers usually do most of their midseason promotions.

As you might expect for a left-handed power hitter with loft in his swing and pull tendencies, Callahan does struggle somewhat with left-handed pitching. He’s getting his first taste of consistently good left-handed pitchers at Double-A, and he’s holding his own with a .786 OPS, but his .983 OPS against right-handed pitching speaks to a likely future role as the strong side of a right field platoon.

Callahan holds a 1.274 OPS overall in June, so he is clearly on one heck of a tear. Whether he can sustain it into July remains to be seen, but he has clearly improved quite a bit. He’s not going to crash the gates and end up on top 100 lists this offseason unless he keeps it going the rest of the year, but all signs point to a developing hitter who already has the speed, arm strength, and defensive chops to be a valuable all-around contributor.

If you like an underdog story in the vein of Carpenter, or Keider Montero, Brett Callahan is your guy right now. His chase and strikeout rates are fine for the Double-A level, but he projects to a low average hitter who walks some and ideally hits for average power. With his all-around game, including the ability to play some center field, that’s enough to make him an average player. And if it all comes together with the bat Tigers fans are going to be very pleased with the results.

Tuesday Morning Texas Rangers Update

Jun 15, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Texas Rangers left fielder Wyatt Langford (36) looks on from second base as his stolen base play is under review during the second inning against the Minnesota Twins at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images | Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

Good morning.

Shawn McFarland checks out what we’ve learned about the Texas Rangers in recent days as they continue on a demanding stretch in June.

Evan Grant writes that the Rangers suffered through the latest of the most prevalent kind of Rangers loss in the series opener against Minnesota.

MLB dot com’s Jared Greenspan breaks down the first phase of All-Star voting and I guess here is where I admit that I don’t know how the All-Star voting works anymore.

Grant notes that apparently Ezequiel Duran is just about Texas’ best hope in the voting unless I guess like 900,000 of you want to start writing in Nicky Lopez.

Kennedi Landry writes that the Rangers are hosting rehabbing top prospect Sebastian Walcott in Arlington to let him hang out in a big league environment.

Grant writes that Walcott is on target to make his season debut sometime in late July as the young shortstop begins to ramp up baseball activities.

Jeff Wilson notes that Corey Seager landed on the seven-day concussion IL but could return after the series against Minnesota if he’s feeling better.

And, Grant writes that the Rangers could see a couple of World Series-winning lefties return this summer with Jordan Montgomery and Cody Bradford showing progress in their rehab.

Have a nice day!

Will Drake Baldwin pick up right where he left off?

ATLANTA, GA - MAY 17: Drake Baldwin #30 of the Atlanta Braves makes contact with the baseball during the MLB game between the Boston Red Sox and the Atlanta Braves on May 17, 2026 at TRUIST Park in Atlanta, GA. (Photo by Jeff Robinson/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

I was writing up the biweekly update last night, and Baldwin’s absence in the hitter tables and charts was a glaring omission. The other times, I’d write something like, “Oh yeah, Drake Baldwin is otherworldly, again.” But for the first half of June, no Drake Baldwin.

At the moment, Baldwin has an insane .403 wOBA / .418 xwOBA in 216 PAs. He played as the DH enough to drop his overall defensive value into the marginally-negative, but still managed 2.1 fWAR in those 216 PAs, which is an fWAR/600 pace of close to 6. Since he’ll be playing catcher more (a lot more) going forward, he could easily push that threshold… if he keeps hitting.

But, will he? A wRC+ above 150 is a tall order. He was already a revelation with a 125 wRC+ last year, and didn’t just hit the ground running in 2026, but rather pulverized the terrain and all opposing pitching on it. Here’s a crazy stat: his lowest wRC+ in any calendar week was 101, while he had three weeks above 200.

All that said, he did miss some time with an oblique injury, and had just one rehab start due to a rainout (in which, of course, he homered).

So, is he going to return and do the same crazy stuff he was doing before the injury? Or, is there going to be an adjustment period and/or regression to something perhaps resembling 2025 rather than 2026?

Cubs 5, Rockies 4: Pete Crow-Armstrong hits for the cycle

One thing is for sure. You cannot say you were not entertained by the Cubs’ 5-4 win over the Rockies Monday evening at Wrigley Field.

It had a little bit of everything — some solid pitching, some blown leads, Pete Crow-Armstrong’s cycle and and in the end, the Cubs’ ninth walk-off win of 2026 on a bases-loaded walk drawn by Matt Shaw.

Let’s rewind to the beginning.

Shōta Imanaga continued his good pitching over the Rockies. He allowed a leadoff single, then retired the next three Rockies in the first inning.

Then PCA hit his second leadoff home run in the last three days [VIDEO].

That one took four pitches instead of the one pitch it took for him to do it Saturday. And that ball was crushed! [VIDEO]

Cubs leadoff homer facts from BCB’s JohnW53:

Pete Crow-Armstrong’s homer was his second in three games as the Cubs’ first batter of the game. The first was at San Francisco.

He is the 39th Cub since 1876 to do it at least once at home and on the road.

The Cubs have hit 137 first-batter homers at home and 130 on the road, for a total of 267.

Jimmy “Pony” Ryan and Rick Monday hit the most at home, 12. Alfonso Soriano is a distant third, with five, followed by Ian Happ and Corey Patterson, with four.

Soriano is the leader in total first-batter homers, with 22. Ryan had 19; Monday, 17; Dexter Fowler, 12; and Abner Dalrymple, Happ and Brian McRae, eight. No one else had more than five.

Imanaga allowed a two-out single to Jake McCarthy in the second — and then picked him off [VIDEO].

The game stayed at 1-0 Cubs into the sixth. The Cubs had several scoring chances, mainly because PCA was putting together his cycle. He tripled leading off the third [VIDEO].

Unfortunately, he was stranded. The same thing was PCA’s, and the team’s, fate in the fifth — leadoff double, then stranded [VIDEO].

Imanaga had a run charged to his record in the sixth, and it wasn’t all his fault. He allowed a leadoff walk, then a fielder’s choice and a fly to center had him one out away from finishing six innings with a 1-0 lead. But another single put runners on first and second with two out, and Craig Counsell replaced Imanaga with Phil Maton. I was a bit surprised, as Imanaga was at 89 pitches. But Counsell must have realized that Rockies manager Warren Schaffer would replace Ezequiel Tovar with pinch-hitter Troy Johnston and he preferred that matchup.

Unfortunately, Maton hit Johnston to load the bases and then walked Cole Carrigg to force in the tying run.

The Cubs got the lead back in the bottom of the sixth. With two out, Moisés Ballesteros walked. This triple by Matt Shaw made it 2-1 Cubs [VIDEO].

The Rockies asked for a review and as you can see in that clip, the ball was clearly fair.

PCA completed his cycle — in reverse order, the first Cub to do that! — with this leadoff single in the seventh [VIDEO].

It was the team’s first cycle since Carson Kelly’s last year against the A’s in Sacramento, and the first by a Cub (and by anyone at Wrigley Field) since Mark Grace cycled in 1993. Later this morning (at 9 a.m. CT) I’ll have a full history of Cubs cycles here. Here’s more on Cubs cycles from John:

PCA’s was 13th in franchise history, including two before Modern Era, both by Jimmy Ryan, in 1888 and 1891.

…..

No player before PCA had been picked off after completing his cycle.

On Aug. 2, 1940, Joe Cronin of the Red Sox, against the Tigers, tripled in the first and struck out in the third. He led off the fifth with a double, then was picked off on pitcher Bobo Newsom’s throw to shortstop Dick Bartell.

Jimmie Foxx, up next, homered, after which Newsom was replaced by Tom Seats. Cronin singled in the sixth and homered in the eighth to complete the cycle.
…..
After George Sisler of the Browns completed his cycle with a two-out single in the ninth inning on Aug. 13, 1921 against the Tigers, he tried to steal second and was tagged out, ending the game.

Less than a year later, on July 3, 1922, Bob Meusel of the Yankees began his cycle by singling in the first inning and was caught stealing.

No other player who hit for a cycle was nailed on a steal attempt for more than a century, until Elly
De La Cruz was out trying to steal home after his cycle-completing triple on June 23, 2023.

Here’s more on the reverse cycle:

And a bit more on reverse cycles from John:

There have been only 10 games in MLB history in which a player made a natural cycle in reverse: homer, triple, double and single in that order. 

The first two were in 1885 and 1887; the third in 1904; and only seven since 1937. None were by a Cub.

There have been exactly 400 cycles since the first, in 1882. The most recent before PCA’s was by Byron Buxton of the Twins on July 12, 2025.

Oh, yes. As John mentioned, PCA immediately got himself picked off [VIDEO].

The pickoff hurt the Cubs in that inning, because they then loaded the bases on a single by Alex Bregman and walks drawn by Michael Busch and Seiya Suzuki. But Ian Happ and Nico Hoerner struck out to end the inning.

Jacob Webb had thrown a 1-2-3 top of the seventh but gave up a leadoff single in the eighth. That brought in Caleb Thielbar, who struck out TJ Rumfield, but then issued a walk. After a fly ball to center, Carrigg smashed a three-run homer.

That, I am certain, brought out the sad thoughts in you that most of us have been thinking for a month now.

But the Cubs did not give up on this game. In the bottom of the eighth, pinch-hitter Pedro Ramirez led off with a single. He wa forced at second by Shaw, and then another pinch-hitter, Michael Conforto, walked.

Both runners moved up on a wild pitch, which was important. PCA was the next hitter and he hit a line drive to right, deep enough to score Shaw to make it 4-3 [VIDEO].

The chanting of “PCA! PCA! PCA!” you hear in that clip is about the loudest I’ve ever heard it. Pretty cool.

Bregman followed with a walk, but Busch struck out to end the inning.

Daniel Palencia threw a 1-2-3 ninth, with all three outs recorded by strikeout.

That set up the Cubs’ game-winning rally, which was accomplished with only one baseball put in play. Suzuki led off with a walk. Happ hit a weak little comebacker to pitcher Juan Mejia, who threw to second — at least one out, and possibly a double play, right?

Well, nope, fortunately for the Cubs. Mejia threw the ball away and Happ was safe. Suzuki, the tying run, wound up on third.

Ramirez, who is looking like a quality MLB hitter and should be getting more playing time, singled in Suzuki to tie the game [VIDEO].

The bases remained loaded, with Happ at third representing the winning run.

Shaw drew ball four on a 3-1 pitch and the Cubs had their wacky win [VIDEO].

As I mentioned earlier, that’s now nine walk-off wins for the Cubs this year. The franchise record is 14, set in 1930 — that seems a mark this year’s Cubs might break. The MLB record for such things is 17, set by the Pirates in 1959 and matched by them in 1977.

More on the walk-off wins from the Cubs this year:

The number of walk-offs is one reason Palencia has only three saves (and no blown saves) — there just haven’t been many save opportunities! The Cubs have had only 21 save opportunities, tied for the fewest (also Red Sox, Giants, Mets) in MLB this year. The Rays and Nationals have the most with 39. The Cubs have 10 saves — three by Palencia, two by Thielbar and one each from Ben Brown, Corbin Martin, Hoby Milner, Colin Rea and Jacob Webb.

Here are Counsell’s postgame comments [VIDEO].

The Cubs, after a 7-22 run, have now won four of their last five. That’s something to build on, and it is still just mid-June.

The Cubs will go for the series win Tuesday evening at Wrigley Field. Edward Cabrera will start for the Cubs and Ryan Feltner goes for the Rockies. Game time is again 7:05 p.m. CT and TV coverage will be via Marquee Sports Network.

MLB critical of Giants players who wrote Bible verses on Pride Night caps

Landen Roupp wrote ‘Gen 9:12-16’ on his Pride cap. Photograph: Scott Marshall/AP

Major League Baseball has issued a statement critical of players who wrote Bible verses on their Pride Night hats after an incident at a San Francisco Giants game last week.

MLB celebrates Pride month during June and most teams choose a home game to acknowledge the LGBTQ community and its baseball fans. The Giants, who are based in a city with a large LGBTQ population, often make an extra effort.

However, those efforts often clash with the league’s players, many of whom come from conservative, religious backgrounds. During Friday’s game against the Chicago Cubs, Giants pitchers Landen Roupp and JT Brubaker wrote Bible verses on their Pride caps. Another Giants pitcher, Sam Hentges, chose not to wear the cap at all.

On Monday, MLB issued a statement on the subject. “The writing on the cap violates our rules, and consistent with normal practice, we have warned the players about future violations,” said MLB chief communications officer Pat Courtney.

Roupp wrote “Gen 9:12-16” on his cap. The verse contains a reference to a rainbow, one of the symbols of Pride. The verse reads in part: “Whenever the rainbow appears in the clouds, I will see it and remember the everlasting covenant between God and all living creatures of every kind on the Earth.”

He denied that his decision to write on his cap was malicious.

“There’s no hate at all. It’s just what I stand for, and what I stand on: I believe in God,” he said. “It’s just about God’s covenant and a promise that he makes to us that, you know, his faithfulness and his mercy. That’s just kind of something I believe in, and I stand firm in that. And I’m thankful we live in a country where, you know, we have the freedom to believe what we want, and express what we want.”

Hentges said he did not appreciate being told to wear the cap.

“It’s just something that I feel like I was forced to support when I don’t morally support it. There wasn’t hatred behind it. I think that’s kind of something that’s misinterpreted,” he said. “I don’t hate the LGBTQ community. It’s just something I believed and talked with teammates and family, and they supported it.”

Giants manager Tony Vitello said his players “have the freedom to do what they think is best.” However, he added that: “it’s pretty impressive how the Giants, as an organization, try and embrace the entire community. We don’t want to be divided, but you can divide it up into certain sections, if you know what I mean.”

The Giants have said they remain committed to Pride Night.

“The San Francisco Giants are proud to support Pride Night and the LGBTQ+ community. Baseball should be a place where everyone feels welcome, respected, and valued. We also respect that individuals may make personal choices about participating in team activations,” the team said in a statement on Saturday.

“We understand that the choices by individual players have caused pain and anger to many in the LGBTQ+ community and we are sorry for that. Those choices do not change our organization’s commitment to inclusion, belonging, and creating a welcoming environment for all. We remain grateful to our fans, partners, employees, players, and coaches who help make Pride Night a meaningful celebration.”

Francisco Lindor's imminent Mets return could be last, best hope to save season

Sometime next week, assuming all goes well, Francisco Lindor will finally return to the Mets' lineup.

Few teams in baseball can assume all will go well less confidently than these Mets, who watched Juan Sotoreturn from the injured list one inning only to see Lindor join it the next. But barring more painful cosmic intervention, the Mets' franchise shortstop is playing simulated games this week in New York. A short rehab assignment could follow. By even the most cautiously optimistic measures, he is close.

The Mets have patched things together in the infield without him, thanks in large part to Bo Bichette’s recent history at shortstop and Brett Baty’s obvious comfort at third. Still, Lindor’s return will not cause any quarterback controversy: he will play shortstop when he returns and Bichette will go back to third base, according to people familiar with the Mets’ plans. In that way, the left side of their infield will finally look as they intended.

Now, Lindor will likely need more days off when he first returns than he would ever take normally. In those cases, Bichette can slide back to shortstop. But what his return will do, besides adding one more All-Star quality bat to a slowly coalescing lineup, is offer the infield more options.

The man most affected by Lindor’s return will probably be Baty, who will likely find himself at third base only on days Bichette or Lindor are serving as the designated hitter. But while Baty did not find much offensive success as he was moving around the field defensively earlier this year, the Mets did prepare him for that.

So he can spell Marcus Semien at second base when the 36-year-old needs a day off, or split time at first base with fellow lefty Jared Young, allowing Carlos Mendoza to play the hot hand and keep an added, credible lefty on his bench each night.

The ideal result would seem to be something of a five-man rotation through the four spots, one that keeps veterans rested while allowing Mendoza and Co. to maximize offensive matchups nightly. With an infielder available to serve as a designated hitter on a daily basis, MJ Melendez will likely be used more as a lefty off the bench. Mark Vientos’ path to infield innings and at-bats, meanwhile, will get even steeper.

All of that should help a Mets lineup that, while far more competitive in recent weeks than it was in the beginning of the season, has reason to expect its best days are arriving soon.

Bichette is finally hitting. Soto has not stopped. Carson Benge and A.J. Ewing have navigated slumps but also continue to work counts. Young has been a revelation. One more quality at-bat each time through the lineup will almost certainly help, and the Mets could use it: they have six weeks until the trade deadline, when David Stearns and/or Steve Cohen will have to decide whether this team is worth adding to or at least, not subtracting from. Lindor’s return should give them a better sense.

Because while the Mets have suffered injuries to projected starters all year, Lindor is the only one of those players who still seems certain to contribute in some form soon. Stearns admitted that Jorge Polanco will almost certainly be limited to DH duties when he returns from the IL, though when that will be and how compromised he will be by his ankle bursitis when it happens remains to be seen. Luis Robert Jr. has finally started baseball activities, but he seems a long way from playing in actual baseball games – not to mention the Mets’ outfield of Soto, Benge, and Ewing has emerged as a bright spot without him.

So Lindor’s return effectively signifies the arrival of the long-awaited calvary, such as it is. Maybe Polanco will return in some capacity, and that will help, but it seems the Mets cannot count on that now. Maybe Clay Holmes will be back from his broken leg sometime in late August, but by then the Mets’ fate might be sealed. So Lindor’s return is their best hope. It is possible they have never needed him more.

Thoughts on a 4-2 Rangers loss

Jun 15, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Minnesota Twins first baseman Kody Clemens (2) puts out Texas Rangers left fielder Wyatt Langford (36) at first base during the sixth inning at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images | Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

Twins 4, Rangers 2

  • The Rangers did not get back to .500 on Monday.
  • It was one of those games.
  • A winnable game.
  • That was not won.
  • Particularly frustrating, as MacKenzie Gore pitched well, but had the misfortune of allowing the most momentum-shifting play in baseball in the first inning, an inning where he allowed half of the six baserunners he gave up in the game.
  • Rangers hitters made some good contact, had some hard hit balls that were caught, and ended up with just five hits.
  • When Joc Pederson hit the two run homer in the third to get the game back to 3-2, I thought, okay, things are headed in the right direction, the Rangers are going to come back.
  • The Rangers did not, in fact, come back.
  • The three run homer Josh Bell hit off of Gore in the first ended up being all the runs the Twins would need.
  • Gore, as I said, pitched well. You may wish to differ, saying that he gave up four runs, including two homers, and that is not pitching well. I get that.
  • But you allow just six baserunners, you strike out 10 batters in seven innings while walking two, you throw 70 strikes out of 102 pitches and get 17 swinging strikes…
  • That’s pretty good.
  • Its a reminder of how fine the margins in this game can be, how slight the difference between a win and a loss.
  • Gore, incidentally, got 11 swings and misses on his fastball. That’s a lot.
  • I decided to go look it up, and that’s tied for the 16th most swings and misses on a fastball (the four seam variety, to be clear — two seam fastballs are sinkers, and cut fastballs are cutters) by a pitcher in a game this season.
  • The top five are all Jacob Misiorowski games, ranging from 14 to 20 whiffs.
  • Four pitchers have 13 whiffs on their fastball in a game this year — Justin Wrobleski, Cam Schlittler, and Kyle Harrison (twice).
  • The six pitchers with 12 whiff fastball games are Jacob deGrom, Cole Ragans, Matthew Boy,d Schlittler, and Harrison (twice).
  • It was the 10th time that a pitcher has gotten 11 whiffs on their fastball in a game.
  • I’ve mentioned before that there’s a Derek Holland quality to MacKenzie Gore. There are instances where you watch him and think, he’s a legitimate TORP. And there’s instances where you watch him and think, he shouldn’t be in a major league rotation.
  • Let’s just hope Gore isn’t a hockey fan.
  • Joe Ross made his Rangers debut, with a scoreless, five pitch ninth inning, after Peyton Gray pitched the eighth.
  • That means that the Rangers have had both Ross brothers, Joe and Tyson, play in the majors for them.
  • I should go and see what other pairs of brothers have played for the Rangers.
  • MacKenzie Gore’s fastball topped out at 97.4 mph, averaging 95.9 mph. Peyton Gray touched 94.6 mph with his fastball. Joe Ross threw a fastball at 96.7 mph.
  • Jake Burger had a 104.9 mph single. Joc Pederson’s homer was 104.3 mph. Brandon Nimmo had a 103.9 mph fly out. Alejandro Osuna had a 103.2 mph GIDP. Elias Diaz had a single that was 101.2 mph.
  • Let us resume again the trek to .500.

New York Yankees vs. Chicago White Sox: Series Preview

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - JUNE 09: Braden Montgomery #24 of the Chicago White Sox celebrates his walk-off, two-run home run in the 10th inning against the Atlanta Braves in his MLB debut at Rate Field on June 09, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Jayden Mack/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Over the weekend, the Yankees went into Toronto and picked up a very nice series victory. Despite still missing Aaron Judge, they took two out of three over the Blue Jays, using big ninth inning homers from Paul Goldschmidt and Ben Rice to take both games. Now, they’re set to return home for another series that, unexpectedly, features a battle of division leaders.

Starting tonight, the Chicago White Sox are in town for a three-game series. The White Sox have been notoriously bad over the last couple seasons, including a record-setting awful 2024. Yet, they’ve gotten off to a winning start to 2026, coming in at 38-32, tied with the Guardians for the AL Central lead. Offseason signing, Munetaka Murakami — who is on the injured list and will be absent for this series — has lived up to the hype, while they’ve gotten impressive performances out of a bunch of their young and upcoming talent, including last week when Braden Montgomery hit a walk-off homer in his MLB debut.

Can the White Sox continue their winning run to the season this week against the Yankees? Let’s take a look at what the pitching matchups have in store over the next couple days.

Tuesday: Gerrit Cole vs. Davis Martin (7:05 pm ET)

Cole is coming off the first meh start of his return so far. Against the Guardians last week, he was knocked out after just four innings. He only gave up two runs, it just came on five hits and two walks, driving up his pitch count for a guy still early in his return from Tommy John surgery. Between said surgery and just schedule luck, this will be the first time he’s faced the White Sox since August 2023, when Chicago actually got to him for four runs in seven innings.

Martin has been the ace of Chicago’s unexpected run, coming into this game with a 2.41 ERA and a 2.39 FIP in 13 starts. He also has a league-leading nine pitching wins, which no one would’ve guessed coming into the season. Those numbers are actually a little bit up from where he had been at the end of May, as he gave up six runs in 4.2 innings against the Twins in his first start of June. However, Martin responded by shutting out the Braves for six innings in his most recent appearance.

Wednesday: Carlos Rodón vs. Anthony Kay (7:05 pm ET)

In the second game of the series, Rodón will face off against his former team. His return from injury a couple weeks ago saw him get off to a rocky start, but he’s settled into somewhat of a groove of late. In his last four starts, Rodón has a 2.35 ERA in 23 innings. He’s still been walking a bit more batters than you would like, but he’s generally been able to work around them.

Kay is a former Mets first round pick who they traded to the Blue Jays for Marcus Stroman all the way back in 2019. Since then, he’s been around the majors a bit and in Japan for two years, before landing with the White Sox this past winter. With a 100 ERA+, he’s been about perfectly league average so far this season, although a 5.23 FIP suggests that he could be gettable.

Thursday: Ryan Weathers vs. Sean Burke (7:05 pm ET)

He’s still in the rotation for now, but recent starts suggest that Weathers will be headed for the bullpen whenever the Yankees get Max Fried back. Weathers has given up seven home runs over his last three starts, allowing a total of 16 runs in 17 innings across them.

Burke is another White Sox starter that has been right around league average so far this year. However, his numbers have come about with a bit of a slump following a good start to the year. Dating back to May 8th, Burke has a 5.82 ERA in seven starts. He’s been especially walk prone of late, issuing 10 free passes over his last two games.

Mets Morning News: Seeing Red

New York Mets left fielder Juan Soto (22) is substituted as the Reds change pitchers in the seventh inning of the MLB National League game between the Cincinnati Reds and the New York Mets at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati on Monday, June 15, 2026. The Reds won the series opener, 12-0. | Sam Greene/The Enquirer / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Meet the Mets

The Mets fell behind 9-0 in the first two innings and never recovered as they were bludgeoned by the Reds 12-0 in the first game of their three-day set at Great American Ball Park. The less we say about this one, the better.

Choose Your Recap: Amazin’ Avenue, MLB.com, Daily News, NY Post, ESPN, Faith and Fear in Flushing

The Mets congratulated the Knicks on their championship and looked to draw inspiration from their magical run to the NBA title, though they certainly didn’t do that last night.

The Mets made a few roster moves before the series began, including calling up Tobias Myers, who got rocked in 1 1/3 innings of work last night, and Jonathan Pintaro, who pitched in relief following Myers’ ineffective start. The club also sent Daniel Duarte down to Triple-A and placed Christian Scott on the IL with a right hip impingement.

The Mets announced that Kodai Senga would be starting tonight’s game for the team after the news of Scott’s injury.

Ronny Mauricio could start a rehab assignment towards the end of the week as he continues his recovery from a fractured left thumb.

The Mets claimed Zack Short off waivers from the Tigers and transferred Jorge Polanco to the 60-day IL.

Juan Soto is ninth in All-Star voting among NL outfielders, while Bo Bichette is eighth among third basemen.

Soto is taking pieces from his past as he mentors the team’s young outfielders, explains Laura Albanese.

Around the National League East

The Braves have shut down Spencer Strider for four weeks, and Strider says he is eyeing a late season return.

Atlanta’s JR Ritchie is ready to make the most of his second stint as a major league starter.

The Phillies blanked the Marlins 7-0. In the win, Philadelphia’s Number 6 prospect, Gabriel Rincones Jr., got his first hit, a home run, in his Citizens Bank Park debut.

The Nationals scored five in the fifth to top the Royals 7-3.

Around Major League Baseball

The MLB Power Rankings feature Atlanta retaining their top spot and the White Sox jumping 20 spots from where they were ranked on Opening Day.

The first update on MLB All-Star balloting was released, with Shohei Ohtani and Yordan Alvarez cruising atop their respective leagues.

Jared Greenspan broke down the closest races in Phase 1 of the ballots.

The MLB.com staff picked the biggest surprise for each team this season.

Max Ralph and Manny Randhawa made their latest predictions for this year’s All-MLB Team.

Sam Blum identified some cases of potential nepotism in baseball which are now standing out.

Adam McCalvy profiled two high school friends: Brewers reliever Aaron Ashby, who leads the NL in wins, and Landry Shamet, who just won an NBA Title with the New York Knicks.

The Giants are starting to test the waters on the trade market, according to Ken Rosenthal.

Padres reliever Ron Marinaccio was suspended for three games after hitting Gunnar Henderson with a pitch in their win against the Orioles last Saturday. San Diego skipper Craig Stammen received a one-game suspension.

San Diego placed closer Mason Miller on the bereavement list and recalled reliever Kyle Hart to take his place.

Corey Seager is heading to the concussion IL after a collision at the plate.

Texas Longhorns sophomore shortstop Adrian Rodriguez hit for the cycle in the team’s 14-2 victory. In the process, he became the third player to hit for the cycle in the Men’s College World Series.

The Cardinals blanked the Padres 3-0, as Dustin May hurled a complete game one-hit shutout.

The Cubs scored one in the eighth and two in the ninth to earn a 5-4 comeback win over the Rockies. Pete Crow-Armstrong hit for the cycle in the victory.

The Twins defeated the Rangers 4-2.

The Tigers beat up the Astros 9-3. Colt Keith hit three homers in the win, becoming the youngest Tiger to accomplish the feat since Al Kaline in 1955.

The Diamondbacks held off the Angels 4-3.

The surging Athletics broke out yet again for an 11-2 win over the Pirates, proving their offensive display in Vegas was hardly a fluke.

The Dodgers snuck by the Rays 4-3.

Yesterday at Amazin’ Avenue

I previewed the team’s series against the Reds.

Allison McCague brought us the position player meters for the week.

Linus Lawrence provided a Monday Stat Party.

This Date in Mets History

On this date in 2024, the Mets topped the Padres 11-6 to complete a 5-1 homestand and make it five straight wins after Grimace threw the first pitch heard round the world. Francisco Lindor, Pete Alonso, and Luis Torrens each contributed a home run in the team’s victory.

Today in White Sox History: June 16

Chicago White Sox outfielder Patsy Dougherty, circa 1910.
On this day 118 years ago, Patsy Dougherty led a mild offensive attack that helped stretch a White Sox win streak to 13 games. | (Photo by FPG/Getty Images)

1908
The number 13 proved lucky for the White Sox, as a 3-2 win over the New York Highlanders ran their winning streak to 13 games. Ed Walsh went the distance to improve to 14-3 on the season, while the Sox offense buffeted just five singles in the game with eight walks and five stolen bases. Patsy Dougherty and Jiggs Donahue had nearly identical starring turns, both going 1-for-2 with an RBI, two walks and a strikeout; the only difference came from Dougherty swiping two bases to Donahue’s one, plus a hit-by-pitch.


1969
By all accounts, during a horrible summer of baseball on the South Side, the White Sox found some relief — north of the Illinois-Wisconsin border. With an 8-3 win over the Seattle Pilots as one of 11 games played that season at Milwaukee County Stadium, the White Sox stretched their “Milwaukee White Sox” winning streak to five games (not consecutive wins, however, as each game at Milwaukee was a single contest, with the White Sox opposing every other AL team up north once during the season).

Chicago struck early and often, going up, 8-1, through three. Future Dodgers relief ace Mike Marshall took the brunt of the damage as Seattle’s starter, while the White Sox took advantage of three Pilots errors in the early going, and four total in the game.

The five wins equaled what would become the team’s longest outright winning streak (later that year, in September) and was not an indication of how good the team was; while this win improved the White Sox to 24-32, they still sat two games behind the expansion Pilots. In the end, the White Sox finished 1969 with a 68-94 record that was good for sixth place in the AL West and just four games better than Seattle.


1989
At 37, former Tigers farmhand Rick Wolff (drafted out of Harvard in 1972) makes a one-series comeback with the South Bend White Sox of the Midwest League (Single-A) for the purposes of a Sports Illustrated article. Wolff pinch-hit at the end of his first game, then starts the next two, batting ninth and then creeping up to eighth — and finishes the series 4-for-7 with a ground-rule double, three RBIs and a .571/.556/.714 slash line. His one error at second base comes when a pickoff throw travels through the pocket of his 20-year-old glove. Wolff himself was 15.1 years older than league average.

This was no end-of-season stunt in a lost season, a la Minnie Miñoso two decades earlier. South Bend won its division in 1989 with an 85-47 record, and featured such future White Sox as Scott Radinsky and Roberto Hernández, along with four other future major leaguers.


1997
After numerous charity and exhibition games, the White Sox and Cubs played for real for the first time in the regular season. The Cubs crushed their former starter, Jaime Navarro, jumping to a 6-0 lead and hanging seven earned on him in an 8-3 win. Lyle Mouton had a solo blast with the game out of hand in the sixth for the first Sox-Cubs interleague homer for the White Sox, while the Cubs went roundtripper-free in their first Crosstown interleague game. This was also the first interleague game ever played at Sox Park, and thus Mouton’s was the first home four-bagger in interleague play for the White Sox.


2023
The White Sox struck out 16 times in a 3-2 loss in Seattle against the Mariners. This came on the heels of striking out 16 times the night before in a 5-4 loss to the Dodgers in Los Angeles. That tied the club mark first set in 2018.

Another oddity was the Sox hit six home runs in the two games but because they couldn’t get runners on base, every single home run was a solo shot!

Luis Robert Jr. and Jake Burger both homered once over the two games — and struck out seven times apiece!

Former Red Wings Forward Kyle Calder Passes Away At 47

Follow Michael Whitaker On X

There is sad news to report on Tuesday morning with the passing of former NHL forward Kyle Calder, who spent part of his career with the Detroit Red Wings, at the age of 47.

The unfortunate news was confirmed by his daughter, Madison Calder, with a heartfelt post on Instagram. 

Born in 1979 in Mannville, Alberta, Calder broke into the game with the WHL's Regina Pats before eventually being selected in the fifth round (130th overall) of the 1997 NHL Draft. He would continue his career playing with the IHL's Cleveland Lumberjacks before eventually transitioning to the AHL's Norfolk Admirals. 

He would play several years as a member of the Blackhawks, which included a stint in the SHL with Södertälje SK during the 2004-05 NHL Lockout. 

His time in Chicago ended in 2006 when he was traded to the Philadelphia Flyers for forward Michal Handzus. As part of a three-team trade, he would be sent back to Chicago at the 2007 NHL Trade Deadline, who immediately flipped him to the Red Wings in return for Jason Williams.

Ironically, Calder's first game as a Red Wing took place in Chicago at United Center against the Blackhawks, and he scored a goal just 1:45 into the contest, converting on a centering feed from Johan Franzen. 

Bookmark The Hockey News Detroit Red Wings team site to stay connected to the latest newsgame-day coverage, and player features

Image

He played in 19 total regular season games with the Red Wings, scoring five goals with nine assists. He also had an assist in 13 postseason games as Detroit advanced to the Western Conference Final. 

Not retained by the Red Wings after the 2007 postseason, he signed a two-year contract with the Los Angeles Kings. He would spend time with both the Kings and the Anaheim Ducks organizations, and later played 13 games in the KHL with Barys Astana. 

In 590 career NHL games, Calder scored 114 goals with 180 assists, and added two goals and one assist in 18 career Stanley Cup Playoff games. 

Never miss a story by adding us to your Google News favorites!

Image

For action-packed issues, access to the entire magazine archive and a free issue, subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/free. Get the latest news and trending stories by subscribing to our newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com or creating your own post in our community forum.

Florida Panthers Among Teams With Shortest Odds To Win 2027 Stanley Cup

It’s time to start looking ahead to next season.

Now that the Stanley Cup has been awarded, there is nothing left for teams to do except gear up for the future.

Next week, the 2026 NHL Draft will take place in Buffalo, and a few days later, the new league year begins on July 1 with the start of free agency.

There are going to be plenty of changes across the league landscape between now and Opening Night in October, but that doesn’t mean we can’t start predicting who is going to win the next Stanley Cup.

That’s right, official betting odds on the next Cup winner are out.

Checking in with BetMGM, the official betting partner of The Hockey News, the favorite to win the Stanley Cup didn’t even reach this year’s Final.

The favorite to win the 2027 Stanley Cup Final is the Colorado Avalanche, coming in at +700.

This year’s champion, the Carolina Hurricanes, are next at +750.

As for the Florida Panthers, they come in with the fifth-shortest odds to win the Cup next year, which isn’t bad considering the Cats didn’t even make the playoffs this past season.

For Panthers fans who are feeling confident that a healthy Florida squad will get back to their Stanley Cup winning ways, they can lock it in at +1100 odds, the same as the Edmonton Oilers.

Only the aforementioned Avalanche and Hurricanes, and the Vegas Golden Knights at +1000, come in with shorter odds than Florida and Edmonton.

To check out the full list of teams and where their odds stack up, visit the BetMGM hockey futures page here.

LATEST STORIES FROM THE HOCKEY NEWS - FLORIDA

Brandon Bussi Winning Stanley Cup Extends Bill Zito Streak Of Signing Champions

Panthers Captain Sasha Barkov Awarded Finland Hockey Association's Annual President's Trophy

Florida Panthers AHL Affiliate Signs Brother Of Young NHL Star

Florida Panthers Players Reveal Who They Think Will Win 2026 FIFA World Cup

The Hockey Show: Steve Goldsten Talks Stanley Cup Playoffs, Panthers Offseason

Florida Panthers, JetBlue Team Up To Open New Fan Areas Inside Amerant Bank Arena

Report: Panthers Attempted To Deal Sergei Bobrovsky To Hurricanes At 2026 NHL Trade Deadline

Photo caption: Nov 30, 2024; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Florida Panthers right wing Mackie Samoskevich (center) celebrates with center Aleksander Barkov (left) and left wing Matthew Tkachuk (right) after scoring against the Carolina Hurricanes during the second period at Amerant Bank Arena. (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)