Huascar Brazobán earns spot in Mets’ bullpen

MIAMI, FLORIDA - MARCH 15: Huascar Brazobán #43 of Team Dominican Republic pitches in the sixth inning during the 2026 World Baseball Classic Semifinals Games between United States and Dominican Republic at loanDepot park on March 15, 2026 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Gene Wang - Capture At Media/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Coming off a successful stint with the Dominican Republic in the World Baseball Classic, Carlos Mendoza has confirmed that Huascar Brazobán will be a part of the Mets’ bullpen if he remains healthy to finish off the spring. When speaking about his 36-year-old right-hander, Mendoza added, “If everything continues to trend in that direction…he’s going to be a part of our bullpen.”

Mendoza faced 13 batters in the WBC and struck out seven of them. He walked one and did not allow a hit over four shutout innings. Brazobán has also allowed one hit and walked one while striking out five over three shutout innings with the Mets this spring prior to his WBC performance.

Brazobán was second among all Mets relievers last season with 63 innings pitched, trailing only Edwin Díaz on that front. Meanwhile, he was fourth in appearances (52) behind Ryne Stanek (65), Díaz (62), and Reed Garrett (58). He finished the year with a 3.57 ERA and a 4.04 FIP, with 57 strikeouts and 27 walks. Brazobán still has a Minor League option, which made his spot in the bullpen anything but a guarantee, but his strong spring performance made it an easy choice for Mendoza.

The Mets have now essentially locked in six of their seven bullpen spots with closer Devin Williams, set-up man Luke Weaver, Brooks Raley, Luis García, Tobias Myers, and Brazobán. With the team expected to deploy a six-man rotation, Mendoza will run a seven-man bullpen, leaving one spot left to fill. Craig Kimbrel is the most high-profile name remaining, but his performance this spring has done little to earn him a spot. He is competing against guys like Bryan Hudson, Austin Warren and Joey Gerbe, to name a few. The Mets are expected to make their decision as close to Opening Day as possible, to allow for more time to analyze their options. The Mets open their season against the Pirates on Thursday, March 26 at 1:15 pm at Citi Field.

2025-26 Gamethread #67: New Jersey Devils vs. Boston Bruins

NEWARK, NJ - JANUARY 22: Boston Bruins center Pavel Zacha (18) and New Jersey Devils left wing Jesper Bratt (63) battle for the puck during a NHL game between the Boston Bruins and New Jersey Devils at Prudential Center on January 22, 2025 in Newark, New Jersey. (Photo by Andrew Mordzynski/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The Matchup: New Jersey Devils (33-31-2) versus the Boston Bruins (37-23-6)

The Time: 7:00 pm EST

The Broadcast: TV — ESPN; Radio — Devils Hockey Network

The Game Preview: Matt had it here.

The Rules: If you have been a reader here, you already know the rules. But for the rest, a reminder: please do not swear in the comment section, and keep comments relevant to the hockey game going on. Beyond that, do not attack any other commenters, and do not ask for or pass along illegal streams on this board.

LGD!

Washington Nationals vs New York Mets Game Thread

WEST PALM BEACH, FL - MARCH 12: Washington Nationals infielder Nasim Nunez (26) bats during a MLB spring training game against the Houston Astros at CACTI Park of the Palm Beaches on March 12, 2026 in West Palm Beach, Florida. (Photo by Doug Murray/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The Nationals have lost their last couple spring games, so they will look to get back in the win column against the Mets. More importantly, the Nats quiet bats will try to get things going before the season starts in 10 days. We also get to see the return of Jacob Young.

This is a bit of an unusual looking lineup for the Nats. Jacob Young will hit second in his return to the lineup. He usually hits at the bottom of the order, but the team wants him to get more at bats. Dylan Crews is back in left field, as he gets more exposure to that position. Luis Garcia Jr. is back at his natural second base position after a couple games at first. Zach Penrod will be the opener in this one, so we should see plenty of relievers tonight.

The Mets lineup is mostly made up of reserves, but there are a couple notable faces in there. Catcher Francisco Alvarez is the biggest name in the lineup. Nats fans will also get a look at the Mets top hitting prospect Carson Benge. David Peterson has been a mainstay in the Mets rotation for a few years now, and he will get the ball tonight.

Game Info:

Stadium: Clover Park

Time: 6:10 PM EST

TV: SNY/MLB TV

Radio: The Team 980

With the season just 10 days away, we are winding down Spring Training. It would be great for the Nats bats to show more life against a starter they will see plenty of this season. Hopefully the likes of James Wood and Dylan Crews can snap out of their malaise at the plate. Follow along down below and let’s go Nats!

Yoshinobu Yamamoto named Dodgers' opening-day starter for second straight season

Phoenix, AZ - February 17, 2026: Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto (18) at the 2026 Dodgers spring training at Camelback Ranch, Phoenix, AZ on February 17, 2026. (Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Times)
Dodgers pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto will make his (Eric Thayer/Los Angeles Times)

It’s only fitting that the pitcher who recorded the Dodgers’ final eight outs of the World Series will take the mound on opening day, as the club tries to pick up where it left off in 2025 and chase a third straight championship in 2026.

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said Monday that World Series MVP Yoshinobu Yamamoto will toe the rubber for the March 26 opener at Dodger Stadium against the Arizona Diamondbacks — the second straight year he's had the honor and the first time at home, after pitching last season's opener in Tokyo against the Chicago Cubs.

Roberts added Yamamoto is expected to return to Camelback Ranch soon, after participating in the World Baseball Classic with Team Japan. The Samurai Warriors, seeking a second straight WBC title, were eliminated by Team Venezuela Saturday night in the quarterfinals.

Yamamoto is expected to make one more start in the Cactus League before opening day, although the date has yet to be scheduled, according to Roberts.

Read more:Swanson: Yoshinobu Yamamoto might not wear a cape, but he has super powers

Shohei Ohtani returned to Dodgers camp Monday morning, and Roberts plans to have a conversation with him soon about configuring his throwing plan leading up to regular season play. Per Roberts, Ohtani threw four innings in a simulated game while with Team Japan last Thursday.

“He’s going to get here and throw a bullpen,” Roberts said, adding: “I’m trying to figure out when we can get him into a game, but it should be here in the next day or two, to take some at bats. But as far as his progression, there’s going to be a bullpen soon, and [we’re] trying to figure out what day he’s going to pitch this week. It should be this week, but I’m not sure which day yet.”

Ohtani has not pitched in a Cactus League game and did not pitch in the WBC. Roberts does not expect the four-time MVP to be fully stretched out by the start of the regular season. Still, as Roberts notes, he’s further along than he was at this time a year ago, when he was working his way back from Tommy John surgery.

“I think this year we’re certainly north of that, I don’t see how we won’t be able to get to three or four innings in a major league game, so that’s certainly a better jumping-off point than last year, so we’ll see how it goes,” Roberts said.

Beyond Yamamoto, Ohtani and trusty veteran Tyler Glasnow, the Dodgers’ back end of the rotation is still taking shape. Though Roberts had considered a six-man rotation to begin regular season play, he indicated Monday that he expects the club to use a five-man rotation, noting that things are still "fluid."

Last week, Roberts said he "didn’t see a world in which Roki Sasaki doesn’t break [camp] as a starter." That would leave one rotation spot up for the taking, with 25-year-old Justin Wrobleski, 26-year-old Emmet Sheehan and 27-year-old River Ryan among those in the running.

Sasaki to make Cactus League start Tuesday

Sasaki is scheduled to make a Cactus League start Tuesday night against the Kansas City Royals at Surprise Stadium.

Sasaki struck out nine of 13 batters he faced in B-game last week against Chicago White Sox minor leaguers on the backfields of Camelback Ranch.

Read more:Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani apologizes for 'shortcomings' in Japan's early exit from WBC

“The last outing was really good, albeit on the other side,” Roberts said. “I’m looking to see it myself and see just more of what he did. So, if he can throw the fastball the way he did, throw the split the way he did, he should be able to manage major league hitters. So, I’m really excited about what we see from him tomorrow. Hopefully, the plan is to get him through five innings, and that would be a huge win.”

Dodgers ‘dodge a bullet’ with Gavin Stone

While Gavin Stone has not yet returned to throwing since he was shut down two weeks ago, Roberts shared an encouraging update regarding his 27-year-old pitcher that he is working his way back from shoulder surgery that caused him to miss all of 2025.

“He is pain-free now, yes,” Roberts said. “I know that he’s close to starting to ramp up again. I think it was two weeks that we wanted to have him not throw a baseball, and so, just building up the arm strength, getting that soreness out. But I think we dodged a bullet, considering where we were at a few weeks ago.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Mets vs. Nationals: Spring training lineup, broadcast info, and open thread, 3/16/26

PORT ST. LUCIE, FL - MARCH 10: David Peterson #23 of the New York Mets pitches during the game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the New York Mets at Clover Park on Tuesday, March 10, 2026 in Port St. Lucie, Florida. (Photo by Phebe Grosser/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Mets Lineup

  1. Carson Benge – RF
  2. Mark Vientos – 1B
  3. Francisco Alvarez – C
  4. Jared Young – DH
  5. Ronny Mauricio – SS
  6. Christian Arroyo – 2B
  7. Jose Rojas – LF
  8. Vidal Brujan – 3B
  9. Cristian Pache – CF

David Peterson – LHP

Nationals Lineup

  1. James Wood – DH
  2. Jacob Young – CF
  3. Dylan Crews – LF
  4. Andres Chaparro – 1B
  5. Daylen Lile – RF
  6. CJ Abrams – SS
  7. Luis Garcia – 2B
  8. Jose Tena – 3B
  9. Riley Adams – C

Andre Granillo – RHP

Broadcast info

First pitch: 6:10 PM EDT
TV: SNY

Tour veterans offer timely challenge to big two era of Sinner and Alcaraz | Tumaini Carayol

The most startling performances of recent months have involved revitalised tennis from Medvedev and Djokovic

In the uncertain early stages of his Indian Wells semi-final contest with Carlos Alcaraz, Daniil Medvedev swiftly made his intentions clear. Having established a 3-1 lead, he chased down a trademark Alcaraz drop shot, then a lob, before slamming the door shut on the point by firing an ultra-flat inside-out backhand winner on to the edge of the line.

This was a statement point and it formed part of the most startling performance of the year so far. Few gave Medvedev a serious chance against Alcaraz, who had won their four previous meetings, conceding just one set. It took one of the best matches of Medvedev’s distinguished career to turn the tables on Alcaraz in only two sets.

Continue reading...

Ask Pinstripe Alley: Yankees mailbag questions request

Ask Pinstripe Alley

We’re now less than two weeks away from Opening Day, and the Yankees have a few choices left to make regarding their roster. Namely, they’re whittling down who on the pitching staff is going to be heading with the team to San Francisco, and then based off of that deciding if they’re going to carry an extra infielder or not. On top of that, they’re waiting for the rest of their players to return from the World Baseball Classic, which will be wrapping up tomorrow, freeing them to start making more of the expected cuts to their spring camp.

As we approach the start of the 2026 season, it’s time to start nailing down the final pieces of the puzzle. Who will be the last handful of relievers that the Yankees carry with them to start the year? Will they opt for a shorter bullpen to give themselves an extra position player on the bench, and if they do how do they solve things once the off-days shorten up? How well do you expect the team to do in their opening month or so, and will the early standings be favorable or an uphill battle? If you have questions like these, or anything else on your mind, send ‘em in for a chance to be featured in our Yankees mailbag.

Answers will run on Friday afternoon. All questions received by the night of March 19th will be considered. You can leave your submissions in the comment section below or by e-mail to pinstripealleyblog [at] gmail [dot] com.

Aaron Judge pumps up USA at WBC, Nolan McLean tries to 'finish this thing'

MIAMI - The boys were pumped up in the Team USA clubhouse Sunday evening, yelling, fist-pumping, back-slapping and absolutely exhilarated.

They had just knocked off powerful Dominican Republic in the semifinals, advancing to the championship game Tuesday night (8 p.m. ET, FOX) against the winner of the Italy-Venezuela game, and are so close to the gold medal now that they could almost touch it.

USA captain Aaron Judge stood up in front of the room, and told them how proud he was with their complete team effort. He pointed everyone out from starter Paul Skenes to closer Mason Miller and the bullpen, to shortstop Bobby Witt, to the home runs by Gunnar Henderson and Roman Anthony.

Go ahead and enjoy the victory, Judge told them, but once they leave the clubhouse, it was time to focus on the business at hand.

They have one more game.

Win, and everything they’ve worked hard for, beginning in Phoenix four days, 10 nights in Houston, and now in Miami, will be all worth it. It has been their dream to be standing on the championship stage in center field Tuesday, with World Baseball Classic officials adorning them with gold medals, with a sellout crowd cheering.

Lose the championship game, and everything is ruined.

It has always been gold medal or bust, and now, being ever so close, it’s no time to let up now.

“He was like, “Hey, we knew that was a big game,’’’ manager Mark DeRosa told USA TODAY Sports. “Certainly, the whole world was watching knowing it was going to be a draining, epic battle, and that it was.

“But he said, 'Let’s set the focus back. We still got work to do.' "

Judge hasn’t spoken after every game, but this time, he felt it was necessary. The pain of losing to Italy during pool play in Houston, after knocking off powerful Mexico, was a scary reminder how their fate can turn dramatically turn.

“He gave a great speech,’’ USA bullpen coach David Ross said. “He said, “Keep the focus on one more. Great win, but we got one left.’

“He went around and said, “Skenes, you did a hell of a job. Bullpen. Young guys, way to swing it.’ Just very positive.

“But at the end, he brought it back to, “We got one more, let’s finish this thing.’’’

Team USA will turn to 24-year-old Mets rookie Nolan McLean to finish it off.

McLean was the losing pitcher in that 8-6 loss to Italy, striking out the side in the first inning, but then giving up two homers in a span of three at-bats in the second inning, and walked two more batters in the third. He was yanked after just three innings.

Nolan McLean pitches for Team USA against Team Italy.

There were no excuses, McLean said, after nearly missing the WBC completely when he was diagnosed with vertigo-like symptoms in Mets camp. He didn’t join Team USA until it reached Houston.

Now, he says he feels 100%, will be good to go for 65 to 70 pitches, and with the way USA’s bullpen has pitched lights out, just pitching four strong innings might be all that's needed.

“I guess as far as the vertigo stuff, I don't know if there's an actual test to know if I had for sure vertigo,’’ McLean said. “I was definitely dizzy. … I had a stretch there where I didn’t feel like myself, but I told my wife, if I can get on a plane, I’m going to play…

“I'm fully past all that now and I'm feeling good.’’

And a healthy McLean is all DeRosa needs, believing that McLean will be a future star in this game.

“I think he's just built for this,’’ DeRosa said. “His mindset, his stuff, his want, all of that kind of led to him being a part of this team.’’

McLean, who says he’s having the time of his life with the experience, should have a few more familiar faces in the stands cheering him Tuesday. Several of his Mets teammates, like Christian Scott, promised they would make the two-hour drive from their spring training camp in Port St. Lucie to see him.

“Putting U.S. on your chest and going out there and competing,’’ McLean said, “obviously means the world. As a competitor and as someone, if you work your whole life at something, you want to be put in these spots. So it's just kind of a dream come true to be able to get the ball in such a big moment, and it's something I want to do.

“I mean, I'm just super pumped to get the ball and go out there and compete. All I ever want to do is win.’’

Follow Nightengale on X @Bnightengale

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: USA taps Nolan McLean for WBC final; Aaron Judge pumps up team

Quick Spring Recap: Jays Beat Marlins

DUNEDIN, FL - MARCH 14: Toronto Blue Jays Outfielder George Springer (4) at bat during the spring training game between the Detroit Tigers and the Toronto Blue Jays on March 14, 2026, at the TD Ballpark in Dunedin, FL. (PhotoPhoto by Cliff Welch/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Jays 5 Marlins 4 (Six innings, rain-shortened)

A win is a win.

Pitchers:

  • Lazaro Estrada: 2.1 innings, 3 hits, home run, 2 earned. 4.50 ERA this spring.
  • Connor Seabold: 1.2 innings, 2 hits, 1 earned. 6.75. He picked Otto Lopez off first base.
  • Joe Mantiply: 1.0, 1 hit, home run. 4.50.
  • Jesse Hahn: 0.2, 2 hits. 6.35.

Batters, starters:

  • George Springer: 2 for 2, home run, RBI. .231.
  • Nathan Lukes: 2 for 2, run. .296.
  • Davis Schneider: 0 for 1, walk. .103.
  • Addison Barger: 0 for 2, 2 k. .267.
  • Daulton Varsho: 1 for 1, double, walk. .423.
  • Myles Straw: 0 for 2, RBI. .179.
  • C.J. Stubbs: 1 for 3, 2 k. .300.
  • Riley Tirotta: 0 for 2. .233.
  • Arjun Nimmala: 0 for 2. .240.

Others:

  • Jesus Sanchez: Walk. .222.
  • RJ Schreck: 0 for 1, k. .167. He made a great throw from right getting a running at the plate.
  • Leo Jimenez: 1 for 1. .278.
  • Eloy Jimenez: 1 for 1. .297.
  • Jonatan Clase: 0 for 1. .261.
  • Rafael Lantigua: 0 for 1, k. .261.
  • Sean Keys: 0 for 1. .207.
  • Josh Kasevich: 0 for 1. .290.

I hate rain shortened spring games. I want to see the young guys late him the game. I know what Springer, Lukes, Schneider and all look like at the plate.

Tomorrow the Jays have an off-day. Wednesday they host the Orioles.

Musgrove to start season on injured list

This morning, San Diego Padres manager Craig Stammen made it as close to official as possible that starting pitcher Joe Musgrove will begin the regular season on the injured list. To be specific, the words he used were “most likely,” and, although not an absolute verdict, they’re not comforting to the Friar Faithful.

The Padres rotation plans will shift accordingly, probably looking something like this come Opening Day:

  1. Nick Pivetta
  2. Michael King
  3. Randy Vásquez
  4. Germán Márquez
  5. Walker Buehler

But the more important question is when he’ll return. Musgrove has stated multiple times that his desire is to be healthy for October. Pitching in the postseason has always been his goal, but the Padres need him if they’re going to get there at all.

With Musgrove in the rotation, the Friars have a formidable front half of their pitching staff. Without him it gets a whole lot shakier. 

It was always apparent that he would be ramped up into the regular season but starting on the injured list isn’t a great place to be. It’s unfortunate but not unforeseen for the pitching staff, as Musgrove struggled to rehab after pitching against Great Britain in a WBC exhibition game on March 4. 

If he can continue to rehab and work on his recovery process, he could emerge mid-season as a viable starter. Until then, he’ll have to be used sparingly. 

A rocky career in San Diego

Musgrove’s tenure with the Padres has been marred by injury almost every year. Despite being highly durable from 2021-22 (and throwing the first no-hitter in San Diego history), the downturn since has been rough. He hasn’t made 20-plus starts since 2022.

If Musgrove can at least show flashes of dominance this season for San Diego, it’ll be enough. But suddenly the Padres are banking on a lot of their bargain hunting to turn out well for them. If it doesn’t, the rotation will be caught between a rock and a hard place fast, and who knows what moves General Manager A.J. Preller might make then. 

It’s possible that he orchestrates a last-minute trade for starting depth or signs a few more reclamation projects like Buehler and Griffin Canning. Whatever the case may be, Musgrove starting on the IL brings a lot of attention back to the San Diego pitching staff.

Musgrove needs to come back healthy and consistent when he does. The on-again, off-again relationship he’s had with the IL only hurts the Friars’ chances more and more. Until he can consistently pitch and recover from his starts he needs to stay on the rehab track.

But the worries from earlier this year about the starting rotation are now renewed, and faith in San Diego starters is low. If they can beat those low expectations, they’ll claw their way into contention this year. Otherwise, the Padres might be relegated to baseball purgatory: mediocrity.

Giants make third round of Spring Training roster cuts

SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 10: Logan Porter #13 of the San Francisco Giants watches batting practice during Spring Training at Scottsdale Stadium on February 10, 2026 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by Suzanna Mitchell/San Francisco Giants/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The San Francisco Giants have now sent out 9 players from their 19 Spring Training invitees following today’s cuts of catcher Logan Porter, infielder Nate Furman, and lefty Nick Margevicius. They join Friday’s cuts of lefty reliever Juan Sanchez, righty Wilkin Ramos, and Thursday’s cuts of relievers Will Bednar and Trent Harris, catcher Diego Cartaya, and outfielder Bo Davidson.

If you’ve been following Brady’s researchon the topic, it’s clear why all of these players have been sent out from camp, as their performances have been okay in some instances against similar invitees, but none have stood out enough to warrant additional consideration just 9 days from Opening Night and with the return of players who were at the WBC. The 24-year old Furman highlights this point. As Alex Pavlovic notes, “he ended up getting a lot of plate appearances with Luis Arraez gone.” He wound up going 2-for-17 and hitless in his last 9 plate appearances.

I’d like to feel a little bit bad for Logan Porter because he seems like a guy who has been yo-yo’d by the organization. The Giants traded for him, released him, re-signed him after he was cut by the Mets, landed on the major league team last June for a grand total of 7 days before optioning him down to Triple-A Sacramento only to DFA him two and a half weeks later. They re-signed him when he cleared waivers and elected free agency, invited him to this year’s Spring Training, and now they’ve sent him back to Triple-A. On the other hand, he hasn’t forced the issue. He went 0-for-7 and didn’t get much of a look from Tony Vitello and his staff.

The pitching situation ought to be self-evident. A lot of roles ought to be up for grabs and not much of this group made a lot of noise. Will Bednar had another good camp velocity-wise, but it’s clear the organization wants him to improve against better competition as he didn’t face any MLB regulars and just 1 hitter on a 40-man roster in his 4 innings of work.

The 10 remaining NRIs: Outfielders Victor Bericoto and Jared Oliva; infielders Osleivis Basabe, Parks Harber, Jake Holton, and Buddy Kennedy; catcher Eric Haase; pitchers Michael Fulmer, Caleb Killian and Gregory Santos (and, if you want to throw late addition Joey Lucchesi onto the list, go right ahead).

Of this group, Fulmer and Santos would seem to be closest to getting roster spots, but even they don’t have a 100% clear path to become bullpenners. Still, all the position players are right-handed, which puts them squarely in competition with Luis Matos, Casey Schmitt, Tyler Fitzgerald, and Jerar Encarnacion. Grant McCray would seem to have the edge because of the handedness and the defense, which basically relegates all of these NRI hitters to roster filler until the exhibition season starts. Unless there really is a battle going on between Eric Haase and Daniel Susac for the role of Patrick Bailey’s backup.

Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani apologizes for 'shortcomings' in Japan's early exit from WBC

Shohei Ohtani holds his bat while grimacing and looking upward. He stands in front of a catcher and umpire at home plate.
Japan's Shohei Ohtani reacts after popping up for the final out of his team's 8-5 loss to Venezuela on Saturday during the quarterfinal round of the 2026 World Baseball Classic in Miami. (Al Bello / Getty Images)

Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani expressed regret Monday for his "shortcomings" following Japan's early exit from the World Baseball Classic.

It is unclear what those shortcomings might have been. Over four games during this year's tournament, Ohtani led Japan with a .462 batting average, three home runs and seven RBI in 13 at-bats.

Those stats are even better than the ones he posted as the MVP of the last WBC. Over seven games in 2023, Ohtani hit .435 with one home run and eight home runs in 23 at-bats to lead Japan to its third WBC championship.

Overall, however, Japan finished with a .284 batting average, down from a .299 average three years ago. Ohtani did account for his team's final out of the 2026 tournament — an infield popup to seal an 8-5 quarterfinal loss to Venezuela on Saturday — and took to Instagram two days later.

"Thank you to all the fans for your support. Your cheers pushed us forward every day," Ohtani wrote in Japanese. "We didn't achieve the results we hoped for, and I deeply regret my own shortcomings."

The two-way superstar did not pitch in this year's WBC, after famously striking out then-Angels teammate Mike Trout of the United States for the final out of the 2023 championship game and going 2-0 with one save and a 1.86 ERA in that tournament.

Ohtani had his second Tommy John surgery in September 2023 and did not pitch again until last June with the Dodgers. Manager Dave Roberts revealed in January that Ohtani had decided not to pitch in the WBC.

Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Dodgers on Deck: Tuesday, March 17 at Royals

GOODYEAR, ARIZONA - MARCH 3: Roki Sasaki #11 of the Los Angeles Dodgers warms up during the first inning of the spring training game against the Cleveland Guardians at Goodyear Ballpark on March 3, 2026 in Goodyear, Arizona. (Photo by Mike Christy/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Dodgers’ final road game of the Arizona portion of spring training comes Tuesday night in Surprise, taking on the Kansas City Royals.

Roki Sasaki gets the start, looking for his first successful outing against major league competition this spring. He last pitched four innings on the backfields at Camelback Ranch, striking out nine Chicago White Sox minor leaguers last Tuesday.

Aaron Sanchez starts for the Royals.

Tuesday game info
  • Teams: Dodgers at Royals
  • Ballpark: Surprise Stadium
  • Time: 6:05 p.m. PT
  • TV: SportsNet LA
  • Radio: KFNZ 96.5 (Royals broadcast)

Slay the dragon: Padres remain a threat to Dodgers’ NL West throne

San Diego Padres Manny Machado Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Unsurprisingly, the Los Angeles Dodgers are favored to cruise to their fifth consecutive National League West title. The majority of preseason win-loss projections select them to be the lone Major League Baseball team to reach 100 wins during the 2026 campaign.

The battle for second place is shaping up to be a tight three-team race between the San Diego Padres, San Francisco Giants and Arizona Diamondbacks. Each club has the potential to play better than last season’s results, and with a little luck, all could challenge for a postseason berth.

The key factor for the Padres remaining in contention is keeping their core players healthy all season. 

Preller does what it takes to remain a contender

Most of the television analysts believe the Friars will take a step back after a very lackluster offseason and concerns about their starting rotation’s ability to avoid time on the injured list in 2026. 

However, the Padres have one advantage over their competitors: team President of Baseball Operations and General Manager A.J. Preller, who has a reputation for doing whatever it takes to improve his team at the trade deadline. 

He has the knack of quickly recognizing his roster’s weaknesses and striking a deal to fix those holes. Often, the deadline deals set the Friars on a course to the playoffs.

It is hard to say whether the Giants or D-Backs will emerge as contenders. Both teams have incomplete rosters that will force their front offices to make trades for reinforcements. A deal of this nature will include the organization’s top prospects to acquire a difference-maker.

The message is more powerful than you would expect. It shows the organization is all-in on making the postseason. 

The Padres cannot worry about the media’s opinion of the state of their roster. Instead, they must create some space between themselves and their NL West foes. Hopefully, the lead can grow as the season progresses.

Injuries and a lack of depth could derail the season

San Diego’s front office understands the team cannot take a significant step backward this season. They responded to the media criticism by reshaping their roster with a flurry of free agent signings before the start of Spring Training. The moves give hope to the Friar Faithful that the organization wants to contend in 2026. 

Still, the upcoming season brings an intriguing storyline to San Diego. In addition to integrating the newcomers into the lineup, first-year manager Craig Stammen must take a cautious approach to Joe Musgrove’s workload, as he returns from Tommy John surgery.

The big right-hander is slated to be part of the starting rotation, but his arm has been slow in the recovery process from throwing sessions. It is unlikely Musgrove will be ready to be on the Opening Day roster according to Stammen. He wants to slow everything down and let Musgrove get healthy before deciding when he pitches in meaningful games again. 

Injuries could throw a wrench into the best-laid plans. The Padres could have two new starting pitchers in the 2026 rotation. However, the lack of major league depth on the 40-man roster limits the options available. It could provide an opportunity for the Giants and D-Backs to move up in the standings if the Friars have issues with their starting pitching. 

Preseason expectations can be cruel sometimes, especially if none of the experts believe your team has a chance to compete for a division title. Granted, the odds are high, but the Padres believe they’re the only legitimate threat to spoil a Dodger’s NL West coronation at season’s end.

While clinching a postseason berth is the priority, upending the reigning champs would give the Friars the momentum they need to play October baseball.