Penguins Summer 2026 Organizational Depth outlook

PITTSBURGH, PA - DECEMBER 14: Sergei Murashov #1 of the Pittsburgh Penguins defends the net during the game against the Utah Mammoth at PPG PAINTS Arena on December 14, 2025 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Now that the 2026 NHL draft is over, and a new league year has started, let’s reset the organization’ with a deeper dive of contracts beyond the NHL roster.

It can be hard to wrap your head around it all, so think of this as a Top 25 Under 25 primer to place players in certain levels to describe their spot in the pecking order for next season.

We’ll set the stage for the upcoming list of the top talent in the organization by first looking at exactly which young players are around the Pittsburgh pipeline these days, in no specific order and based off players who either have NHL contracts or appear on the Pens’ reserve list.

NHL level (or close)

Ville Koivunen
Rutger McGroarty
Joel Blomqvist
Owen Pickering
Sergei Murashov
Avery Hayes
Tristan Broz
Harrison Brunicke

—All of these players should see some time in the NHL next season. It might be temporary and require injuries to other players to receive those opportunities in some cases, but this is the top level of player right on the verge of getting their shot to play in the big league. Then again, this group covers a lot of ground: Murashov could be the NHL opening night starting goalie and Koivunen could be waived in September, with a lot of middle ground in between of players who might get squeezed back to the AHL due to a numbers game of high quantity of NHL bodies.

AHL level

Tanner Howe
Bill Zonnon
David Gustafsson
Oliver Okuliar
Melvin Fernstrom
Atley Calvert
Mikhail Ilyin
Jake Livanavage
Phil Kemp
Chase Pietila
Finn Harding
Daniel Laatsch
Gabriel D’Aigle

—Much of this group will make up the backbone of the WBS team in the AHL for 2026-27. There’s a chance some of these players could get a game or two in the NHL if all the conditions aligned right, but this is mostly the young players who need to develop or the older players who are depth.

Lower non-pro levels (Canadian Junior, NCAA)


William Horcoff
Peyton Kettles
Brady Peddle
Charlie Trethewey
Joona Vaisanen
Quinn Beauchesne
Travis Hayes
Carter Sanderson
Ryan Miller
Jordan Charron
Luke Devlin
Mac Swanson
Kale Dach
Zam Plante
Liam Ruck
Markus Ruck
Pierce Mbuyi
Parker von Richter
Matvei Nikonovich

—A lot of names here go in a “check back in 2-3 years” type area for long developmental, mostly made up of 2025 and 2026 draft picks. Some players on this list should be moving into the AHL segment within time, all dreaming of one day advancing it beyond that. All have possibility and hope but at this point it will take a lot of time, effort and further development to get towards being finished products.

Europe


Kalle Kangas
Emil Jarventie
Kirill Tankov
Tomas Galvas

—The Pens haven’t focused a lot in Europe lately when it comes to bringing on young players via the draft. Assistant GM Amanda Kessel recently confirmed that second round pick from 2026 Galvas would stay overseas for the upcoming season in 2026-27. None of the rest of the list is on the NHL radar at all these days.

Blackhawks Goalie Drew Commesso Not Among 15 Players Who File For Arbitration

The Chicago Blackhawks did not have any players listed among those who filed for contract arbitration. The only player eligible was Drew Commesso, but he decided against it.

Commesso is an RFA, and he will work out a contract with the Chicago Blackhawks without the guidance of an arbitrator. This is a positive, because arbitration can get messy as both sides argue over how much the player deserves to make. A player has to hear why a team thinks they aren’t worth more money, which is never constructive. 

Connor Bedard, Kevin Korchinski, and Ethan Del Mastro are also RFA’s, but they were not eligible for an arbitrator this summer. They all received qualifying offers, and only time will tell what the final number looks like. 

By not electing for arbitration, Drew Commesso could, in theory, receive an offer sheet, but that won’t happen. He is a promising young goalie, but he has proven nothing over a long period of time in the NHL. The Blackhawks would likely match any offer sheet for him or just let him go for whatever compensation is needed, but it isn’t realistic to expect one. 

There is still reason to worry about other Blackhawks receiving offer sheets, specifically Connor Bedard, as they seem to be becoming a trend in the modern-day NHL. 

Drew Commesso only appeared in three games for the Chicago Blackhawks last season, but he is expecting to compete with Arvid Soderblom for the backup job coming into the year. Spencer Knight is the established number one. 

With the way the league goes these days, it will be important to have three goalies that can be trusted in any situation, which is why the Blackhawks and Commesso must agree. Not filing for arbitration is a great start, as both sides can come together for mutual benefit. 

This is the list of players who filed:

  • Xavier Bourgault - Ottawa Senators
  • Kirby Dach - Montreal Canadiens
  • Jamie Drysdale - Philadelphia Flyers
  • Jet Greaves - Columbus Blue Jackets
  • Alex Jefferies - New York Islanders
  • Peyton Krebs - Buffalo Sabres
  • Connor McMichael - St. Louis Blues
  • Cole Perfetti - Winnipeg Jets
  • Jason Robertson - Dallas Stars
  • Nick Robertson - Pittsburgh Penguins
  • Akira Schmid - Florida Panthers
  • Braden Schneider - New York Rangers
  • Ronan Seeley - Carolina Hurricanes
  • Cole Sillinger - Columbus Blue Jackets
  • Trevor Zegras - Philadelphia Flyers

There are some very good players listed there, including Kirby Dach, Jamie Drysdale, and Trevor Zegras. There is even one elite player there in Jason Robertson. 

By going to arbitration, as mentioned before, they all forfeited their right to receive an offer sheet. They all, however, could have their rights traded. Would any of them interest the Blackhawks? Surely, but Chicago might have to figure out their own players first. 

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Loading The Cannon: Pheonix Copley

The Columbus Blue Jackets got extremely lucky last year with their goalie situation. Jet Greaves and Elvis Merzlikins played in every game of the season and avoided injuries. It's not entirely rare, as it happens every now and then.  

The 25-26 season was the first time only two goalies have played in all the games since the 2018-19 season, when Sergei Bobrovsky and Joonas Korpisalo manned the net. That tandem actually did it in back-to-back seasons. 

Before those two seasons, it hadn't been done since the 12-13 season when Sergei Bobrovsky and Steve Mason suited up as a tandem during the lockout season. 

It's happened seven times in 25 seasons, so don't expect it again. 

The Cleveland Monsters are going through some changes next season, and it starts in the net. They lost veterans Zach Sawchenko and Ivan Fedotov, leaving youngsters Evan Gardner and Nolan LaLonde. 

With that, the Blue Jackets signed veteran Pheonix Copley to a one-year deal on July 1st. The immediate thought was that he's going to be the vet in Cleveland next season. We'd be fools to think that the CBJ will go unscathed again on the goaltender injury front, so Copley might actually get some NHL time next season. 

Let's take a look at Copley and what he's done in his career, and what he could bring.

Undrafted - North Pole, Alaska

NHL Debut - February 17, 2016 (St. Louis)

Career NHL Record - 44-17-8 - .898% sv% - 2.85 GAA - 70 Career Starts

NHL Playoff Experience - 1 Relief Appearance

Career AHL Record - 169-104-30-18 - .909% sv% - 2.52 GAA

AHL Playoff Experience - 10-10-0-1 - .933% sv% - 2.13 GAA

NOTES & TRANSACTIONS PER NHL PR

  • Harry "Hap" Holmes Memorial Award (AHL fewest goals against) (2021) (shared with Zach Fucale)
  • Signed as a free agent by Washington, March 20, 2014.
  • Traded to St. Louis by Washington with Troy Brouwer and Washington's 3rd round pick (later traded back to Washington - Washington selected Garrett Pilon) in 2016 NHL Draft for T.J. Oshie, July 2, 2015.
  • Traded to Washington by St. Louis with Kevin Shattenkirk for Zach Sanford, Brad Malone and Washington's 1st round pick (later traded to Philadelphia - Philadelphia selected Morgan Frost) in 2017 NHL Draft, February 27, 2017.
  • Signed as a free agent by Los Angeles, July 13, 2022.
  • Claimed off waivers by Tampa Bay from Los Angeles, October 2, 2025.
  • Traded to Los Angeles by Tampa Bay for future considerations, October 15, 2025.

When the deal was announced, many thought this move was to replace Elvis Merzlikins, but I'm here to tell you that that is very unlikely. Unless a deal comes that makes absolute sense, the goalie tandem in Columbus will be Greaves and Elvis. 

Copley very well may get his chance due to injuries or other circumstances, but at this point, Copley is set to be the vet in Cleveland to help Gardner and Lalonde start their pro careers. 


Next Up For Columbus: Free Agency continues on.

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Weekly Cupcakes: Wolanin joins the Avalanche organization

OTTAWA, ON - JANUARY 16: Colorado Avalanche Left Wing Matt Nieto (83) battles Ottawa Senators Defenceman Christian Wolanin (86) during third period National Hockey League action between the Colorado Avalanche and Ottawa Senators on January 16, 2019, at Canadian Tire Centre in Ottawa, ON, Canada. (Photo by Richard A. Whittaker/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Colorado Avalanche News

Christian Wolanin has followed in his father’s footsteps to Denver, seeking a roster spot with the Avalanche after a long journey through the AHL. [The Hockey News]

The Colorado Avalanche Hockey Club announced today the team has signed defenseman Noah Juulsen to a two-year contract through the 2027-28 season. [The Colorado Avalanche]

Avalanche development camp recently concluded, here’s some observations. [Mile High Hockey]

News Around the League

Pierre-Edouard Bellemare says he’s retiring from hockey at age 41. [ESPN]

How the Leo Carlsson offer sheet changes everything in the NHL. [Sportsnet]

Ovechkin to return for 22nd NHL season in Washington with a one-year deal worth up to $9M. [TSN]

Did Connor Bedard really get injured in a summer training skate session? The Chicago Blackhawks are holding their breath. [Pro Hockey Rumors]

Ottawa Senators offer discounts on new threads if fans want to ‘Chuk’ those Tkachuk jerseys. [Ottawa Citizen]

Now the deadline has passed, 15 players to file for salary arbitration. [Sportsnet]



Flyers Fans Have No Reason to Worry About Matvei Michkov

While he may not have spent most of his summer in Voorhees like many have hoped, Philadelphia Flyers fans can rest assured Matvei Michkov is hard at work having a productive offseason.

As has been discussed ad nauseam at this point, Michkov, 21, had a rough season for his standards, scoring 20 goals, 31 assists, and 51 points in decreased ice time from his rookie year, with his fitness level coming into question throughout the season.

But, after leading the Flyers in scoring after the Olympic break, only to again hit a wall in the Stanley Cup playoffs, Michkov is back on his grind... with the help of a familiar Flyers friend.

Recently, Michkov was spotted working out on the ice at Perm's (his hometown) new arena, where Molot-Prikamye Perm allowed Michkov and other players full access to use the ice.

Our friend, Uggg_uggg, posted the video of the Flyers' Russian dynamo to their X page on Saturday.

Most importantly, Michkov was joined by his de facto Flyers translator Slava Kuznetsov, who is also an experienced skating coach.

In layman's terms, the Flyers have an eye in the sky helping Michkov along as he heads into the last season of his entry-level contract, looking to build on two productive but uneven NHL seasons to date.

While he isn't necessarily a poor skater, Michkov is not fast and seldom produces bursts of quickness to beat defenders one-on-one, so more time with Kuznetsov should only mean good things when it comes to addressing that weakness, in addition to building a stronger foundation of conditioning.

Some fans have questioned whether or not Michkov is still doing the right things, spending a significant portion of his offseason back home in Russia.

Those concerns can swiftly be dismissed, as there is now video proof that the young Flyers star is very much taking his offseason training seriously, especially under the guidance of an experienced Flyers staff member.

Plus, we can imagine Michkov is extra motivated now that the Flyers went out and offer sheeted Leo Carlsson in a bid to get him a true No. 1 center to play with for the next decade.

Flyers training camp is still two months away, so Michkov still has plenty of time to continue his training in preparation of a monster third NHL season.

Report: Maple Leafs Have Spoken To Claude Giroux’s Camp As Free Agent Weighs Options, Does He Make Sense For Toronto?

As the initial dust settles on the opening of NHL free agency, the Toronto Maple Leafs could be looking to add a massive dose of veteran experience and versatility to their forward group. 

According to the Ottawa Sun’s Bruce Garrioch, the Maple Leafs are "keenly interested" in the services of unrestricted free agent forward Claude Giroux. The veteran, who spent the last four seasons with his hometown Ottawa Senators, is assessing his options as he hunts for an elusive Stanley Cup ring, and Toronto could be a possible landing spot. 

The report, first hinted at during early offseason rumblings, aligns perfectly with management's ongoing desire to reshape the identity of the team’s middle-six forward complement. But as with any high-profile pursuit of a player on the back nine of a legendary career, the potential acquisition carries both fascinating upside and undeniable risk. 

The Recent Trajectory: Giroux by the Numbers

While Giroux is no longer the elite, 100-point Hart Trophy finalist he was during his peak years with the Philadelphia Flyers, he has maintained a remarkably consistent baseline of health and utility. 

Over the last few seasons in Canada's capital, Giroux’s raw point totals have naturally trended downward, but his underlying metrics show a player who remains highly effective in an insulated role: 

  • 2022–23 (Ottawa): 82 GP | 35 Goals | 44 Assists | 79 Points | +4 
  • 2023–24 (Ottawa): 82 GP | 21 Goals | 43 Assists | 64 Points | -14 
  • 2024–25 (Ottawa): 81 GP | 15 Goals | 35 Assists | 50 Points | -8 
  • 2025–26 (Ottawa): 82 GP | 14 Goals | 35 Assists | 49 Points | +20 

Even at age 38 last season, Giroux played a full 82-game schedule, contributing 49 points and finishing with a strong plus-20 rating on a turbulent Senators squad. 

The Pros: What Giroux Brings to Toronto

Giroux's most obvious asset is his elite ability in the faceof circle. Last season, he won an astounding 63.1% of his 799 draws. For a Maple Leafs team that has occasionally struggled with consistency on crucial defensive-zone starts and late-game puck possession, adding a right-handed option who can reliably win draws is an instant upgrade. 

Furthermore, Giroux offers rare positional flexibility. He can slide into the third-line center spot or play the right wing on an offensive top-six unit. His presence would give the coaching staff options to shuffle their combinations, potentially allowing them to balance the scoring lines more effectively. 

Beyond the stat sheet, Giroux brings 1,345 games of regular-season experience and 99 career playoff appearances. For a locker room that has undergone structural changes over the last year, a respected former captain with a fierce competitive drive is exactly the type of personality leadership covets. 

The Cons: The Age Curve and Cap Friction

The primary concern with signing Giroux is Father Time. Born in January 1988, Giroux will turn 39 midway through the 2026–27 campaign. While his durability has been exemplary—skipping almost no games over the past four years—the modern NHL demands high-end pace. Pairing an aging veteran with a line that lacks foot speed could leave the Maple Leafs vulnerable to quick transition teams in the Eastern Conference. 

Then there is the financial calculus. Toronto is navigating a tight salary cap environment. Coming off a one-year, $2 million contract with Ottawa, Giroux will likely command a similar short-term salary with performance bonuses attached. Every dollar spent on a veteran forward is a dollar that cannot be allocated toward reinforcing a defense corps that still requires structural help. 

If Toronto expects Giroux to be a primary driving force offensively, they are bound to be disappointed. He has functioned primarily as a middle-six supplementary winger or specialized center for the bulk of the past calendar year. 

Furthermore, it remains unclear whether this management interest preceded or followed the Maple Leafs loading up on several depth forwards who occupy the very roles Giroux would slot into. While his upside is glaringly obvious on the power play, the penalty kill, and in the faceof circle, everything else carries undeniable risk given his age. 

The Verdict

Ultimately, the Maple Leafs' pursuit of Claude Giroux boils down to value and expectations. If management can secure him on a cap-friendly, bonus-laden deal that reflects his current reality as a 45-to-50-point utility forward, the move checks many boxes. 

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DitD & Open Post – 7/6/26: Fixing Utica Edition

Here are your links for today:

Devils Links

“…The statistical overlap in production pace, shot danger, and skating metrics makes (Shane) Wright a defensible target if the Hayton deal falls through. He addresses the same roster hole—secondary center scoring and depth—while adding four years of team control at a fraction of the cap hit at $886,666.” [New Jersey Hockey Now]

“Sunny Mehta has said that the AHL is of paramount importance to him and the Devils. How has he addressed that issue, and why is it so important to begin with?” [Devils’ Advocates]

“Judging by how quickly Hischier signed with the Devils, he was always intent on staying in the Garden State. Let’s break down Hischier’s extension and what it means for both sides moving forward.” [Devils on the Rush ($)]

Arseny Gritsyuk talks after signing his new deal:

Hockey Links

Full list of players who have filed for arbitration:

Now things are getting fun!

On the Leo Carlsson offer sheet: “The Ducks are in an unenviable position, faced with two unappetizing options. Either way, they’re swallowing poison with one option infecting the short term and one option infecting the long term. It takes a nasty offer sheet to make keeping your franchise player feel like anything but a slam dunk, and the Flyers have delivered here. Now we wait to see which pill Anaheim takes — and how it affects the Ducks’ suddenly sour future.” [The Athletic ($)]

Mavrik Bourque gets a six-year deal:

Pavel Mintyukov gets a deal:

On the insanity of trade protection in the NHL:

Feel free to discuss these and any other hockey-related stories in the comments below.

Islanders & NHL News: Arbitration filings and trade rumors

He exists. | Getty Images

The U.S. Independence Day has passed, regular 9-to-5, Monday-to-Friday schleps return to work, and the seven-day clock on the Flyers’ offer sheet to Leo Carlsson continues to count down.

(Also, in the World Cup, the U.S. Men’s National Team continues their run vs. Belgium after England devastated Mexico in Mexico City, then resumed their abuse of the rest of the world by singing Oasis songs.)

Nothing much new from the Isles…

  • Rehash: Isaiah George on eyeing an NHL role this year. [Newsday | Isles]
  • Around the NHL, 15 players filed for salary arbitration, the most notable being Jason Robertson, who has not been able to reach a massive extension with Dallas and refused a sign-and-trade to Seattle. At the other end of the Notability Scale, Alex Jefferies also filed for arbitration with the Isles, and I can’t imagine how that hearing would sound. [NHL]
  • Technically, Jefferies filing for arbitration qualifies the Islanders for a second 48-hour buyout window. [THN] (However, a second window only applies to players whose cap hit is $4 million or higher.)

Elsewhere

  • The Rangers sent their (top-10 protected) 2030 first-round pick to the Canucks for Pettersson…Marcus Pettersson. A move of mixed messages. [Athletic]
  • The Capitals announced Alex Ovechkin is returning for another season, no surprise but lots of bonus money easily achieved. [NHL]
  • Kypreos on who else could still be moved this summer. Like Dylan Larkin, of course. And Alexander Nikishin. And Matthew Knies? I’ve heard there was no interest in Jordan Binnington at the deadline, but maybe that’s changed. [Sportsnet]
  • Kirill Marchenko is supposedly not on that list, despite earlier reports he wants out of Columbus. [TSN]
  • Nashville signed their recently acquired Mavrik Bourque to a five-year extension. [TSN]
  • That hard bargainer Pat Verbeek signed RFA Pavel Mintyukov — reportedly a target of possible offer sheets from several teams — to a big extension at $7.2 million, but that may only increase the pressure in Anaheim. [Sportsnet]
  • He’ll never be a Stastny. [Sportsnet]

Today on Pinstripe Alley – 7/6/26

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JULY 03: (L-R) Carlos Rodon #55, Max Fried #54, Austin Wells #28 and Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees look on from the dugout during the first inning against the Minnesota Twins at Yankee Stadium on July 03, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Yankees have their biggest series of the year lined up starting tonight, and they could not be in a worse state entering it. Losers of eight of their last nine, New York has surrendered the AL East to the Rays who went on a big winning streak of their own at the same time to carve out a four-game lead. Conveniently, they’re now set to open a four-game against Tampa that could bring them right back, but entering their house of horrors at the level of play they’ve shown over the past two weeks is a recipe for disaster. The worst-case scenario for this matchup feels like it could fare just like that fateful series against the Blue Jays last year to open up July that saw them fall out of first place for good, and though the Yankees built themselves a decent lead in the Wild Card race that gap isn’t looking too big anymore either.

Nick opens the day up for us with a look at the pitching matchups that we’ll see in this Rays series, and Kevin follows up with the Rivalry Roundup featuring the Astros besting those Rays to do the Yankees a small favor. Jonathan wishes Willie Randolph a happy birthday and relives his legacy of success as a player and coach with the Yankees. Josh looks over the Giants to see if there’s a reasonable trade the two teams could work towards, Michael examines the inability of the team to work walks of late, and finally I’ll be back later in the day to open up the mailbag for this week.

Today’s Matchup:

New York Yankees at Tampa Bay Rays

Time: 6:40 p.m. EST

TV: YES Network, Rays.TV

Venue: Tropicana Field, St. Petersburg, FL

Questions/Prompts:

1. Get your predictions in now: will the Yankees win zero, one, two, three, or all four of these games in Tampa?

2. Will the USA defeat Belgium tonight to advance to the quarterfinals? Will Folarin Balogun make an impact after getting his one-game suspension reversed?

Erie sweeps with walkoff win

Toledo Mud Hens 6, Iowa Cubs 2 (box)

The Toledo Mud Hens took Sunday’s game against Iowa, 6-2, to split the series against the Cubs.

Dylan File was outstanding in this one, giving the Mud Hens five innings of one-hit ball. He went 1-2-3 in every frame but the second and didn’t allow any free bases. File only threw 61 pitches, but he also started on Tuesday. Smart to not overdo it and take him out after he’s in line for the win.

File left with a four-run lead, thanks to a three-spot in the first. Max Clark led the inning off with a walk and stole second — his 18th of the year — and Max Anderson drove him in with a double (initially ruled an error) right after. Gage Workman kept things going with an RBI single up the middle, and Trei Cruz scored him on a sac fly.

Clark scored again in the third after leading off with a single. He stole second, again, and moved to up a bag on another Workman single. Brett Callahan drove Clark in with a base hit. 4-0, Toledo.

Iowa got a run back in the sixth after Yilber Diaz took over for File. Other than that two-out RBI double, Diaz was fine. Luke Taggart relieved him in the seventh and got five straight outs. Toledo turned to Ricky Vanasco for the four-out save.

Vanasco got the job done, but it wasn’t exactly efficient. He walked a batter in the eighth and gave up a pair of singles in the ninth. The Mud Hens traded a run for an out, and they could afford to because of a two-run eighth.

Workman was at the center of the scoring again, doubling in Anderson, stealing third and scoring on another sac fly from Cruz.

Trade: Woo-Suk Go was sent to Minnesota for cash considerations. He has an assignment clause in his contract and will join the Twins on Tuesday, according to Dan Hayes.

Clark: 1-3, 2 R, BB

Anderson: 2-4, 2B (13), 2 R, RBI, 2 K

Workman: 3-4, 2B (24), 2 R, 2 RBI

File (W, 5-5): 5.0 IP, H, 0 R, 0 BB, 6 K

Coming Up Next:The Mud Hens are on the road next week against the Indianapolis Indians, starting Tuesday at 7:05 p.m. ET.

(F/10) Erie SeaWolves 4, Akron RubberDucks 3 (box)

Erie finished off the sweep with its eighth straight on Sunday, but it took extra innings for the SeaWolves to take down the Akron RubberDucks, 4-3.

Hayden Minton went 3.1 innings to start. Besides a solo homer in the fourth, he was fine. Four hits, two walks and three strikeouts. Nothing special, but also not anything bad.

Just after Minton gave up the lead, Erie took it back on a Garrett Pennington double and Max Burt two-run homer.

Minton left the game after getting the first out of the fourth. Tyler Owens replaced him and got the next two outs. Carlos Pena was next, and he worked the same four innings he’s gone in each of his previous relief outings with Erie. A solo homer in the sixth was his only blemish. He had five strikeouts to one walk and allowed just two more hits in the outing. Unfortunately, that homer tied up the game and gave him a blown save.

Both offenses stalled until the ninth. Garrett Pennington finally broke the tie with a leadoff home run, but Wandisson Charles gave the run back in the bottom of the inning, sending the game to extras.

Bennett Lee drove in Viandel Pena from second, but Erie couldn’t add an insurance run. Chris Meyers also got hurt while swinging. It looked like his back, and he was in obvious pain, running to first on a single. Peyton Graham replaced him in the outfield, which is nice because he was hit in the arm with a pitch yesterday and left the game.

Charles closed things out with a 1-2-3 10th, including a pair of strikeouts. Bring out the brooms!

Pennington: 2-4, HR (2), 2B (4), 2 R, RBI, 2 K

Burt: 1-4, HR (3), R, 2 RBI

Bigbie: 2-5, 2B (14), K

Pena (BS, 2): 4.0 IP, 3 H, R, ER, BB, 5 K, HR

Coming Up Next:The SeaWolves are at home next week against the Harrisburg Senators, starting Tuesday at 6:05 p.m. ET.

Lake County Captains 6, West Michigan Whitecaps 4 (box)

West Michigan dropped the series against Lake County, 4-2, with a 6-4 loss on Sunday.

Rayner Castillo had another up-and-down start. He started out fine, going 1-2-3 in the first, but Castillo hit a batter and walked another in the second, which served as a bad omen.

Lake County got to him in the third. A pair of singles and a walk loaded the bases for Nolan Schubart, who cleared them with a double down the right-field line. Castillo worked around a pair of baserunners in the fourth, but that was it for him.

Carlos Lequerica took over on the mound in the fifth. He got into three straight three-ball counts, but only one of them resulted in a walk. The other two were punchouts, both coming on the changeup.

West Michigan threatened in the bottom of the fifth, with men on the corners and only one out, but nothing came of Andrew Sojka’s double.

Ethan Sloan got the sixth. He gave up three straight singles to open the frame. Samuel Gil made a nice diving stop on the third, but the throw was a tad late and forced the first baseman off the bag. A pair of sac flies made it 5-0.

Luke Stofel also had some trouble in the seventh, allowing back-to-back one-out singles, but he worked his way out of it. The Whitecaps finally got some runs on the board in the bottom half of the inning, scoring three on four singles and a walk. Woody Hadeen and Jackson Strong had RBI base knocks, and Clayton Campbell drove one in on a sac fly.

Eliseo Mota gave a run back to the Captains in the eighth, allowing back-to-back hits with two outs. Ryan Harvey faced the minimum in the ninth despite walking the leadoff man, aided by a 4-6-3 double play.

Hadeen reached on an error that could have been ruled a base hit in the ninth. Rainer and Campbell walked to load the bases. Strong cut the deficit to two runs with a sac fly, but the next two batters went down to end the game.

Rainer: 1-4, BB, K

Strong: 2-3, 2 RBI, BB

Sojka: 2-4, 2B (9), R, 2 K

Castillo (L, 1-6): 4.0 IP, 4 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 3 BB, 4 K

Coming Up Next:The Whitecaps are at home next week against the Fort Wayne TinCaps, starting Tuesday at 12:05 p.m. ET.

Palm Beach Cardinals 5, Lakeland Flying Tigers 3 (box)

Despite outhitting the Palm Beach Cardinals 11-5, the Lakeland Flying Tigers couldn’t claim a series win on Sunday, losing 5-3 to split the series.

Connor Fenlong had a nearly identical start to his first with Lakeland a week ago. He went 4.2 innings, struck out eight and walked one. The only differences for him were allowing a pair of runs (one earned) on three hits instead of five. The stuff is clearly good enough to think about High-A. He’s 26 years old, and a recent Indy league signing, so while the Tigers have him in Lakeland tuning some things up, he should be pushed as rapidly as he can handle.

Before those runs scored off Fenlong, Lakeland took a 3-0 lead. In the third, Jesus Pinto hit his third triple of the year to score Jack Goodman (walk), and Beau Ankeney drove in Pinto with a single up the middle.

Hunter Dobbins tripled and scored in the fourth for the other run. Goodman got the RBI this time.

Fenlong left the game with two on and two out in the fifth, giving way to Xiomer Guacache. A single and an error from Pinto in right field cleared the bases, hence the unearned runs. Guacahe gave up another run in the sixth. This one was earned after back-to-back walks to open the frame.

Lakeland kept getting on base, but the Flying Tigers went 2-for-12 with runners in scoring position, stranding eight batters. Clutch hits matter more in games like these.

Donye Evans got the seventh and worked around a one-out walk. Jan Carballo pitched the final two frames, dealing with multiple baserunners in each. Palm Beach scored its fifth run off him in the eighth, and that was the game.

Ankeney: 2-5, RBI

Dobbins: 2-4, 3B (2), R

MacDonald: 2-4

Fenlong: 4.2 IP, 3 H, 2 R, ER, BB, 8 K

Coming Up Next: The Flying Tigers are on the road next week against the Dunedin Blue Jays, starting Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. ET.

The Pirates finally spent some money. You'll never guess what happened next.

WASHINGTON – They are the tacit representatives in Major League Baseball’s fight to install a salary cap during collective bargaining negotiations, the embodiment of “what fans want” when the league claims widespread socialism must exist among its billionaire owners for the game to survive.

Yet the Pittsburgh Pirates might be proving a different point as they head toward the All-Star break with a winning record: Spending just a little bit of money can make a big difference.

Two offseason moves – signing designated hitter Ryan O’Hearn to a two-year, $29 million contract and trading for second baseman Brandon Lowe – played significant parts in turning one of the game’s least productive lineups into one of its most potent. And as the 46-45 Pirates remain in the thicket of the National League wild card race, they’re proving one of baseball’s axiom’s to very much be true.

“You have to spend money to win. That’s really what it is,” veteran outfielder Bryan Reynolds tells USA TODAY Sports. “Spend smart money. It doesn’t have to be a ton.

“We spent some money. And it’s paying off.”

Brandon Lowe, here hitting his team-leading 21st home run, says "it's a blast being a part of this lineup" in Pittsburgh.

Let’s be clear: It wasn’t a lot. O’Hearn’s signing and the $11.5 million due Lowe after a three-way trade sent him from Tampa Bay to Pittsburgh helped nudge the payroll to $102 million, 22nd among 30 teams.

It’s the highest the Pirates’ payroll has ranked since 2016, when they had the 20th-highest the year after winning 98 games. Yet their payroll that season was $100 million. That means the Pirates payroll jumped 2% as industry revenues grew 31%, from an estimated $9.5 billion in 2016 to $12.8 billion in 2025.

Certainly, the Pirates’ piece of that pie didn’t grow in lockstep, but they benefited from greater revenue sharing as well as increases in national TV contracts, among other shared revenues.

And while they may be painted as the small market, underdog anti-Dodgers, it’s also clear early proposals shared by MLB run counter to some of their 2026 success.

Wake me up when December ends

O’Hearn knows his way around medium markets. A Kansas City Royals draftee, he broke out as an All-Star in his third season in Baltimore and now totes an .807 OPS with 13 homers for Pittsburgh.

He also knows what saber-rattling looks like when MLB and the MLB Players’ Association lock horns early in negotiations.

“I read the emails. I have an idea what’s going on,” says O’Hearn. “But this’ll be my third CBA. I would be shocked if anything came to a solution before crunch time. So I’m not going to get lost in the day-to-day of it, because I have seen this before.

“The league said they’re going to lock us out. So, OK. Things don’t really happen until crunch time, from my experience. I’ll stick with that.”

That Dec. 1 lockout date can wait just a minute, though.

The Pirates’ offensive turnaround has been startling. In 2025, their payroll was a mere $86 million and the lineup resembled such neglect as they ranked 30th in OPS (.655) and runs (583).

This year? They are second in OPS (.762), trailing only the Dodgers, third in runs (475) and lead the majors with 829 hits.

Many hands have had a part in the uprising, including rookies Konnor Griffin and Esmerlyn Valdez, along with big steps forward from players like infielder Nick Gonzales that manager Don Kelly says began last year under first-year hitting coach Matt Hague.

It’s foolhardy to downplay O’Hearn and Lowe’s impact, though. Lowe’s 42 extra-base hits rank fifth in the major leagues, and his 21 homers already surpass Oneil Cruz’s team high from 2025.

“It’s very helpful,” says Reynolds, in the fourth year of an eight-year, $106.75 million deal that averages $13 million a season. “We’ve got one of the best offenses in baseball now, in big part to those two guys, and some other guys too. It’s been great.”

Lowe leads all major league second basemen in homers, RBIs (63) and slugging, making his omission from the All-Star Game something of a surprise. He put the capper on the Pirates’ Sunday, July 5 conquest of the Nationals, ripping a three-run homer in the eighth inning of their 11-5 victory to cap a winning road trip.

“It’s a blast being a part of this lineup,” says Lowe. “One through nine, and even with guys not starting that day, there’s damage to be found and runs to be scored.

“It’s fun coming to the ballpark understanding that I hit behind (Griffin) or in front of (Reynolds), we got O’Hearn and Valdy behind me.”

Indeed, while Lowe and O’Hearn have had huge hands in the Pirates’ success, another newcomer is simply fortunate an MLB CBA proposal wasn’t already adopted.

The kid stays in the picture

On a single, steamy 94-degree afternoon, Griffin’s play constantly demands attention. One moment, he’s laying out headlong to reel in a fly ball to shallow left field; a couple innings later, he’s going horizontal to reel in another dying quail.

And then with the game on the line, he’s fighting off a pair of two-strike pitches to slash a go-ahead two-run single in the eighth inning Sunday, a knock that preceded Lowe’s game-breaking three-run homer.

Griffin is 20 years old. And if one of MLB’s proposals in early rounds of CBA negotiating was already gospel, he wouldn’t be here.

Griffin reclassified to the 2024 draft class – he was selected ninth overall by Pittsburgh – and was bought out of a commitment to LSU. But an early proposal from MLB to the union included a stipulation that high school players would no longer be draft-eligible, that they’d have to be two years removed from high school graduation and at least 20 years old to be drafted.

Griffin wouldn’t be a Bucco, then, instead serving time in Baton Rouge. The proposal seems all the more drastic when you see Griffin take over a major league game.

“I want to do some special things in Pittsburgh, so it’s been really cool to see how the fans have shown me the love," rookie Konnor Griffin says of commiting long-term to the Pirates.

He certainly took notice when MLB and the union exchanged proposals June 19 and the high school draftee ban was floated.

“It makes me think, ‘Dang, what if I couldn’t have gotten drafted out of high school?’” Griffin tells USA TODAY Sports. “It’s definitely a different situation, but I’m just thankful I was able to be a part of that and glad it worked out for me.”

Some guys are just ready.

Griffin was still 19 when he made his debut April 3, and four days later agreed to a nine-year, $140 million contract extension – a term that would also be limited under MLB’s proposals.

Instead, he is a Bucco through most of his 20s, continuing a pattern of moving quickly: Griffin is already married, and already putting down roots in Pittsburgh.

“It’s just cool seeing a lot of my jerseys, my last name in the stands,” he says. “It’s pretty neat seeing all that. I wanted to be somewhere to try to help change a club where we become a winning baseball team.

“I want to do some special things in Pittsburgh, so it’s been really cool to see how the fans have shown me the love.”

He has rewarded them, too, becoming the fastest Pirate in club history to notch 20 steals, and accruing 1.7 WAR in just 59 games, despite missing nearly a month with a forearm strain.

“Being 20 years old and a rookie, he’s way mature beyond his years,” says Kelly, in his first full season as Pirates manager. “He’s going to have huge moments like that, yes, and also understanding that he’s 20 and learning.

“There’s not too many 20-year-olds in the big leagues. It’s the work ethic, the way he goes about it – he’s a mature kid to begin with and when you put the talent on top of that, it’s hard to beat.”

Says Griffin: “I’ve had to grow up pretty quick. Getting drafted out of high school, reclassed a year early, been living on my own a while now, got married, just adapting to what life is throwing at me.”

Lowe says he likes to give Griffin a hard time when he sprawls out for catches as he did Sunday, when sweat mottled the lenses of his sunglasses, he went sans eyewear and then had to lay out for a fly in shallow left field.

At 6-3, 222 pounds, Griffin is an imposing physical figure, featured on ESPN’s “You Got Mossed” segment when he was a Mississippi high school freshman.

“That wide receiver’s coming out on those plays,” says Lowe. “It shows the athleticism and why he’s up here. Not just a hitter or glove. He’s got it all going on.”

Tempting to say the Pirates do, as well. While reigning Cy Young Award winner Paul Skenes and veteran Mitch Keller have scuffled of late, the rotation remains stout. They’re just three games out of a wild card and more important, a biscuit above .500 as the trade deadline nears in less than a month.

At year’s end, they’ll be on the back nine of Skenes’ contractually obligated time with the team. A new CBA may frame just what he can pursue come free agency in 2029, and will certainly set a course of action for the Pirates to pursue.

In the current system, the Pirates – with a TV market size ranked No. 27 – should be more concerned with catching Milwaukee (38th-biggest Nielsen market) than the Dodgers.

But at least the Pirates are in the conversation, proof positive that spending a few bucks can provide an immediate dividend.

“I came into this and it was like, ‘Hey, this team has great pitching but was 30th in offense last year.’ A pretty big turnaround offensively,” says O’Hearn. “I’m proud of what we’ve done so far.

“We’ve got a long way to go, but we’ve got the players to score runs.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: The Pirates finally spent some money. You'll never guess what happened next.

MLB power rankings: As Red Sox dig out of big hole, another big loss looms

Even when they dig themselves out from the lowest point of their season, the Boston Red Sox can't win.

After sinking to their lowest point of the season - 15 ½ games out of first, 14 games under .500 - the Red Sox proceeded to win eight of their next 10 games. They were still in last place - but you could almost see fourth place from there.

Yet throughout that period, second-year lefty Connelly Early was diagnosed with elbow inflammation, went for an MRI, received "some good news," according to manager Chad Tracy - yet now is headed for a second opinion with noted orthopedist Keith Meister. Those often don't end well - and the Red Sox's season doesn't figure to, either.

Oh, they've moved up three spots in USA TODAY Sports' power rankings. Yet Early's loss would put even more of an onus on a lineup that's surprisingly averaged five runs per game in this hot streak. They best keep it up to avoid a wholesale sell-off by the trade deadline.

A look at our updated rankings:

Connelly Early can only hope for good news as he receives additional opinions on his elbow injury.

1. Los Angeles Dodgers (-)

  • Edwin Diaz - remember him? - aiming for a return shortly after All-Star break.

2. Milwaukee Brewers (-)

3. Tampa Bay Rays (+1)

  • Junior Caminero's crazy home run stretch - 11 in 11 games - deserved more attention.

4. Atlanta Braves (-1)

  • Some of that starting pitching magic is dissipating.

5. New York Yankees (-)

  • For the first time this year, they feel like a not very good team.

6. Philadelphia Phillies (-)

  • Bryce Harper says he'll do the Home Run Derby "if he can find someone to pitch to him."

7. Chicago Cubs (-)

  • Pete Crow-Armstrong is their lone All-Star, but he's been as good as three players.

8. Miami Marlins (-)

  • Who needs a perfect game when you're in a virtual tie for the third wild card in early July?

9. St. Louis Cardinals (-1)

  • Non-All-Star JJ Wetherholt leads the majors with 17 outs above average.

10. Chicago White Sox (+2)

  • The joyride continues as they escape Cleveland with a tenuous grip on first place.

11. Cleveland Guardians (-2)

  • José Ramírez eyes return after All-Star break.

12. Seattle Mariners (+3)

  • Logan Gilbert's first-half finishing kick makes his All-Star snub more pronounced.

13. Washington Nationals (-)

  • Luis Garcia Jr. already sets career high in homers, with 19.

14. Pittsburgh Pirates (+2)

  • Big finish to first half, with home series against Atlanta and Milwaukee.

15. Texas Rangers (-1)

  • Life is unpredictable: Jacob Latz loses bid for starting rotation, morphs into All-Star closer.

16. San Diego Padres (-6)

  • They're 44-45, and haven't hit the break below .500 since 2023.

17. Arizona Diamondbacks (-)

  • Seven games with Padres, Dodgers before break may determine team's deadline direction.

18. Houston Astros (+1)

  • 12-6 run has them almost back to .500.

19. Minnesota Twins (+4)

  • Byron Buxton reaggravates hip injury, but confident he's playing it wisely.

20. Baltimore Orioles (+1)

  • Coby Mayo crushing lefties, with a 1.038 OPS.

21. Toronto Blue Jays (-1)

22. Boston Red Sox (+3)

  • The kids aren't much for RBIs these days, but Willson Contreras ranks sixth in the AL with 59 of 'em.

23. Cincinnati Reds (-1)

  • Outfielder Will Benson designated for assignment after batting .188 with 33% strikeout rate.

24. Detroit Tigers (-)

  • 18-12 since June 1, still very confounding.

25. Athletics (-7)

  • The Yolo County loyalists booed the Marlins for punting a perfect game, but perhaps a rotation wtih a 5.23 ERA - 29th in the majors - should've been the target of their ire.

26. New York Mets (-)

  • Kodai Senga "throwing the ball really, really well" in relief, interim manager Andy Green says.

27. San Francisco Giants (+1)

  • Rafael Devers, OPS now up to .791, might be the ultimate "water finds its level" hitter.

28. Colorado Rockies (+2)

  • Hunter Goodman getting that "perennial All-Star" vibe.

29. Kansas City Royals (-)

  • John Wathan receives his blue blazer, inducted into Royals' hall of fame.

30. Los Angeles Angels (-3)

  • Mike Trout confident he'll be active shortly, plans to make All-Star post.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: MLB power rankings: As Red Sox dig out of big hole, another big loss looms

Yankees news: Fried tosses successful live BP session

NEW YORK, NY - JUNE 03: Max Fried #54 of the New York Yankees looks on during the game against the Cleveland Guardians at Yankee Stadium on June 3, 2026 in New York, New York. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

NY Post | Jake Nisse: Yankees’ left-hander Max Fried continues to trend towards a rehab assignment, as he completed another live batting practice session on Sunday. The $218-million man is recovering from an elbow issue that sidelined him in May. He threw 36 pitches and faced Ryan McMahon and Alí Sánchez.

“It’s been good, it’s been a good run-up for him, and obviously another step today,” manager Aaron Boone said. The 32-year-old star boasts a 3.21 ERA in 61.2 innings this season.

NY Post | Mark Sánchez: With their loss on Sunday, the Yankees have now dropped nine of their last 10 games and 13 of their last 17 games. On top of the horrible, sloppy play, second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. had to be removed from Sunday’s finale after the fifth inning with discomfort in his right toe. The team announced that X-rays were negative and said he’ll be reassessed Monday. “Kinda nags him from time to time,” Boone explained after the game.

NJ.com | Adam Zagoria: The Yankees are down right now, but they’ve got their biggest series of the year in front of them. They’re traveling down to Tampa for a massive four-game series against the Rays starting tonight, with a four-game deficit in the AL East that could either be closed entirely or grow to a massive gap. If anything’s going to get this team to wake up and get their season on a lifeboat, this challenge needs to be the one to do it.

SNY | Colin Martin: The Yankees recalled Ángel Chivilli on Sunday morning, and he made his first MLB appearance since April 19th. He pitched well, completing 1.1 scoreless innings in low-leverage duty, allowing one hit, and striking out one to lower his ERA to 2.45 in a tiny sample in the majors. He had posted a 1.08 ERA over 16.2 innings in Scranton, with 17 punchouts.

Utah Jazz vs Memphis Grizzlies: Summer League Preview, start time, how to watch

SALT LAKE CITY, UT - JULY 4: Cody Williams #5 of the Utah Jazz drives to the basket during the game against the Atlanta Hawks during a 2026 NBA Salt Lake City Summer League game on July 4, 2026 at Jon M. Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City, Utah. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Melissa Majchrzak/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

If you are anything like me, you have been watching highlights from the Utah Jazz summer league victory on Saturday afternoon incessantly with a massive cheesy grin every single time. Luckily for people like us, the Jazz take the floor once again, this time against a familiar face in Taylor Hendricks and the #3 overall pick in the 2026 NBA Draft, Cameron Boozer.

SALT LAKE CITY, UT – JULY 4: Darryn Peterson #22 of the Utah Jazz drives to the basket against the Atlanta hawks during the first half of of their 2026 NBA Salt Lake City Summer League game at the Jon M Huntsman Center on July 4, 2026 in Salt Lake City, Utah. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. ( Photo by Chris Gardner/ Getty Images) | Getty Images

How to Watch the Salt Lake City Summer League?

Who: Utah Jazz vs Memphis Grizzlies

When: Monday, July 6, 2026 | 7:00 MT

Where: Jon M. Huntsman Center, Salt Lake City, UT

How to watch: Prime Video, ESPN, League Pass, KJZZ, Jazz+

Players to Watch

Darryn Peterson

Coming as a surprise to absolutely no one, the main player to watch in this one is once again going to be Darryn Peterson. After an absolutely superb debut showing on Independence Day, where he tallied 28 points on 11/21 shooting to go along with 5 rebounds, 2 assists, and 2 steals, all eyes will be on him to see how he will follow up those 4th of July fireworks. This time out, he will face off against the #3 overall pick, Cameron Boozer, who will surely look to make a statement against him. Darryn is the marquee player on the floor every time he plays in Summer League. As such, he has a target on his back. There are lots of guys on the opposing roster who will look to embarrass him to make a bigger name for themselves. One thing in particular to keep an eye on in this game is the turnovers. Darryn was responsible for 8 turnovers on Saturday night, and while not all of them were his fault, that is definitely a number that should be cleaned up as he gets more comfortable on the floor with his teammates.

Cody Williams

Cody Williams looked amazing in the Jazz Summer League Opener. The pessimistic side of things could look at his performance and say, “That is what 3rd-year players should do in Summer League. The optimistic side of that, however, is that there were legitimate stretches early in Cody’s NBA career when he genuinely didn’t look like he was going to make it through his rookie contract. It is really nice to see him getting stronger and more confident with the ball no matter the setting. If he can keep it up, he could be a really important player for this Jazz team with his length and defense as well.

SALT LAKE CITY, UT – JULY 4: Cody Williams #5 of the Utah Jazz drives to the basket during the game against the Atlanta Hawks during a 2026 NBA Salt Lake City Summer League game on July 4, 2026 at Jon M. Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City, Utah. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Melissa Majchrzak/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Cameron Boozer

Cameron Boozer will come out hungry and ready to prove a point to the Jazz. Last time out, he scored 15 points on 7/11 shooting in a dominant win over the Thunder. His dad, Carlos, we all know, works in the front office for Utah and during the predraft process, was quoted in an interview with Marc Spears as saying, “If they miss the boat, they will regret it,” when asked why NBA teams should take his son. You can bet your bottom dollar that Cameron feels the exact same way and wants to embarrass Darryn Peterson in front of his home fans. Although they won’t be matched up head-to-head very often, watch out for the two guys to try to really go at it.