Phillies swept in Pittsburgh, doing nothing offensively and need to figure it out fast

Phillies swept in Pittsburgh, doing nothing offensively and need to figure it out fast originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

PITTSBURGH – The Phillies are going to need to find a way to generate offense without Bryce Harper and the early returns have been ugly.

The Phils were held to a lone run for the second straight day and were swept by the Pirates, falling 2-1 on Sunday afternoon at PNC Park.

The Phillies have lost five consecutive games and 9 of 10. They went 1-5 on a road trip to Toronto and Pittsburgh this week and come home with a 37-28 record. They’re nearly as far behind the Mets in the NL East as they were after being swept at Citi Field in late April.

They knew Sunday wouldn’t be easy against Pirates ace Paul Skenes, who might be the NL Cy Young front-runner at the moment. Skenes used his 99 mph fastball and deep mix of seven pitches to hold the Phillies in check, just as he did on May 18 at Citizens Bank Park. He allowed one run over eight innings in a loss that afternoon and gave up just an unearned run over 7⅔ innings Sunday.

The Phillies mustered two hits off Skenes and they came in consecutive at-bats in the top of the third. Brandon Marsh lined a single up the middle and nine-hole hitter Rafael Marchan doubled. Pirates second baseman Nick Gonzales made an errant relay throw that caromed off Marchan’s body and allowed Marsh to score the Phillies’ only run.

They went 1-for-19 with three walks the rest of the way. The only player to reach base twice was Marsh.

It was a shame for Cristopher Sanchez, who probably had his best command of the season. Sanchez struck out nine and began the eighth inning with just one walk. Manager Rob Thomson left him in to face lefty-hitting Oneil Cruz because Sanchez had handled him three times earlier with two K’s and a groundout. He couldn’t the fourth time, walking Cruz, who leads the majors with 23 steals in 25 attempts.

Cruz spun his wheels and did not seem to get a good jump but still stole second on reliever Orion Kerkering, scoring the game-winning run on an opposite-field single by Andrew McCutchen.

The Phillies return to Citizens Bank Park for a much-needed six-game homestand. The Cubs are in town Monday through Wednesday and the Blue Jays Friday through Sunday.

Zack Wheeler will start Monday’s series opener on 10 days’ rest. He missed the trip to Pittsburgh and Toronto on the paternity list. He’s their ace but he can’t swing the bat and will need more support than Sanchez received in Pittsburgh.

Phillies swept in Pittsburgh, doing nothing offensively and need to figure it out fast

Phillies swept in Pittsburgh, doing nothing offensively and need to figure it out fast originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

PITTSBURGH – The Phillies are going to need to find a way to generate offense without Bryce Harper and the early returns have been ugly.

They were swept in Pittsburgh, shut down offensively and need to figure this out quickly, because Harper didn’t sound Saturday like he expected to be back when first eligible June 16.

The Phils were held to a lone run for the second straight day and were swept by the Pirates, falling 2-1 on Sunday afternoon at PNC Park. They’ve lost five consecutive games and 9 of 10. They went 1-5 on a road trip to Toronto and Pittsburgh this week and come home with a 37-28 record. They’re nearly as far behind the Mets in the NL East as they were after being swept at Citi Field in late April.

“The easy thing is to say it’s a long season but we know we’re better than how we’ve been playing and we need to start doing it,” Bryson Stott said.

“It’s frustrating, just the hitters that we have and the outings we’re getting from the pitchers. Feel like we’re letting them down.”

The Phillies knew Sunday wouldn’t be easy against Pirates ace Paul Skenes, who might be the NL Cy Young front-runner at the moment. Skenes used his 99 mph fastball and deep mix of seven pitches to hold the Phillies in check, just as he did on May 18 at Citizens Bank Park. He allowed one run over eight innings in a loss that afternoon and gave up just an unearned run over 7⅔ innings Sunday.

The Phillies mustered two hits off Skenes and they came in consecutive at-bats in the top of the third. Brandon Marsh lined a single up the middle and nine-hole hitter Rafael Marchan doubled. Pirates second baseman Nick Gonzales made an errant relay throw that caromed off Marchan’s body and allowed Marsh to score the Phillies’ only run.

They went 1-for-19 with three walks the rest of the way. The only player to reach base twice was Marsh.

“A little bit,” Stott said when asked if hitters are trying to do too much without Harper. “We saw it in ’22 when he was down, it took a second to finally have everyone calm down and realize we’ve still got to play our game. He’s Bryce Harper and you’re not gonna try to step up to be Bryce Harper, you want to be yourself. Obviously, you want to hit like him. But a little bit of trying too hard or coming out of approaches.”

It was a shame for Cristopher Sanchez, who probably had his best command of the season. Sanchez struck out nine and began the eighth inning with just one walk. Manager Rob Thomson left him in to face lefty-hitting Oneil Cruz because Sanchez had handled him three times earlier with two K’s and a groundout. He couldn’t the fourth time, walking Cruz, who leads the majors with 23 steals in 25 attempts.

“This was his best start in a while because he was attacking the zone,” Thomson said. “Fastball had a lot of life to it, changeup was really good, he was landing the slider. It’s all about attack for him. He’s got to attack the zone because his stuff is good enough to get anyone out.”

Cruz spun his wheels and did not seem to get a good jump but still stole second on reliever Orion Kerkering, scoring the game-winning run on an opposite-field single by Andrew McCutchen.

“It’s like that when a team isn’t performing like we are right now. I know our team can score a lot of runs,” Sanchez said. “We’re just going through a rough stretch.”

The Phillies return to Citizens Bank Park for a much-needed six-game homestand. The Cubs are in town Monday through Wednesday and the Blue Jays Friday through Sunday.

Thomson said he’s been “thinking about some different things,” so there may be a change or two to the lineup. Zack Wheeler will start Monday’s series opener on 10 days’ rest. He missed the trip to Pittsburgh and Toronto on the paternity list. He’s their ace but he can’t swing the bat and will need more support than Sanchez received in Pittsburgh.

What we learned as Yastrzemski helps cap Giants' sweep of Braves

What we learned as Yastrzemski helps cap Giants' sweep of Braves originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — So, is the sky still falling?

The frustration and concern surrounding the Giants as recently as Tuesday was warranted, but things can change quickly in a 162-game MLB season. A league-best five-game winning streak certainly helps.

San Francisco sent Landen Roupp to the mound against Braves (27-37) righty Spencer Strider (L, 6 IP, 3 H, 4 R, 3 ER, 3 BB, 5 K) as it looked to cap off a series sweep of Atlanta on Sunday at Oracle Park. After trailing early, the Giants, for the fifth consecutive game, came from behind to secure the win.

Here are three observations from the Giants’ 4-3 victory that improved their record to 38-28:

Signs of Life?

Mike Yastrzemski was ice cold entering Sunday’s contest, batting just .040 (1-for-25) over his last eight games and .065 (3-for-46) over his last 15.

He got the scoring started for the Giants in the bottom of the second with a sacrifice fly that tied the game at one run apiece. Then, with runners on second and third and two outs in the bottom of the fourth, and San Francisco trailing 3-1, Yastrzemski roped a two-run double down the right-field line that tied the game 3-3 before he came around to score on a fielding error one batter later.

Yastrzemski was hitless with runners in scoring position in his last 17 at-bats before Sunday’s game, and the Giants certainly hope his three-RBI day is a sign that their longest-tenured player is heating up after a brutal month of May.

Settled In Nicely

Roupp (W, 6 IP, 5 H, 3 ER, 2 BB, 2 K) had been lights out on the mound prior to Sunday’s start, posting a 0.40 ERA over his last four outings combined while surrendering two runs or fewer in each of his last six.

His dominance came to an end pretty quickly in the series finale against Atlanta. With runners on first and third with no outs in the top of the first, Braves slugger Matt Olson grounded into a fielder’s choice out that scored Ronald Acuña Jr. from third and gave Atlanta an early 1-0 lead.

Roupp ran into more trouble in the top of the third with the score tied 1-1. Once again, with runners on first and third and Olson at the plate, this time with one out, the Atlanta first baseman doubled home two runs on a line drive to center field that extended the Braves’ lead to 3-1.

The Giants righty settled in nicely after that, throwing two scoreless frames to get through six on a day when he did not have his best stuff.

Consistent As Can Be

With three scoreless innings on Saturday, the Giants’ bullpen lowered their ERA and WHIP this season to 2.27 and 1.07, respectively, both the lowest marks of any MLB team.

San Francisco’s relievers have combined to throw at least three innings while allowing zero runs 23 times, which is the third-most in the league behind the San Diego Padres (26) and the Houston Astros (24).

Roupp got through six frames on Sunday before handing the ball over to the bullpen. Ryan Walker, Randy Rodriguez and Camilo Doval shut down the Braves in the final three frames. Just business as usual for the league’s most elite bullpen.

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Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Nick Kurtz is back, Kyle Teel is here

Welcome to Waiver Wire Watch, where I review my favorite waiver wire adds and drops for each week of the MLB season.

The premise is pretty straightforward. I’ll try to give you some recommended adds each week based on recent production or role changes. When I list a player, I’ll list the category where I think he’ll be helpful or the quick reason he’s listed. I hope it will help you determine if the player is a fit for what your team needs.

For a player to qualify for this list, he needs to be UNDER 40% rostered in Yahoo! formats. I understand you may say, “These players aren’t available in my league,” and I can’t help you there. These players are available in over 60% of leagues and some in 98% of leagues, so they’re available in many places, and that can hopefully satisfy readers who play in all league types.

Waiver Wire Hitters

Miguel Vargas - 1B/3B/OF, CWS: 39% rostered
(POST HYPE PROSPECT, EMERGING POWER)

Earlier this season, Vargas appeared in my article on hitters to add based on their plate discipline and contact rates. Vargas is chasing at a super low rate, making 85% contact overall and rarely swinging and missing. He's pulling the ball slightly less this season and has focused less on lifting the ball, which is a good change. He doesn't smoke the ball, but a 90 mph average exit velocity is pretty good, and he's playing every day in Chicago. He had a really strong month of May and while he has struggled a bit to start June, his plate discipline remains really strong, and so I expect another hot stretch to come.

Tyler Stephenson - C, CIN: 36% rostered
(HOT STREAK, POWER UPSIDE)

Stephenson didn't exactly hit the ground running when he was activated off the IL, but he seems to be turning it on of late, hitting .308./373/.596 over his last 15 games with four home runs and 11 RBIs. I would consider him in one-catcher formats if you don't have the Contreras brothers, Cal Raleigh, Will Smith, Hunter Goodman, Logan O'Hoppe, or Adley Rutschman. If you're looking for an option in a two-catcher format, you can go with Carlos Narvaez - C, BOS (7% rostered). It seems as though Narvaez has emerged as the starting catcher and one of the better rookies in the AL. He was known primarily for his plus defense when he was acquired from the Yankees in a trade this off-season, but he's hitting .277/.355/.440 in 186 plate appearances with five home runs and 19 RBI. He provides top-tier defense behind the plate and is going to start about two-thirds of the games for the Red Sox while hitting near the middle of the order.

Roman Anthony - OF, BOS: 32% rostered
(TOP PROSPECT STASH, POTENTIAL CALL-UP)

I have no inside information here, but I think Anthony will be called up on Monday before Boston's six-game homestand. The Red Sox still don’t have space in the outfield for Anthony, and Rafael Devers said that he won't take reps at 1B, but it’s coming to a point where Boston may have no choice but to move Gold Glove CF Ceddanne Rafaela back to the infield or trade Jarren Duran just to get Anthony’s bat up. You can’t be in a big market like Boston and have your big league team playing this poorly while the top prospect in baseball is hitting .290/.421/.495 with 10 home runs, 44 runs scored, and 29 RBI in 57 games at Triple-A. Anthony has never posted a swinging strike rate above 9% at any step in the minors other than 50 games at High-A in 2023, so he should be a solid batting average asset upon being called up with good power potential and the ability to swipe 5-10 bases. More of a short-term prospect pick-up is Otto Kemp - 2B/3B, PHI (3% rostered). The 25-year-old has been a fixture in our Rotoworld blurbs because he has been crushing Triple-A to the tune of a .313/.416/.594 slash line in 58 games with 14 home runs and 11 steals. He has always posted high swinging strike rates in the minors, and the overall contact rate was just 67% in Triple-A, so don't expect a good batting average, but the power and speed are legit, and he could play regularly with Bryce Harper on the IL. Kemp has also played all over the infield and some outfield, so he could stick as a utility bat when Harper comes back if he hits well enough.

Parker Meadows - OF, DET: 24% rostered
(POWER/SPEED UPSIDE, RETURN FROM THE IL)

Meadows came off the IL this week and went 4-for-19 with three runs scored and two steals. More importantly, he started almost every game in center field and hit lead-off for the AL’s best team. He did sit against the one left-handed pitcher they faced, so that may become a regular thing with Javier Baex and Wenceel Perez able to play center field, but Meadows needs to be rostered in way more leagues. Matt Wallner - OF, MIN (13% rostered) also returned from the IL this week and went 5-for-20 with three home runs and four RBI. The power is exactly what you're looking for with Wallner, and he's been batting cleanup against righties, which should provide solid counting stats.

Sal Frelick - OF, MIL: 24% rostered
(CONSISTENT PLAYING TIME, BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE)

Frelick has been a bit underrated in fantasy circles this season despite hitting .292 with 11 stolen bases on the season. He’s primarily a batting average and stolen base asset, but he does help a little bit everywhere and is a solid, deep league player and a fine fifth OF in shallow formats. Another underrated outfielder is Wenceel Perez - OF, DET (2% rostered), who is hitting .294/.351/.647 in 11 games this season with three home runs, four RBI, and seven runs scored. He also hit .242 with nine home runs and nine steals in 112 games as a rookie last season. He's been playing a lot of right field with Kerry Carpenter shifting to DH and Colt Keith riding the bench a lot, and that could be how Detroit approaches this moving forward. He's likely only going to play four games a week, so it's more of a daily moves play or a stash and hope he takes Keith's place permanently.

Nick Kurtz - 1B, ATH: 24% rostered
(RETURN FROM THE IL, POWER UPSIDE)

Nick Kurtz was heating up before landing on the IL with a strained oblique, hitting four home runs in his last five games. The talented rookie is set to come back on Monday, and we know that offense is going to pick up in Sacramento as the weather warms, so I'd be trying to add him in any leagues where he's still available.

Chase Meidroth - 2B/3B/SS, CWS: 23% rostered
(EVERY DAY JOB, MODEST STEALS UPSIDE)

In 33 games since May 1st, Meidroth is hitting .306/.386/.395 with 15 runs scored, seven steals, two home runs, and a 16/16 K/BB ratio. He’s another hitter I’m highlighting on here who is making good swing decisions and succeeding due to a strong understanding of the strike zone. He had never stolen more than 13 bases in a season at the minor league level, so that number is a bit shocking to me, but he can run a bit and is a smart baseball player on a bad team that has no problem taking chances on the bases. Meidroth is also hitting leadoff and playing every day, so he could accumulate runs and steals while hitting for a solid batting average. Another option for similar skills is Ernie Clement - 2B/SS/3B - TOR (19% rostered). Over the same stretch of time, Clement is hitting .297/.339/.449 with three home runs, 18 runs scored, 12 RBI, one steal, and a 14/7 K/BB ratio in 34 games. Even with Andres Gimenez back, Clement is still an everyday player, just at 3B now. The 29-year-old has proved himself to be a solid batting average asset last season, and his multi-position eligibility makes him valuable in deeper leagues.

Ryan O'Hearn - 1B/OF, BAL: 22% rostered
(CONSISTENT PLAYING TIME, POWER UPSIDE)

Ryan O’Hearn is a boring veteran who has also been criticized because he was “blocking” the path of many of the Orioles’ top prospects for the last couple of years. However, at this point, Kyle Stowers and Connor Norby are gone, Jordan Westburg and Colton Cowser play every day when healthy, Heston Kjerstad has not hit at the MLB level, and the team clearly doesn’t trust Coby Mayo as a defender, so maybe we should just embrace O’Hearn for the value that he does bring. O’Hearn isn’t going to play against lefties, but he has been producing more than enough against righties. He hits clean-up for the Orioles and is having one of his best seasons by trading a little bit of contact for a slightly more pull-happy approach. He’s more of a line drive hitter, so the home run production will come and go, but the quality of contact has been really good, and this lineup should improve when Cowser and Westburg return soon. Abraham Toro - 1B/2B/3B, BOS (3% rostered) is also on a pretty good run of late and has been starting regularly at either first base or third base for Boston. We keep expecting that Boston will trade for a 1B, but if they continue to fall out of playoff contention, they may just stick with Toro, who is 28 years old and hitting .325/.338/.506 in 23 games this season with three home runs, 10 runs scored, and eight RBI. This is probably more of a short-term add but not a bad one in deeper leagues.

Marcelo Mayer - SS, BOS: 19% rostered
(RECENT CALL-UP, BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE)

Both Marcel Mayer and Cole Young - 2B/SS, SEA (5% rostered) are off to slow starts to their big league careers. They're both also likely better real-life players than fantasy players, but they are talented hitters and could work themselves into being strong batting average assets. Mayer has a bit more power and Young has a bit more speed, but they're both worth a shot to be on your bench to see if they can get hot.

Jordan Beck - OF, COL: 19% rostered
(HOME PARK BONUS, PROSPECT GROWTH)

Beck's roster rate has plummeted from 36% last week, and that makes some sense with the Rockies on the road last week, but they're back at home for six games this week. He's a young hitter with some power and speed who has a 14.3% barrel rate on the season. His exit velocities aren't great, but he's pulling and lifting the ball more this year, which is going to help him get to his power. He still has just a 70% contact rate and 14.4% swinging strike rate, so the batting average will likely regress, but the power is intriguing, and you can slot him into your lineup every time the Rockies are at home.

Carlos Santana - 1B, CLE: 19% rostered
(BATTING AVERAGE, RBI UPSIDE)

Every year, Carlos Santana has strong stretches where his batting average spikes and he drives in a bunch of runs in the middle of the batting order. We are in one of those stretches right now. Over the last month, he has gone 22-for-76 (.289) with three home runs and 13 RBIs. The batting average will likely regress in the coming weeks, and this isn’t a pick-up necessarily to hold for the remainder of the season, outside of deeper formats, but Santana is a solid veteran hitter who can be helpful for you when he’s riding hot streaks like this. Similarly, veteran Josh Bell - 1B, WAS (6% rostered), has been getting a little hot of late, going 11-for-37 (.297) over his last 11 games with three home runs and seven RBI. It's getting warmer in the Northeast, and the ball is starting to fly a little bit. If Bell continues to produce decent numbers, could he wind up traded to a team like Boston, that might need a corner infield bat?

Christian Encarnacion-Strand - 1B, CIN: 18% rostered
(POWER UPSIDE, RETURN FROM THE IL)

If you thought you were going to sneak CES through on waivers after he was activated from the IL on Saturday, his 2-for-5 day with one home run and three RBI likely didn't help you. He's going to play almost every day for a Reds team that is struggling with injuries and has little to play for this season other than player development. CES has had strikeout issues since being promoted to the big leagues and is not lock to produce, but he's well worth a gamble given his power upside now that he's back and healthy.

Jo Adell - OF, LAA: 7% rostered
(POWER UPSIDE, POST-HYPE PROSPECT)

I know we've done this a bunch with Adell in the past, and I'm not sure I buy it, but I do feel the need to point out that he's been playing well of late. Over his last 27 games, Adell is batting .276/.382/.605 with eight home runs, 14 runs scored, and 14 RBI. More importantly, he has just a 19% strikeout rate over that span, with a 51% hard-hit rate and nine barrels. We've seen Adell have short stretches of improved contact in the past, so there's no guarantee that this sticks, but if it does, he will be a huge fantasy asset. A deep league option primarily for speed is. Jake Meyers - OF, HOU (8% rostered)A few weeks ago,I published an article on hitters who were being more aggressive and swinging at the first pitch more often this year than last year. Myers popped up for me on that leaderboard, and I explained in detail why I’m a fan of his new approach, so you should read that article to check out the analysis; however, I think he’s a solid add for steals and something close to a .270 batting average.

Kyle Teel - C, CWS: 6% rostered
(PROSPECT CALL-UP, BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE)

Kyle Teel was promoted this weekend and has started three straight games at either catcher or DH. It seems like he's getting a chance to supplant Edgar Quero, who was fairly average in his first 39 MLB games and provided below-average defense. Teel also may have more offensive upside, slashing .295/.394/.492 in 50 games at Triple-A with eight home runs and seven steals. He's worth a look in all two-catcher leagues.

Mike Tauchman - OF, CWS: 6% rostered
(OFF THE IL, PLAYING TIME GUARANTEE)

Teel's teammate Mike Tauchman has also been playing every day for the White Sox, batting leadoff and hitting .297/.410/.547 in 18 games since coming off the IL with three home runs, 12 runs scored, and 10 RBI. We've seen Tauchman be a solid deeper league fantasy asset in the past, and he may be locking into a strong stretch here as well. The Mets are also giving Starling Marte - OF, NYM (1% rostered) a chance to play more with Mark Vientos on the IL. Brett Baty has cooled a bit of late, and Marte has gone 8-for-25 (.320) in his last 11 games with eight runs scored, two home runs, and a steal. Marte no longer has the stolen base value he used to, but if he's going to DH and hit second regularly for the Mets, there is fantasy value there.

Thairo Estrada- 2B, COL: 6% rostered
(OFF THE IL, BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE)

Estrada was a big late-round favorite of mine early in the season now that he’s in Colorado. I think he hurt his fantasy value by playing through injury last year, but he’s a .270 15/15 type of talent who will not be playing in Coors Field. A fractured wrist could impact some of that power, but Estrada hit a solid 7-for-23 during his rehab assignment and could be a solid source of batting average and speed while being the likely everyday starter at second base for the Rockies. Colorado has six games at home this week, so fire Estrada up. If you wanted more upside, you could take a gamble on Ronny Maurico - 2B, NYM (12% rostered), who has gone 3-for-16 with one home run and one steal in his first four games since being called up. As I mentioned above, Brett Baty has come back down to earth, and Maurico has all kinds of raw tools. It's unclear what kind of opportunity he'll get, especially when Mark Vientos comes back, but Mauricio could be worth a shot.

Ha-Seong Kim - SS, TB: 4% rostered)
(IL STASH, SPEED UPSIDE)

If you have space for a bench stash, Kim is another possible option if you need speed. He's currently in Triple-A on a rehab assignment, so it feels like maybe one or two more weeks until we see Kim back up, but he should play every day for the Rays, who may also then ship him away at the trade deadline. Even if that happens, Kim would have value wherever he winds up, so now may be the time to stash him.

Waiver Wire Pitchers

Eury Perez - SP, MIA: 44% rostered
Yes, Perez doesn't technically qualify for this list since he's rostered in too many leagues, but he's set to make his season debut on Monday in Pittsburgh and gets a nice two-start week against Washington as well. Perez is a high-end talent and could be one of the more exciting pitchers in baseball...in 2026. He's coming back from Tommy John surgery and one a bad team that isn't playing for anything. I doubt they push him past five innings in most starts, and his chances for wins are really small. He's talented, so he'll be worth streaming in some starts and picking up in deeper formats, but I wouldn't add him expecting a "league winner" or whatever. I would much rather be adding Mick Abel - SP, PHI (43% rostered), who also doesn't qualify for this list. Given Aaron Nola's struggles this year and his setback on his rehab, I think it's possible Abel is in the Phillies' rotation for much, if not all, of June. If he pitches well enough, they could trade Ranger Suarez for bullpen help or an outfielder and open up a spot in the rotation for Abel. Or maybe trade Abel to the Red Sox in a package for Jarren Duran. Would love that for both teams.

Bubba Chandler - SP, PIT: 32% rostered
Much like with Roman Anthony, we have no idea when Chandler will be up this season, but it feels like it has to be soon. He has dominated Triple-A this year and has nothing left to prove. I know waiting is hard, but if you have the bench space for a stash, I think Chandler is the one.

Edward Cabrera - SP, MIA: 24% rostered
Cabrera was confusingly pulled after 63 pitches and four innings on Friday, but I had liked what I saw before his exit. The right-hander has long tantalized with his upside and disappointed with his command, but he is making some pitch mix changes that caught my attention. I dug into him for my starting pitcher news column last week, so I'd encourage you to check that out for a more detailed breakdown.

Shane Smith - SP, CWS: 24% rostered
It's rare you see a pitcher with a 2.45 ERA and 23% strikeout rate across 62 innings be rostered in so few leagues. But I guess that's what happens when you're on the White Sox. Smith has slowed a little bit of late, with two poor starts against the Mets and Mariners, but bounced back this week against the Tigers a bit. He has gone six innings only three times this season and has only two wins, so that can make him tough to start, but the ratios and strikeouts have been pretty good these past 6 weeks. Also, just some respect for Smith's teammate Adrian Houser - SP, CWS (4% rostered), who has a 1.48 ERA, 1.03 WHIP, and 20 strikeouts in 24.1 innings for the White Sox this season. It's still Houser, and he pitches for the second-worst team in baseball, so there's not tons of upside here, but he's been really good so far.

Robert Garcia - RP, TEX: 19% rostered
Garcia is now the closer in Texas. I think. I have no idea. He had the last two save conversions for the Rangers, but then "blew" a save against the Rays this weekend. In truth, that was one of the unluckiest blown saves I've seen with TWO runners scoring on THE SAME infield single. Two of the three hits Garcia gave up in that inning were infield singles. It feels like a fluky poor performance. However, Chris Martin - RP, TEX (21% rostered) is also returning from the IL and could get right back into the closer conversation as well.

Ryne Nelson - SP, ARI: 6% rostered
I know his start this weekend was brutal, but it was also in Cincinnati, where we know we tend to want to avoid using our starters. I just wanted to highlight Nelson here because I think he's in the Diamondbacks rotation for the rest of the season. I expect them to be sellers at the deadline, which could mean moving Zac Gallen too. Nelson has some warts as a pitcher, but he was good in the rotation last season, and I expect him to settle in and be just fine for Arizona.

Pierce Johnson - RP, ATL: 1% rostered
It's been a really rough season for Raisel Iglesias. The Braves are also quickly falling out of playoff contention, Spencer Strider is not himself, and Marcell Ozuna is playing through a torn hip. This team could easily sell at the deadline, and even if they didn't do a full sell, trading away a struggling veteran reliever to a contender who may want Iglesias is not a bad idea. The Braves could get an interesting prospect or two and easily find a new closer for next season. Pierce Johnson did give up a huge home run to Matt Chapman, but he's been pretty good this season and feels like a solid gamble for saves. You could also try Kirby Yates - RP, LAD (39% rostered), who's off the IL and could sneak into a save share with the Dodgers.

STREAMING STARTER PITCHERS

MUST BE 40% ROSTERED ON YAHOO OR UNDER (ranked in loose order)

Week of 6/9

Strong Preference

PitcherRoster%Opponent
Mitch Keller36%vs MIA
Cade Horton28%vs PIT
Gavin Williams40%at SEA
Will Warren39%at KC
Jack Leiter39%at MIN
Edward Cabrera23%at WAS
Ryan Weathers33%at WAS

Fairly Confident

Jose Soriano20%vs ATH
Sawyer Gipson-Long9%at BAL, vs CIN
Cade Povich4%vs DET, at LAA
Slade Cecconi3%vs CIN
Luis L. Ortiz15%vs CIN, at SEA
Tomoyuki Sugano35%vs LAA
Ryan Gusto4%vs CWS
Bailey Falter18%vs MIA
Erick Fedde19%at MIL

Some Hesitation

Jeffrey Springs27%at LAA, at KC
Dean Kremer21%vs DET
Ryne Nelson6%vs SD
Shane Smith24%at HOU, at TEX
Aaron Civale5%vs ATL, vs STL
David Festa8%vs TEX, at HOU
Cal Quantrill3%at PIT
Mitch Spence1%at LAA
Brayan Bello19%vs TB, vs NYY
Tyler Anderson19%at BAL
Chris Paddack34%at HOU
Logan Allen4%vs CIN
Sean Burke6%at HOU
Bryce Elder7%vs COL
Mitchell Parker9%vs MIA

If I'm Desperate

Miles Mikolas14%vs TOR
Lucas Giolito16%vs TB
Nick Martinez33%at DET
Colton Gordon1%vs MIN
Andre Pallante6%vs TOR, at MIL
Patrick Corbin12%at MIN
Adrian Houser11%at HOU
Trevor Williams3%vs MIA
Trevor Williams3%vs MIA

Mets at Rockies: How to watch on June 8, 2025

The Mets look to complete a three-game sweep of the Rockies in Colorado on Sunday, with first pitch set for 3:10 p.m. on PIX11.

Here's what to know about the game and how to watch...


Mets Notes

  • Even with a fractured toe, Francisco Lindor has been on a heater, slashing .385/.465/.654 with two home runs, five RBI, and seven runs scored over his last seven games
  • Ronny Mauricio has three hits in his last two games, including Saturday night's mammoth 456-foot home run
  • Tylor Megill has struggled since the start of May, seeing his season ERA rise from 1.73 to 3.77 over his last six starts
  • Colorado rookie starter Chase Dollander enters play with a 6.26 ERA and a 1.44 WHIP in nine starts

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How can I watch the game online?

To watch Mets games online via PIX11, you will need a subscription to a TV service provider and live in the New York City metro area. This will allow fans to watch the Mets on their computer, tablet or mobile phone browser.

To get started on your computer, go to the PIX11 live stream website and follow the site's steps. For more FAQs, you can go here.

ICYMI in Mets Land: Ronny Mauricio launches titanic homer, Clay Holmes turns in another quality start

Here's what happened in Mets Land on Saturday, in case you missed it...


Phillies' rotation plans for the week ahead with Wheeler returning Monday

Phillies' rotation plans for the week ahead with Wheeler returning Monday originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

PITTSBURGH — The Phillies have spent much of the past week without their best hitter and best pitcher but will welcome Zack Wheeler back to the rotation Monday at home against the Cubs.

Wheeler missed the Phils’ road trip to Toronto and Pittsburgh for the birth of his fourth child. He was placed on the paternity list Wednesday, which would have been his day to pitch. Players can remain on the paternity list up to three days, and Wheeler ended up missing two more as the Phillies started Ranger Suarez and Cristopher Sanchez Saturday and Sunday on regular rest.

The Phillies’ rotation for the Cubs series will be Wheeler on Monday, Mick Abel on Tuesday and Jesus Luzardo on Wednesday.

The team is off Thursday before three more home games with the Blue Jays, which will be started by Suarez, Sanchez and Wheeler.

When Wheeler starts Monday, he’ll be doing so on 10 days’ rest rather than the standard four or five during a season. He threw a bullpen session on Saturday at Citizens Bank Park.

The Phillies need all the help they can get right now, having lost eight of their last nine games and Bryce Harper to wrist inflammation. Harper is on the 10-day injured list but sounded Saturday like he expected it to be longer than a minimum stay.

It was a wet morning in Pittsburgh as the Phillies prepared to play their season finale against the Pirates, hoping to salvage one game in the series and avoid a 1-5 road trip. Pitchers found a 10-minute window around 11:45 a.m. to get some work in on the field before heavier rain fell and the teams hoped to play fast with another round of thunderstorms expected close to 4 p.m.

Oracle Park concourse fire quickly extinguished before Giants-Braves

Oracle Park concourse fire quickly extinguished before Giants-Braves originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

A small fire on the promenade level at Oracle Park forced a brief evacuation prior to the Giants’ game against the Atlanta Braves on Sunday before the blaze quickly was extinguished.

The fire burned inside of the Fuku’s Spicy Fried Chicken Sandos food stand.

As emergency workers put out the fire, alarms sounded and players in the Giants’ clubhouse were told to exit onto the field, according to reporters on the scene.

While fans at Sunday’s game won’t be able to enjoy a spicy chicken sandwich, kudos to everyone involved for making sure the situation was handled safely, quickly and efficiently — and that nobody was hurt.

Download and follow the Giants Talk Podcast

A's acquire catcher Wynns in trade with Reds, DFA right-hander Duran

A's acquire catcher Wynns in trade with Reds, DFA right-hander Duran originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Athletics on Sunday bolstered their catching depth — and offense — by acquiring Austin Wynns in a trade with the Cincinnati Reds, the team announced, in exchange for cash considerations.

To clear room on their 40-man roster, the A’s designated right-handed pitcher Carlos Duran for assignment.

Wynns was designated for assignment by the Reds on Friday after hitting .400 (16-for-40) with three home runs, 11 RBI and a 1.142 OPS in 18 games, 11 of which he started at catcher in addition to one start at first base. The seven-year MLB veteran was on Cincinnati’s Opening Day roster after appearing in seven games for them in 2024.

Wynns has played for five teams in the big leagues since 2018, including the Baltimore Orioles (2018-19, 21), San Francisco Giants (2022-23), Los Angeles Dodgers (2023), Colorado Rockies (2023) and Cincinnati (2024-25). The 34-year-old is a .241 career hitter with 16 home runs and 74 RBI in 257 games, with his most extensive playing time coming on the Giants in 2022 when he batted .259 with three home runs and 21 RBI in 66 games.

The A’s acquired Duran from the Dodgers on April 2 for Esteury Ruiz, and the pitcher made his MLB debut with one appearance for the Green and Gold on May 22 against the Los Angeles Angels. The 23-year-old allowed three runs on a hit and three walks in 1/3 innings.

Mets' Clay Holmes continues RISP dominance: 'I made pitches when I had to'

When you are good at something, it is best to show it off and play to that strength. Of course, Mets manager Carlos Mendoza would probably prefer that starting pitcher Clay Holmes doesn’t make his best attribute too much of a habit.

For Holmes has been elite at stifling opponent batters when there are runners in scoring position, something he did on countless occasions in Saturday’s 8-1 win over the Colorado Rockies

"I made pitches when I had to,” Holmes said after holding the Rockies to 0-for-8 with RISP to strand eight men on base over his six innings of one-run ball.

On the year, the right-hander has now allowed just six hits out of 50 such opportunities (.120 average) as his ERA shrunk to 2.95 over his first 73.1 innings with the Mets.

“The biggest thing here at [Denver’s Coors Field], some hits are going to fall in, there's a lot of grass out there,” Holmes said after allowing nine hits in total. “I just knew I couldn’t give out any free passes, and I didn’t hand out any walks. And I was able to get the right kind of contact, swing and miss with runners on base, and gave us a chance there.”

The traffic came early with the Rockies having two on and nobody out in the first inning and again in the third, but Holmes avoided any damage with a couple of strikeouts and a timely double-play ball. That helped give his teammates time to snap out of a 0-for-7 stretch with RISP of their own to grab a lead they didn’t relinquish in the top half of the fifth.

Mendoza said Holmes getting ground balls with men on has been his "calling card." And the starter left that message on four occasions in addition to two strikeouts on Saturday.

“Really, really good,” Mendoza said of his starter’s performance. “From the first inning, first and third nobody out, and they made him work and he got out of it… I thought the sinker was good, the slider and the sweeper… were his pitches.”

Not mentioned was the changeup, which Holmes had used 15 percent of the time (third-most on the year). He threw it just one time out of 96 pitches in the game. That tactical switch came about because the slider, which had been his fourth-most-used pitch, just felt right pregame.

“Pitches can move differently [in the altitude] and really I was just going with what felt good,” Holmes said. “Slider felt good in the bullpen. Sinker did, too. But just threw enough sinkers to really lean on the slider, sweeper. Was able to get some chase on both those pitches.”

For the night, he got nine whiffs from 19 swings on his 27 sliders and six whiffs from 19 swings on 33 sweepers. And on the 30 sinkers, he got just one whiff on 12 swings, but 10 called strikes.

He added later: “Really, it’s not trying to do too much here. You just execute your pitches, don't try to overthrow. You give yourself a chance.”

For the closer-turned-starter, there was a doubt whether he would be able to give the Mets length, especially after pitching in several high-traffic, high-stress innings in the Mile High City. But Mendoza decided to send Holmes out for the sixth inning with the Mets up 4-1.

“Definitely started to add up,” Holmes said. “Pitching here as a reliever, you don't really feel [the altitude] a ton, but I started to hit that 70 pitch mark and I was like, 'Man, this feels like I’m at 100.’”

“After five, the altitude and all the [pitches], I thought he was pretty tired,” the manager said. “But for him to finish that sixth, even with two guys got on, was good to see him getting comfortable, finding a way to get the job done and giving us solid six innings.”

Through 13 starts on the year, Holmes said he feels like he’s in a “great spot” in his new role.

“Bouncing back well, feel like we got some routine dialed in,” he said. “Feels nice to throw at least six innings. I feel like I've been able to establish that. How I'm using my pitches, how to get deep into games.

“... Just continue to lean on the trainers, strength coaches, nutritionists. They do a lot and feel like we’ve put a lot of things together that's working for me.”

Mets' Ronny Mauricio shows off ‘impressive’ power with mammoth home run

Ronny Mauricio was the envy of the 38,279 who paid to attend Saturday night's game in Colorado, as the Mets' young infielder had the best vantage point from which to admire the 456-foot home run that leapt off his bat to start the third inning.

And who could blame the 24-year-old for taking a moment to watch the ball sail through the thin air before its flight was interrupted by the third deck of the right field stands in the 8-1 win for the visitors from Flushing.

“Pretty impressive,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “That’s the first time I’ve seen somebody going over there… not too many people can go on that third deck here. I don’t have much experience in this ballpark, but not easy to do.”

He added: “The power, the impact, the way the ball jumps off his bat, it’s just good to see him doing the things he’s capable of.”

Mauricio said he was just looking for a pitch up in the zone, and German Marquez obliged his request by hanging a 1-1 knuckle-curve that truly jumped off his bat with a 110.3 mph exit velocity. Something the Met with the second-best view noticed.

“As soon as he hit it, I was like, ‘Damn, that’s going a long ways,’” said Francisco Lindor, who watched from the on-deck circle. “And then, I didn’t know what to do. Wait for him at home plate, wait for him on-deck. I was just admiring the baseball.”

“Oh, pretty good, pretty good,” Mauricio said about the ball coming off his bat. “I feel like I hit it right on the barrel.”

After going hitless in his first 11 at-bats since he made his long-awaited big league return, Mauricio now has three hits in his last five at-bats, later adding a single in the fifth. The manager said he’s seen some improvement in the quality of his plate appearances of late, too.

“Better, definitely, especially on pitches in the strike zone,” he said. “I feel like in the first couple of games he was a little passive, and then they made him chase. Now, he’s ready to go on pitches in the strike zone. And when he’s doing that, he’s a pretty good hitter.”

And Mauricio believes he’s getting more comfortable at the plate. “I’m trying to just enjoy the moment, just try to have fun in the game,” he said. 

But the Mets aren’t going to let themselves get carried away by what Mauricio brings, as Mendoza added, “At the same time, I’ve been saying it since he got here, we gotta be patient with him.”

“This is a guy that missed a whole year of development,” the manager said. “[But] it’s really good to see him now do some of the things.”

Mets smack three home runs, Clay Holmes goes six solid innings in 8-1 win over Rockies

The Mets got home runs from Ronny Mauricio, Jared Young, and Jeff McNeil and six innings of one-run ball from Clay Holmes to beat the Rockies 8-1 on Saturday night in Colorado.

New York started the game hitless in seven chances with runners in scoring position, but got enough timely hits (3-for-7 from then on, including three two-out RBI) to go along with three solo home runs, which proved to be more than enough offense.

Holmes gave the Rockies chances, but he managed to wriggle out of numerous jams (he allowed nine hits) and stranded eight runners on the night as the Mets improved to 41-24 (.631) on the year and 17-17 in games played outside of Flushing. New York has now won 11 of 14 games, as Colorado fell to an ghastly 12-52 (.189).

Here are the takeaways...

- Holmes allowed four hits over his first three innings, but worked himself out of a pair of two-on and nobody-out jams with three strikeouts and a 6-4-3 double play through nine outs. But he got burned to start the fourth when he threw one slider too many to Ryan McMahon, who launched a 392-foot opposite-way homer to level the score. (It was the eighth slider thrown to McMahon out of nine offerings over two at-bats.)

The Mets’ defense didn’t give Holmes too much help early. In the bottom of the first, after allowing a leadoff single, the righty induced a grounder to second, but Brett Baty broke to his right and the ball shot to his left, giving Colorado runners at first and third instead of a 4-6-3 double play. The miscue (ruled a hit) didn’t cost the Mets, and Baty made up for it by snagging a hard liner for the first out and ranging deep into center to catch a pop fly for the second.

McNeil, making his eighth start in center, made a couple of routine plays, but with two out in the bottom of the fifth, he failed to come up with a shallow pop-up, missing the ball as he went into a feet-first slide. But the base hit, which put two in scoring position, didn’t lead to any runs as Holmes got McMahon to ground out on a slider.

With two out in the sixth, Mauricio gloved a bouncer down the third base line but couldn’t hang onto the ball behind the bag. The error, the Mets' only one of the game, put runners on first and second, but Holmes got a bouncer to short to end the threat.

- Mauricio got a hanging knuckle curve from Rockies starter German Marquez and just demolished it – 456 feet, 110.3 mph off the bat into the third deck in right field to start the third. He later singled in the fifth, wasted no time swiping second base, and then came around to score on Brandon Nimmo’s single through the left side of the infield. Nimmo's base hit was the Mets’ first with a runner in scoring position of the game, for a 3-1 lead.

Nimmo, coming off a 0-for-5 on Friday, hit the ball hard the first three times he was up, driving one to the warning track and hitting another liner hard to center before his single. He added a two-out RBI double in the eighth to finish the day 2-for-4 with a walk and two RBI. Mauricio ended 2-for-4, with three hard-hit balls.

- Young jumped on a first-pitch fastball for an opposite-field homer to open the fifth to put the Mets ahead for good. It was the DH’s second homer of the year, 385 feet, 103.6 mph to left field. He finished 1-for-2 before being lifted for a pinch-hitter.

- McNeil made his apology for not ending the bottom of the fifth when he started the top of the sixth with a solo shot, cranking a Marquez middle-middle fastball 414 feet to right (101.2 mph) to put the Mets up 4-1. McNeil finished the day 1-for-3 as Tyrone Taylor entered in center for the bottom of the sixth.

Taylor added a bases-loaded sac fly in his first at-bat, setting up Luis Torrens to snap a 0-for-11 stretch by rocketing a two-RBI single up the middle to make it a 7-1 ballgame.

- Francisco Lindor cracked a single to center to start the game. Making his first start since he sustained a broken toe, he stole second on the very next pitch, getting a huge jump and grabbing the base without a throw. After a single in the third, he waited until the second pitch to steal second without a throw to give the heart of the order another chance with a runner in scoring position, but again was left stranded.

Lindor made it a 3-for-5 night with a two-out single in the eighth and was lifted for pinch-runner Luisangel Acuña

- Hard-luck dinged Pete Alonso his first time up when his 100.7 mph liner was right at the Rockies’ third baseman, stealing extra bases (.780 xBA) and an RBI. After starting 0-for-3 (all with RISP), striking and bouncing into a room service 6-4-3 double play, Alonso got another chance with runners on first and second and one out in the seventh and singled to left to load the bases. He finished the day 1-for-5.

- Juan Soto, coming off his first three-hit game with the Mets, went down looking at a curve, grounded out, and reached on a fielder’s choice his first three times up. He finished 0-for-4 (0-for-3 with RISP) with a walk and two strikeouts.

- Baty got a stroke of good luck in his third at-bat as he looks to snap out of a 3-for-21 funk with an infield hit that deflected off the pitcher’s glove. The hit put two on and nobody out, and Colorado went to the bullpen and lefty Ryan Rolison. The Mets countered with Starling Marte (batting for Young), but the pinch-hitter bounced into a 5-4-3 double play and Mauricio grounded out to short.

Baty finished the day 1-for-4, Marte 0-for-2.

- Out of the bullpen: José Butto struck out two in a 1-2-3 seventh and erased a leadoff single with a 5-4-3 double play in a clean eighth, tossing 26 pitches (16 strikes). Left-hander José Castillo added a strikeout in an easy-peasy ninth.

Game MVP: Clay Holmes

Holmes' Houdini Act was the key as it allowed the Mets' offense time to get going, as this was a 1-1 contest entering the top of the fifth inning. And it has been a year-long thing for the starter as he has now held opponents to a .120 average with RISP (6-for-50) after Colorado went hitless in eight chances and left eight on base.

His final line: 6.0 innings, one run, nine hits, no walks, six strikeouts on 95 pitches (71 strikes), lowering his ERA to 2.95.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets go for the three-game sweep over the Rockies on Sunday afternoon. First pitch is set for 3:10 p.m. EDT.

Right-hander Tylor Megill (3.77 ERA, x WHIP in y innings) makes his 13th start of the season. Megill will be looking to find the form of his first six outings of the year (1.74 ERA in 31 innings) and put his last half dozen outings behind him (5.97 ERA in 28.2 innings).

The hosts counter with right-hander Chase Dollander (6.26 ERA, 1.440 WHIP in 41.2 innings) for his 10th start of his debut season in the big leagues. He has pitched better of late (3.29 ERA over his last 13.2 innings), but lasted just nine outs in his last start.

Ryan Yarbrough allows eight runs, Yankees' comeback falls short in 10-7 loss to Red Sox

Ryan Yarbrough was knocked around for eight runs and the Yankees' comeback fell short in their 10-7 loss to the Red Sox on Saturday night in The Bronx.

Before Saturday, Yarbrough allowed six total runs in his first five starts since moving to the rotation, and had not allowed more than two runs in any start.

The Yanks (39-24) struck out 15 times to drop the middle game of this three-game set.

Here are the takeaways...

-The Red Sox would get to the southpaw early. After Yarbrough stranded Rafael Devers, who doubled with one out in the first, he couldn't do the same in the second. After allowing a leadoff double, struggling rookie Kristian Campbell slapped a two-out single the opposite way into right field to give Boston a 1-0 lead.

With Anthony Volpe (elbow) and Jazz Chisholm Jr. (rest) out of the lineup, Aaron Boone had to go with a ragtag bunch for Saturday's game. Pablo Reyes started at third and Oswald Peraza started at shortstop. And that configuration would play a big part in the Red Sox's five-run third inning.

After Yarbrough hit Devers to lead off, Rob Refsnyder doubled on a ball that Cody Bellinger tried to catch on a slide, but whiffed, allowing runners on second and third with no out. Carlos Narvaez hit a hard groundball to Paul Goldschmidt, but the Gold Glove first baseman picked the grounder and threw home to get Devers out at home. After Peraza grabbed a groundball in the hole on the left side, but Reyes didn't cover third in time to get the force, resulting in an infield hit that loaded the bases, Abraham Toro blooped a single to center to cut the Yankees' lead to 3-2. Trevor Story followed with a bases-clearing double that bounced off of Reyes' glove to put Boston up 5-3. Campbell singled to cap off the five-run third.

It wouldn't get much better for Yarbrough, who gave up a two-run shot to Romy Gonzalez -- his first of the season -- in the fourth.

Yarbrough would only go four innings (67 pitches/45 strikes), allowing eight runs on nine hits and two walks while striking out three batters. His ERA jumped from 2.83 to 4.17.

-On the other side, Garrett Crochet was making his Yankee Stadium and Red Sox/Yankees rivalry debut on Saturday. The hard-throwing lefty came into the start allowing more than two runs in a start just once this season, but Austin Wells upped that to two with his three-run blast in the second inning. The home run was set up by a leadoff infield single by Bellinger and a one-out walk to DJ LeMahieu. Wells jumped on the first-pitch cutter to send it over the short porch.

Wells would get Crochet again in the fourth with a double in the left-center gap with runners on first and second and one out to drive in his fourth run of the game. Reyes got the Yankees closer with an RBI groundout.

But aside from that, Crochet was great. He would go six innings (97 pitches/67 strikes), allowing the five runs on six hits, one walk, while striking out nine batters. Aaron Judge struck out three times against the southpaw, who settled down and gave Boston what they needed.

-The Yankees lineup wouldn't wake up until the eighth inning. After Ben Rice led off with a walk and moved to second on a wild pitch. Judge moved him to third on a flyout before Bellinger walked ahed of Jasson Dominguez. Bellinger stole second, but Dominguez struck out. LeMahieu picked up his teammate with a two-run single to cut the Red Sox's lead to 8-7 and advanced to second on an overthrow from the outfield, setting up Wells to potentially drive in the tying run. But the catcher struck out to end the inning.

-In relief of Yarbrough, Yerry De los Santos pitched three innings of one-hit ball -- with two walks mixed in -- to keep the Red Sox off the board. Mark Leiter Jr. pitched a scoreless eighth inning, but Ian Hamilton wouldn't have the same success in the ninth. A walk, and back-to-back singles loaded the bases with no outs for the Red Sox. Story made Yankees pitching pay again with a single up the middle to drive in two. Hamilton would finish the inning without allowing another run, but the damage was done.

Longtime Yankees closer Aroldis Chapman came on for the Red Sox in the ninth. He struck out Chisholm swinging, Peraza and Goldschmidtgrounded out to end the game.

-Judge finished 0-for-4 with three strikeouts to drop his average to .390. Reyes finished 0-for-2 with an RBI and Chisholm pinch-hit for him and finished 0-for-2 with two strikeouts. Volpe pinch-ran for LeMahieu in the eighth and stayed in to play shortstop in the ninth.

Peraza went 1-for-4 with two strikeouts.

Game MVP: Trevor Story

The veteran shortstop had the big hit in that five-run third and the huge two-run single in the ninth when the Yankees were lurking. Three hits and five RBI for Story

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees and Red Sox complete their first series of the season on Sunday night. First pitch is set for 7:10 p.m.

Carlos Rodon (8-3, 2.49 ERA) will look to continue to his hot streak of starts while Boston will have Hunter Dobbins (2-1, 4.06 ERA) on the bump.

Mets Notes: Francisco Alvarez ‘working hard’ to break out; updates on Sean Manaea, Frankie Montas

Ahead of Saturday night's game in Colorado, Mets manager Carlos Mendoza gave updates on a few players...


What's next for Sean Manaea, Frankie Montas

Manaea came out of his first rehab start on Friday night, "all good," the manager said, adding the left-hander will throw again on Tuesday or Wednesday for the High-A Brooklyn. "See how the next couple of days goes," Mendoza said.

The southpaw had a rough go of it, allowing four runs (three earned) on four hits and a hit by pitch in 1.2 innings while throwing 36 pitches (26 strikes).

Montas will make his fourth rehab start on Sunday for Triple-A Syracuse, and the plan is for him to throw 80-85 pitches. While Montas is "getting closer to normal" with the high pitch count, Mendoza said the 32-year-old will likely make another start at Triple-A before he is ready to be activated from the IL.

"After he gets through this one, we'll see where he's at," the manager said. "But I don't think this is gonna be his last one."

Results have not been there for the right-hander, as he has allowed runs in all of his previous outings (the first two coming with Brooklyn). On Tuesday, he surrendered five runs on eight hits (including four home runs) and a walk in 4.0 frames, throwing 61 pitches (43 strikes).

When asked what point he might start to care about the results from these rehab appearances, Mendoza said it is "still early, especially for Manaea."

"With Montas, I'll say we'll see how [Sunday] goes and then we'll start to look more at results and all that," he said. "More about how they are bouncing back. For Sean, after the first one, it's too early for him."

Francisco Alvarez still grinding

The contact has been there for the 23-year-old catcher – a 92.8 mph average exit velocity and a 47 percent hard-hit rate – but the results haven't quite been there – just four extra-base hits and a .301 slugging percentage – through his first 93 at-bats of the season.

"We haven't seen him driving the ball with authority," Mendoza said of Alvarez, who was not in the lineup for Saturday's game. "I feel like he's on and off. There's been some games where I feel like he's put himself in a good position to make swing decisions, and you see the barrel and the bat path coming through the zone. But then there's also been games where he's late.

"We just gotta continue to grind, continue to help him. And hopefully he gets there because he's too good of a player, too good of a hitter. And, obviously, we know the power is there, but we just haven't seen that yet."

May 19, 2025; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; New York Mets catcher Francisco Alvarez (4) celebrates hitting a double against the Boston Red Sox during the third inning at Fenway Park. Mandatory Credit: Eric Canha-Imagn Images
May 19, 2025; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; New York Mets catcher Francisco Alvarez (4) celebrates hitting a double against the Boston Red Sox during the third inning at Fenway Park. Mandatory Credit: Eric Canha-Imagn Images / © Eric Canha-Imagn Images

About three weeks ago, Mendoza said he was seeing Alvarez get beat on fastballs quite a bit. The skipper indicated he's seen some improvement in that area, but not consistent strides.

"I feel like last week he was making progress," he said. "[Friday] night, he looked like he was late with some of the fastballs. Part of some of the inconsistency that we've seen from him. But he's working hard, that's the one thing with him: He's such a hard worker and he's always looking for ways to get better.... And we gotta get him there."

Alvarez batted .315 with a .534 slugging percentage against 690 fastballs a season ago. After Friday's game, those numbers were down to .264 and .302, which are down 46 points and eight points from three weeks ago. But there have been improvements in his expected numbers, which could indicate some of the work is paying off, even if the results haven't been there just yet. His xBA on fastballs is up to .225 from .213 on May 19 and xSLG is up to .373 from .299.

Alvarez also "made a very significant swing change in the offseason," president of baseball operations David Stearns mentioned in late May, something that could be impacting his production, which was further hampered by a stint on the IL.

In 27 games on the year, Alvarez is batting .237 (the same mark he finished with in 100 games last season) with a .625 OPS (down from .710 a year ago).

Bullpen workload on skipper's mind

Manage the personalities and vibe in the clubhouse, manage the lineup, manage the in-game strategy, and manage the bullpen's usage. Those are the four big areas a big league manager can show they are worth their salt.

"We've been using them pretty hard," Mendoza said when asked about the workload of Ryne Stanek, Huascar Brazobán, and Reed Garrett.

Of course, the hitters could do something to help the relievers out.

"When you look at Reed Garrett, I feel like the past week he's been on and off, on and off. That's not sustainable," he said. "This is something that we gotta be careful here. Same with Stanek, the past week I feel like [he's been used] every other day. I'm not gonna complain, but we're playing so many tight games that every time they're available, we're using them. Same thing with Brazoban.

"That's the balance here that we're gonna have to watch those guys closely."

Mets sign RHP Julian Merryweather to minor league deal

The Mets have signed right-handed pitcher Julian Merryweather to a minor league deal, the club announced on Saturday evening.

Merryweather, 33, spent the past three seasons with the Chicago Cubs organization before he was released on the penultimate day of May.

In 21 games this season, the reliever posted a 5.79 ERA and 1.821 WHIP over 18.2 innings with 15 strikeouts to 11 walks. During an injury-plagued 2024 campaign, he was limited to just 15 innings over 15 outings and posted a 6.60 ERA and 1.800 WHIP.

New York is hoping the MLB veteran of six seasons can regain the form of his first season on the North Side of Chicago when he posted a 3.38 ERA and 1.306 WHIP over 72 innings and 69 games with 98 strikeouts to 36 walks.

A hard-thrower, Merryweather has become a two-pitch reliever relying on his slider and four-seam fastball. The heater's 96 mph average velocity is good for the 80th percentile in the majors this year.

A late bloomer, he got his start in the majors at the age of 28 with the Blue Jays in 2020, and appeared in big league games in Toronto for three seasons. In 152 career games, Merryweather has posted a 4.72 ERA and 1.434 WHIP over 158.1 innings with 127 strikeouts to 56 walks.

Earlier on Saturday, the club announced the acquisition of RHP Justin Garza in a deal with the Giants, sending cash considerations to San Francisco.