Prep sports roundup: Hunter Manning strikes out 12 in West Ranch win

Hunter Manning lives so close to the West Ranch High baseball field that he can hear sounds of balls being hit in the batting cage at night.

He decided to attend Sherman Oaks Notre Dame as a freshman, requiring 6:30 a.m. wake-up calls and enduring traffic jams on the 5 Freeway. Now he sleeps until 7:45 a.m. without being late to walk to school and is playing with lifelong friends.

He's headed to UC Irvine in the fall to pitch and only wishes he could take catcher Nolan Stoll with him. Manning struck out 12 on Wednesday with Stoll calling the pitches in West Ranch's 3-1 win over Hart in a battle for first place in the Foothill League. West Ranch is 16-8 and 8-1.

It was by accident that Stoll started calling pitches for Manning earlier this season when the PitchCom communication device malfunctioned. It worked out so well that Stoll was allowed to continue to call the pitches for the rest of this season for Manning even though he still wears a wire and receives instructions from the dugout to move fielders. With Stoll in charge, Manning struck out a school-record 16 batters against Valencia and then came Wednesday's effort.

"He called an awesome game," Manning said.

Stoll is a Stanford commit with a grade-point average out of this world. Manning's 3.8 GPA probably wouldn't get him to Stanford, so he'll need to figure a plan to take Stoll with him to Irvine.

"Sadly, I can't," he said.

Omar Gutierrez had a two-run first-inning single for West Ranch. Hart (11-9, 6-2) got two hits and an unearned run off Manning in the first inning, then saw him strike out eight consecutive batters.

The two teams meet again Friday at Hart.

St. John Bosco 2, Mater Dei 1: The Braves got a walk-off bases-loaded walk in the bottom of the eighth inning. Gavin Cervantes threw all eight innings for the Braves.

Santa Margarita 5, JSerra 1: A three-run triple by Warren Gravely IV in the top of the ninth inning keyed the Eagles' Trinity League win. Ben Finnegan finished with a double and triple.

Newport Harbor 5, Huntington Beach 2: Lucas Perez, Adam Martin and Keoni Wun each had two hits to knock off No. 1 Huntington Beach.

El Dorado 4, Cypress 0: Logan Steenburgen threw the shutout, striking out two and walking none. Diego Gonzalez hit a two-run home run.

Foothill 4, El Modena 1: Sean Green hit a three-run walk-off home run in the 10th inning.

Edison 3, Corona del Mar 1: Gavin Johnson hit a three-run home run in the sixth inning for Edison.

Etiwanda 1, Rancho Cucamonga 0: Luke Mendoza hit a sacrifice fly in the eighth inning for the game's only run. Michael Aleman threw eight innings with nine strikeouts for Etiwanda.

Chino Hills 1, Damien 0: Brody Buoncristiani and Matt McCliman combined on a two-hit shutout.

Los Osos 10, Upland 4: Roberto Topete finished with four hits to lead Los Osos.

Summit 5, Grand Terrace 3: Dylan Harrison and Ian Stewart each had two RBIs for Summit (20-3), which has won 17 straight games.

Sherman Oaks Notre Dame 4, La Salle 0: J. Beckett Berg threw a complete game, striking out eight with no walks.

Crespi 8, Saugus 2: Jackson Eisenhauer threw four scoreless innings with five strikeouts, making it 47 innings without giving up an earned run this season for Crespi (17-1). Josh Stonehouse had three hits.

Sierra Canyon 11, Kennedy 1: Freshman Kingston Monette struck out 11 in six innings. Dezi Delgado had four RBIs.

Mira Costa 5, West Torrance 1: Ace Tarango had three hits and Aiden Pinn threw four innings of scoreless relief. Mira Costa is 20-2 and 9-1 in the Bay League.

Vista Murrieta 3, Murrieta Valley 0: Jonas Jusay threw 6 2/3 innings, striking out four.

Cleveland 7, Granada Hills 3: Four Cleveland pitchers combined for a no-hitter. Joshua Pearlstein led the way with five hitless innings.

El Camino Real 10, Taft 2: Luke Howe, Troy Shaw and Adan Viner each contributed two RBIs for El Camino Real.

Birmingham 1, Chatsworth 0: The Patriots won on a walk-off from Cristian Martinez in the eighth inning. Allen Olmos threw the shutout.

Royal 9, Oak Park 0: Dustin Dunwoody threw the shutout. Brady Hewitt had three RBIs.

Warren 2, Gahr 1: Max Ruiz had the walk-off single in the seventh for Warren.

La Habra 5, Yorba Linda 0: Isaac Aguirre struck out eight, walked none and threw a four-hit shutout.

Long Beach Millikan 6, Long Beach Poly 3: Anthony Pack had two RBIs for the Rams, who are 8-1 in the Moore League.

Long Beach Wilson 7, Lakewood 0: The Bruins stayed unbeaten in the Moore League. Ben Howard threw a five-hitter.

Softball

Carson 11, Banning 3: Kiarah Chukwudi had a home run and three RBIs for Carson. Giselle Pantoja struck out six.

Granada Hills 20, Taft 4: Alana Miller had four RBIs and Zoe Justman had four hits for the Highlanders.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Shohei Ohtani's struggles continue as Dodgers are swept by Cubs

Los Angeles Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani (17) returns to the dugout after striking out during the ninth inning of a baseball game against the Chicago Cubs, Wednesday, April 23, 2025, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Erin Hooley)
Shohei Ohtani returns to the dugout after striking out in the ninth inning Wednesday. (Erin Hooley / Associated Press)

The stage was set for an intentional walk.

The Dodgers had the potential go-ahead runs in scoring position. First base was open with two out in the sixth. And, in his fourth at-bat of the night against Chicago Cubs starter Matthew Boyd, none other than Shohei Ohtani was at the plate.

For much of his Dodgers tenure over the last two seasons, such a situation would usually trigger an automatic “four” signal from the opposing dugout.

For much of his Dodgers tenure, after all, Ohtani has been one of the best hitters on the planet.

Lately, however, the reigning National League MVP has been slumping. Considerably.

Entering Wednesday’s sixth-inning at-bat, he was just one for 10 since returning from the paternity list this last weekend. Going back to April 5, he was batting only .232 over his last 14 games.

Read more:Dodgers blow late lead, outslugged as Cubs win in extra innings

Against that backdrop, Cubs manager Craig Counsell stood motionless in the dugout. Even with a right-hander warming and Mookie Betts on deck, he let Boyd work to the game’s biggest star.

In the Cubs’ 7-6 victory over the Dodgers, it proved to be a prescient decision. Despite working a 2-and-0 count, Ohtani chased on a fastball that was well up and well inside. His soft pop out to shortstop extinguished the Dodgers’ best chance to rally.

Unlike so many other highlight stretches since his arrival in Los Angeles, the $700-million slugger looked incapable of turning the tide.

As the Dodgers (16-9) return from their second straight losing trip to open the season — after going 2-4 in Philadelphia and Washington earlier this month, this week’s two losses at Wrigley left the club with a 2-3 record on this five-game swing through Texas and Chicago — there are plenty of names on the roster posting subpar production.

Freddie Freeman and Mookie Betts are both batting in the .250s to this point (despite a three-hit night from Betts on Wednesday that snapped a one for 22 slump). Everyone at the bottom of the order is hitting .200 or worse (despite the Nos. 6-9 hitters on Wednesday combining for five hits, including a home run from Andy Pages).

Even a once-stout bullpen has started to waver, following up a late-game collapse on Tuesday with a creaky showing in Wednesday’s predetermined bullpen game (three of the runs were allowed by recently called-up depth arm Noah Davis; the other four belonged to rookie left-hander Jack Dreyer, snapping his streak of nine consecutive scoreless outings).

Read more:Dodgers Dugout: Want to go to a game? Visit a financial planner

Still, no one’s struggles have loomed larger than Ohtani’s.

And as the Dodgers try to even out the up-and-down play that has marked this opening month, there is no one more equipped to provide a steadying presence.

For all the other talent on their roster, so much of the Dodgers' success still depends on their leadoff man.

Ohtani did aid one rally Wednesday, poking a softly hit single to right field that loaded the bases in the top of the third. Two batters later, Teoscar Hernández (another recently slumping hitter who found his swing during a four-hit series at Wrigley) laced a two-run single to left.

Despite Ohtani flying out in the fifth, the Dodgers scored three more runs in that inning, with Betts lining an RBI double to left before Hernández belted a two-run home run that gave him 22 RBIs (most on the team and fourth-most in the NL).

Still, after Davis was knocked around in a three-run fourth and Dreyer was punished for walking the bases loaded in his four-run fifth, the Dodgers needed more from their offense. And even with a golden opportunity to snap out of his recent slump, neither Ohtani nor anyone else from the club’s lineup could provide it.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Mets at Nationals: 5 things to watch and series predictions | April 25-28

Here are five things to watch and predictions as the Mets and Nationals play a four-game series in Washington, D.C. beginning on Friday at 6:45 p.m. on SNY.


Preview

The returns of Francisco Alvarez and Jeff McNeil

Alvarez and McNeil are expected to be activated from the IL ahead of Friday's series-opener after spending the first chunk of the season working their way back from injuries that were suffered in spring training.

Asked earlier this week whether Alvarez would be the starting catcher upon his return, David Stearns did not give a clear yes or no. So the playing time situation between Alvarez and Luis Torrens bears watching.

Regarding McNeil, he's returning at a time when Luisangel Acuña is starting to put his stamp on things at the plate. Acuña carried a 107 OPS+ into play on Wednesday, and was hitting .353/.421/.471 over his last 38 plate appearances.

So it stands to reason that Acuña and McNeil will split time at second base.

McNeil also got some time in center field while on his rehab assignment, so it's possible he'll get some burn there in addition to second base and the corner outfield. Carlos Mendoza recently said he's also comfortable using Acuña in center.

Clay Holmes is starting to go long

While making the transition from reliever to starter, Holmes went just 4.2 innings in each of his first two starts. Since then, he's started to provide more length.

Holmes went 5.1 innings on April 8, 5.0 innings on April 14, and a season-high 6.0 innings against the Cardinals on April 20 at Citi Field.

Along the way, he's been trusting his expanded arsenal more. Holmes featured six pitches against the Cards, relying heavily on his sinker, slider, four-seam fastball, and changeup, while mixing in the occasional sweeper and one cutter.

As Holmes has gotten more comfortable in his new role, the results have followed.

In 11.0 innings over his last two starts, Holmes has allowed just two runs on six hits while walking four and striking out 14. His ERA for the season is down to 3.16.

Ryne Stanek has been dominant

Stanek has announced his presence with authority this season while serving as one of the main bridges to Edwin Diaz.

The hard-throwing right-hander has held the opposition scoreless in nine of his 10 appearances spanning 9.1 innings, posting a 0.96 ERA and 1.07 WHIP to go along with 10 strikeouts.

Apr 22, 2025; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets relief pitcher Ryne Stanek (55) reacts to a double play in the eighth inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citi Field.
Apr 22, 2025; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets relief pitcher Ryne Stanek (55) reacts to a double play in the eighth inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citi Field. / Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

Stanek's fastball has averaged 97.9 mph this season, which is in the 95th percentile, with hitters slugging just .192 against the offering.

Washington's starting pitching has been strong

With the exception of old friend Trevor Williams (who has a 5.95 ERA and 1.62 WHIP), the Nationals' starting pitching has been very good.

Jake Irvin and Mitchell Parker are two of the Nats that Mets will face during this series, and they're both riding high.

Irvin is coming off a strong start in Colorado, where he allowed two runs in 6.1 innings while striking out nine. In his prior start in Pittsburgh against the Pirates, he fired 7.0 scoreless frames.

Parker has been phenomenal all season, with a 1.39 ERA and 0.93 WHIP. He twirled eight shutout innings against the Orioles during his last start, allowing just one hit.

James Wood is becoming a star

Wood impressed last season during his rookie campaign, posting a .781 OPS in 79 games in what was his age-21 season.

This year, he's taken things to another level.

Entering play on Wednesday, Wood was slashing .253/.350/.552 with seven home runs, five doubles, 17 RBI, and 16 runs scored.

Out of all the players in the National League, only Fernando Tatis Jr. and Tommy Edman (who each have eight homers) have hit more long balls than Wood.

Predictions

Who will the MVP of the series be?

Mark Vientos

Vientos has turned it on, hitting safely in eight of his last nine games.

Which Mets pitcher will have the best start?

Kodai Senga

Senga hasn't allowed a run since his season debut on April 1, firing 17.2 consecutive scoreless innings over his last three starts.

Which Nationals player will be a thorn in the Mets' side?

James Wood

As much as the Mets will try to limit the damage Wood does, it won't be easy,

Max Kranick's 10th-inning heroics helps Mets complete sweep of Phillies: 'He was unbelievable today'

It was a tightly-contested game between the Mets and Phillies on Wednesday afternoon at Citi Field

The score was tied 2-2 heading to the 10th when Edwin Diaz, in his second inning of work, got one out before allowing an RBI single to give the Phillies the lead. The Mets closer was in obvious discomfort and was lifted from the game with what was revealed to be a left hip cramp.

Enter Max Kranick.

The young right-hander was tasked with getting the Mets out of further trouble without the usual bullpen warmups, but that didn't seem to bother him.

After allowing a walk to J.T. Realmuto and an Alec Bohm single, Kranick got Bryson Stott and Max Kepler to fly out to keep the score, 3-2.

"Looking back at it, I probably should have thrown a couple more [warmup pitches], I would have been more ready," Kranick said after the game with a smile. "That’s my fault, I’ve never done that before. Next time I’ll be ready."

Mets skipper Carlos Mendoza said he was trying to avoid using Kranick after the 27-year-old threw two innings two days prior.

Kranick knew the plan, but understood that with how the game was going, and extra innings were imminent, he figured he would be used and kept moving around in the bullpen just in case. And it helped.

"He was unbelievable today...Comes in there in a very difficult spot and continues to make pitches. Continues to stay on the attack," Mendoza said of Kranick. "The moment is never too big for him. Trusting his stuff in the zone and got a huge out for us."

Kranick executed his pitches and allowed the Mets a chance to win it in the bottom of the 10th, which they did thanks to Starling Marte.

He said he's found success this season by staying in the moment and not think too far ahead. He wants to "go pitch-by-pitch" and "win every pitch." That has led to his impressive 2.81 ERA over 10 appearances this season.

And as Wednesday proved, he can be counted on in even the most difficult situations.

"Getting hot took a little bit, but happy I was able to come through for the team," he said.

Thanks to Kranick's heroics, the Mets (18-7) own the best record in baseball, have won seven straight and are 12-1 at home for the first time in franchise history.

Juan Soto’s defense plays part in Mets’ win over Phillies: ‘It’s always great to have some role’

Juan Soto wasn’t able to come through for the Mets with the bat during Wednesday’s win over the Phillies -- but he still found a way to make his mark. 

The superstar hasn’t exactly been known for his outfield defense throughout his career -- but that’s exactly where his impact was felt the most during this one. 

With two on and two outs in a 2-2 game in the top of the eighth, Phillies outfielder Max Kepler lined what appeared to be a go-ahead single to right off of Jose Butto; however, Soto fielded the ball and came up throwing.  

The throw was a bit off line but catcher Hayden Senger made a terrific play behind the plate, quickly reaching over to slap the tag on the sliding Nick Castellanos, just in time to keep the score tied and the inning. 

It was Soto’s first outfield assist as a Met -- and it was a huge one.

"It was pretty good," Carlos Mendoza said. "Soto getting behind the ball and then Senger making sure he catches the baseball and then quickly applying the tag -- but the one hope from Soto, just getting behind the ball and making that one hope throw, it was a well-executed play."

The Mets were able to keep things evened up after that before heading into extras.

In the top of the 10th, the Phillies were able to bring across the ghost runner from second base against Edwin Diaz before he was forced out of the game due to a left hip cramp.

Max Kranick then entered and somehow worked his way out of a bases-loaded jam before the Mets fought right back and scored two runs of their own, securing the sweep on a Starling Marte walk-off hit.

“This is a team that doesn’t give up,” Soto said. “We keep working day in and day out every inning — it doesn’t matter if we’re winning by a lot of losing by a lot, I think the guys have been showing that we just never give up.”

Despite finishing the day 1-for-4 with a punchout, the 26-year-old was happy to be able to come through somehow.

“It’s always great to have some role and play a part in the game,” Soto said. “I’m trying my best to come through with the bat, but whenever that doesn’t come through, I have to do something else to help. We play defense, we run the bases right -- today I had the chance to help the team with my defense."

Could double first bases prevent Luis Arráez-like collisions? Padres manager Mike Shildt not opposed to it

San Diego Padres' Luis Arraez lies on the ground after a collision with with Houston Astros second baseman Mauricio Dubon, left, as Padres first base coach David Macias (46) along with an Astros' trainer check on him at first base during the first inning of a baseball game Sunday, April 20, 2025, in Houston. (AP Photo/Karen Warren)
The San Diego Padres' Luis Arráez lies on the ground after a collision with Houston Astros second baseman Mauricio Dubón, left, as Padres first base coach David Macias and an Astros trainer check on him during the first inning of a game Sunday in Houston. (Karen Warren / Associated Press)

Umpires call it a train wreck, a play that results in a horrific collision through no fault of the baserunner or fielder. No interference or obstruction is called. It's considered "just baseball" and seemingly unavoidable.

The most recent example began with a bunt by Luis Arráez of the San Diego Padres against the Houston Astros on Sunday. First baseman Christian Walker fielded the ball and tossed it to second baseman Mauricio Dubón, who'd raced over to cover first.

Dubón's momentum carried him directly behind the base as he touched it with his foot to record the out. Arráez, meanwhile, motored up the line and through the base, then slammed into Dubón. Arráez got the worst of it, suffering a concussion that landed him on the injured list.

Throughout baseball history, such collisions have been met mostly with grimaces and shrugs. Nobody likes seeing an injury, but the game is the game and, as the saying goes, it hasn't changed in 150 years.

Now, though, tweaking rules and introducing concepts are in vogue, whether to improve the pace of play with a pitch clock, increase stolen bases with larger bags, or address player safety by eliminating catchers blocking home plate.

Read more:How four rule changes will impact Major League Baseball

Addressing collisions at first base might be next. They are frequent, and often result in serious injury.

Padres' Luis Arráez (4) collides with Astros second baseman Mauricio Dubón.
The Padres' Luis Arráez (4) collides with Astros second baseman Mauricio Dubón, left, at first base, resulting in Arráez being carted off the field. (Karen Warren / Associated Press)

An abbreviated list of memorable train wrecks at first base:

— 2023: The Minnesota Twins' Royce Lewis flips over Cleveland Guardians first baseman Gabriel Arias and lands on his face, with his neck bending as his legs fly up and over his body.
— 2022: Toronto Blue Jays first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. gets his free hand stepped on while stretching for a throw.
— 2017: The Washington Nationals' Bryce Harper hyperextends his left knee when he lunges to beat a throw and slips on a wet base during a crowded play at first.
— 2013: The New York Mets' Eric Young steps on the right ankle of Atlanta Braves pitcher Tim Hudson, who is covering the bag on a ground ball to first baseman Freddie Freeman. Hudson suffers a fractured ankle.

And, of course, Dodgers first baseman Max Muncy suffers a torn ulnar collateral ligament when the Brewers' Jace Peterson slams into his left arm as he reaches into the base line to catch a throw in the last game of the 2021 regular season. Muncy is out for the entire postseason and the injury lingers into the next spring.

"I definitely felt like my arm wasn't there," Muncy said.

Read more:Haunting memories of last year are driving Max Muncy

Several if not all of those calamitous collisions could have been avoided with one simple solution: Follow the lead of NCAA baseball and utilize two first bases, an orange or green one for the runner and a white one for the fielder.

The injury to his three-time National League batting champion Arráez fresh in his mind, Padres manager Mike Shildt said on the "Starkville" podcast with Jayson Stark and Doug Glanville that common sense dictates Major League Baseball explore the two-base solution.

“I wouldn’t be opposed to it,” he said. “I haven’t seen it or played with it to form a real strong opinion. But conceptually, it’s one of those things where you go: You know, why not? I mean, we want our players to be safe and on the field. ... Conceptually, it does check some boxes to me that make sense — that listen, let’s just create a lane for everybody.”

Shildt said Arráez seems to be recovering well so far.

“He’s sore, as you would expect,” Shildt said. “But nothing from a CT scan that’s alarming in the cervical area or the jaw line, because he got a little abrasion on his jaw. And cognitively, [he’s] alert, remembers what’s taken place, is testing positively to this point on anything relative to the concussion side of it.”

Read more:Shaikin: Are Dodgers ruining baseball? 'There are some owners that have concerns'

Pushback on implementing double first bases might come from purists, but player safety has become an overarching concern as salaries have increased. The average MLB salary this year is $5 million, which is what Dubón will make. Arráez will make $14 million.

The collective bargaining agreement expires after the 2026 season. Top of the agenda for owners in negotiations will be the creative spending of deep-pocket teams such as the Dodgers and Mets. Another hot-button topic is player safety, which union chief Tony Clark mentions at every turn. Double first bases, anyone?

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

What we learned as Logan Webb, Wilmer Flores spark Giants' win over Brewers

What we learned as Logan Webb, Wilmer Flores spark Giants' win over Brewers originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

BOX SCORE

SAN FRANCISCO — Through the first month of the season, Logan Webb has already faced Hunter Greene (twice), Carlos Rodón, Tyler Anderson and Freddy Peralta. That’s just part of being the Opening Day starter, but so far the difficult slate is working out well for Webb and the Giants. 

The staff ace threw 6 1/3 shutout innings Wednesday, outdueling and outlasting Peralta, who entered as one of the league’s ERA leaders, to pick up his third win of the season. With a 4-2 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers, the Giants improved to 4-2 in games started by Webb and 7-6 during this stretch of 17 consecutive games. 

Webb didn’t need much help, but Mike Yastrzemski provided a boost in the top of the sixth by making a perfect throw from right to nail William Contreras at third and keep the Brewers from having runners on the corners with one out in a scoreless game. In the bottom of the inning, the Giants broke through for four runs, and they ended up needing that big frame.

Ryan Walker came on in a non-save situation and again struggled to put hitters away. After two singles, a hit-by-pitch and a double, Walker was pulled for Camilo Doval, who struck out Jackson Chourio and then got Christian Yelich to ground out to pick up his fourth save of the year. 

Walker has given up six earned runs in his last two outings after going 15-for-15 previously in save opportunities. The struggles have come out of nowhere and might lead to a change in the ninth far sooner than anyone could have expected.

Here are the takeaways as the Giants improve to 16-9 this season:

Mr. 200?

Webb said at the end of camp that he would like this to be the year he wins his first Cy Young. He also said he would like to finally join the 200-strikeout club, and that one is starting to look like a lock if he stays healthy. 

Webb struck out six on Wednesday to get to 44 through six starts, putting him on pace for about 240 over a full season. His previous career-high is 194 and he has only one previous season with an average of even one strikeout per inning. He currently ranks third in the NL in strikeouts and, as always, he is among the league leaders in innings pitched. Only Zack Wheeler currently ranks ahead of him there. 

Put those two numbers together with an ERA that dipped to 1.98 and Webb is among the early favorites for the Cy Young, which is no surprise. He currently ranks fifth in the NL in ERA behind Yoshinobu Yamamot, Nick Pivetta, Mitchell Parker and Andrew Heaney. 

Mr. 100? 

Wilmer Flores has just one season in his career with more than 60 RBI, and his career-high is 71, set in 2022. At the moment, he’s on pace to more than double that total. 

Flores bounced a single up the middle and off shortstop Joey Ortiz’s glove in the sixth and two runs scored easily, getting him to 27 RBI, the most in the big leagues. He’s one ahead of a couple of New York sluggers, Aaron Judge and Pete Alonso. The hit came after singles by Willy Adames and Jung Hoo Lee and a walk by Matt Chapman, and it ignited a four-run rally.

Going For Gold, And Then Platinum

Chapman and Patrick Bailey are coming off Gold Glove seasons, and both look like they’ll win again this year. There’s a level beyond gold, though, and last year’s Platinum Glove winner is in this series, too. 

Brewers second baseman Brice Turang got the honor of being named the best defender in the NL last year, but he has had a rough three days in San Francisco. Turang had two balls bounce off his glove Monday, although he recovered both times to avoid errors. 

In the sixth Wednesday, Turang couldn’t glove a double-play ball from LaMonte Wade Jr., and the Giants piled on. The error allowed a run to score and the Giants made it a four-run inning when Ortiz made a wide throw on a bouncer up the middle from Christian Koss.

Turang led all big leaguers with 22 Defensive Runs Saved last season but he was at negative one coming into Wednesday’s game. Chapman is currently at three DRS, which is tied for third in the NL behind Tommy Pham (six) and Pete Crow-Armstrong (four).

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Both Brett Baty and Hayden Senger improved their industry standing during surprise Mets opportunities

When the Mets started talking last year about getting Brett Baty reps at second base, the rational response was … what? That Brett Baty? The bat-first corner guy? The one who does not seem to possess the tools of a middle infielder?

It felt like a classic case of a team floating a topic that it knew made little sense, but that it hoped rivals would notice enough to increase a player’s trade value.

In the offseason, when president of baseball operations David Stearns continued to praise Baty’s work at second, it seemed more of the same. The Mets weren’t actually planning to do this at the major league level, were they?

But then Jeff McNeil suffered an oblique injury during spring training. Nick Madrigal, the infielder who would have backed up McNeil, was already out for the season after separating his shoulder. That left Baty and Luisangel Acuña with an opportunity to split time filling in for McNeil.

A funny thing happened when reality met expectations. Baty ended up exceeding all internal and external projections for his defense. He utilized a strong work ethic and naturally quick first step to perform capably at second base. If he goes back to Triple-A on Friday, as seems likely with McNeil’s expected return, he will do so with increased value and versatility.

Similarly, Hayden Senger – a catcher who was long perceived to have a big league-caliber glove but perhaps the bat of an org-gut or non-prospect – has hit well enough during Francisco Alverez’s stint on the injured list to prove himself a viable MLB player.

Senger will also likely head to Syracuse prior to Friday’s game, but he will leave having added potential years to his professional career. That’s likely no exaggeration; now that Senger has shown that he belongs, he could break through as someone’s backup rather than wind down his career in the minors. For that matter, Luis Torrens proved he can be a starting catcher, which is why he’ll continue to see significant playing time after Alvarez returns on Friday.

Baty, of course, holds more significance to the franchise. A one-time top prospect, he has established a pattern of raking in spring training and at Triple-A and failing to control at-bats while with the Mets. He now finds himself blocked by Mark Vientos at third base.

Talk of Baty switching positions or serving in a utility role long seemed fanciful. Through no fault of his own, Baty was born with the broad lower half of a corner guy. Increasing his agility at third seemed a more reasonable goal.

But while Baty will never be as naturally slick and rangy at second as Acuña (who has earned a lasting place on the team) or Jose Iglesias, he left a deep impression on the Mets with his progress there. Just as Senger can survive at the plate in the big leagues, Baty has now shown that he can play a credible middle infield. Both he and the Mets staff, from Triple-A manager Dick Scott to major league infield instructor Mike Sarbaugh, deserve praise.

He has also validated the confidence that the Mets showed in him earlier this month. On April 9, Baty went 0-for-3 in a loss to Miami, striking out twice and hearing boos from the home fans. It seemed like a moment to consider optioning him to Triple-A, but the Mets did not seriously weigh it. Between that day and Tuesday of this week, Baty batted .280 with a .797 OPS.

On Wednesday, he homered when Zack Wheeler left a fat cutter over the plate, punishing the ball at 113.9 miles per hour. He also made a pair of slick plays and second on well-struck balls. If Baty goes down now instead of outfielder Jose Azocar, roster construction will be to blame, not the quality of his play.

This all means that, if Baty is forced to take another trip to Syracuse, it will be as a player enhanced by this stint in Queens, not diminished by it. Now the Mets – and perhaps as importantly, with Vientos emerging – other teams can view him as more versatile and attractive.

Mets' Carlos Mendoza on perfect homestand: 'There’s a lot of good things happening'

Down 3-2 heading into the bottom of the 10th inning against the Philadelphia Phillies, the Mets’ six-game winning streak and hopes of a possible perfect homestand seemed to be dwindling at Citi Field on Wednesday.

At least outside of the Mets’ dugout, that is.

Inside the dugout, the Mets never lost faith, and their fundamentally sound play in the field and in the batter’s box paid off as they came back to win 4-3, finishing off a perfect homestand and a three-game sweep of the NL East-rival Phillies.

“That’s a huge team win there,” Carlos Mendoza said afterward.

And that statement couldn’t be more true, as it felt like every player on the roster contributed in one way or another, whether it was Juan Soto gunning down Nick Castellanos at home plate in the eighth, or Max Kranickrelieving a cramping Edwin Diaz to escape a bases-loaded, one-out jam in the 10th, or Pete Alonso coming up clutch with a game-tying double that led to Starling Marte’s walk-off single.

Baseball is a game of fundamentals, and right now, perhaps no one is playing better fundamental baseball than these Mets.

“Today is a perfect example of a lot of winning plays, a lot of fundamental plays,” Mendoza said. “…Outfielders getting behind the ball on shallow fly balls with runners on third base, Soto making a huge throw at the plate, [Hayden] Senger not only catching the ball but making the tag, Pete being in the right spot with cutoffs. There’s a lot of good things happening. There’s a lot of good at-bats, getting big hits, walks, and then from a pitching standpoint, not giving in.

“There’s a lot to like about the way the guys are playing.”

While players like Soto and Alonso are expected to come up huge in big moments given their salaries and stature within the game, the unheralded Kranick played a huge role on Wednesday. After Diaz had to come out of the game due to what the team said was cramps in his left hip, Kranick faced a bases-loaded one-out jam against a Phillies lineup that has the potential to have things snowball.

But Kranick, who has been terrific so far this season to the tune of a 2.81 ERA, stopped any potential avalanche before it could even start, getting Bryson Stott to fly out weakly to center before Max Kepler followed suit to right.

Kranick’s magic act only fueled the Mets’ fire heading into the bottom of the inning.

“For Kranick to keep it there and what’s coming for us offensively when you see it’s Soto, it’s Pete, it’s [Mark] Vientos, it’s [Brandon] Nimmo,” Mendoza said. “So you’re like ‘We’ve got a chance, we’ve just got to keep it somewhat close,’ and that’s what Kranick did. Coming into the bottom of the 10th, we liked our chances. There was a good feeling in that dugout, and I’m glad Pete came through and then the other guys and then Marte there.”

It was almost fitting that it was Marte who walked the Mets off with a win, as he’s perhaps the perfect embodiment of what the Mets have become: a player putting the team first, and someone who has gone from being a full-time outfielder to a part-time DH, yet he still did his job when called upon.

“Not an easy role for him now after being an elite player in this league for a long time,” Mendoza said. “…At some point he’s going to contribute, and sure enough he did it today.”

Mets finish perfect homestand as Starling Marte delivers walk-off hit in win over Phillies

The Mets completed a three-game sweep of the Philadelphia Phillies, winning 4-3 in 10 innings on Wednesday afternoon, rounding out a perfect 7-0 homestand.

Here are the key takeaways...

-A huge moment came in the top of the eighth inning. With two on and two outs, Max Kepler lined a hit into right field, with Nick Castellanos steamrolling home for the potential go-ahead run. But Juan Soto came up firing, throwing a dart to the plate that was slightly offline, and Hayden Senger lunged and applied the tag just in the nick of time, keeping the game scored at 2-2.

-With the game still tied into extras, the Phillies pushed a run across againstEdwin Diaz in the 10th, as free runner Bryce Harper stole third and came in to score on a Castellanos single past a drawn in Mark Vientos. Diaz then committed a balk, disengaging three times, before motioning to the dugout. After talking to coaches and trainers, Diaz left the game, and the balk was overturned since it was deemed he stepped off due to injury.

Diaz was pitching in his second inning of work, and he ended up throwing 18 pitches before leaving the game.

-Max Kranick took over on the mound, and was able to escape a bases-loaded, one-out jam, keeping the Phillies' lead at one run. In the bottom of the inning, Pete Alonso delivered an RBI double off of Jordan Romano, tying the game and putting the winning run in scoring position. Starling Marte then played hero, lining a soft single into center to score Alonso and give the Mets a walk-off victory.

-Prior to the game, Carlos Mendoza discussed the roster crunch looming when Jeff McNeil and Francisco Alvarez return, which will likely be on Friday. Brett Baty may have made that decision even more difficult in the bottom of the second, when he blasted a no-doubt, two-run home run off of Zack Wheeler, depositing the ball in the the upper deck in right field.

Baty went 1-for-2 with his first big fly of the season, and was later pinch-hit for in the top of the seventh inning.

-David Peterson dealt with traffic on the bases for most of his outing, but he did a nice job of mitigating any damage, like in the second when he escaped a bases-loaded, one-out jam without allowing a run. The Phillies did get to him for a pair of runs in the fourth on RBI knocks from Johan Rojas and Trea Turner, but that was all the tall lefty would surrender.

Peterson went 5.1 innings, allowing two earned runs on eight hits while striking out two and walking one batter.

-Francisco Lindor stayed hot at the plate, reaching base three times, including a pair of hits. Lindor had multiple hits in each of the three games against the Phillies, raising his batting average from .271 at the start of the series, to .309 at the end.

-Brandon Nimmo had a quiet day at the plate, but he made a couple of terrific plays in the field. In the fifth, Nimmo went all out to dive and catch a sinking Castellanos line drive, and then in the sixth he followed that up by running full speed and jumping to grab an Alec Bohm liner that looked like it was bound to go for extra bases over his head.

-Wheeler, who came into the game with a 3.56 ERA in 15 starts against his former team, had another good showing. The former Met went 6.0 innings, allowing two earned runs on five hits with nine strikeouts and two walks. Like Peterson, he left the game without factoring into a decision.

Who was the game MVP?

Marte, who came into the game as a pinch-hitter and later delivered the game-winning knock.

Highlights

Upcoming schedule

The Mets have a day off on Thursday before hitting the road for a four-game series in Washington D.C. against the Nationals.

Kodai Senga will start for the Mets, while the Nats have not yet announced a starter.

Yankees jump out to early lead, avoid sweep with 5-1 win over Guardians

The Yankees beat the Cleveland Guardians, 5-1, in the series finale of a three-game set on Wednesday afternoon.

Here are the takeaways...

- The Yanks jumped on Guardians starter L.L. Ortiz, scoring twice in each of the first two innings. The first four batters of the game were able to reach base, with the big knocks being Aaron Judge's RBI triple and Paul Goldschmidt's opposite-field RBI double -- both were inches away from leaving the park.

- In the second inning, Jasson Dominguez led off with a walk, and after stealing second he scored on a Ben Rice single. Rice came around to score a run of his own a few batters later on Goldschmidt's second run-scoring knock in as many innings.

- Rice was on base three times out of the leadoff spot, bringing his OPS to 1.005. Judge was also on base three times -- he's now hitting a league-high .419 with a 1.247 OPS. Goldschmidt continues swinging a hot bat, posting a .383 average through 94 at-bats.

- Carlos Rodon put together his second consecutive strong outing after being staked to the early advantage. He was hurt by a Cody Bellinger error in the first, which allowed an unearned run to score, but was able to dance around further damage from there.

The southpaw's best inning came in the fourth, when he struck out the side on just 10 pitches. He worked around a one out walk in the fifth before retiring the next six batters he faced to close out one of his strongest performances of the year.

Rodon allowed just the unearned run on four hits and two walks while striking out eight across seven innings.

- Fernando Cruz continued his strong start to the year, striking out a pair in the eighth. Luke Weaver then came on and worked around a one-out single to put the finishing touches on the Yankees' 15th victory of the season.

- The heart of New York's order continues to struggle, with Jazz Chisholm Jr., Anthony Volpe, and Austin Wells going acombined 2-for-15 on the afternoon with eight strikeouts. Chisholm singled and the other knock was a Wells RBI double, but they have a combined .683 OPS on the year.

Game MVP: Carlos Rodon

Rodon put together one of his strongest outings of the season to help New York avoid the three-game sweep.

Highlights

Whats next

The Yanks return home to start a three-game set with the Blue Jays on Friday at 7:05 p.m.

Aaron Nola working to regain command of the 2025 season after rough start

Baseball is a world full of superstitions. Rally caps. On deck circle rituals. Lucky shirts worn under game jerseys. Each franchise is filled with them and sometimes they are large enough in scope that they encompass an entire season. The San Francisco Giants had a stretch where they competed for a World Series every other year, and Aaron Nola is now battling his own "every other year" stigma.

Since 2017, the starting pitcher has seemed to go back and forth between good seasons and seasons where his ratios or strikeouts take a step backward. Most recently, Nola followed up a strong COVID-shortened 2020 season with a decline in strikeout rate and a 4.63 ERA in 2021. Then he bounced back with a career-best season in 2022 before struggling to a 4.46 ERA and another drop in strikeout rate in 2023. Last year, Nola seemed to take a small step forward again with his ERA and hard contact allowed, but the early stages of the 2025 season have not been kind to the veteran.

Through five starts, the 31-year-old has a 6.43 ERA and 1.61 WHIP with 34 hits allowed and a 31:11 K:BB ratio in 27 innings. While it would be easy to write this off as another step backward, as dictated by the "every other year" superstition, there might be another, simpler answer to why Nola has struggled to start the season.

"Keeping guys off free passes," the veteran said two days after his last start against the Mets. In that outing, Nola walked two batters and struck out six while allowing seven hits and four earned runs in 6.1 innings. Although, two of the runners who came around to score did so after Nola had been removed from the game.

"I have to focus on the small things that I usually do, which is to get the leadoff hitter out, first pitch strikes, and walks," he continued. "I had two [walks] the other night, but the past two games before that, I had four each game, which is kind of unacceptable for me. I'm not a guy who usually walks a lot of guys in my career. That's not really me."

For his career, Nola has a 6.4% walk rate or 2.36 walks per nine innings. This season, his walk rate is 8.7%, which has equated to 3.54 walks per nine innings. As Nola alluded to, a large portion of that can be attributed to his lack of success early in the count. This season, Nola has a 56.3% first-pitch strike rate, which is not only 10% lower than last season but also 10% lower than his career mark.

If you look at True First Pitch Strike Rate, which takes the swings and called strikes in 0-0 counts but removes balls in play so that it measures every time a pitcher gets to an 0-1 count, Nola has a 46.8% mark right now, which is far-and-away the worst of his career and is considerably worse than his 55% career rate. That has led to Nola pitching from behind in the count more than he has in any season since 2019.

"At the end of the day," said Nola, "it all comes down to command and getting ahead of [hitters]. Pitching is a lot easier when you do that. You have more options when you do that."

The flip side of that statement is that falling behind in the count limits the options that a pitcher has and makes things harder. With Nola falling behind in the count more often, he can't nibble at the corners or try and get hitters to chase as the at-bat goes on because he runs the risk of giving up a free pass. When that happens, as Nola himself said, "Those guys usually score, and they have. I think almost all the walks that I've had this year, scored or led to some runs."

I went back and looked at the 11 batters Nola has walked this season to see if his feeling was correct. Of his 11 walks on the season, six of those either directly led to a run or eventually came around to score, so even if it's not "almost all," that's almost a third of the runs he's allowed this season behind tied back to free passes.

When pitchers fall behind in the count, hitters can also get more aggressive on pitches in the strike zone, so even if Nola can avoid issuing a walk when he falls behind in the count, he is still facing too many hitters who are in counts where they feel they can do damage on anything in the strike zone.

"That's a really big thing for me," he explained, "to go at guys as best as possible. Obviously, not serve it up over the middle, but to get myself in better counts to where I can make better pitches, more quality pitches. There's the ones that I've thrown over the middle that [hitters] just haven't missed so far, and sometimes that's just how it goes."

In some sense, he's right. Nola isn't throwing more pitches down the middle than he has in years past. Statcast has him throwing 27% of his pitches in the Heart of the strike zone, which is in line with his season-long numbers from the last four seasons. The issue is that he's currently sporting a -4 Run Value on pitches in the Heart of the zone after posing a +4 Run Value on pitches there last year.

Some of that can also be attributed to Nola falling behind in the count so often. Hitters are getting into positive counts more often, and when Nola does miss over the heart of the plate, they're waiting to do damage. Nola has given up a higher rate of pulled fly balls than he ever has, and his 33% HR/FB rate is obviously inflated by small sample size, but a good indicator that hitters are making the most of their contact off of Nola right now.

Another reason that hitters are having such success against Nola can be connected back to something even more basic: "My velocity has been down," admitted Nola. "When the fastball velocity is down, usually all the other pitches are down a little bit."

The veteran is sitting right at 90 mph with his sinker through five starts, which is the lowest mark of his career. However, he doesn't believe the issue is connected to anything mechanical or health-related. "It's early season ramping up," he suggested. "Every season, I kind of start out at lower velocity. When it starts to warm up, [the velocity] usually starts to tick up. It's just probably a little more prevalent right now because I'm not having a great start to the season. But, I mean, that's kind of how it's usually been to start off the season."

Through his first nine starts in 2024, Nola averaged 90.8 mph on his sinker and then sat 91.9 mph in his final 21 starts. In 2023, Nola's sinker was 90.8 mph in his first eight starts and then sat at 92.2 mph in his final 20 games. So even though the 90 mph mark is lower than what we've seen the last two years, Nola's velocity has indeed climbed as the season has gone on, and it's fair to assume that we'll see the same this year.

If that velocity does start to come back, there are some positive developments for Nola this season that may start to shine a bit more.

One of them has been the location of his sinker. Even though the sinker velocity hasn't been good, it's inducing 15% more groundballs and giving up a lot less hard contact. Some of that could be because he's getting the pitch in on the hands of right-handed batters more often. His inside location to right-handers is up 10% from last season, up to 47.3% on the year.

"I'm trying to jam the inside a little bit more," Nola admitted, although it does seem to be game-dependent. "The other day, that sinker in to righties felt better than glove side, so we just kind of stayed with that. Some games that gloveside feels really good and armside doesn't, so you just kind of have to go in with a plan every single game, and, obviously, it changes depending on what's going on in the game and how I'm feeling with certain pitches."

That flexible approach also makes sense for a veteran like Nola, who has a good understanding of his pitches. His willingness to attack inside on righties is a positive development, even if it's not one he'll force every game.

Another positive development has been the increased success of Nola's curveball in two-strike counts. So far this season, Nola has a 51% chase rate on his curveball in two-strike counts and has posted a 26.5% PutAway Rate on the pitch, which measures how often a two-strike pitch results in a strikeout. Those marks are up from a 39% two-strike chase rate and 22% PutAway rate last year.

"Chase rate, for me, comes with the location," Nola explained. "I mean, I've thrown a lot of curveballs. The curveball is usually my out pitch over the years, and if I can locate that, I feel like I can get some swing and misses on that one."

This season, Nola is doing a tremendous job of locating his curveball low in the zone and has thrived with the pitch when he's able to get into favorable counts. He just needs to keep working on getting ahead in the count so that he can put himself in those favorable situations.

"The more reps I get, the more comfortable I'll get with the release," he theorized. "I just gotta keep working on it every day and try to get back to being really sharp...That's not saying I'm not gonna walk anybody else for the rest of the year, but I'll try to do that, for sure. There's a difference between an aggressive walk and a nonaggressive walk, and, for me, an aggressive walk is trying to be around the plate and making good pitches, and, you know, if they lay off good pitches, they lay off pitches, but really trying to be on the attack mode is a big component."

At this point in his eight-year career, Nola has earned the benefit of the doubt when it comes to understanding himself and what he needs to do to be successful. However, being in the game as long as he has can sometimes work against you at times too.

"Some things have changed [over the years] just because I've faced teams and guys a lot of times now," Nola admitted. "This just comes with pitching a lot...I've seen a lot of guys a lot of times and thrown a lot of pitches, and so they've seen all my stuff." That means Nola can sometimes try to adapt in ways that wind up not being successful, but it also means his margin for error is much smaller because there are fewer ways he can trick his opponents.

Without the element of surprise, Nola's path to success comes back to one answer: "Command is obviously number one."

By taking back command of the strike zone early in counts, the veteran can hopefully reassert command of the 2025 season. There are enough statistical indicators early in the season that suggest that Nola might be a better pitcher than the version of him we saw last year if his velocity starts ticking back up and he can go back to getting ahead in counts. While that may not be an ace-level pitcher in fantasy baseball anymore, it could still be a valuable one that you may be able to buy low on in your leagues.

Bryce Harper doesn't want to hear that it's still early

Bryce Harper doesn't want to hear that it's still early originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

NEW YORK — Don’t tell Bryce Harper it’s still early.

Not after a stretch or series like this.

The Phillies were swept out of Queens on Wednesday afternoon, losing 4-3 in extra innings to end a brutal three-game set. They did nothing offensively until the ninth inning Monday, couldn’t buy a big knock Tuesday and didn’t produce an extra-base hit Sunday, leaving 12 more on base.

They’ve lost four in a row, nine of 14 and already trail the Mets by five games in the NL East.

They’ve been held scoreless in 26 of the last 30 innings and only one of their last 20 hits has gone for extra bases.

“I’d rather you guys say it’s a little early,” Harper said at his locker, frustrated by the events of the last few days. “I don’t like that just because you should be wanting to play good baseball all year long, from April to November. Obviously, that’s not gonna happen, you’re gonna go through ups and downs and try to stay as even-keeled as you can. But we’re a good team in here and we expect to win. Winning takes care of it all.”

It does. It overshadows individual slumps, narratives and storylines like The 2025 Phillies aren’t having enough fun and need to bring back water celebrations and Dancing On My Own.

“We’ve just got to win,” Harper said. “It takes care of everything, it takes care of mindset, it takes care of what you’re feeling. It doesn’t matter if one guy’s struggling or not, you come to win and winning takes care of it all. As a team, we just have to be better. It’s a really good Mets team over there, they played really good baseball this series, obviously. But it doesn’t matter. We’ve gotta really understand what we want to do and how we want to do it, where we want to go.”

The Phillies are 2-9 against the Mets their last three series. They’ve lost close games and lopsided ones. The most consistent theme of those 11 games has been the Phillies putting men on base, not capitalizing and the Mets breaking things open late.

“You can see that right now,” Harper said. “They’ve played us really well and they’ve beaten us. As a team we’ve got to try to flip that, do what it takes to win games, no matter if it’s the Mets or anybody else. We’ve got to understand that we’re a really good team too and you’re gonna go through ups and downs in a season, but we’ve got to figure it out now.”

Some of it has been poor at-bats. Some of it has been bad luck. Alec Bohm was snakebit for a few weeks, at one point making an out in nine of 10 line drives, and lately it’s been J.T. Realmuto and Trea Turner with tough-luck outs.

It’s exacerbated by a lack of power. Mixing in a two-run homer here or there can make up for situational failures. But the Phillies have one longball in their last five games, Bryson Stott’s off Edwin Diaz in the ninth inning Monday. Two weekends ago in St. Louis, they had a homerless series.

“It’s the randomness of the game,” manager Rob Thomson said. “We’re not gonna start telling guys to swing uphill. If you hit a ball hard, you hit a ball hard. The runners in scoring position number, it’s skewed at some point because you take the (second) inning where we had a runner at second base and (Weston) Wilson hits a bullet to the third baseman. That’s all he can do. Trea comes up later and hits a bullet to the shortstop. That’s all he can do. And so you’re 0-for-2 in that situation. But they hit the ball hard, that’s what I’m looking for.”

Hitters tend to try to do too much when they’re going through a down period. It’s happened to basically the entire Phillies lineup two Octobers in a row after the Diamondbacks seized momentum in the 2023 NLCS and the Mets outplayed them last fall.

With all the noise, all the outside panic, how do guys still let the game come to them?

“Trying to keep it as light as possible so they don’t get too frustrated and get in their own head,” Thomson said. “But I think we’re in a pretty good spot with that.”

On to Wrigley Field to take on the first-place Cubs, who at 6.24 runs per game are the only team in MLB above 5.50.

Bryce Harper doesn't want to hear that it's still early

Bryce Harper doesn't want to hear that it's still early originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

NEW YORK — Don’t tell Bryce Harper it’s still early.

Not after a stretch or series like this.

The Phillies were swept out of Queens on Wednesday afternoon, losing 4-3 in extra innings to end a brutal three-game set. They did nothing offensively until the ninth inning Monday, couldn’t buy a big knock Tuesday and didn’t produce an extra-base hit Sunday, leaving 12 more on base.

They’ve lost four in a row, nine of 14 and already trail the Mets by five games in the NL East.

They’ve been held scoreless in 26 of the last 30 innings and only one of their last 20 hits has gone for extra bases.

“I’d rather you guys say it’s a little early,” Harper said at his locker, frustrated by the events of the last few days. “I don’t like that just because you should be wanting to play good baseball all year long, from April to November. Obviously, that’s not gonna happen, you’re gonna go through ups and downs and try to stay as even-keeled as you can. But we’re a good team in here and we expect to win. Winning takes care of it all.”

It does. It overshadows individual slumps, narratives and storylines like The 2025 Phillies aren’t having enough fun and need to bring back water celebrations and Dancing On My Own.

“We’ve just got to win,” Harper said. “It takes care of everything, it takes care of mindset, it takes care of what you’re feeling. It doesn’t matter if one guy’s struggling or not, you come to win and winning takes care of it all. As a team, we just have to be better. It’s a really good Mets team over there, they played really good baseball this series, obviously. But it doesn’t matter. We’ve gotta really understand what we want to do and how we want to do it, where we want to go.”

The Phillies are 2-9 against the Mets their last three series. They’ve lost close games and lopsided ones. The most consistent theme of those 11 games has been the Phillies putting men on base, not capitalizing and the Mets breaking things open late.

“You can see that right now,” Harper said. “They’ve played us really well and they’ve beaten us. As a team we’ve got to try to flip that, do what it takes to win games, no matter if it’s the Mets or anybody else. We’ve got to understand that we’re a really good team too and you’re gonna go through ups and downs in a season, but we’ve got to figure it out now.”

Some of it has been poor at-bats. Some of it has been bad luck. Alec Bohm was snakebit for a few weeks, at one point making an out in nine of 10 line drives, and lately it’s been J.T. Realmuto and Trea Turner with tough-luck outs.

It’s exacerbated by a lack of power. Mixing in a two-run homer here or there can make up for situational failures. But the Phillies have one longball in their last five games, Bryson Stott’s off Edwin Diaz in the ninth inning Monday. Two weekends ago in St. Louis, they had a homerless series.

“It’s the randomness of the game,” manager Rob Thomson said. “We’re not gonna start telling guys to swing uphill. If you hit a ball hard, you hit a ball hard. The runners in scoring position number, it’s skewed at some point because you take the (second) inning where we had a runner at second base and (Weston) Wilson hits a bullet to the third baseman. That’s all he can do. Trea comes up later and hits a bullet to the shortstop. That’s all he can do. And so you’re 0-for-2 in that situation. But they hit the ball hard, that’s what I’m looking for.”

Hitters tend to try to do too much when they’re going through a down period. It’s happened to basically the entire Phillies lineup two Octobers in a row after the Diamondbacks seized momentum in the 2023 NLCS and the Mets outplayed them last fall.

With all the noise, all the outside panic, how do guys still let the game come to them?

“Trying to keep it as light as possible so they don’t get too frustrated and get in their own head,” Thomson said. “But I think we’re in a pretty good spot with that.”

On to Wrigley Field to take on the first-place Cubs, who at 6.24 runs per game are the only team in MLB above 5.50.

Mariners at Red Sox Prediction: Odds, expert picks, starting pitchers, betting trends, and stats for April 23

It's Wednesday, April 23 and the Mariners (12-11) are in Boston to take on the Red Sox (14-11). Emerson Hancock is slated to take the mound for Seattle against Sean Newcomb for Boston.

Boston won the series-opener behind five strong innings from Brayan Bello (four hits, one earned run allowed), plus two hits and three RBIs from Alex Bregman. Seattle is 4-3 on this 10-game road trip and has yet to lose back-to-back games on the trip.

Let's dive into the matchup and find a sweat or two. We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on how to catch tipoff, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.

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

Game details & how to watch Mariners at Red Sox

  • Date: Wednesday, April 23, 2025
  • Time: 6:45PM EST
  • Site: Fenway Park
  • City: Boston, MA
  • Network/Streaming: RSNW, NESN

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

Odds for the Mariners at the Red Sox

The latest odds as of Wednesday:

  • Moneyline: Mariners (+115), Red Sox (-136)
  • Spread:  Red Sox -1.5
  • Total: 9.0 runs

Probable starting pitchers for the Mariners at Red Sox

  • Pitching matchup for April 23, 2025: Emerson Hancock vs. Sean Newcomb
    • Mariners: Emerson Hancock, (0-1, 12.71 ERA)
      Last outing: Innings Pitched, Earned Runs Allowed, Hits Allowed, Walks, and Strikeouts
    • Red Sox: Sean Newcomb, (0-2, 3.64 ERA)
      Last outing: Innings Pitched, Earned Runs Allowed, Hits Allowed, Walks, and Strikeouts

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

Top betting trends & insights to know ahead of Mariners at Red Sox

  • AL West teams have won 4 of their last 5 matchups against AL East sides
  • 5 of the Mariners' last 7 games (71%) have gone over the Total
  • The Red Sox have covered the Run Line in 8 of their last 10 matchups against the Mariners

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

Expert picks & predictions for tonight’s game between the Mariners and the Red Sox

Rotoworld Best Bet

Vaughn Dalzell (@VmoneySports) leans the Red Sox on the ML and the Over:

"The Mariners haven't lost back-to-back games on this current 10-game road trip, and this is the last spot it could happen. Seattle didn't find much offense against Bello yesterday and while they could against Newcomb, I like Boston's matchup with Hancock and the bullpen more. The two games Hancock has started were 9-6 and 11-7 finishes, so maybe I'm overcomplicating things and should be taking Over 4.5 runs on the Red Sox or the Game Over 9.0."

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

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

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Wednesday’s game between the Mariners and the Red Sox:

  • Moneyline: NBC Sports Bet is staying away from a play on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: NBC Sports Bet is leaning towards a play ATS on the Seattle Mariners at +1.5.
  • Total: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the over on the Game Total of 9.0.

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