Mets vs. Cardinals: How to watch on SNY on March 21, 2025

The Mets face the Cardinals on Friday at 1:10 p.m. on SNY.

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


Mets Notes

  • Clay Holmes gets the start in what will be his final appearance before Opening Day on March 27 against the Astros in Houston
  • Brett Baty has a 1.022 OPS this spring in 45 at-bats

CARDINALS
METS

Michael Siani, CF

Brandon Nimmo, LF

Jordan Walker, RF

Starling Marte, RF

Alec Burleson, 1B

Pete Alonso, DH

Pedro Pages, C

Mark Vientos, 1B

Jose Fermin, 2B

Brett Baty, 3B

Jose Barrero, SS

Tyrone Taylor, CF

Nathan Church, LF

Donnie Walton, 2B

Wade Stauss, DH

Luisangel Acuña, SS

Ramon Mendoza, 3B

Hayden Senger, C


What channel is SNY?

Check your TV or streaming provider's website or channel finder to find your local listings.

How can I stream the game?

The new way to stream SNY games is via the MLB App or MLB.tv. Streaming on the SNY App has been discontinued.

In order to stream games in SNY’s regional territory, you will need to have SNY as part of your TV package (cable or streaming), or you can now purchase an in-market SNY subscription package. Both ways will allow fans to watch the Mets on their computer, tablet or mobile phone. 

How can I watch the game on my computer via MLB? 

To get started on your computer, click here and then follow these steps: 

  • Log in using your provider credentials. If you are unsure of your provider credentials, please contact your provider. 
  • Link your provider credentials with a new or existing MLB.com account. 
  • Log in using your MLB.com credentials to watch Mets games on SNY. 

How can I watch the game on the MLB App? 

MLB App access is included for FREE with SNY. To access SNY on your favorite supported Apple or Android mobile device, please follow the steps below.  

  • Open “MLB” and tap on “Subscriber Login” for Apple Devices or “Sign in with MLB.com” for Android Devices. 
  • Type in your MLB.com credentials and tap “Log In.”  
  • To access live or on-demand content, tap on the "Watch" tab from the bottom navigation bar. Select the "Games" sub-tab to see a listing of available games. You can scroll to previous dates using the left and right arrows. Tap on a game to select from the game feeds available.  

For more information on how to stream Mets games on SNY, please click here

Phillies rotation is better equipped if disaster strikes in 2025

Phillies rotation is better equipped if disaster strikes in 2025 originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

CLEARWATER, Fla. — It’s been said that the Phillies have one of the best top-to-bottom rotations in baseball going into the new season.

Of course, many who said it also thought the Eagles should be underdogs to Kansas City in Super Bowl LIX. As Yogi Berra noted, “It’s tough to make predictions, especially about the future.” Once the first pitch is thrown at Nationals Park on March 27, those rah-rah words will be worthless as Confederate money. All that will matter is how well they actually pitch.

And the best-case scenario is intoxicating.

Zack Wheeler replicates his 2024 dominance and wins his first Cy Young Award after two agonizingly close misses. Aaron Nola sidesteps the one-bad-inning syndrome that has dogged him recently and also earns Cy Young votes. Left-hander Ranger Suarez, who was scary good a year ago before a variety of ailments derailed him, goes wire-to-wire at the top of his form. Cristopher Sanchez continues to blossom. Jesus Luzardo, the signature offseason acquisition, bounces back from injuries and pitches as well as he did for the Marlins in 2022 and 2023.

But …

And you knew there was going to be a but …

Wheeler will turn 35 at the end of May. Including the playoffs, he’s pitched more than 200 innings each of the past two seasons, the first time he’s carried that workload in back-to-back years.

Nola has been remarkably consistent throughout his career but has fallen into a curious every-other-year pattern. Since his breakout season in 2018, his ERA has been much better in even-numbered years (3.07) than odd (4.32). The hope, then, is he breaks that mold in ’25.

Suarez was a beast through his first 15 starts in 2024 (10-1, 1.75) and largely ineffective after that (4-8, 6.17 in 12 starts with two trips to the injured list). He’s already dealing with back stiffness that may delay his start to the season. He’s also in his contract year, which some players embrace. And some don’t. Sanchez’ ERA also rose significantly in the second half, 3.79 compared to 2.96. And after a career year (10-10, 3.58, 208 strikeouts) for the Marlins in 2023, Luzardo was limited to 12 starts last year by elbow and lower back problems.

What will actually happen as the schedule unspools will almost certainly land somewhere in the middle of those two extremes. But write this down in ink: Every team will need more than their original five starters before it’s all over.

In 2024, MLB teams used an average of 12.87 different starting pitchers. Only the Mariners (7), Padres and Yankees (8) and Royals (9) needed fewer than 10. At the other end of the spectrum, the Dodgers, White Sox and Brewers required 17, the Angels 18 and the Marlins a staggering 20. Four full rotations’ worth.

The Phillies used an even dozen. President of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski is relatively satisfied that the organization is well-armed to withstand the unexpected challenges that will inevitably pop up along the way.

“As confident as one can be,” he said earlier this spring while sitting in his BayCare Ballpark office. “You never can have enough options if the wrong guys get hurt. But the reality is that I think we’re about as deep as we’ve been in starting pitching since I’ve been here.”

Here are some of the potential options:

Joe Ross

The 31-year-old right-hander was used as a swingman by the Brewers last season before signing a one-year, $4 million contract with the Phillies that includes bonuses which could add another $1 million if he stays on the active roster all season. It has to be noted, though, that he had a 4.98 ERA in 10 starts for Milwaukee compared to 1.67 in 15 relief appearances.

Andrew Painter

The Phillies are bringing their touted 21-year-old uber-prospect along cautiously coming off his July 2023 Tommy John surgery but the expectation is that he’ll make his MLB debut this season.

Taijuan Walker

He was considered a longshot coming into spring training after an ugly 3-7, 7.10 stat line last season, but pitched well enough in the Grapefruit League to allow the organization to believe it could still get some value from the remaining two years and $36 million on his contract … or make him attractive to another team looking for pitching.

Which starter might get promoted from the minors when a need arises often depends on how well each candidate is performing at the time, as well as how well their next scheduled start lines up with when the big-league club has the hole to fill. “Some of our young starting pitching is starting to progress where we feel like they can give us some depth,” Dombrowski said. That category would include:

Seth Johnson

The 25-year-old acquired from Baltimore at last year’s deadline made his MLB debut last September after putting up a 1.52 ERA in August at Double A Reading. He’s really thrown the ball well,” manager Rob Thomson said early in spring training. “His one start, first in the major leagues last year in Miami (8 H, 3 BB, 9 ER in 2.1 IP), I kind of take that with a grain of salt. He’s throwing strikes while he’s been here. “

Moises Chace

The 21-year-old, who came to the Phillies along with Johnson in the deal that sent Gregory Soto to the Orioles, had 124 strikeouts in 80.1 innings at three minor league levels last season but also walked 40. If he can improve his command, he could arrive sooner rather than later.

Mick Abel

The Phillies’ first-round draft choice in 2020 hasn’t lived up to expectations to this point, mostly due to control issues. But he still has the power arm that tantalized scouts and, at 23, still has a chance to put it all together. “He’s really growing up. He gained 10, 15 pounds over the winter and he’s strong,” Thomson said.

Jean Cabrera

Was added to the 40-man roster in December after pitching in 20 games (19 starts) for High A Jersey Shore and Double A Reading last year. He struck out 110 in 106.2 innings and had a 1.21 WHIP.

Tyler Phillips

After being called up in June, he went 3-0 with a 1.71 ERA in his first three starts. In his next three, though, his ERA was 13.91. But he’s experienced – 134 minor-league starts – and could be the right man at the right time if help is needed. Phillips is out of minor-league options.

Concluded Dombrowski: “I’m as comfortable where we are as you can be. But, again, you never know if it’s going to be enough.”

Mets Spring Training Notes: Max Kranick's stock rising, Luis Torrens showing offensive capability

It was another productive day at spring training for the Mets, who are now less than a week away from Opening Day following a 10-3 blowout win over the Washington Nationals.

Before and after the game, manager Carlos Mendoza shined a light on some of the things he and the rest of the coaching staff are seeing from players on the team as final roster cuts begin to loom.

Reliever on the rise

Max Kranick has been perhaps the most surprising pitcher at camp this year as the 27-year-old has dominated opposing hitters whenever he's been on the mound. That continued on Thursday night when the right-hander struck out two batters in his two scoreless innings of work, throwing 19 pitches and 11 strikes.

It was the third time Kranick pitched two innings so far in spring training, but the first time since Feb. 27. In fact, in all but one outing this year Kranick has recorded more than three outs, showing he's capable of being a multi-inning reliever which is of great value in a modern-day bullpen with starters no longer asked to pitch deep into games.

"[Kranick's] a guy that is a multiple inning guy," Mendoza said. "... [He] attacked the strike zone [on Thursday], slider was good, life on the fastball, continues to throw strikes and that’s what you want out of a guy like that that is capable of going multiple innings."

Kranick's ascension as a bullpen arm has been surprising because of his lack of MLB experience and because he hasn't pitched in the majors since 2022 as a member of the Pittsburgh Pirates. Even then, he only pitched five innings that year before undergoing Tommy John surgery.

Since then, Kranick was designated for assignment by the Pirates in January 2024 and claimed off waivers by the Mets a week later. And while he didn't make the team out of spring training (started the season on the IL), Kranick pitched well in Triple-A with a 3.57 ERA (1.22 WHIP) in 63 innings across 41 appearances.

With a fastball that can reach the upper 90s and a devastating slider that he can also throw for strikes (one walk in 11.1 innings), New York hopes Kranick can be its secret weapon this year.

Luis Torrens -- good hitter

With the injury to Francisco Alvarez landing him on the IL to begin the season, the Mets will start the year with Torrens as their starting catcher. Known more for his defense -- especially his throwing arm -- Torrens showed New York he was capable with the bat as well at times. While it's not necessary for a backup catcher to be an offensive juggernaut, Torrens will have to step up like he did in 2024 while Alvarez is on the shelf.

On Thursday, the 28-year-old went 3-for-3 at the plate with a triple, three RBI and three runs scored in the heart of the Mets lineup.

"He’s a good hitter. We saw flashes last year, especially when he first came up and got the opportunity to play," Mendoza said. "This is a guy that can drive the baseball, knows what pitchers are trying to do in certain situations. He’s going to get an opportunity here and like I said, he’s a good player."

For his career, Torrens has slashed .227/.289/.356 with 22 home runs in 850 at-bats. If New York can get some pop out of Torrens along with great defense before Alvarez gets back, it should be fine, especially with so much firepower elsewhere in the lineup.

Starting rotation battle

The Mets still haven't unveiled their full starting rotation with a couple of spots still up for grabs and three pitchers -- Tylor Megill, Paul Blackbun and Griffin Canning -- vying for them.

All three pitchers have had strong moments during camp and Mendoza is pleased with how they are throwing the ball, as well as how they are recovering.

Asked if Megill has an inside track to make the Opening Day roster, the skipper wouldn't tip his hand.

"He’s in the mix, he’s in the conversation," Mendoza said. "Those three guys that we’re talking about, they’ve been throwing the ball really well, Megill being one of them. And that’s why this decision is not as easy as people think.

"You can make a case for Megill, you can make a case for Blackburn, you can make a case for Griffin [Canning]. All three of them are throwing the ball really well, they’re recovering well so that’s why we want to wait here and see what we’ve got."

Despite having the least amount of experience in the majors out of the three options, Megill has experience with New York, debuting with the Mets in 2021 and having varying amounts of success. The right-hander has looked good in Grapefruit League action, owning a 3.86 ERA (1.03 WHIP) with 13 strikeouts over 11.2 innings in three starts.

It's Canning, though, who's been the most impressive in camp with his 0.90 ERA (0.80 WHIP) and 16 strikeouts in 10 innings so far. A former second-round pick, Canning signed with the Mets on a one-year, $4.25 million contract during the offseason after spending five seasons with the Los Angeles Angels.

In his career, the 28-year-old is 25-34 with a 4.78 ERA (1.33 WHIP).

Mets' Carlos Mendoza impressed with Kodai Senga's work ethic: 'He's a man on a mission'

Having missed almost the entirety of the Mets' 2024 season due to injuries, Kodai Senga is making sure he's doing everything he can to stay healthy and on the field for New York in 2025.

So far in spring training, the right-hander has put himself in great position to be a key contributor in the starting rotation, including another solid outing on Thursday night against the Washington Nationals where he went 3.2 innings and didn't allow a hit.

Manager Carlos Mendoza thought his starter's performance was a tale of two halves. He felt Senga "was a little off" in the first couple of innings before completely flipping the script in his last two innings.

"It was a good day of work for him," Mendoza said. "I thought the first couple of innings he was a little off, command was off and it looked like he didn’t have the best feel for his pitches. And then that third inning and the fourth inning it was the complete opposite – he was pretty nasty."

Senga threw just 49 pitches on the night, four less than his previous start, but struck out six and really found his groove deeper into the game, retiring the last nine batters he faced. He also touched 96 mph on his fastball and threw all of his pitches well.

"It was a good outing, I got a lot out of it," Senga said through an interpreter.

Thursday's outing marks Senga's final Grapefruit League action before the start of the regular season. All told, the 32-year-old threw nine innings in three starts and had a 2.00 ERA (1.22 WHIP) with nine strikeouts.

He's now on track to pitch against the Miami Marlins in the Mets' second series of the regular season, an accomplishment Senga doesn't take for granted following his injury-riddled season last year.

"He’s on a mission," Mendoza said. "This is a guy that wants to stay healthy because of what he went through last year. He knows he’s a big part of this team and I see a guy that is having fun. Last year he went down early and it was frustrating for him. Now you can see a smile on his face."

Still, because of his lack of innings thrown in 2024, Senga and the training staff will have to take every precaution this season for the Japanese-born pitcher not to have a similar fate this season. After all, he's much too important to the team who missed him badly last year.

But if New York can get an entire season from a fully healthy Senga, the one who finished second in NL Rookie of the Year voting in 2023 after going 12-7 with a 2.98 ERA and 202 strikeouts in 166.1 innings, the Mets' pitching staff will have one less question to answer.

"I’m on the same page with the coaches, the training staff, everybody on the team and they’re doing their best to keep me on the field and I’m doing what I can to stay on the field," Senga said. "So we’re all on the same page and I think we have a good step going forward."

Jazz Chisholm Jr. drives in five, Will Warren roughed up in Yankees' win over Orioles

In their second and final meeting of Grapefruit League play, the Yankees defeated the rival Baltimore Orioles, 9-7, on Thursday night in Sarasota.

Here are the takeaways...

-- It didn't take long for the Yankees to produce offense. After a one-out walk from Aaron Judge and a line-drive single from Jasson Dominguez in the first inning, Jazz Chisholm Jr. brought his teammates home with a deep two-run double off the right field wall.

-- Poised to claim a rotation spot, Will Warren made his fifth start (sixth appearance) of camp. The outing didn't start on a high note for the Yankees' fifth-overall prospect, as he gave up a mammoth solo homer to Ryan O'Hearn in the first. The blast was sandwiched between a strikeout, flyout, and groundout. New York led 2-1 after one.

-- Chisholm provided even more damage at the plate in his second at-bat. With two runners on and one out in the third, he crushed an inside fastball that landed well beyond the right-field wall for a three-run shot. It was Chisholm's third homer of the spring and second in as many games.

-- Warren didn't thrive with more breathing room in the bottom frame. He allowed back-to-back singles to Jackson Holliday and Cedric Mullins to open the third, and shortly thereafer, Adley Rutschman took a wheelhouse fastball deep to left for a three-run jack. The hard contact continued on the ensuing at-bats, but Warren escaped holding a 5-4 lead.

-- After the Yankees went down in order in the fourth, Warren returned to the mound. He allowed a leadoff walk, but recovered by striking out Holliday and forcing Mullins into a fielder's choice. That marked the end for Warren, who allowed four runs on seven hits and two walks with three strikeouts in 3.2 innings. He built his pitch count up to 74.

-- Anthony Volpe joined the homer party in the sixth, crushing a breaking ball from Seranthony Dominguez for a solo shot to deep left-center. His third homer of camp and second hit of the night bumped the Yankees' lead to 6-4.

-- Ian Hamilton entered the sixth with a flawless 0.00 ERA across 8.1 innings this spring, but his seventh appearance of camp wasn't smooth sailing. He experienced the highs and lows, allowing one run on three hits while still striking out three. So much for that perfect ERA -- it now sits at 9.00.

-- Yerry De Los Santos, who's aiming to earn a bullpen spot, worked around a leadoff walk in the seventh by striking out two and inducing a groundout. He returned for one matchup in the eight inning, and happened to strike out former Yankees catcher Gary Sanchez.

-- Ben Rice didn't bring his hot bat to Sarasota. As the Yankees' catcher, he went hitless in the leadoff spot across four at-bats. Cody Bellinger and Dominguez logged a single and run scored apiece across seven combined at-bats, while Oswaldo Cabrera singled once in three trips.

-- Judge failed to collect a hit in his 11th game of camp, but managed to get on base with a pair of walks and runs scored. It was also a quiet night at the plate for top prospect Spencer Jones -- he went 0-for-3 with a strikeout.

-- A group of Yankees farmhands produced a three-run eighth, as Omar Martinez delievered an RBI double and Brendan Jones drove in two with a single to center.

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees (13-12) will travel 80 miles north-east to Lakeland for a Friday night matchup against the Detroit Tigers (6:05 p.m. first pitch).

Mets pound 13 hits en route to convincing 10-3 win over Nationals

The Mets had another offensive onslaught on Thursday night, this time against the Washington Nationals in a 10-3 win.

Here are the takeaways...

-Kodai Senga, looking for a better outing than his last one on March 14 when he allowed seven hits, including a home run, in 3.1 innings with just one strikeout, made his third start of the spring and delivered a spectacular performance. In 3.2 innings, the right-hander's swing-and-miss stuff was back, consistently getting hitters to chase and generating a ton of whiffs on his way to six strikeouts on 49 pitches (29 strikes).

The 32-year-old didn't allow a hit on the night, but he walked two, including CJ Abrams to lead off the bottom of the first who then scored from second base on a dropped third strike by Luis Torrens, who made an errant throw to first base, allowing the runner to advance to second. After another walk, Senga didn't allow the inning to get away from him, as he induced an inning-ending double play niftily turned by Francisco Lindor and Brett Baty.

From there, Senga retired the next batters eight he faced before getting pulled in the fourth inning.

-On offense, New York got to work immediately after going down 1-0, scoring three in the second, two in the third, and five in the fourth. Luisangel Acuña, batting ninth and playing third base, got the party started with a two-run single the opposite way to give the Mets the lead -- one they would never relinquish.

Acuña finished 2-for-5, but had a bit of a weird play in the field where he took a bad route on a popup on the third base line before appearing to give up on the ball and giving way to left fielder Jose Azocar, who couldn't get to it either which allowed a run to score.

-Other notable contributors at the plate were Luis Torrens, who went 3-for-3 with a triple, three RBI, and three runs scored (he should buy a lottery ticket tonight). Jose Siri finished 3-for-4 with a double, three RBI, and a run scored, and Baty produced his fifth double of the spring along with a walk, an RBI, and two runs scored.

-Noticably absent from the hit parade was Lindor, who finished 0-for-5 with an RBI. The shortstop, who historically gets off to slow starts, has not had a great spring and is batting .163 (8-for-49) with a .459 OPS out of the leadoff spot. After his MVP-caliber season in 2024, in which he got off to possibly the worst start of his career, Lindor has earned the right for fans to be patient with him. But a good start to the season would certainly benefit New York's offense.

-Jesse Winker was back in the lineup for the first time since exiting Monday's game with cramps in his calf. Batting cleanup as the designated hitter, he went 0-for-2 with a walk and run scored before getting pinch-hit for in the sixth.

-Max Kranick, the reliever from out of nowhere who has been lights out this spring training, was at it again on Thursday. The 6-foot-3, 220-pounder pitched two scoreless innings while striking out two more batters to get his total up to 14 in 11.1 innings. The 27-year-old right-hander, who last pitched in the majors in 2022 with the Pittsburgh Pirates, has done everything he can to get a spot on the Opening Day roster.

-Tyler Zuber, another reliever fighting for a roster spot who's shown promise during camp, pitched the final two innings and allowed a run on two hits and a walk while striking out two. It was the first run allowed by Zuber this spring, and he still owns a 1.17 ERA in 7.2 innings.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets will complete their spring training slate with a four-game homestand that begins on Friday afternoon against the St. Louis Cardinals (1:10 p.m start).

Matt Rempe Out Against Maple Leafs With Illness While Rangers Make Lineup Changes

Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images

Matt Rempe is out against the Toronto Maple Leafs on Thursday night due to an apparent illness. 

Rempe was on the ice before the New York Rangers’ morning skate on Thursday, which hinted something was up. 

Brennan Othmann will take Rempe’s spot in the lineup after serving as a healthy scratch for the past two games.

Meanwhile, Carson Soucy is set to replace Urho Vaakanainen in the lineup with Peter Laviolette looking to make a defensive shake up. 

Soucy was acquired by the Rangers from the Vancouver Canucks one day before the NHL Trade Deadline, but he’s been scratched for three consecutive games.

Braves add to outfield depth by signing veteran Alex Verdugo to one-year, $1.5 million deal

ATLANTA — The Atlanta Braves bolstered their outfield depth on Thursday by signing Alex Verdugo to a one-year, $1.5 million contract and optioning him to Triple-A Gwinnett.

Verdugo, 28, hit .233 with 13 homers and 61 RBIs for the New York Yankees in 2024 following four seasons with Boston. He took a big cut in pay from last year, when he had an $8.7 million base salary and earned $50,000 in performance bonuses for plate appearances.

The left-handed hitting Verdugo played for the Los Angeles Dodgers for three seasons, beginning in 2017. He has a career batting average of .272 and is a superior defender.

In similar moves to bolster depth this week, the Braves signed nine-time All-Star closer Craig Kimbrel and catcher James McCann to minor league deals.

Atlanta’s biggest offseason move was signing outfielder Jurickson Profar to a three-year, $42 million contract.

Profar, who is expected to be ready for the regular season after missing time with a jammed left wrist this spring training, is the projected starter in left field.

Atlanta is awaiting the return of 2023 NL MVP Ronald Acuña Jr., who tore his left ACL on May 26.

The Braves also signed Bryan De La Cruz to a one-year deal, and De La Cruz is expected to share right field with Jarred Kelenic while Acuña’s recovery continues. Michael Harris is set in center field.

Verdugo’s signing was a surprise because the Braves may have a glut of outfielders when Acuña is healthy, perhaps as early as May.

Reds, newly acquired catcher Jose Trevino agree to three-year contract worth $14,925,000

GOODYEAR, Ariz. — Catcher Jose Trevino and the Cincinnati Reds agreed Thursday to a three-year contract worth $14,925,000, a deal that adds $11.5 million in newly guaranteed money.

Trevino was acquired from the New York Yankees in December for reliever Fernando Cruz and catcher Alex Jackson, and the 32-year-old avoided arbitration when he agreed to a one-year contract worth $3,425,000. Trevino would have been eligible for free agency after this year’s World Series.

His new deal adds salaries of $5.25 million each for 2026 and 2027 plus a $6.5 million club option for 2028 with $1 million buyout.

Trevino will begin the season as the Reds top catcher. Tyler Stephenson is sidelined by an oblique injury; he last played March 11, was scratched the following day and had an MRI on March 13.

Trevino was limited to 74 games last year, hitting .215 with eight homers and 28 RBIs. He was a first-time All-Star in 2022, playing a career-high 115 games and earning a Gold Glove while batting .248 and setting career bests with 11 homers and 43 RBIs.

Trevino has a .236 batting average, 32 homers and 141 RBIs over seven major league seasons with Texas and the Yankees.

Yankees' Clarke Schmidt throws successful BP, but status as IL candidate still 'up in the air'

The good news for the Yankees is that Clarke Schmidt successfully completed a live batting practice session on Thursday without any hitches. The bad news is that he's still a potential injured list candidate once the regular season arrives next week.

While speaking to Anthony Rieber of Newsday, Schmidt acknowledged that his Opening Day status remains "up in the air," as he's not yet built up due to recent shoulder fatigue.

The Yankees haven't arrived at a decision either. According to Gary Phillips of the New York Daily News, manager Aaron Boone is still determining whether Schmidt's next trip to the mound will come in another batting practice session or game action.

The right-hander threw 32 pitches at Steinbrenner Field on Thursday, and faced a group of hitters that included Austin Wells, Dominic Smith, and Paul Goldschmidt.

Instead of starting Monday's game against the Toronto Blue Jays, Schmidt threw a bullpen session in Tampa. The 29-year-old threw 24 pitches then, and Boone told reporters that it went well.

The chances of Schmidt beginning the 2025 campaign on the shelf seem rather high, considering that the spring training window closes soon. Even if he builds up to 50 pitches in his next outing -- and without any setbacks -- it's not the workload required for a starter. The Yankees will undoubtedly err on the side of caution, despite the encouraging progress.

Schmidt's lone start of camp took place on March 11 against the Baltimore Orioles. He threw 38 pitches (23 strikes) and allowed three runs on four hits while striking out four.

Ex-Angels draft pick Bobby Jenks fighting for his life after losing home in Palisades fire

Bobby Jenks of the Chicago White Sox pitches during the ninth inning of Game Four of the World Series
Chicago White Sox closer Bobby Jenks pitches during the ninth inning of Game 4 of the 2005 World Series against the Houston Astros. (Brad Mangin / MLB via Getty Images)

Former Angels draft pick Bobby Jenks helped the Chicago White Sox win the 2005 World Series.

Twenty years later, the 44-year-old and his family need some help.

Jenks has been diagnosed with Stage 4 adenocarcinoma, a form of stomach cancer. In addition, the family lost its home in the Palisades fire.

Jenks is taking part in a private memorabilia-signing event arranged by PastPros. The money raised will go toward helping the former closer who forced the Houston Astros' Orlando Palmeiro into hitting a game-ending groundout Oct. 26, 2005, to end the White Sox's 88-year championship drought.

"As many will have heard, former White Sox closer Bobby Jenks has been diagnosed with stage 4 stomach cancer (after losing his home in the LA fires)," PastPros posted Wednesday on Instagram.

"To help Bobby and his family with medical costs, we have arranged an in-person private signing with him. All profits will be given to the Jenks family."

Read more:Nearly everything Tommy Hawkins cherished in life was destroyed in the Palisades fire

Fans are asked to send the items they wish to have signed (cards, photos, balls or jerseys) to an address provided on the PastPros website by March 25. The items will be signed by Jenks in Portugal — where he, his wife and two of his six children are currently living — and returned by mail.

PastPros also announced that former Dodgers pitcher Darren Dreifort is donating his proceeds from a similar signing event to Jenks and his family.

The Jenks family, through PastPros, declined to comment for this article.

Born in Mission Hills, Jenks later attracted the attention of baseball scouts as a hard-throwing teenager on an American Legion team in North Idaho. After graduating from Inglemoor High School in Kenmore, Wash., in 2000, Jenks was selected by the Angels in the fifth round of that summer's draft.

Jenks spent much of the next several years dealing with injuries and was designated for assignment after the 2004 season. He was claimed by the White Sox and made his first MLB start in July. In October, he appeared in all four World Series games during Chicago's sweep of Houston, giving up three hits and two earned runs with seven strikeouts and two walks over five innings pitched.

Read more:Gary Hall Jr. won 10 Olympic medals in the water. Then he lost them in the Palisades fire

Jenks played six seasons with the White Sox, earning All-Star nods in 2006 and 2007, then one season with the Boston Red Sox before his career ended after he underwent emergency surgery on his spine to fix a spinal fluid leak that caused a major infection.

Jenks was in Crestfield, Ill., managing the Windy City Thunderbolts independent professional baseball team when the Palisades fire hit. He had his World Series ring with him at the time, Jenks told MLB.com in February, but all the other tangible memories of his baseball career are gone.

“I’ve got one suitcase left to my name,” Jenks said. “It’s all gone. Everything else I’ve ever done. ... All those things are irreplaceable.”

He added that he has every intention of being able to manage the Windy City team again this year, as well as attend the White Sox's 20-year World Series reunion in July.

“Now it’s time to do what I got to do to get myself better and get myself more time, however you want to look at it,” said Jenks, whose family moved to Portugal to be closer to his wife's family. “I’ll tell you one thing: I’m not going to die here in Portugal."

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

MLB Tokyo Series Marks Biggest-Selling Event in Fanatics History

The Shohei Ohtani (and more) effect was strong for Fanatics during MLB’s two-game, season-opening Tokyo Series between the Los Angeles Dodgers and Chicago Cubs.

In a rare release of sale figures by the ubiquitous retailer, Fanatics announced that it generated $40 million in fan gear and trading card sales, making the series the biggest-selling event in company history. That total includes sales in multiple retail channels both online and in-person, in Japan as well as in the U.S.

A limited-edition collection from Japanese artist Takashi Murakami, which was sold at Complex and Fanatics pop-up stores in Tokyo and Los Angeles, sold out on the Fanatics app in less than an hour. Most of those products sold out within 15 minutes.

Of the Fanatics offerings, the Topps items were among the fastest sellers. More than 12,000 Topps Series 1 Japan Exclusive Mega Boxes sold out online in Japan. The two Topps Tokyo Series sets included a dual-signed 1/1 autograph of Ohtani and Murakami, and they were heavily sought after during the two-game series.

The company claims that the foot traffic at MLB’s store in the Tokyo Dome was so high that 140 registers were needed to handle the customer demand, with over 2,000 fans waiting in line to enter the store prior to the March 18 game and 1,000 waiting in line for the second game on March 19.

Of course, much of the fervor has been driven by Ohtani, who is coming off one of the greatest individual seasons in MLB history. Last August, the Dodgers superstar signed an exclusive global trading card deal with Topps, and its timing could not have been better, as he not only became the first 50 homer/50 steals player in AL/NL history but won his first World Series two months later, setting TV viewership records in his native country.

Yet, the three-time MVP was not the only star on hand in the series who helped move units for Fanatics. Fans also came out in droves to see his teammates Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Roki Sasaki, along with Shōta Imanaga and Seiya Suzuki of the Cubs. Imanaga and Yamamoto faced off in the first game, while Sasaki made his MLB debut for Game 2. Los Angeles won both games to start the 2025 season 2-0 ahead of next week’s league-wide Opening Day.

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Former Cy Young Award winner Jake Peavy returns to Padres as special assistant to CEO

SAN DIEGO — Jake Peavy, the 2007 NL Cy Young Award winner and member of the San Diego Padres Hall of Fame, has joined the team as special assistant to CEO Erik Greupner.

Greupner said Thursday the three-time All-Star will assist multiple departments and serve as a team ambassador.

“I’m incredibly appreciative of this opportunity to reunite with my Padres family,” Peavy said in a statement. “San Diego has always held a special place in my heart. I’m a Padre through and through— from the moment I was drafted by the team until this very day, and I can’t wait to work alongside this talented group and contribute in any way I can to the success of this great organization.”

Padre, inducted into the team Hall of Fame in 2023, won 19 games with a 2.54 ERA and 240 strikeouts in his Cy Young-winning season. He was 92-68 with a 3.29 ERA and 1,348 strikeouts in 212 starts with the team from 2002-09.

Peavy was selected by the Padres in the 15th round of the 1999 amateur draft. He also pitched for the Chicago White Sox, Boston and San Francisco and retired after the 2016 season with a 152-126 record and 3.63 ERA over 15 seasons.

Thanks to Shohei Ohtani, MLB enjoys huge success in Japan and has momentum heading into 2025 season

TOKYO — There was the crack of Shohei Ohtani’s bat, the roars from the Tokyo Dome crowd and the beeps from the credit card machines at the massive merchandise center selling boatloads of Los Angeles Dodgers and Chicago Cubs gear.

It all must have been music to the ears of Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred.

The 2025 season couldn’t have had a much better start for the sport, which showcased its international appeal in Japan. The Tokyo Dome hosted a capacity crowd of roughly 42,000 for all four games — two exhibitions against Japanese teams and two regular-season games — and thousands more came downtown to enjoy the spectacle of a wildly successful overseas trip.

It’s all part of MLB’s winning streak as it barrels toward its domestic opening day on March 27. The game is in solid health with a slight increase in stadium attendance and a quicker pace of play thanks to a series of rules changes that started in 2023.

“To the city of Tokyo and the country of Japan, on behalf of the Dodgers and Major League Baseball, we just want to say thank you,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “You guys were all such great hosts.

“Hopefully we put on a good show.”

It’s hard to argue otherwise. Ohtani’s towering solo homer in the Dodgers’ 6-3 win put an exclamation point on a two-game sweep in which five Japanese players returned home, including four who played quite well, navigating the suffocating pressure of performing in front of their home fans.

Chicago’s Shota Imanaga and Los Angeles’ Yoshinobu Yamamoto got things started with the first all-Japanese starting pitching duel in opening day history. Both delivered, with Imanaga throwing four scoreless innings and Yamamoto responding with five quality frames of his own, giving up just one run over five innings in the Dodgers’ 4-1 win.

In the second game, Dodgers rookie Roki Sasaki made his big league debut, firing four 100 mph fastballs to start his career in three electrifying — if a little erratic — innings that showcased his potential. Chicago’s Seiya Suzuki was the only one with a quiet homecoming, going hitless in the two games.

But the center of attention was undoubtedly Ohtani, who handled the massive expectations with grace and skill. He went 3 for 8 with a pair of walks, including the solo homer that just cleared the wall in right-center field, giving the Dodgers a 6-2 lead.

Even Chicago’s Pete Crow-Armstrong unwittingly contributed to the fairy tale scene, flipping Ohtani’s home run ball into the stands where a 10-year-old Japanese boy caught it and became an instant celebrity.

“You know, it’s not surprising,” Roberts said. “Nothing Shohei does surprises me. Everyone here tonight came to watch Shohei perform and put on a show. And like Shohei does, he always seems to deliver.

“It was a great moment for everyone for him to hit a home run here at the Tokyo Dome.”

The festive scene was in stark contrast to last year’s two-game series in South Korea between the Dodgers and San Diego Padres, when news of a gambling scandal involving Ohtani’s translator Ippei Mizuhara marred the series and briefly tarnished Ohtani’s spotless reputation.

Mizuhara later pleaded guilty to bank and tax fraud after he stole nearly $17 million from the Dodgers player’s bank account. He was sentenced to nearly five years in federal prison in February.

Ohtani was never implicated in the scandal, and the slugger responded to the turmoil with one of the greatest seasons in MLB history, becoming the first player to have at least 50 homers and 50 stolen bases in one season and helping the Dodgers win the World Series over the New York Yankees.

The 30-year-old’s baseball heroics over the past year have made the stunning 10-year, $700 million deal he signed with the Dodgers seem like a bargain. Now he’s trying to return to the field as a two-way player, targeting a May return to the mound as he tries to pitch for the first time since elbow surgery in 2023.

It’s fair to wonder how much longer Ohtani’s surgically repaired body can keep up this pace. He had left (non-throwing) shoulder surgery during the offseason to repair a torn labrum after an injury sustained in Game 2 of the World Series and has now had two major surgeries on his pitching elbow.

But if we’ve learned anything since Ohtani came to the big leagues, baseball’s conventional wisdom doesn’t seem to apply to one of the best players the game has ever seen.

Final Yankees 26-man roster prediction for 2025 season

The Yankees can't get to Opening Day soon enough.

Injuries have plagued New York this spring, and the team is trying to get to March 27 without any more. The Yankees lost their ace Gerrit Cole to Tommy John surgery, and the status of Giancarlo Stanton and DJ LeMahieu remains a mystery.

That's in addition to not having AL Rookie of the Year Luis Gil to start the season and now Clarke Schmidt is dealing with shoulder soreness and his availability for the start of the 2025 season is in question.

With all that in mind, and barring any last-minute additions, here is our final Yankees 26-man roster prediction for the 2025 season…

Starting Lineup

Austin Wells: C
Paul Goldschmidt: 1B
Jazz Chisholm Jr.: 2B
Anthony Volpe: SS
Oswaldo Cabrera: 3B
Jasson Dominguez: LF
Aaron Judge: RF
Cody Bellinger: CF
Ben Rice: DH

When I created this lineup last time, I had right-hander Everson Pereira making the team. It seemed like a no-brainer, with the once-touted prospect hitting .333 with two home runs in spring but two things likely went against the outfielder.

The first is that Pereira is coming back from Tommy John surgery. The Yankees will want the youngster to get more reps, especially in the outfield, down in the minors before coming up to test his durability.

The second potential reason is that Pereira has a minor league option. Although he has only one more option remaining, that can be used if the team needs a right-handed spark off the bench later in the year.

Feb 17, 2025; Tampa, FL, USA; New York Yankees outfielder Everson Pereira (80) runs the bases during a spring training drill at George M. Steinbrenner Field.
Feb 17, 2025; Tampa, FL, USA; New York Yankees outfielder Everson Pereira (80) runs the bases during a spring training drill at George M. Steinbrenner Field. / Dave Nelson-Imagn Images

So, that gives us Rice as the left-handed DH to start the season. Rice, who was given a runway last year playing first base for the injured Anthony Rizzo, is having a monster spring. After a slow start, Rice has smashed four home runs in his last five games and has raised his average to .283.

Rotation

Max Fried: LHP
Carlos Rodon: LHP
Marcus Stroman: RHP

Carlos Carrasco: RHP

Will Warren: RHP

The Yankees' starting rotation was hit the hardest by injuries, which has caused Stroman to remain in pinstripes at least for the time being. I believe Schmidt will be fine in the long run but for the sake of Opening Day, I'm a bit pessimistic about his availability. That's why I see Warren getting the nod to start the season.

He does have two options, so he can be sent down once Schmidt comes back.

Carrasco is the logical choice to be a part of this rotation as a non-roster invitee. Carrasco has an opt-out on March 22, which is when the Yankees have to decide on the veteran's future.

Mar 14, 2025; Tampa, Florida, USA; New York Yankees pitcher Carlos Carrasco (59) throws a pitch against the Philadelphia Phillies in the first inning during spring training at George M. Steinbrenner Field
Mar 14, 2025; Tampa, Florida, USA; New York Yankees pitcher Carlos Carrasco (59) throws a pitch against the Philadelphia Phillies in the first inning during spring training at George M. Steinbrenner Field / Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

Carrasco, 37, has pitched well enough this spring to garner that final spot. In four games (three starts), Carrasco has pitched to a 1.69 ERA and a 0.94 WHIP while striking out 15 batters across 16 innings.

His addition to the roster would be easy with Cole's 60-day IL designation opening up a spot for the veteran right-hander.

Bullpen

Devin Williams: RHP
Yerry De Los Santos: RHP
Mark Leiter Jr.: RHP
Ian Hamilton: RHP
Fernando Cruz: RHP
Tim Hill: LHP
Luke Weaver: RHP
Yoendrys Gomez: RHP

The bullpen, like the rotation, has been bit by the injury bug, especially to Tyler Matzek (oblique) who I predicted would make the roster as a second lefty option. Obliques are tricky, and with Matzek's age, he will likely not be ready for Opening Day -- which leaves Cruz as his replacement.

Leiter and Hamilton have missed time this spring as well, but they both are on track to make Opening Day. So assuming the health of those guys, this could be how the bullpen will look.

Bench

Trent Grisham: OF
Dom Smith: 1B/OF
J.C. Escarra: C
Oswald Peraza: INF

I originally thought right-hander Alex Jackson would win the backup catcher spot but the Yankees have pretty much shown their hand on how they plan to approach the position.

In March, Jackson has had just 13 at-bats. Escarra has 38.

It sure seems like Boone is prepping Escarra to get as many at-bats as possible to be ready for the regular season.

Peraza, without any options remaining, will make the roster or else the Yankees risk losing their former prospect. Grisham is entrenched as the fourth outfielder and Smith, a non-roster invitee, makes the cut thanks to his solid spring and versatility.