Cal Raleigh makes history, but will the catcher’s 60 homers be enough to beat Aaron Judge for MVP?

The 60-homer mark remains a magical threshold in baseball.

Babe Ruth was the first hitter to reach it in a season, and nobody else did until Roger Maris 34 years later. Then it was another 37 years until Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa surpassed 60 home runs in 1998, part of a power surge in which there were six 60-homer seasons between ’98 and 2001.

After that, it took over two decades before New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge hit 62 in 2022. Now Seattle catcher Cal Raleigh has 60 this year, and fittingly the American League MVP race is coming down to him and Judge.

Raleigh (-220) was a slight favorite for the award over Judge (+165) according to BetMGM Sportsbook. But 60 homers is no guarantee of anything. In 1999, both McGwire and Sosa surpassed 60, but Chipper Jones was the National League MVP. McGwire hit a then-record 70 home runs in 1998 but lost out to Sosa, who hit 66.

While Raleigh tries to add to his home run total, Judge has 51 of his own — and he’s closing in on the AL batting title. So the only thing that’s clear about the MVP race is that everyone else is fighting for third.

Advanced stats favor Judge

Judge led the American League in Baseball Reference’s version of wins above replacement (bWAR) — and by a pretty healthy margin of 9.3 to 7.2. The FanGraphs version (fWAR) is closer, with Judge up 9.6 to 9.1, but the New York outfielder also has significant leads in batting average (.330-.247), on-base percentage (.457-.360) and slugging percentage (.683-.594).

Judge and Raleigh both play for teams headed for the playoffs. Raleigh’s role on a Seattle club that has won its division, but was also in danger of missing the postseason until recently, could weigh in his favor. But Baseball Reference has a stat for that, too: Championship win probability added (cWPA) measures how much a player’s contributions have increased his team’s chances of winning the World Series. Judge has the edge there too, with a cWPA of 3.8% to Raleigh’s 3.0%.

How much does WAR affect the voting?

Quite a bit, seemingly.

From 2012 to 2015, Mike Trout led all AL hitters in bWAR every season but only won the MVP once. He was beaten out twice by Miguel Cabrera and once by Josh Donaldson — most contentiously in 2012 when the Triple Crown-winning Cabrera beat out Trout despite the latter’s 10.5-7.1 advantage in WAR.

But since 2016 across both leagues — and not counting the pandemic-shortened 2020 campaign — only five of 16 MVP winners failed to lead his league in bWAR. Those were:

— Christian Yelich in 2018 was fourth in the NL in bWAR, but the only three players ahead of him were pitchers, who often face an uphill climb in MVP voting.

— In 2019, Trout somewhat ironically beat out Alex Bregman despite a bWAR deficit of 8.9-7.9.

— In 2021, Bryce Harper (5.9 bWAR) won MVP honors in a year pitcher Zack Wheeler led the NL in bWAR. Juan Soto had 7.3 bWAR, but his Washington Nationals lost 97 games.

— In 2022, Paul Goldschmidt (7.7) beat out Manny Machado (6.8) and Nolan Arenado (7.9) in the MVP race. Pitcher Sandy Alcantara (8.0) led the NL in bWAR.

— In 2023, Ronald Acuña Jr. (8.4) beat out Mookie Betts (8.6) for NL MVP.

It’s Acuña’s MVP that might be most analogous to Raleigh’s bid this year. Acuña in 2023 had a unique statistical accomplishment on his side — he’d become the first player to reach 40 homers and 70 steals in the same season.

Raleigh makes history

The question for Raleigh is whether Judge’s advantage in many key stats is small enough that more subjective factors can tip the race to the Seattle slugger. The Mariners just won their first division title since 2001, and Raleigh’s role as a catcher presumably includes contributions that stats have a hard time measuring. With Judge no longer playing center field — he’s been exclusively at designated hitter and in right field this year — it’s fair to say Raleigh has the tougher job.

No catcher — and no switch-hitter — has ever hit as many homers as Raleigh in a season. In that sense, he’s had a more historic year than Judge.

Now it’s up to the voters to decide if it was more valuable.

Tigers and Guardians tied atop AL Central with 3 games left

CLEVELAND — Detroit manager A.J. Hinch knows the Tigers’ 4-2 win over Cleveland counts only as one game in the standings.

However, the victory gave the Tigers plenty of momentum going into the final series of the regular season.

“Everybody needs to see a little bit of positivity in the game,” Hinch said. “I think everybody takes a collective breath and say, ‘here we go,’ We know these games matter the most. Even though they count the same, they don’t feel the same because of where we’re at.”

The Tigers and Guardians are both 86-73 and tied atop the American League’s Central Division with three games remaining. The last time the division was remotely close after 159 games was in 2014, when the Tigers had a two-game lead on the Kansas City Royals.

The last time the AL Central was tied at this point was 2006 when the Tigers and Minnesota Twins had 95-64 records.

The Tigers snapped an eight-game losing streak and go into Boston in control of their own destiny. Despite having a 9 1/2 game lead in the division on the morning of Sept. 1, Hinch has tried to keep things focused on the Tigers still having control of a playoff spot despite going 6-15 in September.

Detroit though knows what it is like to be left for dead and all of a sudden get hot at the end to make the postseason. Last season, the Tigers were 55-63 before going 31-13 the remainder of the season to get a wild-card spot.

“This is a weird sport we play. Anything can happen. We’ve seen it with our own eyes. That’s why you have to play all 162 games,” Riley Greene said.

The Tigers swept the Red Sox in a three-game series in Detroit earlier this season. Boston took two of three in its series against Toronto, but lost 6-1.

“We know if we win as many games we can, we’re going to be just fine. We have a good team. We need to play like it,” Hinch said. “Tonight was a good example of what we can bring to the table. Fenway (Park) is going to be an incredibly fun place to play. They are trying to get to the finish line as well, so I expect it to be tough, hard fought games.”

Even though the Guardians were unable to sweep the Tigers for the second time in less than two weeks, they still got what they wanted by taking two out of three games.

“We’re in first place, aren’t we? That sounds good to me,” Cleveland catcher Austin Hedges said. “We talk about winning series. We did that. If we win every series moving forward, we win the world championship.”

The Guardians — who are 18-6 in September — play a Texas Rangers squad that has dropped 9 of 10. However, Texas swept the Guardians in a three-game weekend series last month. The Rangers though will be without their key stars.

“I couldn’t be more thrilled with the way our guys played these last three days,” manager Stephen Vogt said. “We played a great series. Our goal is to win series. We talk about it all year long and we won the series, so we got to do that one more time. We got to win a series this weekend and see what happens.”

If Cleveland and Detroit end up tied after the regular season, the Guardians would win the AL Central due to an 8-5 advantage in the season series and host a Wild Card Series.

Cleveland and Detroit also have a one-game lead on Houston for the final wild-card spot.

The Guardians and Tigers also hold the tiebreak over the Astros. Both teams have a magic number of two to clinch a postseason spot.

Mets Wild Card Scenarios: Everything to know for final weekend of 2025 MLB regular season

The Mets enter the final weekend of the regular season with a 1.0 game lead over the Reds and a 2.0 game lead over the Diamondbacks for the third and final Wild Card spot in the National League.

As the Mets play a three-game series against the Marlins in Miami, the Reds play three games against the Brewers in Milwaukee while the D-backs play three games against the Padres in San Diego.

The Mets do not have the tiebreaker over the Reds (Cincinnati won the season series) or the tiebreaker over the D-backs (season series was split, D-backs will end season with a better intradivision record).

In the event of a three-way tie between the Mets, Reds, and D-backs, the Reds would make the playoffs based on better head-to-head records against the Mets and D-backs.

Here are the Wild Card clinching scenarios for the Mets...


Mets go 3-0 against Marlins

Mets clinch the third Wild Card spot

Their magic number is three, meaning the Reds and D-backs cannot catch them if they sweep Miami

Mets go 2-1 against Marlins

Mets clinch the third Wild Card spot if...

Reds go 2-1 or worse against Brewers

In a scenario where the Mets win two games or more this weekend, the D-backs cannot catch them

Mets go 1-2 against Marlins

Mets clinch the third Wild Card spot if...

Reds go 1-2 or worse against Brewers

D-backs go 2-1 or worse against Padres

Mets go 0-3 against Marlins 

Mets clinch the third Wild Card spot if...

Reds are swept by the Brewers

D-backs go 1-2 or worse against Padres

Mets at Marlins: How to watch on Sept. 26, 2025

The Mets open a three-game series against the Marlins in Miami on Friday at 7:10 p.m. on PIX11.

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


Mets Notes

  • Francisco Lindoris hitting .333/.429/.694 with four homers in 42 plate appearances over his last nine games
  • In 11.2 innings over nine appearances this month, Edwin Diaz has allowed one run on six hits while walking three and striking out 17
  • Brandon Sproat has a 3.94 ERA (2.39 FIP) and 1.18 WHIP with 15 strikeouts in 16.0 innings over his first three big league starts

METS
MARLINS
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--
--

How can I watch the game online?

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

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

Mets at Marlins: 5 things to watch and series predictions with Wild Card on the line

Here are five things to watch and predictions as the Mets and Marlins play a three-game series in Miami starting on Friday at 7:10 p.m. on PIX11.


5 things to watch

It all comes down to this

As the Mets won two of three games against the Cubs in Chicago, the Reds dropped two of three to the Pirates and the Diamondbacks lost two of three to the Dodgers.

That means New York enters the final weekend of the regular season with a 1.0 game lead over the Reds and a 2.0 game lead over the D-backs for the third and final Wild Card spot in the National League.

Cincinnati owns the tiebreaker over the Mets by virtue of winning the season series, and Arizona will have the tiebreaker over them as well due to a stronger intradivision record (the teams split the season series).

So this is simple for the Mets: their magic number is three over the Reds and two over the D-backs. If they sweep the Marlins, the Reds and D-backs can't catch them.

The Reds head to Milwaukee this weekend for a three-game series against the Brewers, while the D-backs play three games against the Padres in San Diego. 

The biggest start of Brandon Sproat's young career

A lot has been put on the Mets' trio of rookie starters down the stretch, and that will continue on Friday night.

Sproat gets the start in what will be the biggest and most pressure-filled outing of his young career.

His 3.94 ERA does not reflect how well he's pitched over his first three big league starts, since two of the runs he allowed on Sept. 19 against the Nationals should have been unearned due to a misplay by center fielder Jose Siri that was somehow ruled a hit.

Sproat has the stuff to thrive, and has shown poise as well. Following the hiccup he had in the third inning of his last start, he rebounded to throw a shutdown frame in the fourth to complete his night.

Who will start for the Mets on Saturday and Sunday?

Following Sproat's start on Friday, things are up in the air.

It seems likely that Clay Holmes will start on Saturday, but who pitches after him is a mystery. That's because it's been a struggle for Sean Manaea since his strong piggyback performance on Sept. 16, when he allowed one run in 5.0 innings.

New York Mets starting pitcher Sean Manaea (59) delivers a pitch during the fifth inning against the San Diego Padres at Citi Field.
New York Mets starting pitcher Sean Manaea (59) delivers a pitch during the fifth inning against the San Diego Padres at Citi Field. / Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Manaea surrendered three runs in 3.0 innings in a start on Sept. 21 against the Nationals, and allowed two runs in 1.0 inning while pitching in relief against the Cubs on Wednesday.

As far as Sunday?

If that game matters for the Mets, it's very hard to envision them handing the ball to David Peterson. The lefty allowed five runs in 1.1 innings on Tuesday in Chicago, and has an 8.42 ERA in 41.2 innings over nine starts dating back to Aug. 6.

So it could be all hands on deck for New York on Sunday afternoon. 

Will Mets go defense over offense?

The Mets have vacillated between defensive and offensive lineups lately.

On Thursday night against the Cubs, they went with Tyrone Taylor in center field, Luisangel Acuña at second base, and Luis Torrens behind the plate.

Earlier in the series, they had a lineup that included Brandon Nimmo in center field and Starling Marte in left field.

Perhaps the Mets will split the difference a bit in Miami.

A lineup with Brett Baty at third base, Taylor in center field, Francisco Alvarez behind the plate, and with DH duties split between Marte and Mark Vientos could make the most sense.

Marlins' starting pitching is lined up perfectly

The Marlins' minuscule playoff chances were extinguished on Thursday, but they remain a tough opponent.

That mainly has to do with the three pitchers they'll have toeing the rubber to start these games.

It will be Sandy Alcantara on Friday (the Marlins pushed him back so he can pitch in this series), Eury Perez on Saturday, and Edward Cabrera on Sunday.

Following a tough first half as he worked back into shape following Tommy John surgery, Alcantara has been dominant. In seven starts since Aug. 15, he has a 2.70 ERA in 46.2 innings, allowing just 30 hits.

Perez has been hit and miss (the Mets lit him up for five runs on Aug. 29 as he failed to escape the first inning), but has filthy stuff. The same can be said for Cabrera, who has slowed down a bit lately -- New York touched him up for six runs (five earned) in 4.0 innings on Aug. 30.

Predictions

Who will the MVP of the series be?

Francisco Lindor

Lindor has the same look in his eye at the plate that he had during the 2024 NLDS against the Phillies.

Which Mets pitcher will have the best start?

Clay Holmes

Holmes has been strong over his last three appearances.

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

Jakob Marsee

The rookie has an .876 OPS over his first 222 big league plate appearances. 

The Tigers are enduring one of MLB’s greatest-ever meltdowns. And yet there may be hope

The Tigers have blown a huge lead in the AL Central and may miss the playoffs entirely. Photograph: Aaron Josefczyk/UPI/Shutterstock

On Wednesday night against the Cleveland Guardians, Tigers first baseman Spencer Torkelson stood stunned as he watched a routine ground ball spin off his glove and into right field. Later, his teammate, catcher Dillon Dingler, doubled over in disbelief after an innocent foul pop up plopped off his mitt and on to the dirt. These were some of the low-lights of yet another Tigers loss, their eighth straight, a defeat which dropped them completely out of first place for the first time since April, shortly after the 2025 season began.

Collapse is not a powerful enough descriptor to characterize Detroit’s sudden and dramatic downfall, which we’ll get to momentarily. But first, some housekeeping. With three games to go of the regular season, the Tigers and the Guardians are tied for first place in the AL Central, but Cleveland own the tiebreaker as they have the better head-to-head over the course of the season. The Tigers do hold a one-game lead over the Houston Astros for the final wildcard place, but if their collapse continues and the Astros do well in their final games, Detroit would be in serious trouble. For the Tigers, who were skating towards the playoffs with a 9.5-game lead in the AL Central with just 16 to play as recently as 10 September, there are three ways their regular season could end. On Monday morning, their fans could wake up dazed but with a division title, sputtering “it was all just a terrible dream.” Or Detroit could be preparing for a humiliating but somewhat face saving wildcard series. The third option, in which the Astros overtake them and the Tigers miss the postseason altogether, is that the franchise becomes the holder of what is arguably the most catastrophic late season collapse in nearly 150 years of Major League Baseball.

Related: Guardians’ David Fry suffers facial fractures after being hit by 99 mph fastball

At this point, one thing we can definitively say is that these once promising young Tigers are in dire need of a break. By that I mean for a few bounces to go their way, and a couple of days to set their heads straight. Except baseball doesn’t work that way. As Earl Weaver, Baltimore’s Hall-of-Fame manager once told Washington Post writer Thomas Boswell, “This ain’t a football game, kid. We do this every day.”

And it’s that baseball schedule, a 162-game slog that starts in the thaws of March and ends in the early frosts of late September, that is at least partially responsible for the history that made the 1964 Philadelphia Phillies and the 2007 New York Mets the benchmarks for late season swoons. The sheer volume of baseball games in a season opens the door for graphics like this, which claims (ridiculously) that on that same 10 September, Detroit had a 100% chance of making the playoffs. Now they don’t know if they’re going anywhere other than Cancún. This couldn’t happen in most other sports, where, for example, a four-game divisional lead in the NBA feels like eight, and, well, a division title really doesn’t matter and sliding down a few seeds has minor consequences.

In the pre-division MLB alignment up of 1964, when the Phillies blew their 6.5 game lead with 12 to play, the result was brutal: a blown National League pennant. In the wild card era of 2007, when the Mets, who are on the verge of making their own piece of miserable history this season, blew a seven-game lead with 17 to play, they wound up missing out on the playoffs entirely. If the Tigers earn a wildcard berth over the Astros, they’ll be forced to play, guess who, the Guardians in a three-game series, and all those match-ups will be played in Cleveland.

And yet, with such a long season, streaks of such malaise are not unheard of, even for strong teams. The 2000 New York Yankees finished the season 3-14 and went on to win their third World Series title in four years. So when AJ Hinch’s Tigers, a relatively young, inexperienced club, slumped to a 1-14 stretch in July, was it unnerving? Yes. But then they righted the ship and hit their high-water mark of 25 games over .500 on 23 August. Criticism of team president Scott Harris – who passed on adding a big bat to protect the farm system despite a good but not great lineup – quieted once the team turned things around. Now? Well, it’s a different story altogether, with the once celebrated Harris being universally vilified by the locals.

With soon to be multi-Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal under team control for just one more year and the team on the verge of making the wrong kind of history, all of the franchise’s recent accomplishments are on the verge of being cast in the darkest shadow baseball can offer. Their unexpected playoff run in 2024? Owning the best record in baseball earlier this season? Sending six players to the All-Star Game? The reclamation of all-star Javier Baez (once considered one of the worst free agent contracts in baseball history)? yet another incredible season from Skubal? Torkelson, the former No 1 overall draft pick, who wasn’t even guaranteed a starting place in Spring Training, finally fulfilling his potential? Right now, that’s all gone.

Instead, the city of Detroit is deep into the full-blown panic that takes over when a sports plague sucks up every ounce of oxygen available. Tuning into local sports talk radio for just five minutes on Thursday revealed hosts and callers arguing over whether it’s better to miss the playoffs altogether rather than suffer the embarrassment of a wildcard series. One host decried that the “anything can happen in the playoffs” mantra sounded a lot like “trying your luck as a 16th seed in an NCAA basketball tournament.” Gulp.

“To be honest, people are embarrassed by it, because you take pride in your city,” says Deadline Detroit journalist Allan Lengel (disclaimer: yes, he’s a relation). “And so this is another national embarrassment, and we’re kind of hoping that nobody in other cities is paying attention, but, you know, I’m getting little notes from people: ‘Oh my God … what’s going on with the Tigers?’”

What’s going on is that their fanbase is so low, they can’t begin to imagine the team winning another game, and that’s in a sport where you can run into a win here and there almost by accident.

All that said, for a collapse of this type to unfold, it does take two to tango, and what Cleveland have pulled off is nearly as remarkable. On 4 September, the Guardians were in third place with a 69-70 record, 11 games behind Detroit – only slightly better than their 15.5 game July deficit. Then, just as the Tigers were gearing up for their sudden slide, Cleveland put together a run of 19 games where they won all but two games and outscored their opponents 86 to 32, while posting a 1.35 ERA, a truly jaw dropping set of results.

That staggering run came to a close on Thursday night, with Detroit snapping their slide, moving back into a dead heat with their rust-belt rivals. But as it’s been with the September version of the Tigers, even the good news isn’t good: Cleveland own the tiebreaker, so even when Detroit is even, they’re still effectively in second place. To finish the season, Cleveland are at home to Texas, who have nothing to play for while Detroit head to Boston whose games should still matter as the AL playoff picture takes form.

What’s good? Well, maybe it’s that Detroit, a city that’s had its share of both real life and sports setbacks, is back in a more familiar place – as underdogs.


'No evidence Rangers are getting there'

Former Rangers midfielder Scott Arfield on TNT Sports

In transition it looked as if Genk could have scored a few more goals. It felt almost inevitable Oh was going to put one in the back of the net. Rangers are not in a great place and the performance embodied that.

It's a crowd now who are so disillusioned with what's going on here.

Former Rangers striker Rory Loy on BBC's Scottish football podcast

You don't see any signs of really what Russell Martin is trying to implement. He talks about dominating the ball and having possession, but it isn't with any great purpose.

John Souttar and Derek Cornelius must pass the ball to each other I don't know how many times without it actually going up the pitch.

Ex-Rangers striker Steven Thompson on BBC Sportsound

The onus has to be on the players as well. The transfer of the ball through the thirds is so laborious. The supporters are urging the players to do things quicker, and they're just not.

Everything is so predictable and so slow in the build-up that it's easy to defend against. How long are we going to keep hearing 'We're going to get there' for?

Former Rangers midfielder Derek Ferguson on BBC Sportsound

Rangers went down with a whimper. The feeling within the stadium is there is no belief from the players.

There is no evidence in that performance that Rangers are getting there. Genk were going through the motions, they were in control, even if Rangers kept 11 men on the field. Fans can't keep coming to watch a Rangers side accept defeat like that.

There is a way of winning, and a way of losing. That's not the way you lose a football game.

Ex-Rangers midfielder Andy Halliday on BBC Sportsound

Rangers didn't make Genk defend at any point. It was another underwhelming performance. I'm not seeing enough that suggests there's going to be an improvement by the time they travel to Sturm Graz in two weeks two.

Former Rangers striker Ally McCoist on TNT Sports

With the greatest respect, Genk are bang average. Rangers didn't pose them anywhere near enough problems. Previous Rangers sides would've wiped the floor with them.

An image detailing how to follow your Premier League team on BBC Sport: "On the app? Tap the bell icon to get news about your club sent to you. Signed in on a browser? Hit 'Follow' to stay up to date.
[BBC]

Mets Notes: Bullpen dominant again, Brett Baty playing like an everyday player

After the Mets' 8-5 win over the Chicago Cubs on Thursday night at Wrigley Field, manager Carlos Mendoza and players spoke about the bullpen and Brett Baty's performance...


Mets bullpen continues to come up clutch

Mets starters have not given the bullpen any breaks for most of the season, but although length has not been had, the relievers have come up clutch of late.

In Thursday's win over the Cubs, Nolan McLean could only give the Mets 5.1 innings and the bullpen had to get the final 11 outs. Similar to Tuesday's win, the bullpen was dominant, not allowing a run over the final 3.2 innings that they had to pitch. Going up against a high-powered offense like the Cubs was no easy task and the bullpen was up for the challenge.

"They’ve been through ups and downs, but they were able to bounce back," Mendoza said. "We’ve been asking a lot of them…We’re going to continue to rely on those guys. They know where we’re at. They know where we’re at and they’ll continue to ask for the baseball."

Brett Baty playing like an everyday player

Arguably, the biggest hit of the night came off the bat of Brett Baty. With the team up 3-0, Baty took southpaw Shota Imanaga deep for a three-run shot that gave the Mets a six-run cushion that they would not relinquish. 

The three-run blast proved to be the difference on Thursday, but it wasn't just the offense that impressed Mendoza. In the third, Baty made a nifty barehanded play that helped McLean finish the inning. 

"It’s pretty impressive," Mendoza said of Baty's growth this season. "It hasn’t been easy for him, but he feels like he’s an everyday player at this level. The defense at third, defense at second base, but some of the left-on-left at-bats, like what we saw today. Confident player now, having good results, playing with joy and with confidence."

Baty went 2-for-4 with that three-run blast on Thursday and is now hitting .289 with an OBP of .333 and slugging .533 over his last 15 games. But it's his numbers against left-handers that's pretty impressive. He's slashing .247/.301/.377with an OPS of .678, which isn't that much lower than when he takes on right-handers.

"I think just hanging in there, not trying to do too much with them," Baty said of his success against lefties of late. "And really just trying to stay on the slider [of Imanaga] there."

 

Francisco Lindor joins 30-30 club

Lindor joined the offensive barrage with a solo shot, his 30th of the season.

The blast allowed the Mets shortstop to reach 30 homers and 30 stolen bases this year, the second time he's done it in his career. The milestone had more significance when looking at the entire 2025 Mets team. He and Juan Soto are just the third pair of teammates to have 30-30 seasons at the same time, joining Dante Bichette and Ellis Burks of the 1996 Rockies and Howard Johnson and Darryl Strawberry of the 1987 Mets. 

It's also the first time in franchise history that three players have had 30 home runs in the same season, joining Soto and Pete Alonso.

"Pretty impressive. Not easy to do," Mendoza said. "Elite players, guys at the top of the lineup all year. Lindor today reaching 30 homers to go along with 30 stolen bases is pretty impressive. Goes to show the type of players we have here and they’ve been caring us the whole year. They’ll continue to lean on those guys and they will step up."

Lindor didn't make too much of his milestone but chose to praise Soto and Alonso for being the best at what they do.

"I’m blessed to be around good teammates, good people who are elite and at the top of what they do," Lindor said. 

Nolan McLean looks human, but keeps Mets' playoff hopes alive with poise

Nolan McLean couldn't have possibly imagined pitching with the weight of the Mets' season resting on his shoulders in late September, but the rookie right-hander embraced the high-stakes assignment with grit and just enough efficiency.

With sole possession of the NL's third wild-card spot on the line, McLean helped save the Mets' postseason hopes on Thursday night, completing 5.1 innings with a career-high 11 strikeouts in the team's critical 8-5 win over the Cubs at Wrigley Field.

The outing was anything but blemish-free for McLean. He was responsible for all five runs, three of which came on a home run to Seiya Suzuki in the sixth inning that knocked him out at 94 pitches. But ample run support from the Mets arrived at an opportune time, and even the vulnerable version of McLean appeared tougher than most.

"You try to look at the positives the best you can," McLean said after the win. "Obviously, getting stung there at the end with a couple of solo shots. But tried to focus on the positives. A win's a win, and I just appreciate the offense keeping me in the game."

McLean didn't need much time to gain control over the Cubs. After working around a double in the first, he struck out the side in the second and four more between the third and fourth innings. He served up a pair of solo homers to Suzuki and Dansby Swanson, cutting the Mets' lead to 6-2 after five, but the 24-year-old added another three punchouts before the three-run blast.

It would've been unreasonable for the Mets to demand a flawless performance from McLean, making just his eighth MLB start. Much to their delight, perfection wasn't required. McLean received a boost from his teammates at the plate, and the bullpen delivered 3.2 scoreless innings in his stead.

Mets manager Carlos Mendoza has been impressed with McLean's makeup since his big league debut in mid-August. And at a time when the team is desperately requesting quality length from starters, it just so happens to be the youngster stepping up and carrying the load.

"You feel good about your chances every time he takes the baseball," Mendoza said. "Today was the perfect scenario, a couple of guys on and he's up to 91-92 pitches and you still feel really good about him getting out of that situation...

"And I'm going to continue to say, the way he makes adjustments, recognizing what's working for him. Today was the cutter and he kept going after, using that pitch. There's a lot to like, and he's got so many weapons as well."

While one could easily argue that McLean's big-league promotion was weeks overdue, the Mets are thankful to have him now in crunch time, with only three games remaining in the regular season. He owns a stellar 2.06 ERA with 57 strikeouts across 48 innings, and his 11 punchouts against the Cubs were the most by a Mets pitcher in 2025.

Since he left the game with one out in the sixth, McLean still remains eligible for rookie status next season. If he logs two innings of relief work on the road this weekend against the Marlins, he'd lose that rank. But the Mets will undoubtedly need McLean fresh to start Game 1 of a potential best-of-three Wild Card series next week.

"I want to win every game," McLean said. "That's just how I was raised and how I compete. Every time I go out there, I'm trying to win and compete. I just like winning."

Mets look to handle business vs. Marlins with playoffs on the line: 'This series in Miami is a must for us'

It comes down to three more games in Miami.

After the Mets' 8-5 win over Chicago on Thursday night, New York won its three-game series with the playoff-bound Cubs and the team is feeling good. They hit well, pitched well and played some really good defense to stay one game ahead of the Cincinnati Reds for the final wild-card spot. 

"Got three more, you feel good," Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said after the game. "It’s a good series win against a really good team that is already in the playoffs. We faced some really good arms and that is a good lineup."

Although winning two of three from the Cubs was impressive, Mendoza knows they can't overlook the Marlins. Miami, who took three of four from the Mets in Citi Field at the end of August, will look to play spoilers after being eliminated from postseason contention earlier Thursday evening.

"You walk away from this series feeling good but you still have to go out there and take care of business in Miami," Mendoza added. "We’re in this position, but we’re still in control."

"We feel good. We feel like we have to go down there and handle business," Brett Baty said of the upcoming weekend series. "We can’t think about winning three games because we got to win tomorrow night. We’re going to focus on tomorrow night and try and get a W and see where things are at. And keep fighting until the end of the season."

The Reds defeated the Pirates hours before first pitch for Mets-Cubs, so New York had some extra pressure heading into their game. If they lost, they would have lost control of their own destiny. Cincinnati holds the tiebreaker with the Mets, so even if both teams finish the 2025 regular season with the same record, the Mets will be the odd team out.

But the Mets played really well. Starter Nolan McLean struck out 11 batters and gave the Mets 5.1 solid innings while the offense put up eight runs, three of which came off the bat of Baty's home run that gave the Mets a cushion they would not relinquish. And then the bullpen tossed 3.2 shutout innings in relief of McLean to leave Chicago with two wins.

New York will enter Friday's series opener with not just a one-game lead over the Reds, but also a 78.1 percent chance at making the postseason, according to FanGraphs. But the Mets aren't looking at odds or scoreboard watching. They know they just have to win their games and they are in.

"We control our own destiny, so we have to go out there and take care of business," Francisco Lindor said. "At the end of the day, the teams that are fighting for playoffs are really good teams. And we have to get it done. No one cares what we’re going through; we have to get it done. This series in Miami is a must for us."

While the Mets are in Miami for three, the Reds travel to Milwaukee to take on the Brewers for a three-game set to end the regular season. 

Mets' offense explodes, Nolan McLean strikes out 11 to hold on for 8-5 win over Cubs

Two homers helped propel the Mets to an 8-5 win over the Cubs in Chicago on Thursday night to take the series.

Nolan McLean, while dominant at times, had an uneven night. But with the offensive production, the Mets didn't need their young phenom to carry the weight of the season. And with the Reds winning their game earlier in the day, the Mets remain one game ahead in the wild-card race with three games remaining.

Here are the takeaways...

-New York got to Shota Imanaga in the first inning with Francisco Lindor setting the table with a leadoff walk. After Juan Soto nearly missed a two-run shot, Pete Alonso followed with a double to put runners on second and third with one out. Mark Vientos popped out toward the stands on the third base side, which Dansby Swanson caught in foul territory, but he fell into the stands, which automatically allowed Lindor to score from third since Swanson went out of play. Brandon Nimmo hit a single to score Alonso to give the Mets an early 2-0 lead.

Lindor would help the offense out again in the third, launching a fastball 408 feet out of Wrigley Field to put the Mets up 3-0. It's Lindor's 30th homer of the season, his second 30-30 year of his career. It's also just the third time in MLB history two teammates -- with Soto -- had 30-30 seasons, joining the 1996 Rockies (Dante Bichette, Ellis Burks ) and the 1987 Mets (Howard Johnson, Darryl Strawberry). 

It's also the first time in franchise history that three players have had 30 home runs in the same season, joining Soto and Alonso.

-The Mets' batters started to hit Imanaga hard in the fourth. Vientos hit a screamer tailing away from Ian Happ in left field, but the Gold Glover made a nifty diving catch for the first out. Nimmo and Luis Torrens followed with back-to-back singles before Brett Baty launched a three-run shot to give the Mets a comfy 6-0 lead.

With the Cubs trying to chip away, Tyrone Taylor got the runs back in the sixth with a two-out double that scored Nimmo and Baty. Taylor entered that at-bat 0-for-5 since returning from the IL, but delivered a massive hit to reestablish the Mets' six-run lead.

-McLean was asked to essentially save the Mets' season again, and he did his darnedest on this night. After allowing a two-out double to Happ in the first, he struck out Moises Ballesteros to end the first inning and kept the momentum on the Mets' side after their two-run opening frame. The young right-hander was cruising in the early going, striking out eight batters in the first four innings. He made one mistake, leaving a hanging changeup to Seiya Suzuki smashed it to straight center field for a solo shot, just the second home run McLean has allowed in his big league career. Swanson hit a solo homer of his own with one out in the fifth to get the score to 6-2. Despite the homers, McLean had reached a new career-high in strikeouts, fanning 10 Cubs across his first five innings of work.

After McLean picked up his 11th strikeout of the night, the most by a Mets pitcher this season, he started to lose his command. He walked Happ and allowed a ground-rule double to Ballesteros before Suzuki launched a three-run shot to trim the Mets' lead to 8-5. New York tried to stretch McLean to get through six innings with the bullpen taxed, but McLean hit a wall.

McLean allowed five runs on five hits (three home runs), two walks through 5.1 innings (94 pitches/63 strikes) while striking out those 11 batters. The five runs pushed McLean's ERA to 2.06 on the year.

-In relief of McLean, the taxed Mets bullpen was tasked with getting the final 11 outs of the game and performed masterfully. The combination of Ryne Stanek, Brooks Raley, Tyler Rogers and Edwin Diaz shut out the Cubs to hold down the win. Here's how each reliever did...

  • Stanek: 0.2 IP, 1 H
  • Raley: 1.0 IP, 3 K
  • Rogers: 1.0 IP
  • Diaz: 1.0 IP, 1 H

-Francisco Alvarez was not in the starting lineup, as manager Carlos Mendoza wanted to give the young backstop a day off after he had leg cramps toward the end of Wednesday's game. Torrens started and went 1-for-4 with a run scored. The Mets' skipper also said he had a decision to make with the lefty Imanaga on the mound, and chose Baty over Jeff McNeil. Baty finished 2-for-4 with the big blast and made a bare-handed web gem at third base to get McLean through the third inning.

Game MVP: Mets bullpen

With McLean unable to get out of the sixth, the 'pen got the final 11 outs without giving up a run from the high-powered Cubs.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets head to Miami to take on the Marlins. The series opener on Friday has a first pitch time of 7:10 p.m.

Brandon Sproat (0-1, 3.94 ERA) will take the mound for the Mets. Miami will send Sandy Alcantara (10-12, 5.48 ERA). 

Clayton Kershaw and Dodgers celebrate 12th NL West title in last 13 seasons

PHOENIX (AP) — As the Los Angeles Dodgers celebrated their 12th NL West title in 13 years, Clayton Kershaw thought about participating in a division championship for the final time.

“This is what I’m going to miss,” the left-hander said after Thursday’s 8-0 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks. “Pitching is great and I love that, too, but getting to do this with a group of guys, all working for a collective goal, the camaraderie, that’s really special.

“You don’t get that anywhere else. There’s no jobs where 37-year-olds get to do that. But I’m good, I had a great run.”

An 11-time All-Star and three-time Cy Young Award winner, Kershaw said last week he will retire at the end of the postseason. He won the first of 14 division titles as a rookie in 2008.

“It was a lot of fun then and it’s a lot of fun now,” Kershaw said of the celebration.

While the Dodgers celebrated their 2013 division title by jumping into the Chase Field pool behind the right-field wall, they avoided the water this time — except when Shohei Ohtani hit a splash shot for his 54th home run.

“Winning the division title, you can never take it for granted,” said Freddie Freeman, who homered twice Thursday. “We feel like we’re really starting to click.”

Los Angeles, which reached 90 wins for its 12th straight full season, will play in a wild card series for the first time since the best-of-three round was added in 2022.

“You only play this game for so long, so you only get so many opportunities to do this,” Mookie Betts said. “I feel great. I really didn’t do anything the first half of the season, so I got plenty of rest and I’m just happy to help.”

Dave Roberts has reached the playoffs in all 10 years as Dodgers manager, nine times as a division winner. LA won the World Series last season, beating the Yankees in five games.

“This was expected. We got it done, maybe a little bit later than we hoped. But I’m happy with the way we’re playing,” Roberts said. “I do think we’re better for all the adversity and we’re playing our best baseball right now, What we’ve done before, nothing matters. It’s more about trusting each other and playing for a championship.”

Ohtani hits 54th homer as Dodgers beat Diamondbacks 8-0 for 12th NL West title in 13 years

PHOENIX (AP) — Shohei Ohtani matched his career high with his 54th home run, Freddie Freeman went deep twice and the Los Angeles Dodgers clinched their 12th NL West title in 13 years by beating the Arizona Diamondbacks 8-0 Thursday.

Ohtani’s homer splashed into Chase Field’s swimming pool behind the right-center wall for a 6-0 lead in the fourth inning. The two-run shot gave him 101 RBIs for the season and matched his career-best home run total with the World Series champion Dodgers last year. He has scored a big league-high 144 runs.

Los Angeles, which clinched a postseason berth last week, won its fourth straight division title.

Arizona (80-79) fell 1 1/2 games behind the New York Mets (81-77) for the final NL wild card spot and also is one game back of Cincinnati (81-78). The Diamondbacks close with three games at San Diego.

Yoshinobu Yamamoto (12-8) allowed four hits in six innings and struck out seven to finish with 201. His 2.49 ERA ranked second in the NL behind the 1.97 ERA of Pittsburgh’s Paul Skenes.

Three relievers finished a five-hitter in the Dodgers’ 10th shutout.

Freeman and Andy Pages homered back to back starting the second inning, Freeman off opener Jalen Beeks (5-3) and Pages against Nabil Crismatt. Mookie Betts added a two-run single.

Freeman, who had three RBIs, has 23 homers while Pages has 27.

Arizona finished 43-38 at Chase Field. The crowd of 34,952 raised home attendance to 2,393,773, the Diamondbacks’ highest since 2008.

Key moment

After Ohtani struck out with the bases loaded in the second, Betts lined Crismatt’s first pitch for a 4-0 lead.

Key stat

Los Angeles was 36-16 against the NL West.

Next

Dodgers: RHP Emmet Sheehan (6-3, 2.86) starts Friday at Seattle.

Diamondbacks: RHP Zac Gallen (13-14, 4.70) and San Diego RHP Yu Darvish (4-5, 5.51) start Friday.

Martin feels heat again, but are Rangers players letting him down?

There's no end of flak that can be flung at Russell Martin for the epic fail that is his project at Rangers.

But watching his reaction when Mohamed Diomande got a deserved red card four minutes before half-time at Ibrox made you feel for the man.

Rangers had been second best. Fitful at the back, wasteful in possession, headless chickens in too many areas. Again.

Even before the red, it looked likely that Martin's period of calm after Saturday's League Cup win over Hibernian was about to come to a shuddering and noisy end.

In losing the plot, Diomande more or less ensured that Rangers were losing this Europa League opener against Genk, currently Belgium's 14th best team.

In lunging in on Zakaria El Ouahdi, Diomande left his team-mates in a terrible lurch, already struggling with 11 and now sitting ducks with 10.

The lack of self-control was unforgivable, the look of confused innocence on his face in the aftermath a complete nonsense.

Diomande, who on his very best days looks like a player worthy of the jersey, has been nowhere near it this season. Too often he's been lazy in his work and now he was ridiculous in his discipline.

'Rangers engulfed in deepening apathy'

And so Martin was left, once again, to reap the whirlwind of those Rangers supporters who remained until the end.

Around 12,000 tickets went unsold - a reflection of a deepening apathy. The boos, now as much a part of the match-day experience as Broxi Bear, were heard again.

The chants demanding the manager's head were cranked up for the umpteenth time. It was grim. The cameras panned to the directors' box, where chairman Andrew Cavenagh and chief executive Patrick Stewart stood stony-faced.

A penny for Cavenagh's thoughts. The Rangers fans would cough up a lot more than that for an audience with the man, for a chance to air their views by way of a venting of the spleen.

Cavenagh has made it known that he's behind his manager, but it's just not credible to think that he has no doubts about what he's seeing. And it's unimaginable that he has no concerns about the way his - and other people's - money has been spent.

Is any single part of Rangers' operation working? Not really. Quality of play, results, recruitment, relationship with supporters - nothing is functioning.

Rangers were, and are, a hard, hard watch. They were, and are, pedestrian and predictable. Laborious. Tiresome. Everything looked so slow, so difficult, so unthreatening, save for the odd moment of energy from Djeidi Gassama on the left.

Genk missed a sitter at 0-0, then hit a post, then missed a penalty, or rather had it saved by Jack Butland. All of those moments happened before the break when the score was level.

Diomande's act of foolishness just put the tin hat on it. It gave Martin an excuse, and in his news conference later he took it.

But there was not a lot of positivity in Rangers' performance before that and there was no reason to believe that it would have been any better had Diomande not taken himself out of the game.

Genk are in the midst of a poor run themselves, with one win in five coming into this. This was their first clean sheet in 11 games, which is the kind of thing that happens when your goalkeeper doesn't have a save to make.

Like Rangers, they were under pressure. Like Rangers, they had cause to be anxious and negative, playing it tight and hoping for the best.

But they weren't. They were ambitious on the ball. They attacked the game, while Rangers flailed wildly. Their intensity, away from home, was impressive.

Whatever their coach Thorsten Fink said to them beforehand, they looked full of belief, a stark contrast to their hosts.

'Diomande just latest to let Martin down'

The lack of incisiveness in Martin's team is remarkable for a set of players put together for a relative king's ransom.

We're told that Rangers' net spend this summer has been £21m, including transfer fees and loan payments. You could put a dot between the 2 and the 1 and still wonder if they've got value.

They had Youssef Chermiti up front, a 21-year-old brought in from Everton at a cost of £8m.

It's easy to bash the young striker, but he didn't lack hunger or work-rate. What he lacked was a modicum of a chance, a sniff at goal. Just one.

The life of a Rangers centre-forward is a lonely existence right now. Isolated and joyless. They're on their own up there. Sink or sink would appear to be the range of their options.

Diomande's moment of madness was the last thing Martin needed, but it was Martin who picked him and it was Martin who picked others who struggled to make passes.

It was Martin, again, whose management of this team produced very little threat while giving up big chances even when it was 11 versus 11.

His midfielder let him down on Thursday, and on other days and nights it was others who let him down, didn't show enough leadership, failed to make a difference.

The cast of characters on that front is long and thunderously unimpressive.

Martin gets filleted but the Rangers players can't escape censure here. A lot of this mess is down to the manager, but not all of it.

He said the red changed the game and he was correct, but there's always something - players being anxious, a red card, a penalty not given, another decision given in error. There's a fatalism about all of this.

And on Sunday they have a trip to Livingston. Plastic pitch, canny manager, physical team motivated to the high heavens. A gauntlet awaits this meek Rangers outfit.

Giancarlo Stanton's three-run double lifts Yankees to 5-3 win over White Sox

The Yankees maintained their place tied atop the AL East standings on Thursday night, sweeping the lowly White Sox, 5-3, at Yankee Stadium.

They weren't able to claim sole possession of first place for the first time since July 3, however. The division-rival Blue Jays own the head-to-head tiebreaker, and they wrapped up Thursday with a 6-1 home win over the Red Sox.

Due to these results, the worst-case scenario for the Yankees will be hosting a best-of-three Wild Card series next week. Their opponent just may be the Red Sox, too.

Here are the takeaways...

-- The Yankees were primed to dig the White Sox into an immediate hole, as a single from Trent Grisham, a double from Aaron Judge, and a walk from Cody Bellinger set the bases loaded with nobody out in the first inning. But they fell short of inflicting much damage against Davis Martin, as their lone run from the threat came on a weak fielder's choice groundout from Ben Rice. Davis proceeded to strike out Giancarlo Stanton and force Jazz Chisholm Jr. into a groundout.

-- The missed opportunity to tack on runs came back to bite them in the second, as Carlos Rodón allowed a leadoff single and then hit a batter. After a sac bunt that pushed the runners into scoring position, Corey Julks flied out to deep center that brought the tying run home. It was still a milestone inning for Rodón, however. He ended the frame with his 200th strikeout of the season, becoming the sixth left-hander in franchise history to accomplish the feat. His first 200-strikeout campaign came in 2022, as a member of the Giants.

-- Yet another bases-loaded rally for the Yankees was squandered in the second, as Bellinger grounded softly to first with two outs to end the threat and keep the game tied. But the table was set on a whopping 35th intentional walk to Judge this season, a new AL record. The Yankees' captain was briefly tied with legend Ted Williams, who set the mark back in 1957. The free-pass stat became official two years earlier.

-- The lack of run support hurt Rodón in the fourth, when he served up a two-out, two-run homer to Michael A. Taylor that gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead. It was the 22nd long ball allowed by the veteran southpaw this season, but compared to the career-worst mark (31) he set in 2024, the Yankees can declare some progress to his long-established homerless bugaboo. Luckily for Rodón, his teammates eventually came through in the batter's box.

-- Stanton entered Thursday with a measly .175 average across 69 plate appearances in September, and his monthly strikeout total climbed to an ugly 35 through his first two at-bats. But the veteran slugger made the most of his third trip to the plate in the fifth, delivering a three-run double down the left-field line off reliever Tyler Gilbert that put the Yankees ahead, 4-3. It was somewhat of a gift for Stanton -- while he ripped the ball 109 mph to third, the grounder was misplayed by Curtis Mead on a backhand attempt. The wet grass slowed the ball down just enough to clear the bases.

-- Rodón flirted with trouble in the sixth, allowing a leadoff double to highly-touted rookie Colson Montgomery. But the youngster ruined the White Sox's threat on the basepaths, mistakenly running on contact on a grounder hit to shortstop just two pitches later. Anthony Volpe took advantage of Montgomery standing too far off second, throwing over to third so Ryan McMahon could force the tag. Rodón then capped off his final regular-season start by inducing a strikeout and groundout. Overall, he allowed three runs on four hits and one walk with five punchouts over six innings. Fans should tip their cap to Rodón, who logged a career-high 33 outings and 195.1 innings with a commendable 3.09 ERA. It was also his 18th quality start of 2025.

-- Luke Weaver took over in the seventh, retiring the side on seven pitches. He's now registered five straight appearances without a run allowed (4.2 innings). The Yankees blew another bases-loaded chance in the sixth, bumping their left-on-base total to an alarming nine, but they managed to send a fifth run home on a deep RBI double from Austin Wells in the seventh. Stanton set up the opportunity with a leadoff walk, and Jasson Dominguez wound up crossing the plate as his pinch-runner.

-- Devin Williams entered the eighth looking to extend his scoreless appearance streak to eight, and he did just that. But the inning wasn't stress-free. While he induced a pair of strikeouts, he sent the go-ahead run to the plate after allowing a walk and a single. Williams' third out was a hard liner to left from Miguel Vargas that Bellinger shrewdly tracked. No harm, no foul for the high-leverage reliever. The Yankees were able to exhale. David Bednar handled the ninth with ease, recording his 26th save of the season with two groundouts and one strikeout on 18 pitches.

Game MVP: Giancarlo Stanton

It took a while for the Yankees to produce a back-breaking hit, but Stanton's three-run double in the fifth gave them a lead they didn't relinquish. 

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees (91-68) will wrap up their regular season slate at home, with a weekend series against the last-place Orioles. First pitch on Friday is scheduled for 7:05 p.m.

RHP Will Warren (8-8, 4.35 ERA) is lined up to take the mound, opposite LHP Trevor Rogers (9-2, 1.35 ERA).