Starting Pitcher News: Edward Cabrera debuts, Yuseki Kikuchi makes changes

It's Wednesday, which means it's time for us to visit the bump on Hump Day and discuss starting pitcher news. Each week in this article, I'll be taking a deeper look at a few trending/surging starting pitchers to see what, if anything, is changing and whether or not we should be investing in this hot stretch.

The article will be similar to the series I ran for a few years called Mixing It Up (previously Pitchers With New Pitches and Should We Care?), where I broke down new pitches to see if there were truly meaningful additions that changed a pitcher's outlook. Only now, I won't just look at new pitches, I can also cover velocity bumps, new usage patterns, or new roles. However, the premise will remain the same: trying to see if the recent results we're seeing are connected to any meaningful changes that make them worth buying into or if they're just mirages.

Each week, I'll try and cover at least four starters and give my clear take on whether I would add them, trade for them, or invest fully in their success. Hopefully you'll find it useful, so let's get started.

Most of the charts you see below are courtesy of Kyle Bland over at Pitcher List. He created a great spring training app (which he's now carried over into the regular season) that tracks changes in velocity, usage, and pitch movement. It also has a great strike zone plot feature, which allows you to see how the whole arsenal plays together.

Edward Cabrera - Miami Marlins (Four-Seam Fastball Usage, New Curve)

Am I really going to do this again? Every year, I talk myself into Edward Cabrera, repeating in my head, "If he can just throw strikes with the fastball, we'll be OK." It's the same logic that led me to Jose Soriano in many drafts, and that's worked swimmingly so far, so why not Cabrera? Maybe 2025 is the year?

Cabrera made his season debut last week after missing the beginning of the season with a blister that landed him on the IL. However, that blister may have been a blessing in disguise. Cabrera struggled during spring training, and the time on the injured list allowed him to take a break and continue to throw bullpens without the pressure of a game situation. That's important because when we saw Cabrera pitch against the Nationals last week, we saw a different version of the 27-year-old. Perhaps he just needed more time to continue to implement the changes that the new coaching staff was working with him on. After all, this is a Marlins staff with a new manager, a new pitching coach, a new assistant pitching coach, and a new performance and data integration strategist, which means plenty of changes in the philosophy of the pitching staff.

So, what did we see from Cabrera that was different?

Edward Cabrera chart

For starters, Cabrera has shifted his attack plan pretty dramatically. It was only one start, but he cut his four-seam usage more than in half and led with his breaking balls, particularly leaning into his slider far more than he did in 2024. On the surface, I like those changes because the biggest issue we had with Cabrera was that his four-seam fastball command was poor. He had below-average zone rates on it, and when he did get it in the zone, it was mainly down the middle with almost a 10% mistake rate and nearly 50% Ideal Contact Rate (ICR), which is a Pitcher List stat that measures barrels and solid contact and hard groundballs allowed.

The four-seamer has consistently graded out as Cabrera's worst pitch, so throwing it less is something we should be happy about. Provided he can get strikes with his other pitches.

Interestingly, that early strike pitch, particularly for right-handed hitters, turned out to be his slider. Cabrera tightened up his slider this season, keeping the same velocity and vertical movement but dialing back the horizontal break. That could be a one-game small sample size, or it could be a concerted effort to make it a pitch he can command in the zone. In his season debut, Cabrera used the pitch early in the count 75% of the time to righties, and it had a 75% first-pitch strike rate. Overall, the pitch had an above-average 50% zone rate and 69% strike rate, so the one-game sample seems to suggest that it is a pitch he can command and is a pitch he feels confident in throwing for strikes.

He also has the sinker, which he can command in the zone better than his four-seamer, so he has two pitches now to righties that he can use to pound the zone early and get ahead in the count without relying on his four-seam fastball. That sinker is going to be less useful to lefties, and the new usage of the slider means it's not missing many bats, but that's where the other new wrinkle comes in.

Cabrera drastically changed his curveball in the offseason.

In his first start, his new curveball was one mph slower than the one he threw last year but featured nearly double the amount of vertical and horizontal break. He went from eight inches of horizontal break and just over seven inches of vertical break on an 85 mph curve to over 11" of horizontal break and 14" of vertical break. It's a wild change. Yet, it was an incredibly impactful one in that first start, getting three whiffs and a 35.3% CSW.

We can also see a usage plan shaping up here. Against lefties, he threw the curveball in the zone at almost double the rate he did against righties, and he kept it in the lower third of the strike zone 64% of the time to lefties while doing so 83% of the time to righties. To me, that suggests the curve could be his early-strike breaking ball to lefties and more of a swing-and-miss pitch to righties; yet, it missed bats to hitters of both handedness in the first start.

Using the curve and sporadic four-seam fastball to get ahead of lefties sets up his elite changeup, which he leaned into far more in his first start. The usage rate was 29.1% overall, but 42% against lefties after being 32% last year.

Cabrera has never thrown over 100 innings in an MLB season, and the Marlins are not a great team, which will hurt his potential win totals, but I'm loving these changes for him. Who knows if they'll last into the next few starts, but if this is the version of Edward Cabrera that we get in 2025, I'll have to do a lot fewer mental gymnastics to talk myself into rostering him.

Ben Brown - Chicago Cubs (No New Changes)

I wanted to talk about Ben Brown quickly because I know there is a lot of buzz around him after his start against the Dodgers, where he went six shutout innings and allowed five hits while walking five and striking out five. I hate to be here to pour cold water on that performance, but it's what I have to do.

First of all, on the season, Brown has a 5.09 ERA, with 22 hits and a 20:9 K:BB ratio in 17.2 innings, which gives him a 10.7% walk rate to go along with a 23.8% strikeout rate. His 12.9% swinging strike rate (SwStr%) is above average, but he's also giving up a lot of hard contact, so the case for Brown is simply: he pitched well against the Dodgers, he has a good curveball, and he's locked into a rotation spot.

After seeing how he did what he did against the Dodgers, that's not just enough for me.

Ben Brown versus dodgers

Pitcher List

For starters, Brown ended the illusion that he throws three pitches by not throwing the changeup at all against the Dodgers. He's only thrown eight changeups in three starts, and while it might be a pitch he feels confident in using down the stretch, it's simply not there right now.

The main driving factor behind his success against the Dodgers was his ability to fill up the zone for strikes. He had his highest zone rate and strike rate of the season, and while that's generally a good thing, it's not enough in and of itself. In that start against the Dodgers, Brown threw the four-seam fastball more often, but threw it in the middle of the zone more often. In fact, he threw 14.3% of his fastballs middle-middle. The MLB average for four-seam fastballs thrown middle-middle last year was 7.4%. So Brown essentially threw double the percentage of middle-middle fastballs that a starting pitcher typically did last year and did it against the best team in baseball. I know it worked, but that, uh, doesn't seem like a great strategy long-term.

He also had just a 5.4% SwStr% on his four-seam fastball against the Dodgers. So he was throwing middle-middle fastballs, and they weren't missing bats. The Dodgers had a 90% zone contact rate on his fastball with a .333 average and a 50% ICR. None of that is good. What is good is that he located his curveball well against them, with a much higher zone rate and strike rate than he's had in any other start this season. It has just a 10.7% SwStr%, but it didn't give up much hard contact and earned six called strikes.

So, to wrap that up, Brown succeeded by only throwing two pitches, throwing his fastball over the middle of the plate far more often, and missing fewer bats but getting more outs in play. All while featuring a below-average fastball and a good curveball. That's just not enough for me. I know he's likely going to be in the starting rotation for a while with Justin Steele out for the year, but I can't trust a two-pitch pitcher with one good pitch. I know it might seem weird to say that after what he just did against the Dodgers, but I think that statline is entirely misleading. Also, Javier Assad is starting a rehab assignment, so don't be surprised if Brown loses his rotation spot if he struggles in his next few starts.

Shane Smith - White Sox (New Sinker, Changeup success)

Another pitcher who may have "gotten away with it" in his last start was Shane Smith. However, Smith has also allowed just four earned runs on nine hits in 17.2 innings this season, so it's probably time we look into how he's doing what he's doing.

Smith leads off his arsenal with a four-seam fastball that averages 94.4 mph and is used to both righties and lefties. Through three starts, it's far more effective to lefties, as righties post a 60% ICR against it and Smith does a far worse job getting it inside (more on that later). He also throws a lot of fastballs down the middle to both hitters, with a 12.5% middle-middle rate to righties and a nearly 19% mark to lefties. That supports what I saw about the Red Sox, with the Boston hitters simply getting under plenty of fastballs that were over the heart of the plate. Smith doesn't have great shape or elite velocity on his fastball, so I don't love his attack plan or reliance on that pitch so much.

However, he also leans heavily on a slider to righties and a change-up to lefties. On the season, he has only used the changeup 9.5% of the time to righties and only used the slider 10% of the time to lefties, so these are pretty much matchup pitches to hitters of a certain handedness. Not that that's a bad thing. The slider is not giving up any hard contact to righties, and he throws it in the zone often, but it doesn't miss many bats with just a 10.5% SwStr% to righties this season. Meanwhile, the changeup has been a strong pitch to lefties, but weirdly is giving up a lot of hard contact and doesn't miss as many bats as I think it should with its movement profile.

Part of that could simply be that he uses it mainly early in the count to lefties, so he wants it in the zone for groundouts rather than out of the zone for swinging strikes, but I think that movement profile at 92 mph is a pitch that he can use more as a two-strike pitch and more often against righties as well. If he keeps it low in the zone, it could easily operate like a splitfinger and miss plenty of bats, which is kind of what he needs against righties because the slider isn't that pitch and his curve is seldom used and also doesn't miss bats.

The last piece of the puzzle is a new pitch we saw against the Red Sox: the sinker. Smith threw four sinkers in that outing, which is intriguing because, as I said above, his four-seam fastball gets hit hard by righties. Yet, the four-seam does have a well-above-average swinging strike rate to righties, so if he can use another fastball for strikes to righties and then get chases up and out of the zone with the four-seamer, that could be the missing piece to right-handed hitters. Using the sinker inside to righties, which he doesn't do enough with his four-seam fastball, could also set up the slider low and away, so I kind of dig this new addition if he can lean into it more.

At the end of the day, I think Smith is an intriguing pitcher with one truly elite pitch and a collection of other offerings that could easily set him up for success. His overall location needs to improve, and the sinker needs to bring more swing-and-miss to righties, but this is a Rule 5 pick who the Brewers moved from the bullpen to the rotation just last year. There will be some growing pains, but it wouldn't shock me if Smith became a far more dynamic pitcher in the second half of this season.

Yusei Kikuchi - Los Angeles Angels (New Arm Slot, Slider Shape)

Yusei Kikuchi seemed to unlock a new level in the second half of 2024, pitching to a 3.49 ERA, 1.05 WHIP, and 31% strikeout rate in 69.2 innings with the Astros. A huge component of that was him leaning into his slider more, throwing it 31% of the time in the second half after using it just 17% of the time in the first half. The slider posted a nearly 16% swinging strike rate in the second half of the season and allowed him to put his less reliable curveball on the back burner.

It seemed like an easy plan for him to replicate in 2025, but when he signed with the Angels, I worried that he was with an organization that couldn't stay out of its own way with pitcher development and would either change him for the worse or not be able to identify why Kickuhi was going through a tough stretch, as he has been proned to do in his MLB career. Perhaps both of those are true so far.

Through his first three appearances, Kikcuhi is off to a disappointing start, allowing 10 earned runs on 15 hits in 18 innings while striking out 16 and walking eight. The 5.00 ERA and 21.6% strikeout rate are far worse than anything we've seen from him in years, so I wanted to dig in to see if anything was different. And...it's not good news.

Yusei Kikuchi chart

Alex Chamberlain

This chart from Alex Chamberlain's Pitch Leaderboard shows a few things that stand out to me.

For starters, Kikuchi has dropped his arm angle significantly. The lower the arm angle, the more sidearm the release, so Kikuchi has dropped his arm angle almost 10 degrees, which has led to an overall shift in the movement profile of his pitches, as you can see above. He has lost some of his vertical attack angles and movement in favor of horizontal movement, especially on both his four-seamer and slider. Now, much of that could simply be a result of releasing his pitches from a lower arm angle, but why he lowered his arm angle in the first place is the question. A 10-degree difference is not just a small sample size difference, so this has to be a conscious change, but was it his decision or the Angels?

Overall, he's not allowing as much hard contact, with a strong 32% Ideal Contact Rate, but his SwStr% is the lowest it's been since 2019, and his strike rate is at a career low mark, which could also be why he has a nearly 11% walk rate. Additionally, he's getting fewer chases out of the zone than he ever has since coming over from Japan. Maybe he's struggling to adjust to the new arm angle or the new action on his pitches, but they're not missing bats and not being commanded for strikes, which is a major problem.

However, my biggest concern is that the slider has a new movement profile and has also been performing poorly. This year, he is throwing his slider nearly two mph slower and has more than doubled the vertical break to 4.3 inches. The pitch is in the strike zone more often than last year and getting more called strikes, but it has just a 7.7% SwStr% and a well below-average PutAway Rate, which measures how often a pitch thrown in a two-strike count leads to a strikeout. He has also only thrown the slider in two-strike counts 19% of the time this year, after using it 39% of the time in two-strike counts last year.

So, in summary, Kikuchi has changed the shape of his slider, which was the pitch that drove his success last year. He has made it more hittable and started to use it more often early in the count for called strikes and stopped using it late in the count for swings and misses. He has also added a sweeper, which feels entirely unnecessary and may also be the reason why he wants more vertical movement on his slider.

At the end of the day, I'm not sure who suggested these changes, but I don't like them, and they give me real pause about rostering Kikcuhi in most formats right now.

WEDNESDAY MORNING ADDENDUM:

Oh, would you look at that. Yusei Kikuchi had a solid start on Tuesday night against the Rangers and did it by leading with his slider 47% of the time. He also didn't have the same drop on his slider, posting a vertical movement profile much closer to what we saw last year. Perhaps those first three starts were just a "figuring it out" process for Kikuchi with this new arm angle. I still don't love the change, and I remain a bit skeptical.

Kikuchi Tuesday start

Now, it's important to note that Kikychi threw 11 total pitches against lefties in this game because Texas stacked their lineup with righties. That could impact why his pitch mix looks different in this game. Also, four whiffs and a 21.6% CSW on the slider isn't that good in the grand scheme of things, and his four-seam fastball still has less vertical movement and velocity from last year. This still feels like a pitcher I'd rather not have on my roster.

Luis L. Ortiz - Guardians (Changeup, Four-Seam Location, New Approach to Lefties)

Oh, Luis L. Ortiz. There is a lot to say here, so I'm going to do my best to be brief. I know Ortiz struggled in spring training and was terrible in his first start of the season, but I think it's prudent to remember that Ortiz is in his first year with the Guardians, andI spoke to Guardians pitching coach Carl Willis this off-seasonabout the changes they were making to Ortiz's arsenal, attack plan, and grips. Changes like that don't simply click overnight, so it's entirely possible that Ortiz's early struggles were connected to getting a feel for who Cleveland wants him to be, and his last strong start is an indication that he's beginning to get more comfortable.

Before we get into his last start specifically, we should talk about the changes Ortiz has made overall this year. The biggest change is in how he attacks lefties.

Last year, Ortiz used his four-seamer 31.5% of the time to lefties, his slider 24%, his cutter 22%, and his sinker 21%. That led to a pretty pedestrian 9.5% K-BB% and 9.1% SwStr%, even though he didn't give up a lot of hard contact. He responded to that this season by adding back his changeup at 17.5% usage to lefties, dialing back his sinker to just 6% usage, and slider to 13% while throwing the four-seam fastball almost 42% of the time. So far, that has led to a 14.7% SwStr% to lefties and a 19.3% K-BB%. Yeah, that's nice.

The changeup itself is a fine pitch, thrown at 89 mph with little vertical break and 16.5” arm-side run. PLV grades it out as a slightly above-average offering because he commands it in the zone well and does a good job of keeping it low, with an 81% low location. However, I think the bigger driver of his success against lefties has been the decision to mix up the locations of his cutter and slider.

Last year, he threw the cutter inside to lefties 54% of the time, but threw it in the upper third of the strike zone 39% of the time. This season, he's throwing the cutter inside just 27% of the time (literally cut in half) while using it up in the zone 65% of the time. Same with the slider, which he threw inside to lefties 49% of the time last year and is throwing inside 19% of the time this year.

That jives with exactly what Carl Willis said to me this spring about Ortiz: "What we’re trying to work towards is more consistency with [the cutter], particularly more consistency with the location of that pitch. It is a newer pitch for him. That’s part of the reason it played last year because the guys hadn’t seen it. Now we’re just trying to refine it a little bit to show him what zones it's actually successful in, and where he should hone in on commanding that particular pitch, and now that it’s not a surprise, not making mistakes with it in other areas of the strike zone.”

In 2025, Ortiz's cutter has a 38.5% called strike rate to lefties, up from 21% last year, as he works it more on the outside part of the plate as a backdoor pitch. The slider has also seen a jump in swinging strike rate and doubled its called strike rate. Being able to locate those pitches over the plate for strikes and not only pound them inside for weak contact has set up the other big change for Ortiz: four-seam fastball location.

As Nick Pollack pointed out on our last episode of “On the Corner,” Ortiz used the four-seamer up in the zone 60% of the time against the Royals, up from a combined 29% of the time in his first two starts.

Luis Ortiz map

Pitcher List

The four-seam fastball had a 24% SwStr% for Ortiz overall in that start and has an 18% mark against lefties so far in 2025 after posting an 8.3% mark in 2024. So Ortiz is locking his cutter and slider in the strike zone more and then getting the four-seamer up in the zone over it. That's not only allowing him to get ahead but also shifting the batter's eye level down in the zone or down and away in the zone and then coming upstairs with a 96 mph four-seamer with solid extension. That's a recipe for success and one I think will make Ortiz far more likely to finish as the pitcher we saw in his last start than the one we saw in his first start.

Francisco Lindor says fielding error is to blame for latest Mets loss: 'It's unacceptable'

Tuesday night's matchup between the Mets and the Twins was tightly contested. Both offenses were unable to push across runs, one mistake could tip the scales in the other team's favor, and that's what happened in the third inning.

After Tylor Megill allowed two baserunners to reach with one out, the big right-hander got DaShawn Keirsey Jr. to pop out on a bunt attempt and was a batter away from getting out of the inning unscathed. Ty France hit a soft grounder to Francisco Lindor, but the sure-handed infielder botted the ball and allowed a run to score on the error.

Carlos Correa would follow with an RBI single and gave the Twins a 2-1 lead.

"It happens, that’s baseball. He’ll get over there, he’s too good of a player," manager Carlos Mendoza said of Lindor's error after the game. "They’re human, they’re going to make mistakes. I’ll take my chances with him every time."

"Today my eyes got a little blurry because of the weather but it’s unacceptable. What’s happening right now is unacceptable," Lindor explained. "I gotta be better. It's not to the standards the Mets have, it's definitely not to the standard I have for myself. It's been two games already that cost the team. Gotta get better for sure."

The other game Lindor is talking about occurred back on April 1, when he made two errors, one allowing the Marlins to score two unearned runs, which proved to be the difference.

Now, his two runs weren't the difference in Tuesday's 6-3 loss, but on a day when the Mets offense -- outside of Pete Alonso and Juan Soto -- could not do any damage against starter Bailey Ober and the rest of the Minnesota pitching, they proved large.

Lindor was asked about the weather affecting his eyes -- potentially significant considering Lindor has had issues with dry eyes in the past -- but the Gold Glove shortstop said it wasn't the reason he missed the ball. And he feels bad for Megill who he said executed his pitches to get out of the jam in the third.

"I have to finish the play for [Megill]," Lindor said. "Ultimately, it’s a game of execution. Today they played the game cleaner than us, that’s why they came out on top."

Lindor had just 12 errors all of last season. So far this year, he has four. The NL MVP runner-up didn't have a reason for his defensive performance so far this year but knows how important it is for him to figure it out.

"I’m going to have to get better," he said. "I have to finish the plays for the boys. I have to execute."

Patience at the plate and slick defense help Dodgers continue Jackie Robinson Day dominance

Los Angeles Dodgers' Will Smith celebrates his three-run home run in the dugout during the third inning of a baseball game against the Colorado Rockies in Los Angeles, Tuesday, April 15, 2025. (AP Photo/Kyusung Gong)
Will Smith celebrates his three-run home run in the third inning. (Kyusung Gong / Associated Press)

Two sloppy tendencies — one involving gloves, the other bats — repeatedly cost the Dodgers during a slipshod 10-game stretch that followed their 8-0 start to the season: Uncharacteristic defensive miscues and an inability to lay off pitches out of the strike zone.

Both were solved early and emphatically in a 6-2 victory over the Colorado Rockies on Tuesday night at Dodger Stadium. The Dodgers improved to 17-4 on Jackie Robinson Day, the April 15 tradition since 2004 that celebrates and honors the anniversary of the Dodgers' Black Hall of Fame infielder breaking the color barrier in 1947.

"This is an emotional day for me," said the Dodgers' Dave Roberts, who along with the Angels' Ron Washington are the only Black managers in major league baseball.

"People that have certainly never seen Jackie Robinson, just hear some stories, are trying to live in a way that he lived. And that's something that is so powerful for me."

Because the Dodgers didn't chase errant pitches, they chased Rockies starter Ryan Feltner in only 2 2/3 innings after he walked six and threw 81 pitches, leading to one run in the second inning and four in the third.

Read more:Kareem Abdul-Jabbar has strong words for Dodgers on importance of Jackie Robinson Day

Shohei Ohtani and Freddie Freeman walked, then jogged home when Will Smith crushed a first-pitch sinker over the left-field wall in the third. Smith continued his hot start — his .482 on-base percentage entering the game was the best in baseball — with his second homer of the season.

Tommy Edman doubled with two out in the third — one of his four hits — and scored after Max Muncy walked on Chris Taylor's single to extend the lead to 5-0. One more walk, this one to Andy Pages, and Rockies manager Bud Black had seen enough, lifting Feltner, who in September had pitched six scoreless innings against the Dodgers.

Meanwhile, the Dodgers made outstanding defensive plays that helped strand runners in each of the first four innings and enabled spot starter Landon Knack to navigate 4 1/3 innings in 65 pitches, including 41 strikes.

With a runner on second and none out in the second inning, second baseman Edman knocked down a hot smash from Mickey Moniak, scooped up the ball and threw him out by a whisker. Then with two out, shortstop Mookie Betts made a slick backhand play deep in the hole and retired Jacob Stallings on a one-hop throw to first.

Read more:Hernández: Dodgers' celebration of Jackie Robinson Day rings hollow in wake of White House visit

With a runner on second and none out in the third inning, center fielder Taylor made a diving catch on a line drive directly in front of him, and Knack again stranded the runner. The Rockies scored two runs in the fourth on a two-out double by Jacob Stallings and Knack exited after retiring the first batter in the fifth, having reached a predetermined pitch count.

The win was the Dodgers' second in a row over the Rockies, which could be expected. Colorado is 3-14, including 1-10 on the road. The Dodgers, meanwhile, are 13-6, including 9-2 at home, and have won 32 of their last 42 games against the Rockies.

Teoscar Hernández sat out a second game in a row because of illness, but Roberts said the slugging outfielder would return to the lineup Wednesday.

Miller time to arrive early

Bobby Miller will start for the Dodgers on Wednesday, his first big league appearance since September, when he was so ineffective he was deemed unusable during the postseason.

Miller gave up 17 earned runs in 11.1 innings over three September starts, capping a perplexing and injury-riddled sophomore season. In 56 innings he posted an 8.52 ERA, the worst in baseball among pitchers who logged more than 50 innings.

Read more:Man used Jackie Robinson contracts to steal millions from investors. Then he fled to Russia seeking asylum

It was a precipitous fall from the lofty expectations the Dodgers developed after Miller’s rookie season in 2023 when he went 11-4 in 124.1 innings, posting a perfectly acceptable ERA of 3.76 in 22 starts and looking every bit a mainstay of the rotation for years to come.

The former first-round draft pick out of Louisville appears to have returned to form at triple-A Oklahoma City this season, posting a 2.25 ERA while giving up only six hits in 12 innings over three appearances.

When he was demoted in September, Miller vowed to return to the Dodgers with a vengeance.

“There is no doubt in my mind, whenever that may be, I’m going to be back better than I ever have,” he said.

He’ll get his first chance at fulfilling that promise against the Rockies.

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Mets Notes: Tylor Megill's tough start, Justin Hagenman to pitch Wednesday

Following the Mets' disappointing 6-3 loss to the Twins on Tuesday night, manager Carlos Mendoza and players spoke about the game and other topics...

Tylor Megill's start against Twins

Megill was on the mound for Tuesday's game and was a victim of some tough luck. After scattering Twins hits for the first two innings, Minnesota would get on the board in the third thanks to a Francisco Lindor error.

He would allow two more runs and eventually take his second loss of the season, with an odd stat line that doesn't necessarily tell the story of his start.

"Hard time getting ahead, strike one, deep counts, foul balls. Only a couple of balls were hit hard…just didn’t get ahead the way we wanted to," Mendoza said of Megill's performance after the game. "Gave us five [innings] and yea..."

"Don’t think it was terrible. Threw a lot of strikes, got a lot of groundballs. Got out of traffic early tonight," Megill said assessing his start. "Trying to get groundballs, keep runners close. Thought I did a really good job of that."

Megill echoed his skipper that he couldn't keep his pitch count down thanks to being unable to get Twins hitters out, despite feeling he continued to attack the batters. The big right-hander said the Twins put together good at-bats especially later in the game, which doomed any opportunity of going more than five innings.

Although he didn't walk a batter, Megill gave up four runs (two earned) on eight hits but could only strike out three batters.

Overall, Megill felt his start was productive despite the results. The lack of walks was brought up and Megill said he'd take that sort of performance every time.

"Nothing crazy, rather get singled to death," Megill said. "Not like it’s damage, I’ll live with that all day."

This is Megill's second consecutive loss and his ERA rose to 1.40, which is qualified for eight-best in the majors so far this season.

Justin Hagenman call-up

With the news that Griffin Canning would miss his Wednesday start due to illness, the question of which pitcher would be called up to take his spot. Mendoza finally made the decision known after the game, and the 28-year-old right-hander is getting the call. However, the team isn't sure what Hagenman's role will be.

"The question now is if we’re going with an opener or we’ll give him the start," Mendoza said.

When asked if Hagenman will be the long-man on Wednesday no matter what, Mendoza kept it coy and simply said the right-hander will be active.

Hangenman has made three appearances (two starts) with Triple-A Syracuse this year. He's allowed eight earned runs on 15 hits and four walks over 10.1 innings pitched.

Feb 25, 2025; West Palm Beach, Florida, USA; New York Mets shortstop Luisangel Acuna (2) throws a baseball into the stands after the second inning against the Houston Astros at CACTI Park of the Palm Beaches.
Feb 25, 2025; West Palm Beach, Florida, USA; New York Mets shortstop Luisangel Acuna (2) throws a baseball into the stands after the second inning against the Houston Astros at CACTI Park of the Palm Beaches. / Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

Luisangel Acuña an option in center?

With Jose Siri about to miss significant time with a fractured leg, the Mets have some question marks in their outfield.

While Tyrone Taylor will likely play center field the most in Siri's absence, how will the Mets rotate their other outfielders? Mendoza spoke about the situation prior to Tuesday's game.

"Tyrone, very comfortable with him playing center," Mendoza said of his center field options. "[Brandon] Nimmo, Acuña if we have to."

Mendoza was asked if Acuña is good in centerfield and the Mets skipper said the organization believes in the youngster's abilities.

"The reports we got last year was he covers a lot of ground, we know the speed but routes and all that," he explained. "I remember talking with Dick Scott, our Triple-A manager, and how he was impressed not just at short/second but in the outfield too."

Now, Mendoza wouldn't go as far as to start him there any time soon, but are preparing for it if they have to. Acuña

"If we get there, I’m comfortable," Mendoza said. "In the meantime, we’re good with Tyrone."

With fielding under microscope, Yankees' Jasson Dominguez bat comes up big

While much of the pregame chatter about Jasson Dominguez centered around his fielding, it was the young outfielder’s bat that made all the noise in the Yankees’ 4-2 win over the Kansas City Royals on Tuesday night in The Bronx.

Rather than the ball finding him in left, it was the moment that found Dominguez. After singling in each of his first two trips to the plate, the opportunity to deliver the big hit in the clutch fell to him with the bases loaded and two down in the bottom of the sixth inning and the Yanks trailing by one.

"Really important moment in the game," Dominguez said. "I thought about just trying to get a good pitch, something out over the plate and get a good swing at it."

After taking a good slider for a strike from left-hander Angel Zerpa, Dominguez took a ball and fouled off another slider against the Royals reliever. Dominguez then got a 96 mph fastball up and on the inside corner and turned on it for a bases-clearing double to give the Yankees a lead they wouldn't relinquish.

“Just glad that he could get some results there in a big spot, obviously,” manager Aaron Boone said. “He never seems panicked or rushed, and that’s one of the things that you always liked about him. So you know the situation’s not too big for him.”

Dominguez entered the night with just one hit in 20 at-bats against lefties so far this year. "I've been having a little bit of struggle lately from the right side, but lately I feel like I've done some improvement."

The manager said the big knock can boost his confidence, but “as much as anything, it’s an experience thing for him.”

“He hasn’t had a lot of right-handed at-bats,” Boone said. “I think over time that will improve, and I think he’ll be productive from that side.”

At the plate, he finished 3-for-3 (with three RBI) on balls that were hit 95.1, 100.5, and 106.4 mph.

Of course, for the second straight night, Dominguez came out of the game with the Yanks ahead. But on Tuesday night, circumstances were a bit different as Boone said the young left fielder “lost his contacts” while running the bases on his three-run double in the previous half inning. Dominguez wasn't sure what happened but believes it occurred when he knocked his helmet into his face on his backswing.

And, sometimes, for a manager, fortune shines on you. Even if the defensive switch was made out of necessity – Dominguez not being able to see as opposed to not being trusted in later innings – the addition of Trent Grisham in center (moving Cody Bellinger over to left) paid off big time.

After Max Fried issued a leadoff walk, MJ Melendez, who homered in the third, smoked an 0-1 sinker (108.6 mph off the bat) to center field.

Fortunately, Grisham got a great jump on the ball and was able to track it down for an over-the-shoulder catch and a 396-foot out to preserve the 4-2 lead rather than allowing a potential RBI triple.

It is likely that had Dominguez not lost his contacts, he would have remained in the game – he was 3-for-3, after all, and before the game, Boone said he was comfortable keeping the 22-year-old in to play left field rather than use a defensive replacement to help protect a lead.

“It’s just kinda how I’ve wanted to do it and breaking him in and in understanding our roster and some of the strengths of our roster,” the manager said in talking about his late-game decisions before first pitch. “I think JD is gonna turn into a really, really good one out there and I think he’s getting there day after day and we’re seeing [it].”

Boone added that he’s seen “over the last month, back-end of spring training into the early part of this year, [his] route efficiency, reacting properly to the ball is all improving.”

“I have no issue with him being out there now,” the manager continued. “It’s just on the days I got Trent Grisham sitting over there with [Bellinger]. I’m gonna take advantage of our roster and try and bring [Dominguez] along in the best way possible. But excited with the way he keeps moving the needle.”

Yankees Notes: Clarke Schmidt set for debut, Ben Rice cooking, importance of honoring Jackie Robinson

Yankees manager AaronBoone hit on several topics speaking ahead of New York's 4-2 win over the Kansas City Royals, including getting Clarke Schmidtback in the rotation, Ben Rice's hot start at the plate, and the importance of Major League Baseball honoring the legacy of Jackie Robinson ending baseball's segregated era on this day 78 years ago.


Schmidt set for season debut

The Yanks’ rotation is getting a boost with the 29-year-old set to make his season debut on Wednesday after beginning the year on the IL with a shoulder issue.

“We’re counting on Clarke; we expect a lot from Clarke now,” Boone said Tuesday. “How it lines up with last year, hopefully, guys like Clarke are always continuing to improve, too. We have a lot of confidence in what he brings and how good of a pitcher he is and has become.”

The right-hander was similarly hampered by injuries last year as he missed June, July, and August but was effective when healthy, pitching to a 2.85 ERA and 1.184 WHIP in 85.1 innings over 16 starts.

“[We] feel like he’s in a good place right now, too, in his build-up and what the last month or so has been. We’re excited to get him back, and he’s an important part of our team,” the manager said.

Schmidt tossed four scoreless innings with four strikeouts in his final rehab start at Double-A Somerset last week.

Honoring No. 42

Members of both teams – and across all of baseball – wore No. 42 for Jackie Robinson Day in honor of his April 15, 1947 debut for the Brooklyn Dodgers, which ended segregation in the modern era of professional baseball.

“I think he’s one of the most important figures in American history and certainly of the last 80 years now or so,” Boone said before the game. “Obviously, he was part of integrating our sport but further integrating America and other sports. 

“I think it’s so cool what we get to do today in everyone wearing 42 and bringing attention to it and just honoring what’s an amazing legacy.”

Aaron Judge added that he "wouldn't be standing here today without all the sacrifices that Jackie made, and a lot of people before me."

"It's a humbling reminder, looking back on his story and what he went through just to play this game," he said via The New York Daily News. "I go out here and have some fun, but he had a lot of hate, a lot of discrimination against him, and he still went out there and had an incredible career.

"So it just speaks volumes to the type of hero he was. So anytime you get a chance to wear 42 and represent him and represent what his legacy stood for, it’s something I definitely don’t take for granted.”

Boone’s grandfather Ray overlapped with Robinson and made his MLB debut for the then-Cleveland Indians a year after Larry Doby became the first Black player in the AL.

“I feel like sometimes Larry Doby gets lost in this. He was an amazing player and an amazing person,” Boone said, recalling what his grandfather told him.

After Robinson’s debut, it would be another eight years – 1,233 regular season games –  before the Yankees became the 13th team to integrate when Elston Howard appeared in pinstripes for the first time on April 14, 1955. (The Boston Red Sox were the 16th team to integrate on July 21, 1959.)

During his playing days, Howard would win four World Series titles, appear on 12 All-Star teams, win two Gold Glove awards, and was named the 1963 American League MVP.

Apr 12, 2025; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees first base Ben Rice (22) celebrates with outfielder Aaron Judge (99) after hitting a solo home run against the San Francisco Giants during the sixth inning at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Tom Horak-Imagn Images
Apr 12, 2025; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees first base Ben Rice (22) celebrates with outfielder Aaron Judge (99) after hitting a solo home run against the San Francisco Giants during the sixth inning at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Tom Horak-Imagn Images / © Tom Horak-Imagn Images

Rice frying competition

The big first baseman went off the boil on Tuesday night, finishing 0-for-5 with several weakly hit balls and a strikeout. But the production this year has been big – eight extra-base hits (five home runs) with a .385 OBP and .618 slugging – and the underlying advanced metrics are very Aaron Judge-like. 

“I don’t want to say he’s gonna be Aaron Judge. But I think he can really hit,” Boone said before Tuesday’s game.

Entering the second game of the series against KC, Rice has a .491 expected-weighted on-base average (99th percentile), .329 expected batting average (94th percentile), .749 expected slugging percentage (99th percentile), 96.1 mph average exit velocity (98th percentile), 27.8 barrel percentage (100th percentile), and a 66.7 hard-hit percentage (100th percentile).

As much as Boone doesn't like the comparison, but even in this small sample size of just 16 games and 65 plate appearances, is this sustainable?

“He rakes," the manager said. "I think he is going to be a really good hitter, maybe already is a really good hitter in this league because he controls the strike zone well and hits the ball extremely hard, that’s a pretty good recipe as a hitter. 

“I’m expecting him to be a really good major league hitter for a long time.”

Boone admitted he didn’t remember much about Rice when the Yankees drafted the catcher in the 12th round in 2021, but once he got a chance to impress last spring, he stood out.

“Really impressed us in spring training last year, getting to really be around him and see him for the first time and the at-bat quality the ability to control the strike zone with power," he said. "And then getting an opportunity last year and doing a lot of really good things, around some struggles, too.

"But I think the takeaway was this guy has a good chance to really hit. I think he’s got a lot better for a lot of different reasons from last year to this year and obviously, he’s playing a huge role for us right now.”

The batting eye and strike zone control are reflected in his 10 walks so far (93rd percentile in walks) and 17.4 percent chase rate (97th percentile), entering Tuesday's game.

Bombers more than just mashers

“When anyone mashes homers, they win,” Boone said in response to a point about Monday’s win that saw his side smack four solo home runs. “Usually, the good offensive teams usually hit the ball out of the ballpark to some degree. It's an important part of our identity. It’s not everything, we feel like we have other ways to beat ya.”

Tuesday the Yankees were kept inside the ballpark in their 17th game of the year. While acknowledging the small sample, Boone believes the club has “the chance to have a really good offense.”

“We’ve got the best player in the sport right in the middle of things and I feel like we’ve got really capable people around him,” he continued. “And I also feel like young emerging players that we’re counting on to take another further step in their development and their career.

“I feel like we have more speed this year, so some different ways we can go about it on a given day."

Giancarlo Stanton will travel to Tampa

The slugger, on the IL with elbow issues, is expected to travel with the team for the upcoming trip to Tampa for the four-game weekend series against the Rays. Boone said he is not sure about any plans for Stanton to take live at-bats.

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar has strong words for Dodgers on importance of Jackie Robinson Day

Former NBA basketball player Kareem Abdul-Jabbar speaks to members of the Los Angeles Dodgers to commemorate Jackie Robinson Day before a baseball game against the Colorado Rockies at Dodger Stadium Tuesday, April 15, 2025, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar speaks to members of the Dodgers and Rockies to commemorate Jackie Robinson Day. (Damian Dovarganes / Associated Press)

To Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Jackie Robinson’s legacy is as important now as it has ever been.

And on Tuesday, as the guest speaker at the Dodgers’ annual celebration of Jackie Robinson Day, he made the reason he believes so abundantly clear.

“Trump wants to get rid of DEI, and I think it’s just a ruse to discriminate,” Abdul-Jabbar said to a scrum of reporters, while sitting at the base of Robinson’s statue in the center field plaza of Dodger Stadium.

“You have to take that into consideration,” he added, “when we think about what’s going on today.”

Indeed, Tuesday was no typical Jackie Robinson Day — not for the Dodgers, or the rest of the baseball world at large.

Since President Trump returned to office in January, his campaign against diversity, equality and inclusion initiatives has had direct cross-overs with Robinson’s legacy, as well as Major League Baseball’s public communications.

Read more:Hernández: Dodgers' celebration of Jackie Robinson Day rings hollow in wake of White House visit

This spring, the Department of Defense removed an article from its website detailing Robinson’s history of military service, only to later restore it amid a wave of public criticism. In what appeared to be a capitulation to Trump’s anti-DEI stance, MLB’s league office has also struck all DEI-related references from its website, as The Athletic detailed last month.

The Dodgers’ decision to visit Trump’s White House last week, of course, also continues to be a point of consternation among many in the fan base who would have rather not seen the team celebrate its 2024 World Series title with such a polarizing political figure.

Against that backdrop, Abdul-Jabbar called it “absolutely important” to uphold Robinson’s trailblazing legacy.

That’s why, as part of the Dodgers annual celebration of Robinson breaking baseball’s color barrier on Tuesday, he highlighted Robinson’s historical significance in a speech to members of the Dodgers and Colorado Rockies (all of whom were wearing No. 42 jerseys) before the start of that night’s game.

“I’m glad that we do things like this,” he said, “to let everybody in the country know what’s important.”

Read more:Jackie Robinson's Army story restored to Defense Department site after removal in DEI purge

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts also fielded Robinson-related questions for almost the entirety of his pregame address with reporters, and agreed with Abdul-Jabbar’s comments about the importance of Robinson’s legacy amid the country’s current political climate.

“I'd like to think it's a continued wake-up call for everyone, to take a step back and appreciate what made our country, the people who shaped our country,” Roberts said, before later adding: “This is not a one-day situation. It's Jackie Robinson's day for breaking the color barrier. But this is like an everyday sort of mindset, appreciation.”

Roberts disputed the notion that the Dodgers’ commemoration of Robinson this year felt hypocritical, given their visit to Trump’s White House just the week before.

"I don't personally view it as talking out of both sides of our mouth,” he said. “I understand how people feel that way. But I do think that supporting our country, staying unified, aligned, is what I believe in personally.”

Roberts did, however, express the personal responsibility he feels to ensure Robinson’s legacy endures in his current role as Dodgers manager — and later lamented the fact he is one of only two Black managers currently in the big leagues, along with Ron Washington of the Angels.

"I think he would say we need to do better,” Roberts said, when asked how Robinson might react to the league’s lack of managerial diversity. “It's important to get the best qualified people. … But I do think there's a lot of people of color that are qualified to do this job."

Read more:Dodgers celebrated at White House for 2024 World Series title by Trump

Then, like Abdul-Jabbar, Roberts emphasized the need to keep Robinson’s legacy relevant.

“There's more people from different countries than there ever has been in this game, which is great, and there's room for more,” he said. “I hope it's not getting lost on why we're celebrating this day, because somebody's got to break through.”

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Juan Soto, Pete Alonso homer but Mets fall to Twins, 6-3

Juan Soto and Pete Alonso homered but the rest of the Mets lineup was held in check by the Twins in their 6-3 loss in Minnesota on Tuesday night.

Here are the takeaways...

-A day after Soto's comments set the baseball world ablaze -- sarcasm -- both he and Alonso showed off their power. Alonso got the scoring started for the Mets, taking Bailey Ober deep in the first for his fifth longball of the season. With the Mets down 2-1 in the fourth, Soto launched a 351-foot blast off Ober to tie the game.

But after the Alonso homer, Ober settled in retiring seven straight Mets at one point and the Mets had just three hits entering the seventh inning but then began to get to the right-hander. Mark Vientos hit a one-out single before Luis Torres doubled. Carlos Mendoza pinch-hit Jesse Winker for Tyrone Taylor. The Twins countered with a lefty reliever and got Winker to fly out to right, plating Vientos on the sac fly. After Luisangel Acuña walked, Francisco Lindor grounded out to end the threat.

-The Mets had one last gasp in the ninth. The Twins' defense allowed Vientos to reach on an error and failed to complete a couple of double plays, allowing Acuña to single and get Lindor up as the tying run. Lindor had a 3-1 count but eventually struck out to end the game.

-The Mets had seven hits, with Alonso being the only one with multiple hits.

-Tylor Megill was solid in the early going, scattering hits until the third inning. With one out and runners on the corners, Megill got DaShawn Keirsey Jr. to pop out on a safety squeeze and Ty France hit a grounder to Lindor, but the Mets shortstop booted it, allowing the tying run. Carlos Correa followed up with an RBI single to put the Twins up 2-1.

It's Lindor's fourth error this season. He had just 12 all of last year.

The Twins threatened again in the fourth. After an HBP, Ryan Jeffers hit a double that was nearly a home run -- it was initially called one but overturned. Megill struck out Willi Castro, but Harrison Bader hit a hard grounder to Vientos that the third baseman could not get his bearings on and everyone was safe, and a run scored. A double play allowed Megill to escape with just one run scored.

Megill would allow one run in the fifth but it was an odd game for the big right-hander. He pitched five innings, throwing 95 pitches (60 strikes) while allowing four runs (two earned) on eight hits and striking out three batters. His ERA rose to 1.40, which is eighth-best in the majors among qualified pitchers.

-Max Kranick has been amazing this season, but the Twins got to the young right-hander. He allowed a leadoff double -- just the third hit allowed this season -- before Edouard Julien spoiled Kranick's perfect ERA, lining a two-out single into left field to extend the Twins' lead to 5-2.

Kranick would allow a solo shot in the seventh. He surrendered two runs on four hits in his 1.2 innings of work. Before Tuesday, Kranick allowed no runs over his previous 10.0 innings.

Game MVP: Ryan Jeffers

The catcher has been hampered with a thumb injury this season, but it didn't affect him Tuesday. He went 3-for-3 and reached base four times.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets finish their three-game series with the Twins with an afternoon showdown on Wednesday. First pitch is set for 1:05 p.m.

Griffin Canning was originally scheduled to start but came down with an illness that had him scratched. The Mets have yet to announce a starter. Minnesota will send David Festa to the mound.

Mets' Francisco Alvarez homers in rehab game with Double-A Binghamton

Mets catcher Francisco Alvarez played his first rehab game with Binghamton, the team's Double-A affiliate, on Tuesday night and showed off the power.

Alvarez grounded out in his first at-bat but launched a home run in his second plate appearance. The backstop singled in his third at-bat and then had a scary moment in his fourth time up. In the sixth, Alvarez was hit in the same hand he fractured by the first pitch thrown by Eiberson Castellano. The Binghamton training staff took a look at Alvarez and he was seemingly ok, running the bases and catching the next inning.

Overall, Alvarez went 2-for-3 and caught six innings.

Jeff McNeil continued his rehab down in Single-A St. Lucie and reached base three times. He singled and walked twice in his five at-bats.

Mendoza said McNeil will continue to play down in St. Lucie before eventually going to Triple-A to get more at-bats. It's possible McNeil will stop off at Binghamton, but the utility infielder/outfielder should be back soon.

Jasson Dominguez's three-run double powers Yankees past Royals, 4-2

Jasson Dominguez notched a go-ahead three-run double in the sixth inning in a 3-for-3 performance and Max Fried delivered a quality start as the Yankees took down the Kansas City Royals, 4-2, on Tuesday night in The Bronx.

New York improved to 10-7 on the year. Kansas City fell to 8-9.

Here are the takeaways...

- Fried needed just 11 pitches in the first and 16 in the second for a perfect start, tallying two strikeouts on the four-seam fastball in the process. 

The second pitch of the third innings was a bad one for the lefty as MJ Melendez clobbered a 94 mph four-seamer to the Yankee bullpen in center (107.2 mph, 429 feet). With two down, a slow dribbler to third wasn't barehanded by Oswald Peraza, and that infield hit came around to score when Bobby Witt Jr. smacked a first-pitch fastball off the wall in right-center for a double.

Fried’s first-pitch curveball to start the fourth went right into the leftfield gap for a double off Salvador Pèrez’s bat, but three balls on the infield stranded the runner. The first-year Yank allowed the leadoff man to reach for the third-straight inning with an infield single to first in the fifth. But Fried escaped without further damage, adding his fifth strikeout of the night in the process.

A leadoff walk and a two-out walk in the seventh ended Fried's night. Luke Weaver needed just two pitches to end the threat. Fried's final line: 6.2 innings, five hits, two runs, two walks, seven strikeouts on 94 pitches (60 strikes).

- Two runners reached against Michael Wacha in the first, but he cruised to five scoreless innings, needing just 58 pitches. The wheels came off in the sixth. After a leadoff infield single, Wacha got the next two batters before back-to-back walks saw the Royals summon Angel Zerpa, but the lefty promptly walked Austin Wells on four pitches to score a run.

That brought Dominguez to the plate, and the young left fielder got a 96 mph fastball on the inside corner and didn’t miss it, yanking the 1-2 pitch over the third baseman for a bases-clearing double to give the Yanks a 4-2 lead.

It was Dominguez’s third hit in three at-bats after he stayed on a breaking ball for a first-pitch single through the right side in the second and laced a single (106.4 mph) to the right of second base in the fifth.

He exited the game for the top of the seventh – manager Aaron Boone said after the game Dominguez "lost his contacts" when he was running the bases – and Trent Grisham came in to play defense. And it didn’t take long for Grisham’s defense to pay dividends as he tracked down a hard-hit ball for the first out in the inning, robbing Melendez of extra bases.

- Weaver needed just nine pitches for a 1-2-3 eighth inning with a strikeout. Devin Williams needed just 16 for a perfect ninth (with a strikeout) to earn his third save of the year.

- Aaron Judge, 1-for-21 with no extra-base hits against Wacha, rocketed a single (108.6 mph off the bat) that one-hopped the wall in right-center. Judge notched a second hit off Wacha, an infield single to start the sixth when Perez at first mishandled a throw from shallow center. He finished the day 2-for-3 with a walk.

- Cody Bellinger went 0-for-3 with a walk and a strikeout swinging. The outfielder is now 5-for-40 (.125) with one extra-base hit and two RBI in the month of April

- Paul Goldschmidt reached on catcher’s interference in the first but finished the day 0-for-3 with a strikeout.

- Jazz Chisholm Jr., wearing high socks and baggy pants in honor of Jackie Robinson, had a big chance in the first with two on and two out, but popped out in foul ground down the line in right. Went 0-for-3 with a walk and a strikeout looking. He is now stuck in a 2-for-28 stretch.

- Wells made a bid for extra bases his first time up, but Hunter Renfroe tracked down the 369-foot flyout to the warning track in right-center. Finished 0-for-2 with a strikeout and RBI walk.

- Ben Rice, who has been swinging a mighty bat, hit just one ball hard as he finished 0-for-5 with a strikeout.

- Anthony Volpe had just one hit in his last 22 at-bats before cracking a leadoff single (100 mph) in the eighth. He finished 1-for-3 with a strikeout and a walk.

- Members of both teams – and across all of baseball – wore No. 42 for Jackie Robinson Day in honor of his April 15, 1947 debut for the Brooklyn Dodgers, which ended segregation in the modern era of MLB. After Robinson’s debut, it would be another eight years – 1,233 regular season games – before the Yanks became the 13th team out of 16 to integrate when Elston Howard appeared in pinstripes for the first time on April 14, 1955.

Game MVP: Dominguez

When Kansas City presented the Yanks with the opportunity to win the game, it was Dominguez – in his first at-bat from the right side – who seized the moment.

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees look to complete the three-game sweep of the Royals on Wednesday, first pitch is set for 7:05 p.m.

Right-hander Clarke Schmidt will make his season debut and face off against Kansas City left-hander Kris Bubic (0.96 ERA, 0.964 WHIP in 18.2 innings).

Bohm and Marsh humble, Harper introspective after Phillies win

Bohm and Marsh humble, Harper introspective after Phillies win originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The only Phillie who needed a productive night more than Alec Bohm on Tuesday was the hitter behind him, his lockermate and best friend on the team, Brandon Marsh.

Bohm entered the night riding a 5-for-45 slump. Marsh was hitless in his last 26 at-bats. Bohm was dropped from fourth to eighth in the Phillies’ lineup last week, and Marsh was benched on Monday night against a right-handed pitcher because manager Rob Thomson felt the centerfielder needed a night to clear his head.

Both were instrumental in Tuesday’s win over the Giants, driving in a run apiece in a game that was decided by two. Marsh drove in the Phillies’ second run with a sacrifice fly in the bottom of the second, and Bohm overcame an earlier failure with one out and runners on the corners to hit the go-ahead RBI single in a 6-4 win.

“That’s the game right there,” Bohm said of rebounding two innings after grounding into an inning-ending 4-6-3 double play. “You think, ‘Oh, there goes my chance.’ You can either let that go one way and ruin the rest of the day or just keep playing the game and the game gives you another opportunity.”

Bohm and Marsh were introspective in the Phillies’ clubhouse postgame.

“It’s a very humbling game and I’m feeling very humble right now,” Bohm said.

“The game’s very tough. It’ll knock you down and bring you back up when you least expect it,” Marsh added.

Bryce Harper was even more philosophical.

“I just want them to enjoy the game,” he said of Bohm and Marsh. “Life can be a lot harder, life can be a lot tougher, we get to play this beautiful game every day. I was standing in the on-deck circle in the third inning thinking about it — it’s a great game we get to play. Obviously, you’re going to go through ups and downs in life and in the season and it’s a hard thing to do. But at the end of the day, we’re all healthy, we’re all strong.

“Just go out there and enjoy it because it’ll go quick and you’ll start thinking to yourself why did I take it so serious and it’s gone now.”

Bohm and Marsh have taken their slumps seriously because they care. They care that they’ve been unable to produce or help the Phillies win for most of April. They’re not the primary reasons why the Phillies lost five of seven before Tuesday but were pieces of it.

“Me and Brandon, if we’re playing up to three-quarters of what we’re capable of and we’re hitting eighth and ninth, we have a really good lineup because we’re not eight- and nine-hitters. It’s just that simple,” Bohm said. “I think lately, we’ve kind of just been outs. That’s why we’re so frustrated about it, because we know we’re way better than we’ve been. I think when this thing all comes together, you’re gonna see a pretty deep lineup.”

It was uncertain whether or not Marsh would be in Tuesday’s lineup. Thomson on Monday sounded like he wanted to give the centerfielder multiple days to reset. But Marsh had a good day of work on Monday in the cage. The Phillies faced another righty on Tuesday in Justin Verlander and knew they’d see a lefty Wednesday in Robbie Ray, so Marsh got the nod over Johan Rojas.

“It just felt like I was me again, just feel like dancing into the box,” Marsh said. “Just smooth and in rhythm. Yesterday was a good day, today was a good day, just got to keep going.

“We’re scuffling a little bit, Bohmer and I, but we’ll be just fine. A lot of other guys are carrying the weight of this team right now which is great, but when the tide turns me and Bohmer are gonna be there.”

They’ve been there in past. Marsh hit .276 with an OPS well over .800 vs. right-handed pitching in 2023 and 2024. Bohm has hit .277 the last two years, driving in 97 runs each time. It’s been a wretched start to 2025 but it’s also barely even mid-April.

The win over the Giants was a step in the right direction for Bohm, for Marsh and for a Phillies offense that was 3-for-44 with runners in scoring position from Thursday through the sixth inning Tuesday night.

“We’re all in this together,” Bohm said. “Everybody knows that over the course of 162 games, we’re all gonna have our moments, we’re all gonna have our struggles. It’s a rollercoaster. It feels good to have 26 guys behind me and the rest of the staff and the whole stadium.

“… Whether it’s tomorrow or a week from now or a month from now, I’m gonna be a different player for sure. Just having faith in that, knowing that, trusting everything I’ve done.”

Yankees’ Aaron Judge is made aware of stupid, fake Juan Soto controversy

Aaron Judge, glancing up at the approaching horde of reporters on Tuesday afternoon, did not know at first what we wanted. He wondered aloud if he had missed something.

Yes, in fact, he had.

Judge had missed it when a former teammate,Juan Soto,answered a fair question with honesty and intelligence. He had then missed it when the least rational corners of New York sports fandom became loud online and on the radio, acting as if Soto had no right to be human.

This stupid fake controversy started on Monday afternoon when veteran Mets reporter Mike Puma of the New York Post quoted Soto about no longer hitting in front of Judge.

“It’s definitely different,” Soto told Puma. “I had the best hitter in baseball hitting behind me. I was getting more attacked and more pitches in the strike zone, less intentional walks and things like that. I was pitched differently last year.”

No problem with Puma’s question or execution. Unfortunately for Soto, those words spent the better part of a day bouncing around online and ultimately landed in the Yankees clubhouse.

“I’m not really going to go back and forth with this,” Judge said as he prepared to face the Kansas City Royals. “He’s got probably one of the best hitters in the game behind him right now in what [Pete] Alonso is doing. It has been fun to watch. He’s hitting close to .400. He’s driving the ball all over the field, driving guys in. So they’re gonna be good.”

Judge then referenced his own slow start last season and said that Soto’s production during that stretch showed that he didn’t need Judge. The captain batted .207 in March and April of 2024, while Soto batted .325.

“You can look at what I did last April as an example of how he just needs to keep being himself and he’ll be good,” Judge said.

Soto’s words banged around Yankeeland a bit on Tuesday. Other folks with the team recalled Soto as extremely well-liked and felt it a shame that a loud segment of the public discourse couldn’t handle the complexity of several facts:

1) Soto’s time with the Yankees was deeply meaningful to him; 2) he made a difficult decision to sign elsewhere; 3) it takes people time to fully adjust to new circumstances; 4) he is fitting in nicely with the Mets and is already popular with his new team.

This does not have to be binary. Soto can treasure his time with Judge and the Yankees and commit with his whole heart to this new chapter in Queens. Any fan who does not accept this dehumanizes Soto by expecting him not to feel.

Soto critics also forget that he personally lobbied owner Steve Cohen to sign Alonso as lineup protection for him. This meant a great deal to the Polar Bear and informed how he feels about his new teammate.

Around the Yankees, people who care about Soto note that he is playing a much different role for the Mets than he did here. After the Yanks traded for Soto, Judge told him privately that he didn’t have to be the guy, that the roster was loaded with talent and that Juan just had to be Juan. The pair rode that perfect balance all the way to the World Series.

The Mets then made Soto the richest athlete in the history of North American professional sports, shining a brighter spotlight in his face and perhaps placing a $765 million target on his back.

Soto is a big boy, and scrutiny is part of his job. But money can’t change a person’s basic character. Soto is a brilliant baseball player and fun teammate. He is fortunate to have Francisco Lindor just as he was fortunate to have Judge; those two are more interested than he is in vocal leadership. Today in the Yankees clubhouse, Soto’s adjustment to the expectation of being “the guy” in a personality sense was viewed as more relevant than his ability to perform in a lineup without Judge.

Fortunately, the Mets have a strong support system. In addition to Lindor in the clubhouse, Carlos Beltran is a member of the front office; he knows a thing or two about being dehumanized during his early days as a high-profile Met. Owner Alex Cohen is authentically interested in fostering an atmosphere that makes Citi Field feel like a home and the Mets like a family.

Good things are coming for Soto and the Mets. It’s just a shame that New York had to run the young man through the wringer today for the sin of offering a thoughtful answer.

Mets' Griffin Canning scratched from Wednesday's start due to illness

Mets manager Carlos Mendoza announced on Tuesday that right-handerGriffin Canning will not make his scheduled start on Wednesday against the Minnesota Twins due to an illness.

"We’re going to wait until after the game," Mendoza said about any potential roster move. "The reason is Griffin Canning will not make the start tomorrow. He’s under the weather a little bit and feeling weak, so we’re going to give him an extra day or so. So, we’ve just got to get through today, and instead of inserting a sixth starter on Friday, most likely, it will be tomorrow.

"We’ve just got to get through today’s game, and then we’ve got to make a couple of moves here."

Mendoza was a bit coy about the team's options to start on Wednesday, but he said there are a lot of moving pieces that need to be figured out, indicating that a series of roster moves, like placing outfielder Jose Siri on the IL, could be coming after Tuesday's game.

Canning has made three starts for the Mets this season, pitching to a 4.20 ERA over his 15.0 innings of work.

Whoever the Mets tab to make Wednesday's start will need to get to Minnesota quickly, as the Mets and Twins play at 1:10 p.m. ET to close out their series.

Reds activate Diaz, McLain and Hays off injured list ahead of series opener against Mariners

CINCINNATI (AP) — The surging Cincinnati Reds will have all their key players for the first time this season after making a series of roster moves before Tuesday night’s game against the Seattle Mariners.

The Reds activated right-hander Alexis Diaz, infielder Matt McLain and outfielder Austin Hays. Cincinnati goes into the three-game series with Seattle after wins in five of its last six, including its first series sweep of the season this past weekend against Pittsburgh.

Diaz, who was dealing with a left hamstring strain since the start of spring training, made a pair of rehab appearances in Triple A Louisville last week. He was projected to be the team’s closer going into the season, but Emilio Pagán has converted all four of his save opportunities and has a 1.23 ERA in eight games.

McLain missed last year with a shoulder injury but got off to a strong start this season with home runs in three of his first four games. He went on the IL retroactive to April 5 with a slight left hamstring strain after going 1 for 12 in four April games.

McLain will play second base and is batting second in Tuesday’s game.

Hays will make his Reds debut at designated hitter and bat fifth. He missed the first 16 games with a left calf strain that occurred on the final day of spring training.

Hays signed a one-year, $5 million deal Cincinnati during the offseason after spending last season with Baltimore and Philadelphia.

Outfielder Jacob Hurtubise and infielder Noelvi Marte were optioned to Louisville to make way for McLain and Hays. Diaz takes the roster spot that opened after left-hander Sam Moll was placed on the 15-day injured list Monday due to left shoulder impingement.

Harper and Realmuto homer, Bohm and Marsh drive in runs in Phillies win

Harper and Realmuto homer, Bohm and Marsh drive in runs in Phillies win originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

It wasn’t an explosion, it wasn’t a perfect game, but all the Phillies have needed over the past week has been a timely knock or two and they finally came in a 6-4 win over the Giants.

The Phils entered the bottom of the sixth inning Tuesday night trailing by a run and had made an out in 41 of their last 44 at-bats with a runner in scoring position, hitting .068 since Thursday. They’d lost five of seven. They had two hitters at the bottom of the order, Alec Bohm and Brandon Marsh, slumping so badly that Bohm was dropped four spots in the lineup last week and Marsh was benched in Monday’s series opener.

Despite going a combined 1-for-7 on Tuesday night, both Bohm and Marsh came through, accounting for a pair of RBI in a two-run win. Marsh put a sweet swing on a low-and-in slider from Justin Verlander for a sacrifice fly in the second inning, and Bohm delivered a two-out RBI single to give the Phillies a lead in the seventh.

Twice earlier in the night, Bohm came up with a man in scoring position and was unable to drive him in, grounding out to second with a man on second and grounding into an inning-ending double play with runners on the corners in the fourth. This has been a grueling stretch for both Bohm and Marsh and the Phillies hope the duo has already reached rock bottom. There’s really only one direction either can go given how rough the first three weeks have been.

Bryce Harper made a close game more comfortable with a towering two-run homer on a 3-0 count in the seventh, his third of the year. This was a difficult night to drive a ball. The wind was swirling upwards of 20 mph at first pitch, and by the end of the first inning, Trea Turner had flung his bat into the netting beyond third base, rain clouds had rendered Center City invisible and roughly 1,000 fan scorecards had made their way onto the field.

The elements subsided as the game went on but still made a difference. In the bottom of the seventh, J.T. Realmuto popped a ball up to medium left field but Heliot Ramos was unable to track it down as it danced in the wind. It fell in to tie the game.

Four innings earlier, Ramos hit a soft infield fly with a man on first just over Harper’s head but it changed direction multiple times in the air and eluded Harper’s mitt. The first baseman didn’t panic, though, picking up the ball up and calmly firing to second for the force-out.

The conditions made Realmuto’s second-inning home run to left-center field, directly into the wind, even more impressive. It was Realmuto’s first at-bat since a frustrating called strike three ended the Phillies’ seventh inning Monday night with two men on and two out, down four runs. The pitch Realmuto was rung up on Monday was well off the plate and he let home plate umpire Tony Randazzo know about it.

There was more frustration on Tuesday after the Phillies relinquished an early lead for the second straight night, gave the Giants costly free bases and ran into two outs on the basepaths themselves. The Giants tied the game in the top of the fourth after slow-footed Matt Chapman and Wilmer Flores executed a double-steal on Jesus Luzardo’s first move to the plate. It was the third time already in the game that the Giants ran on Luzardo’s first move but the first two pitches were fouled off. They seemed to have something on him. Luzardo’s next pitch after the double steal was lined into left field by Casey Schmitt for a two-run single. When the Giants later took the lead briefly in the sixth, a run scored on a groundout just after Orion Kerkering threw a wild pitch to advance him to third.

The Phils went ahead with four singles in the bottom of the sixth and received an important shutdown inning from Jordan Romano. The first-year Phillie seems to be settling in — he’s faced the minimum nine batters over his last three outings, allowing just one baserunner.

Jose Alvarado had a dicey eighth inning, allowing three straight singles to the top of the Giants’ order but recovered with a popup, strikeout and flyout to the warning track. Matt Strahm closed it out as the Phillies improved to 10-7.

Wednesday’s assignment goes to Aaron Nola, who is 0-3 with a 5.51 ERA and looking to find a rhythm himself.