Mets’ Paul Blackburn throws two innings in first rehab start with Brooklyn Cyclones

Mets right-hander Paul Blackburn began a rehab assignment on Saturday night. 

Blackburn took the mound for the Brooklyn Cyclones and he was handed an early lead but gave it right back -- as the second batter he faced crushed a solo homer deep to left-center. 

He issued a walk following that, but got a lineout double play to end the inning. 

The veteran allowed another walk and a hit in the bottom of the second, but was helped out by a caught stealing and a ground out to help him end his first rehab appearance without any further damage. 

Overall, he allowed one run on two hits while walking two and threw 38 pitches. 

Blackburn landed on the injured list after dealing with right knee inflammation late in camp.

Manager Carlos Mendoza said it’s still too early to tell exactly what his role will be when he returns to the big-league club, but they are planning on stretching him out to around 75 pitches to keep the door open on him joining the rotation. 

Blackburn pitched to a 5.68 ERA over five spring training outings.

He has just four appearances in his career out of the bullpen, all with the Athletics.

Mets’ Mark Vientos day-to-day with groin discomfort, 'not concerned at all'

Mets 3B Mark Vientos left Saturday afternoon’s 3-0 win against the St. Louis Cardinals early due to groin discomfort and is considered day-to-day.

Manager Carlos Mendoza spoke after the game and said his third baseman "felt it" after he made a leaping grab on a line drive to start the fourth inning.

"I think it was the batter right after that play, there was a foul ball that he reacted towards the baseball and he felt something," the skipper said.

After testing the 25-year-old following his departure, the team's level of concern is "low-level" and will wait and see how he feels on Sunday.

Nevertheless, Vientos said he feels good and is "almost positive" the injury is more of a cramp than anything else.

"Not concerned at all," he said. "I think it’s just I didn’t drink enough water, made that play and then just felt like a little tweak, but I think I’m good."

The injury comes after Vientos had hit a home run in two straight games and was showing signs of pulling himself out of an early slog offensively.

"[It's] frustrating because it’s something that I can control which is drinking water and staying hydrated, but I’m grateful it’s not too bad," Vientos said.

Vientos was replaced by Brett Baty in the field in the top of the fifth inning and he immediately made an impact -- throwing Thomas Saggese out at the plate attempting to score on a grounder to third. 

Vientos finished the day 0-for-2 with a groundout and a popout. Baty went 0-for-1 with a walk.

Roki Sasaki shows progress in six innings, but Dodgers fall to Rangers on walk-off

Dodgers starting pitcher Roki Sasaki throws the ball from the mound against the Texas Rangers Saturday
Dodgers starting pitcher Roki Sasaki delivers against the Texas Rangers on Saturday in Arlington, Texas. (Jeffrey McWhorter / Associated Press)

Roki Sasaki was in line for his first career win in Major League Baseball on Saturday.

Instead, the Dodgers suffered their first walk-off loss of the season.

Up a run in the bottom of the ninth, thanks in large part to Sasaki’s season-long six-inning, two-run start, the Dodgers’ bullpen couldn’t hold on.

Primary closer Tanner Scott was down after closing out Friday’s win. Top ninth-inning alternative Blake Treinen was placed on the injured list pregame with forearm tightness.

Read more:Shohei Ohtani's wife gives birth to a girl for the couple's first child

That meant veteran right-hander and former Texas Rangers closer Kirby Yates was summoned to try to finish off his old club. He couldn’t, giving up a leadoff double and then a walk-off two-run home run to Adolis García for a 4-3 loss at Globe Life Field.

The ending overshadowed an otherwise positive day from the 23-year-old Sasaki — who saw his fastball velocity suffer a noticeable drop on Saturday but took another step forward in his major league development nonetheless.

Early on, Sasaki’s heater was as soft as 92 mph. Not until the fifth inning did it top 96 mph. Overall, it averaged just 94.7 mph, a stark drop from the 96.9-mph average he had over his first four MLB starts.

And yet he turned in his best effort as a big-leaguer anyway, using a heavy dose of splitters and sliders to hold the Rangers’ powerhouse lineup to just a two-run home run from Kyle Higashioka in the third inning.

Read more:Yoshinobu Yamamoto outduels Jacob deGrom, makes statement in Dodgers' win over Rangers

The Dodgers' offense, meanwhile, put Sasaki in line for his first career win, erasing the early 2-0 deficit with a three-run rally in the fourth that was keyed by Freddie Freeman’s two-run homer and (after a botched pickoff attempt from Rangers pitcher Nathan Eovaldi moved Michael Conforto into scoring position) a go-ahead ground-rule double from Max Muncy.

The bullpen provided a bridge to the ninth inning, with Jack Dreyer, Alex Vesia and Evan Phillips (who was making his season debut after being activated off the injured list in place of Treinen) combined for scoreless frames in the seventh and eighth.

Yates, however, failed to record an out in the ninth. Josh Smith smashed a leadoff double after barely missing the right-field foul pole on a potential game-tying homer two pitches before. García then launched a no-doubt blast to left field, hammering an elevated 93-mph fastball to knot this three-game series between the past two World Series champions.

The result highlighted the significance of Treinen’s absence, serving as an immediate reminder of how valuable he’s been to the bullpen early on this year.

Treinen, who has two saves and a 3.38 ERA this year, first felt something in his arm after pitching an inning against the Chicago Cubs last Sunday. That day, he struck out three batters but also gave up a run on two hits and averaged less than 93 mph on the two fastballs he threw — almost two ticks lower than his normal velocity.

This week, the Dodgers had tried to avoid using Treinen, hoping the rest would alleviate the issue. However, while warming up in the ninth inning on Friday, Treinen reported more tightness to the team. It was enough for the Dodgers to put him on the IL and cut short Phillips’ triple-A rehab assignment so he could pitch on Saturday.

Read more:Pitching help on the way, improved bats, too? | Dodgers Debate

The severity of Treinen’s injury wasn’t immediately clear. According to manager Dave Roberts, Treinen was scheduled to have an MRI later on Saturday. While his timeline to return wouldn’t be known until the team got those results, Roberts said his initial concern level is “not too high right now."

“We want to get to the bottom of it,” Roberts said. “Don't know how long it'll be. But I appreciate Blake for letting us know his discomfort.”

Still, it didn’t take long for the Dodgers to miss the veteran right-hander in a save situation that would have been tailor-made for him.

A day that should have been about Sasaki’s first career win instead ended in a frustrating defeat.

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 beat Cardinals, 3-0, to win third straight game

The Mets (14-7) won their third straight game against the St. Louis Cardinals (9-12) with a clean 3-0 win on Saturday afternoon at Citi Field.

Here are the takeaways...

-Despite a hot Saturday afternoon at the ballpark, the offenses were cold and held mostly in check as Kodai Senga and St. Louis starter Matthew Liberatore were locked in a pitcher's duel. Both pitchers were coming off scoreless outings of six or more innings in their last start and kept it going on Saturday with Senga able to keep his scoreless streak alive by escaping a couple of jams.

In the second, after a one-out walk followed by a double, the right-hander came back from 2-0 on Nolan Gorman by throwing three straight forkballs and getting Gorman to swing and miss on all three for the strikeout -- one of just four strikeouts by Senga on the day. A flyout to center ended the scoring threat.

Then in the fifth, a leadoff double and wild pitch put a runner on third and nobody out for a prime scoring chance for the Cards. However, Senga struck out Gorman once again (on a forkball) for the first out before his defense helped him out on the next batter.

-Freshly inserted into the game after Mark Vientosexited with what the team announced as "groin discomfort", Brett Baty fielded a grounder to third base and with the runner at third running on contact, Baty immediately went home with the throw to nab Thomas Saggese at the plate by a comfortable margin as Luis Torrens applied the tag.

Senga's defense came to his rescue again in the sixth, this time a double play turned by Luisangel Acuna and Francisco Lindor after a walk and single put runners on first and second. With a chance to maneuver through another jam, Senga hit Nolan Arenado to end his outing after 5.2 innings. Reed Garrett did his part and got the final out of the inning to preserve Senga's scoreless streak and lower his season ERA to 0.79.

-Facing Liberatore, New York's offense was able to push across two runs in the third. The first was driven in by Juan Soto who singled home Acuna and the second came via Pete Alonso's double -- his ninth already this season.

Other than that, Liberatore's ledger was clean as the left-hander went 6.2 innings, striking out six.

-Alonso added an insurance run in the eighth with his sixth home run. The slugger finished 2-for-4 and is now hitting .356 with a 1.220 OPS as his early season success continues.

-A.J Minter survived the eighth inning despite three walks and set up Edwin Diaz who looked dominant in the ninth, striking out two and securing his fifth save in as many opportunities.

Game MVP: Pete Alonso

Alonso is doing it all right now as his 23 RBI lead the Mets and is one off Aaron Judge for the MLB-lead.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets will look for the sweep when they close out their four-game series against the Cardinals on Easter Sunday with first pitch scheduled for 1:40 p.m.

RHP Clay Holmes (2-1, 3.66 ERA) faces off against RHP Sonny Gray (3-0, 3.13 ERA).

Roupp reaches ‘new territory,' sets career high in Giants' win

Roupp reaches ‘new territory,' sets career high in Giants' win originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Landen Roupp couldn’t have asked for a better way to introduce himself to Mike Trout in the first inning of the Giants’ game against the Los Angeles Angels on Saturday.

The three-time AL MVP went down swinging, falling victim to a curveball that has brought Roupp plenty of success over his last two starts. Roupp struck out the side to begin Saturday’s game, but Trout’s next two at-bats against Roupp didn’t go as smoothly for the Giants starter. In the end, though, San Francisco was able to survive two Trout home runs off Roupp en route to a 3-2 victory at Angel Stadium.

“It was fun,” Roupp told reporters after the game about his first time facing Trout. “I wish I could have gotten him all three times, but that’s baseball and the way it goes, and I’ll learn from it.”

Aside from Trout’s two homers, Roup was lights-out against the Angels, recording a career-high nine strikeouts with one walk, five hits and two earned runs across seven innings on 96 pitches. His curveball, which he threw 56 times in a 10-4 win over the Philadelphia Phillies on Monday, was at work again 43 times Saturday and produced a 60-percent whiff rate.

Roupp’s sinker, which he threw as often as his curve (42 times), kept the Angels off balance as well, and the 1-2 punch allowed him to last seven innings for the first time in his MLB career.

“I think that’s new territory for him,” Giants manager Bob Melvin told reporters of Roupp’s seven-inning outing. “Nine punch-outs, only walked one, kind of splits the plate with his sinker and his breaking ball going the other way. It’s a tough breaking ball to track; kind of has different shapes on it from time to time … Less than 100 pitches, so pretty impressive.”

After starting the 2025 MLB season out with a no decision and a loss, Roupp now has two consecutive wins under his belt and is proving worthy of the rotation spot Melvin gave him out of spring training. Giants third baseman Matt Chapman, who delivered two of San Francisco’s three runs Saturday with a two-run homer in the first inning, is encouraged by what he has seen from Roupp so far.

“I thought it was great,” Chapman told reporters of Roupp’s outing. “I think he continues to get experience every time he goes out there. He gets to go back out for the seventh, and he’s gaining confidence, gaining experience. He’s got really good stuff, and I think he gave [the Angels] some trouble tonight. Obviously Mike Trout’s a great player and put some good swings on the ball.

“I thought [Roupp] did an amazing job and gave us an opportunity to win that game.”

Seven innings, nine strikeouts and a win. After wasting a gem by Logan Webb on Friday night at Angel Stadium, the Giants improved to 14-7 on Saturday behind Roupp’s dominance, a 1-2-3 eighth inning from Tyler Rogers and Ryan Walker’s fifth save of the year. It’s all coming together for the 26-year-old Roupp, who can feel the difference and improvements every time he steps on the mound.

“My curveball has been the best it’s been,” Roupp said. “It’s not even close to what it is last year. It’s been where I think it’s always been — I just feel really good right now.”

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It’s a girl! Two-way superstar Shohei Ohtani of the LA Dodgers is now a father

Shohei Ohtani, above, and wife Mamiko Tanaka are first-time parents.Photograph: Jayne Kamin-Oncea/Getty Images

Shohei Ohtani has added a new title to his already decorated résumé: father.

The Los Angeles Dodgers’ two-way superstar announced the birth of his first child, a daughter, in an Instagram post Saturday. Ohtani, 30, shared a photo of the newborn’s tiny feet cradled in two hands, along with a message expressing his gratitude and wonder at becoming a parent for the first time.

“Welcome to the Ohtani Family!” he wrote. “I am so grateful to my loving wife who gave birth to our healthy beautiful daughter. To my daughter, thank you for making us very nervous yet super anxious parents.”

Ohtani is currently on Major League Baseball’s paternity list and missed the Dodgers’ weekend series against the Texas Rangers. He is eligible to miss up to three games, with the club off Monday before heading to Chicago for a series with the Cubs starting Tuesday.

The baby’s arrival marks the latest milestone in a whirlwind 16 months for Ohtani. After signing a record-shattering $700m contract with the Dodgers in December 2023, the three-time AL MVP revealed he had quietly married Mamiko Tanaka, a former professional basketball player in Japan. The couple had kept their relationship private, with Ohtani only confirming their marriage after joining the Dodgers.

Tanaka, 28, played collegiately at Waseda University before joining the Fujitsu Red Wave of the Women’s Japan Basketball League, where she competed from 2019 to 2023. The couple also share a dog, Dekopin, who has become a fan favorite on Ohtani’s social media accounts.

In his Instagram post, Ohtani extended his thanks beyond family. “I would also like to thank the Dodgers organization, my teammates, and the fans for their constant support and kind words of encouragement,” he wrote. “I would also like to express my sincere gratitude to all the medical professionals and everyone who dedicated their support to us, up until this wonderful day.”

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts announced the birth on Saturday’s game broadcast from Arlington, Texas. “Congratulations Sho!” Roberts said, adding with a smile that he wasn’t yet sure of the baby’s name.

Ohtani, who helped lead the Dodgers to a World Series title last fall, is off to a strong start in his second season with the club. Through 21 games, he’s batting .288 with six home runs, eight RBIs, and a .930 OPS.

Shohei Ohtani's wife gives birth to a girl for the couple's first child

LOS ANGELES, CA - DECEMBER 8, 2024: Dodgers Shohei Ohtani and his wife Mamiko Tanaka.
Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani and his wife, Mamiko Tanaka, attend a Lakers game at Crypto.com Arena on Dec. 8. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

Shohei Ohtani announced the birth of his first child on Saturday, posting on Instagram that he and his wife, Mamiko Tanaka, welcomed a baby girl.

“I am so grateful to my loving wife who gave birth to our healthy beautiful daughter,” Ohtani wrote in his post. “To my daughter, thank you for making us very nervous yet super anxious parents.”

Ohtani has been on the paternity list since Friday, and stayed back in Los Angeles during the Dodgers’ trip to Texas to face the Rangers this weekend in anticipation of the birth.

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said Saturday afternoon — before learning the baby had arrived — that it remained possible Ohtani could be back in the lineup for Sunday’s series finale, though no plans had been finalized.

“I’m hopeful,” Roberts said.

Ohtani first announced that he and Tanaka were expecting back in December. The couple got married the same winter Ohtani signed his 10-year, $700 million contract with the Dodgers.

During an in-game interview on Saturday's Fox broadcast, Roberts said: "All of the baseball world, the Dodger family, is so excited for Shohei and Mamiko. Congratulations, Sho!"

Read more:Yoshinobu Yamamoto outduels Jacob deGrom, makes statement in Dodgers' win over Rangers

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: Brett Baty and Luisangel Acuña 'proving they're big league players,' latest on Francisco Alvarez

Mets manager Carlos Mendoza spoke to reporters prior to Saturday's game against the St. Louis Cardinals and addressed a number of different topics...


Confidence in Brett Baty and Luisangel Acuña

Despite riding a five-game hitting streak, Brett Baty is on the bench Saturday and Luisangel Acuña is starting at second base. Mendoza talked about his decision with the Cardinals starting LHP Matthew Liberatore, making it clear both players understand they will have plenty of chances to play.

"I don't necessarily go and tell them why, by now they both know that they are both going to get opportunities," Mendoza said. "And it doesn't necessarily have to be against the lefties or the righties. I think I gave Acuñathe other day a couple of starts against right-handed pitching. And there'll be days with Baty, he'll stay in there with lefties, too.

"I think it just comes down to continuing to build the confidence for both of them. Not only Baty, who's playing really, really well. Acuña's been playing really, really well. Just continuing to communicate with those guys that they are good major league players. And now we're seeing that... I think everybody's different and you can manage a lot of different ways."

Over the last seven games, Baty is 8-for-25 (.320) with two doubles, one triple, two RBI, one walk, and one steal while Acuña is batting .368 (7-for-19) with four runs, two doubles, one RBI, three walks, and four steals.

Jeff McNeil getting close to return

Mendoza was asked if Jeff McNeil would be ready in time to play on Monday when the Mets begin a three-game series against the Philadelphia Phillies, and said they will wait and see. He's scheduled to play with Double-A Binghamton on Saturday and Sunday.

"We'll see," Mendoza said. "He's scheduled to play today and tomorrow, back-to-back. And we'll see where we're at after that."

McNeil played center field for the first time on Friday night during his rehab assignment with Single-A St. Lucie, logging six innings of action.

Of course, when McNeil does return, the Mets will need to make a roster decision. Mendoza gave a similar answer when asked if there's a scenario in which Baty and Acuña would both be able to stay with the team after McNeil returns.

"We'll see, we'll make that decision when we get there, we're still a few days away," Mendoza said. "The good thing is, if we are having this discussion, it's a good thing. That means Baty continues to play well, that means Acuña continues to play well and they're making that decision very tough on us. That's what we want. So hopefully that's the case in a few days from now where we got get in that room and make a difficult decision. They're both earning playing time and they're both proving they're big league players."

Plan for Francisco Alvarez

Catcher Francisco Alvarez, who's recovering from a broken hamate bone in his left hand,is nearing his return to the majors and will catch again on Saturday for Double-A Binghamton.

"Scheduled to catch nine innings today, maybe he'll DH tomorrow," Mendoza said. "As far as from the medical staff, he's going to be clear. It's now, 'Do you need more at-bats just to get your timing right? Or are you ready to come up and start playing big league games?'

"I think after he plays today, he caught nine innings last night, after he plays today, I think maybe DH tomorrow. And then after that, knock on wood, from a medical standpoint he's going to be clear."

Over six games with St. Lucie and Binghamton, Alvarez is 4-for-22 (.182) at the plate with one home run and three RBI.

Mendoza had said Thursday that Alvarez's return date will depend on if he needs more at-bats to feel ready for big league action, but he could return during the team's homestand. He also noted Luis Torrens will continue to see playing time

"They're both going to play," Mendoza said. " I got to take care of Alvy, too, I'm not going to run him into the ground. And Luis is playing well. That's a luxury to have, when you got two guys that you feel good about your chances, doesn't matter who's in the lineup. That's credit to Alvy and that's credit to Luis.

"I could see a scenario here where they both will play. Schedule will dictate a lot of that, where you're playing a lot of games in a row, day games, night games. All of that factors into the decision making, but I could see both of them playing."

José Azócar making season debut

With Jose Siri on the IL, Mendoza is giving José Azócar a chance in the starting lineup after he was added to the roster on Thursday.

"He's here and we're going to use him," Mendoza said. "It's something that I always put a lot of value, using the whole roster. Obviously giving TT (Tyrone Taylor) a day here, he's been playing a lot too and I got to protect him a little bit."

Mendoza likes what he's seen from Azócar, who hit .250 with one home run over 44 at-bats in spring training after playing the past three seasons with the San Diego Padres. He owns a .243 average with 21 RBI over 214 career major league games.

"Good ballplayer, he's a guy that can play defense, can play all three (outfield spots), can run the bases, and can give you good at-bats too," Mendoza said. "He's got some big league experience, brings a lot of energy. Yeah, I'm excited to have him here."

Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani announces birth of his daughter with heartwarming post

Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani announces birth of his daughter with heartwarming post originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Congratulations are in order for Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani and his wife, Mamiko Tanaka, who gave birth to their daughter.

Ohtani made the aww-inducing announcement in an Instagram post on Saturday, sharing that he and his wife are now the proud parents of a baby girl. This marks the first child for Ohtani and Tanaka, who was a professional basketball player in their native Japan.

“I am so grateful to my loving wife who gave birth to our healthy, beautiful daughter,” Ohtani wrote in his post. “To my daughter, thank you for making us very nervous yet super anxious parents.”

The couple, who routinely guard their privacy, did not share their daughter’s name or a photo of the newborn, but did share an image of the couple holding their daughter’s tiny feet. Decoy, the pair’s beloved Kooikerhondje, made a cameo in the announcement with a small photo of the pooch on the corner of the post.

In addition to showering his family with his gratitude, Ohtani also expressed his thanks to the Dodgers and the medical staff that has been supporting the new parents.

The two-way athlete announced in December that his wife was expecting their first child. Ohtani did not specify when the baby was born.

On Friday, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said Ohtani was placed on MLB’s paternity list. Under the organization’s rules, Ohtani can miss up to three games during his paternity leave.

Phillies rip 18 hits, hang on for victory over Marlins

Phillies rip 18 hits, hang on for victory over Marlins originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Phillies’ bats sure enjoyed an 80-degree April afternoon at Citizens Bank Park. 

The Phils piled up a season-high 18 hits Saturday and just about held on for an 11-10 win over the Marlins. Even many of their outs were loud. 

Taijuan Walker started for the Phillies. He didn’t have great command out of the gates but used his splitter well and escaped a first-and-third, no-out jam in the third inning. 

The Phillies had several near misses and hard-hit balls early against Miami’s Cal Quantrill, including J.T. Realmuto’s second-inning knock off the left field wall. 

They waited until the third to post a crooked number. Johan Rojas doubled to lead off the inning, darted to third base on Bryson Stott’s grounder to shortstop and cruised home on Trea Turner’s line-drive hit to left. 

Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber’s walks loaded the bases for Nick Castellanos with one out. Harper’s walked seven times over the past five games. Castellanos produced a sac fly and Max Kepler delivered a two-RBI double to put the Phils up 4-0. 

Miami got a run back in the fourth inning, but the Phillies’ offense kept the pressure on and Quantrill couldn’t complete the fourth.

After a Bohm single, Rojas lay down a bunt. Quantrill fielded the ball and considered going to second base, but he decided against it and Rojas wound up sprinting through first without a throw. Stott ripped a double to right-center that scored Bohm, and Rojas was (successfully) hot on his heels. Turner followed with a double that gave the Phillies a 7-1 lead. 

Both the bottom and top of the Phillies’ lineup were tremendous Saturday. Rojas and Stott picked up RBI hits in the fifth. Bohm recorded his first multi-hit game of April and Rojas notched his first three-hit game of the season. Stott was 3 for 5 with three RBIs and Turner went 4 for 5 with two RBIs. 

Phillies manager Rob Thomson pulled Walker after just 56 pitches, turning to Matt Strahm for the fifth inning. Walker’s final line was four innings, one run, one hit, three walks and two strikeouts. 

He dealt with shoulder stiffness throughout the day.

“Just couldn’t really get extended too much on the glove side, especially in that fourth inning with my cutter and four-seamer into the lefties,” Walker said. “Couldn’t really get it there all the way. And we had that other long inning the next one.

“It kind of sucks because I feel like I was in a pretty good groove, getting a lot of ground balls. My splitter was working really well today. It just sucks having the bullpen have to cover for me.”

Walker’s slated to start next Friday against the Cubs and expected he’d be ready to pitch.

Carlos Hernandez had a rough sixth inning and Jordan Romano seriously struggled in the ninth, conceding six runs. The game suddenly became tense and Jose Alvarado was needed for the final out.

“I felt great out there, actually,” Romano said. “That’s the best my arm has felt in a long time. … I felt confident, honestly, in all my pitches. I don’t know. They were seeing it really well today. Everything I threw in there, it felt like they were pretty comfortable with it and obviously putting pretty good swings on it.

“But again, not exactly sure. Obviously, when I’m up in the count, need to make better pitches — 1-2, 0-2. But I still felt great out there, just got crushed.”

Romano said he’d review the video and look into whether he was tipping his pitches.

“I’ve got a lot of confidence in him,” Thomson said. “He’s got a great track record. As long as the stuff is good, you’ve got to believe in him.”

Alvarado ultimately sealed the deal. Miami’s Xavier Edwards lined out to right field, cementing the Phillies’ third win in a row. They’re now 13-8 on the season.

Sunday’s series finale will start at 1:35 p.m. The pitching matchup is Jesus Luzardo (2-0, 2.31 ERA) vs. Connor Gillispie (0-2, 6.63 ERA). 

Castellanos gets a DH day 

Castellanos served as the Phillies’ designated hitter Saturday. Schwarber played left field and Kepler slid over to right. 

Thomson has been cautious with Castellanos since he exited the Phillies’ win Thursday over the Giants because of left hip flexor tightness.

“We’re just trying to keep him off his feet for a day, limit as much running as we can. … Schwarbs is happy he gets to play (the field),” Thomson said. 

Brandon Marsh remained out with a right knee injury. According to Thomson pregame, Marsh was feeling “a little bit better” and likely would’ve been available in an emergency scenario. 

Another step for Painter 

Andrew Painter made his second rehab start Friday night for Single A Clearwater, throwing three scoreless innings. Thomson was pleased with his outing. 

“The velocity was good, he threw strikes, the secondary pitches were good. … Forty-nine pitches. Three hits, four strikeouts, no walks. It’s good,” Thomson said. 

Painter is scheduled to start next Thursday in Clearwater. He’ll again be around 50 pitches. 

Thomson said he envisions Painter hitting “120, 130” innings this season between the minors and majors, but “we don’t really know the number.” 

Ranger Suarez is set to continue his rehab progression with a start next Tuesday for Triple A Lehigh Valley. He was in Philadelphia on Saturday for a bullpen session.

Phillies rip 18 hits, hang on for victory over Marlins

Phillies rip 18 hits, hang on for victory over Marlins originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Phillies’ bats sure enjoyed an 80-degree April afternoon at Citizens Bank Park. 

The Phils piled up a season-high 18 hits Saturday and just about held on for an 11-10 win over the Marlins. Even many of their outs were loud. 

Taijuan Walker started for the Phillies. He didn’t have great command out of the gates but used his splitter well and escaped a first-and-third, no-out jam in the third inning. 

The Phillies had several near misses and hard-hit balls early against Miami’s Cal Quantrill, including J.T. Realmuto’s second-inning knock off the left field wall. 

They waited until the third to post a crooked number. Johan Rojas doubled to lead off the inning, darted to third base on Bryson Stott’s grounder to shortstop and cruised home on Trea Turner’s line-drive hit to left. 

Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber’s walks loaded the bases for Nick Castellanos with one out. Harper’s walked seven times over the past five games. Castellanos produced a sac fly and Max Kepler delivered a two-RBI double to put the Phils up 4-0. 

Miami got a run back in the fourth inning, but the Phillies’ offense kept the pressure on and Quantrill couldn’t complete the fourth.

After a Bohm single, Rojas lay down a bunt. Quantrill fielded the ball and considered going to second base, but he decided against it and Rojas wound up sprinting through first without a throw. Stott ripped a double to right-center that scored Bohm, and Rojas was (successfully) hot on his heels. Turner followed with a double that gave the Phillies a 7-1 lead. 

Both the bottom and top of the Phillies’ lineup were tremendous Saturday. Rojas and Stott picked up RBI hits in the fifth. Bohm recorded his first multi-hit game of April and Rojas notched his first three-hit game of the season. Stott was 3 for 5 with three RBIs and Turner went 4 for 5 with two RBIs. 

Phillies manager Rob Thomson pulled Walker after just 56 pitches, turning to Matt Strahm for the fifth inning. Walker’s final line was four innings, one run, one hit, three walks and two strikeouts. 

Carlos Hernandez had a rough sixth inning and Jordan Romano seriously struggled in the ninth, conceding six runs. The game suddenly became tense and Jose Alvarado was needed for the final out.

He got it. Miami’s Xavier Edwards lined out to right field, cementing the Phillies’ third win in a row. They’re now 13-8 on the season.

Sunday’s series finale will start at 1:35 p.m. The pitching matchup is Jesus Luzardo (2-0, 2.31 ERA) vs. Connor Gillispie (0-2, 6.63 ERA). 

Castellanos gets a DH day 

Castellanos served as the Phillies’ designated hitter Saturday. Schwarber played left field and Kepler slid over to right. 

Thomson has been cautious with Castellanos since he exited the Phillies’ win Thursday over the Giants because of left hip flexor tightness.

“We’re just trying to keep him off his feet for a day, limit as much running as we can. … Schwarbs is happy he gets to play (the field),” Thomson said. 

Brandon Marsh remained out with a right knee injury. According to Thomson pregame, Marsh was feeling “a little bit better” and likely would’ve been available in an emergency scenario. 

Another step for Painter 

Andrew Painter made his second rehab start Friday night for Single A Clearwater, throwing three scoreless innings. Thomson was pleased with his outing. 

“The velocity was good, he threw strikes, the secondary pitches were good. … Forty-nine pitches. Three hits, four strikeouts, no walks. It’s good,” Thomson said. 

Painter is scheduled to start next Thursday in Clearwater. He’ll again be around 50 pitches. 

Thomson said he envisions Painter hitting “120, 130” innings this season between the minors and majors, but “we don’t really know the number.” 

Ranger Suarez is set to continue his rehab progression with a start next Tuesday for Triple A Lehigh Valley. 

Villar returns to big leagues with Giants; Schmitt on IL

Villar returns to big leagues with Giants; Schmitt on IL originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Giants on Saturday made their first roster move of the 2025 MLB season.

San Francisco selected David Villar to the major league roster and placed Casey Schmitt on the IL with a left oblique strain. Jerar Encarnacion, who fractured his left hand in spring training, was moved to the 60-day IL to make room on the roster.

Just two days before Opening Day, the Giants added veteran right-handed reliever Lou Trivino to the roster and designated Villar for assignment to clear a spot on the 40-man roster. Last month, Villar cleared waivers and was outrighted to Triple-A Sacramento, keeping him as a backup option when needed this season.

For his career, Villar slashed .200/.288/.400 with 15 home runs and 40 RBI. His offensive numbers haven’t remained consistent with his debut 2022 season with San Francisco.

Last year, he started the season at Triple-A Sacramento after Matt Chapman joined the club to take the third base job. He did appear in 11 games with San Francisco, slashing .257/.270/.457 with one home run and four RBI.

His potential is undeniable, but his inconsistencies have made it difficult for him to keep a firm role in the big leagues. Perhaps this latest call-up can serve as a reminder of what he can bring to the table for the Giants looking to get back in the win column.

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Mets vs. Cardinals: How to watch on April 19, 2025

The Mets (13-7) continue their series with the St. Louis Cardinals (9-11) on Saturday at 4:05 p.m. on FOX.

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


Mets Notes

  • Kodai Senga looks to continue his strong start to the season, as he tossed seven scoreless innings last time out on April 13 against the A's
  • Francisco Lindor is slashing .333/.412/.500 with three RBI, including his walk-off HR on Friday, over his last seven games
  • After two straight hitless games, Juan Soto broke out with a clutch RBI-single to tie Friday's game in the fifth inning
  • New York relievers have combined to post a 2.10 ERA this season (third-best in the majors) with Max Kranick (1.35 ERA) and Ryne Stanek (0.00 ERA) both throwing scoreless outings in Friday's win
  • Mark Vientos homered for the second straight game (the first time of his career), extending his hitting streak to six games (tied for second-longest of career)


CARDINALS
METS

Lars Nootbaar, RF

Francisco Lindor, SS

Willson Contreras, 1B

Juan Soto, RF

Brendan Donovan, LF

Pete Alonso, 1B

Nolan Arenado, 3B

Mark Vientos, 3B

Alec Burleson, DH

Starling Marte, DH

Thomas Saggese, SS

Brandon Nimmo, LF

Nolan Gorman, 2B

Luis Torrens, C

Yochel Pozo, C

Luisangel Acuña, 2B

Victor Scott II, CF

José Azócar, CF


How can I watch Mets vs. Cardinals online?

To watch Mets games online via FOX, you will need a subscription to a TV service provider. This will allow fans to watch the Mets on their computer, tablet or mobile phone browser, or via the FOX Sports app.

ICYMI in Mets Land: Francisco Lindor's big night; Carlos Mendoza impressed with Max Kranick

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


Shaikin: Zach Neto isn't Mike Trout, but he might be capable of saving the Angels

Los Angeles Angels' Zach Neto, left, and Jo Adell congratulate each other after the Angels defeated the San Francisco Giants 2-0 in a baseball game Friday, April 18, 2025, in Anaheim, Calif. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)
Angels teammates Zach Neto, left, and Jo Adell celebrate after a 2-0 win over the San Francisco Giants on Friday night at Angel Stadium. Neto has proven to be a difference-maker for the Angels. (Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press)

This is Star Wars weekend at Angel Stadium, and on Friday the Angels activated their best player from the injured list, so the graphics on the video board pretty much wrote themselves: “Return of the Neto.”

That would be Zach Neto, not Mike Trout. It could be Trout again, but for last year and again in his season debut Friday, the Angels’ best player was Neto.

For Ron Washington, the Angels’ manager, young players earn their stripes, then they earn them all over again. On Friday, Neto batted seventh.

“When you have a superstar like Mike, when he gets going, he’s the type of guy who can carry the team,” Washington said. “We’re not expecting Neto to carry this team.”

Read more:Tyler Anderson shines and Zach Neto makes an impact in Angels' win over Giants

There is nothing controversial in that statement. Trout is bound for Cooperstown, a three-time most valuable player. The idea that a third-year shortstop would be the guy on which Angels fans were waiting did not sit well with Neto.

“I'm not the savior,” Neto said. “I'm just here to do my job.”

He might be a savior, if not the savior. As Neto completed his rehabilitation from shoulder surgery, the replacement shortstops in Anaheim batted .159 with a .372 OPS. In 2021, the last season before the adoption of the universal designated hitter, Angels pitchers batted .150 with a .377 OPS.

Neto put up 5.1 WAR last season, according to Baseball Reference, bettered among American League West players only by Oakland slugger Brent Rooker (5.6) and Houston slugger Yordan Alvarez (5.4).

Zach Neto hits a two-run double against the San Francisco Giants in the second inning Friday.
Zach Neto hits a two-run double against the San Francisco Giants in the second inning Friday. (Luke Hales / Getty Images)

You may have heard of the two players immediately behind Neto: Texas shortstop Corey Seager (5.0), winner of a World Series championship with the Dodgers and another with the Rangers; and ex-Houston outfielder Kyle Tucker, now with the Chicago Cubs, who could be the winner of a half-billion dollars in free agency in the coming winter.

“If what he did last year is his ceiling, we’re in trouble,” Washington said of Neto, “meaning that there’s a lot more.”

In his first at-bat of the season, against San Francisco Giants ace Logan Webb, Neto rocketed a 106-mph one-hopper that sent Giants shortstop Willy Adames staggering.

As the ball headed into the left-center field alley, Neto raced around first base and dove headfirst into second. The hustle double drove in Nolan Schanuel with the game’s first run, and Neto subsequently scored the game’s second run on an error by Giants third baseman Matt Chapman.

Final score: Angels 2, Giants 0.

The Angels had returned home dragging a four-game losing streak, and Trout said Neto was just what the doctor ordered. For the past week, as Neto completed his minor league rehabilitation assignment, Trout said Neto repeatedly texted him.

“He was bugging me to go to the front office and tell them to bring him back,” Trout said.

“His energy, you can feed off that. The last couple games, the energy has been down a little bit, unlike the first week and a half of the season. We’ve got to pick it up. He’s got some talent, and he knows it.”

Said Neto: “Everybody has a bad road trip. Every team is bound to have one. The Dodgers had one. And unfortunately, it was our turn. So, you know, we're just here to come back in the homestand, kind of get back on the winning side of it. And keep everything rolling.”

The season is 19 games old, far too soon to draw any conclusions, but the early signs for Trout have leaned toward the unfavorable. Of the nine players in Friday’s lineup, Trout was the only one who finished the game with a batting average below .200.

He leads the team with six home runs. But he is batting .171, and he struck out in all three at-bats Friday. In his last six games, he has two hits — both singles — with one walk and 13 strikeouts in 22 at-bats.

The Angels lead the AL in attendance, with a fireworks show and Star Wars giveaway item on deck Saturday. They are one game above .500, in second place in a division in which every team has given up more runs than it has scored.

As former major league pitcher Joaquin Andujar once said, “You can sum up the game of baseball in one word: You never know.” We don’t yet know about these Angels, but we know their chances are better with Neto.

Read more:Championship blues: Dodgers games used to be affordable family entertainment. No more.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.