Moving Teoscar Hernández in lineup pays off for Dodgers in sweeping win over Tigers

Dodgers right fielder Teoscar Hernández runs to first base after hitting a two-run double against the Detroit Tigers.
Dodgers right fielder Teoscar Hernández runs to first base after hitting a two-run double against the Detroit Tigers in the fifth inning of a 7-3 win Saturday at Dodger Stadium. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

Based on the Dodgers’ original lineup, Teoscar Hernández would have been in the dugout during the biggest at-bat of Saturday night’s game.

Originally, on a night the Dodgers gave normal No. 2 hitter Mookie Betts a scheduled day off following his battle with a stomach virus last week, switch-hitter Tommy Edman was supposed to follow leadoff man Shohei Ohtani in the batting order.

About an hour before first pitch, however, the team announced a late change.

Read more:Mookie Betts' walk-off homer in 10th keeps Dodgers undefeated: 'We just don't quit'

In the new lineup, Hernández was bumped up to second from the cleanup spot. Edman, who has been a significantly worse hitter from the left side of the plate since joining the Dodgers last year, was dropped to eighth against Detroit Tigers right-hander Reese Olson.

The switch meant that, when the Tigers intentionally walked Ohtani with a runner on third and two outs in the fifth, it was Hernández who came to the plate in what was then a tied ballgame.

Sometimes in baseball, those are the fine margins on which contests can be decided.

On cue, Hernández produced the biggest swing of the Dodgers’ 7-3 win over the Tigers in his pivotal fifth-inning at-bat, lining a two-run double inside the third-base bag to help the Dodgers extend their perfect record to start the season to 5-0 — making them just the fourth defending champion in MLB history to begin their season with five consecutive wins.

“Just kind of thinking through things, I just felt that if you slide Teo up, I felt good about that,” manager Dave Roberts explained. “And it just worked out.”

Read more:Nancy Bea Hefley, Dodgers organist who entertained fans for 27 years, dies at 89

Like the four wins that preceded it, the Dodgers’ performance was far from flawless. 

Rookie phenom Roki Sasaki failed to get out of the second inning in his first career Dodger Stadium start, struggling with his command again in a two-run, four-walk, 1 ⅔-inning outing.

The Dodgers’ bats only mustered two early runs off Olson, with Freddie Freeman hitting a solo home run in the first and Andy Pages scoring on Michael Conforto’s double in the second (despite running through a stop sign from third-base coach Dino Ebel and getting bailed out by a wayward throw to the plate).

Then, in the seventh, the Dodgers almost let the Tigers back into the game on two defensive miscues. Hernández dropped a fly ball while crashing into the wall on a running catch attempt, resulting in a leadoff triple. Two batters later, reliever Luis García created more traffic for himself by failing to cover first on a ground ball, albeit after appearing to tweak something on his pitch.

And yet, in what has become an early theme of the team’s title defense this season, the Dodgers nonetheless found a way to pull away late.

Hernández’s double gave them their first lead in the fifth. Will Smith and Edman extended it with solo home runs in each of the next two innings. And despite being called upon for more than seven innings of work, the bullpen posted almost nothing but zeroes the rest of the way, completing the club’s second-straight series sweep to open the season.

“The bullpen did a fantastic job ... and obviously the offense picked us up and scored some runs when we needed to,” Roberts said. “That's a good ball club over there. So for us to win three at home was a huge series for us.”

Like the first two nights of this home-opening series, Saturday began with another (albeit more muted) round of pregame ceremonies. Hernández, Betts and Ohtani were given their Silver Slugger Awards from 2024. One of last year’s postseason heroes for the Dodgers, Tigers pitcher Jack Flaherty, was presented with his World Series ring by a group of his former teammates on the field. The same thing happened back in the clubhouse, with Dodgers players distributing rings to members of their behind-the-scenes staff.

"I think we've been able to compartmentalize,” Freeman said. “It's been a great weekend.”

It didn’t include a great start from Sasaki, though. Just like in his MLB debut in Tokyo last week, when he sprayed the ball around with shotgun-esque command, he put the Dodgers in an early hole amid more command issues.

In the top of the first, Sasaki found the zone on just 24 of 41 pitches, fell behind on five of the eight batters he faced, and gave up two runs on three singles (one of them, a swinging bunt by Manuel Margot that opened the scoring) and two walks (the second, a bases-loaded free pass that forced in another run).

In the second, Roberts pulled him with two outs after Sasaki issued two more walks, giving him nine in less than five total innings.

Dodgers pitcher Roki Sasaki delivers during the first inning Saturday at Dodger Stadium.
Dodgers pitcher Roki Sasaki delivers during the first inning Saturday at Dodger Stadium. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

“Roki, throughout his entire career, he's been a command guy,” Roberts said of the 23-year-old right-hander, who only averaged two walks per nine innings during his four professional seasons in Japan. “Right now it's just not syncing up. So we're going to keep working on it.” 

That work, however, will have to come later.

Roberts then turned to his bullpen, counting on the group to pick up the slack in the same way they did so often in October.

“Those guys are ready for it whenever that happens,” said Smith, who caught six relievers over the next 7 ⅓ innings. “Like they say, they're dawgs down there. We're fortunate to have all of them.”

Indeed, the Tigers’ only other run scored after Hernández’s dropped ball in the seventh.

And by then, the right-field slugger already put the Dodgers in front.

Although Hernández said he didn’t realize he’d been bumped up to No. 2 spot in the batting order until he got to the dugout shortly before the game, he was fully locked in after watching Ohtani get intentionally walked in front of him.

“Any hitter that gets the guy in front of them intentionally walked, you put a little more effort and focus on the things you have to do in that at-bat,” Hernández said. “Just to do damage and help the team.”

This time, Hernández’s damage came in the form of a scorching one-hopper that snuck past Zach McKinstry at third base. Conforto, who led off the inning with a walk, scored easily from third. Ohtani, who was motoring around the bases from first, slid in safely behind him.

It already marked the fourth time this season the Dodgers managed to erase an early deficit.

And, with the help of another insurance run in the eighth — when Freeman’s RBI double scored Ohtani from second following his first stolen base of the season — the unbeaten Dodgers never looked back again.

“To go out there and play a good baseball game, get the sweep in front of our fans, while we celebrate last year,” Freeman said, “I think that was just a great job by all of us this weekend."

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Mets' Francisco Lindor not discouraged by hitless opening series: 'I've got to do a way better job'

Before the Mets received MVP-level production from Francisco Lindor for the vast majority of last season, the superstar shortstop endured an April slump that sparked the ire of fans for weeks.

Of course, it's still far too early to declare history repeating itself. But the opening series of the 2025 campaign certainly mirrored more of the worst from Lindor than the best.

A lineup built for serious damage has yet to check in, as the Mets were held to a single hit in their 2-1 road loss to the Houston Astros on Saturday night. Since the third inning of Friday's game, they've produced only two knocks, and at the center of the skid is Lindor, who went a hitless 0-for-11 in the series.

The heart of the Mets' order offered very little at Daikin Park. Aside from Juan Soto, who produced the lone hit on Saturday and reached base seven times in three games, other key contributors -- Pete Alonson, Brandon Nimmo, and Mark Vientos in particular -- combined for a measly 4-for-31 (.129).

It's no secret that Lindor, chock-full of energy and flare, has long been the tone-setter atop the Mets' lineup. Luckily, the sample size is tiny. There's no need to press the panic button or even lift up the security cover. If it provides some comfort, Lindor isn't worried about the skid either.

"I've got to do a way better job to be on base and to make things happen," Lindor said after the loss. "I think once I do that, then the offense is going to continue to get better. I feel like the guys had quality at-bats the entire weekend."

Before the game, manager Carlos Mendoza revealed that Lindor's wife is expecting their third child in the next week or two. The team has yet to learn how much time -- if any -- the 31-year-old veteran will miss.

Following the loss, Lindor was asked if it's been "tough" to play with the family news on his mind. He smiled and jokingly dismissed the notion.

"It's life, I'm sure I'm not the only one going through it. There's no excuses," Lindor said. "There was no baby last year and I was in the same spot. This is not my kid's fault. This is not my wife's fault. I own up to it. I didn't get any hits."

The Mets' offense will look to wake up on Monday in South Florida, when they begin a three-game set against the division-rival Miami Marlins. The trip back east could bode well for Lindor -- he's slashed .289/.387/.471 with five home runs, seven doubles, and 17 RBI in 31 career games at Marlins Park.

Mets fall on wrong side of pitchers' duel in frustrating 2-1 loss to Astros

The Mets wrapped up their Opening Weekend series on a sour note, falling to the Houston Astros, 2-1, in a rubber game on Saturday night at Daikin Park.

Here are some takeaways...

-- In his first at-bat, Juan Soto benefited from Daikin Park's short left field wall and, well, the Astros’ short left fielder. A towering shot that struck the manual scoreboard resulted in a stand-up double, as Jose Altuve’s leaping attempt to catch the ball was futile. Soto tagged up and advanced to third on a flyout to right from Pete Alonso, but he was ultimately stranded on the corner bag after a Mark Vientos strikeout.

-- Griffin Canning, who earned a rotation spot in spring training, didn't look the least bit fazed by his starting assignment. The leadoff single he allowed to Altuve was a line drive snagged by Vientos deep in the hole, and the long throw to first didn't arrive in time. But the defense picked up Canning moments later, as catcher Luis Torrens gunned down Altuve trying to steal second after a strikeout of Isaac Paredes.

-- Astros starter Spencer Arrighetti locked in after Soto's one-out double in the first, retiring 13 straight batters with four strikeouts through five innings. Canning matched Arrighetti's efficiency with one hit allowed -- the single to Altuve -- and four punch-outs of his own entering the fifth inning, but Houston drew first blood when Jeremy Peña took the Mets' right-hander deep for a leadoff solo home run to left.

-- Jose Siri broke Arrighetti's streak with a leadoff walk in the sixth, and his speed helped put the Mets on the board. After stealing second base with ease and advancing to third on a Francisco Lindor flyout, Siri aggressively charged home on a comebacker to Arrighetti that caught the Astros' infield by surprise once the play was made at first. Siri's bold baserunning helped knot the score, 1-1.

-- Houston managed to get the last laugh against Canning in the sixth. With two outs and a runner on first, Yordan Alvarez crushed a 2-2 slider that dented the center-field wall and brought Paredes home. The mistake pitch was Canning's last, but his Mets debut was strong. He allowed two runs on four hits and two walks with four strikeouts (87 pitches).

-- Jose Butto entered in relief of Canning and prevented further damage by striking out Christian Walker. He returned for the seventh inning, retiring the Astros in order on just seven pitches.

-- New York squandered a prime opportunity to tie the game against reliever Bryan Abreu in the eighth. Torrens led off the inning with a walk, and then Luisangel Acuña entered as a pinch-runner, successfuly stealing second with nobody out. But luck quickly turned Abreu's way, as he punched out Brett Baty and Siri, and induced a Lindor groundout. The Mets' superstar shortstop is now 0-for-11 to start the season.

-- Butto ran into trouble in the eighth, allowing a walk and a single that set up runners on the corners with nobody out. While he induced a grounder to third that resulted in a fielder's choice tag out at home, he loaded the bases with a walk to Paredes. Max Kranick was asked to clean up the mess, and he delivered with a foul out and groundout on five pitches. It was Kranick's first MLB appearance since 2022.

-- The ninth inning began with an intense rematch between Soto and Astros star closer Josh Hader, and this time, Soto reached base by walking on six straight sliders. But there wasn't a rally in the Mets' bones. Alonso popped out to shallow right on one pitch. Brandon Nimmo grounded out, pushing Soto to second. The game ended on a line drive from Vientos that found Peña's glove at short.

-- The Mets recorded just one hit -- Soto's first-inning double -- and they've produced only two knocks since the third inning of Friday's game. Overall, New York hit 0-for-8 with runners in scoring position and left four on base.

Game MVP: Yordan Alvarez

The clutch hit of the night belonged to the Astros' star slugger, even though it was his only knock in four at-bats. Call it a confidence-booster for Alvarez, who's now hitting .125 through three games.

Highlights

Upcoming schedule

With an unsual Sunday off-day to begin the regular season, the Mets (1-2) will return to South Florida for a three-game set against the division-rival Miami Marlins that starts Monday at 6:40 p.m.

David Peterson is scheduled to take the mound and oppose Cal Quantrill on SNY.

David Stearns explains his thinking about a perceived Mets’ weakness, the starting rotation

HOUSTON -- It is a straightforward question, the one asked most by Mets fans at the beginning of this promising season: folks want to know if the starting rotation is good enough.

Or, more pointedly, they want to know why the Mets did not do more to build a name-brand rotation after investing so heavily in a top offense. Clay Holmes on Opening Day, they say. Griffin Canning in Game 3. Really?

It’s a fair question -- and it’s not just the usual internet knuckle draggers asking. It’s legitimate baseball people, like the longtime major league scout who told me simply this week that “the Mets don’t have enough pitching.”

The Mets themselves disagree. Strongly. And they’re not stupid. So what gives?

On our SNY shows and in conversation, I’ve handled this question by saying that one has to assume that president of baseball operations David Stearns and his people know what they are doing. Stearns made his reputation running the Brewers as a guy who oversaw the acquisition and development of great pitching.

Those are my words, though, not Stearns’. On Saturday evening, standing in the Mets’ dugout in Houston, I asked the man himself how he would answer this oft-posited challenge to his offseason work.

Here’s how I worded the question: “Why is this rotation, which does not look like a championship-caliber rotation to the untrained eye, something that you guys feel good about?”

Worth asking, right?

What Stearns said:

“We think we have really talented pitchers,” he said. “And it's the talented pitchers that are in our rotation right now. It's the talented pitchers who are presently on the IL and it's the talented pitchers who may be in the rotation later in the year.

“A lot of what we try to guard against over the course of the season is what you can't predict, right? You can't predict things like injuries. You can't predict things like underperformance. You also can't predict breakouts, and if you lock yourself in with no flexibility, you also don't have the opportunity to take advantage of breakouts.

“The notion of a championship-caliber rotation, I think, is one that is worthy of discussion. I think if we look at the actual champions of baseball over the last however long you want to look at -- decades, 15 years, 20 years, some of them might have the Hall of Famer at the front end of the rotation, and some of them have guys who signed one-year deals and were traded midseason and all of a sudden got on the heater in September and October, and a team rode them to a World Series championship. Teams can be built in a variety of different ways. And I think successful rotations can be built in a variety of different ways.

“The last thing I'll say is like the long-term, successful rotation depends upon our ability to develop really quality starters, right? And that is what we are aiming to do. That is what the continuously successful teams at this level do, and really, that is where our focus is."

I then asked Stearns if he thought of pitching more in terms of staff than rotation.

“I think certainly in the playoffs, you do, but in building your opening day staff, you do need -- especially as MLB has cracked down on the number of pitchers and has cracked down on the roster movement we can do in season -- you do need some length out of your rotation.

“I don't think it needs to be seven innings every night, but you do need some length out of your rotation and or if not, you will go through your bullpen, you'll pay the price at some point later in the year. So I don't discount all the importance of starting pitching. In fact, I think starting pitching is really important.”

Some additional thoughts:

What I heard there were three basic elements:

1) Confidence in the pitchers who the Mets chose and the people who chose them -- Canning, Holmes, Paul Blackburn etc.

2) A desire to develop aces from within, and maintain flexibility to allow for top pitching prospects to potentially contribute later this year.

3) A related desire to keep a lane open for trade acquisitions. I strongly expect the Mets to be in on Dylan Cease and Michael King, if the Padres make them available this summer, and any other rotation rentals. They are too well-resourced and ambitious to have a passive trade deadline.

Stearns has certainly earned credibility from his time with the Brewers, when the team developed starters Corbin Burnes, Freddy Peralta and Brandon Woodruff, along with a slew of top relievers. Now with the Mets, he is operating with new budget parameters and can not only oversee the ascent of homegrown pitchers, but sign them to contract extensions rather than lose them to free agency.

We can trust that when the Mets' front office hones in on a Blackburn at the trade deadline or a Canning in free agency, they see an element that excites them. It might be a plus pitch that has just started to click. It might be a potential adjustment in their delivery that, if implemented correctly by ace pitching coach Jeremy Hefner, could unlock a level of dominance.

The Mets know they will not hit on every acquisition; the $34 million ticketed for Frankie Montas’ bank account is not looking great at the moment. But when the team chooses a pitcher who seems random to us, it is always because of a specific quality or qualities that make that pitcher stand out.

Finally: did you notice when Stearns seemed to gently challenge the premise baked into my question about a “championship-caliber rotation,” and posited that champions assume many different shapes and structures?

To his point, the mighty Dodgers operated last October with Jack Flaherty at the top of their rotation. Flaherty is a talented pitcher, but he was a trade deadline acquisition pitching on a one-year deal after posting a 4.99 ERA the year before.

This was not how the Dodgers wanted to draw it up, or how they are attempting to draw it up this year, but it worked in 2024.

Max Fried's underwhelming Yankees debut shrouded by historic offense

Yankees left-hander Max Fried never needed to stress about run support in his pinstripe debut. His new teammates crushed a franchise-record nine home runs -- four of which came during the very first inning -- in an emphatic 20-9 drubbing of the Milwaukee Brewers on Saturday in the Bronx.

But the historic offensive production didn't even help Fried register a win. The southpaw failed to complete five innings of work, as a slew of fielding errors and unlucky soft contact resulted in six Brewers runs -- two of which were earned -- by the time he was pulled with two outs in the fourth at 94 pitches.

Fried's underwhelming season debut simply took a back seat to the Yankees' onslaught. Blame it on the poor defense behind him, or the lengthy breaks in the dugout while the lineup flaunted its power. But the team's biggest acquisition of the winter didn't resemble his established ace self.

The obvious good news is that the calendar has yet to flip to April. It wasn't the performance that Fried wanted or fans expected, but it's easy to shrug off mistakes on Opening Weekend.

"I would've loved to [qualify for the win], but there were a lot of things throughout the outing that I didn't do my part in to be able to earn that," Fried said after the game. "Adding a bunch of pitches, the PFP [error] in the second inning added a bunch of pitches. I walked a bunch of guys. It wasn't a clean game. So at that point, if I wanted to be able to earn that, I should've done a lot more earlier in the game."

Fried's afternoon started on an efficient note. He induced a weak comebacker on the first pitch of the game, recorded a scoreless top frame, and watched sluggers Paul Goldschmidt, Cody Bellinger, and Aaron Judge put on a show with three straight homers on three straight pitches from former Yankees lefty Nestor Cortes.

But a 4-0 lead entering the second inning didn't provide enough comfort. After allowing two singles and a hit-by-pitch, the Brewers scored their second run on a throwing error by Anthony Volpe. Two batters later, Fried committed his own gaffe with a poor throw to first base on another soft comebacker.

A pair of errors from Pablo Reyes and one from Jazz Chisholm Jr. extended the fourth and fifth innings, and Fried ultimately exited with a somewhat unsatisfying 16-6 lead.

"He did great. There were a few plays that we could've made behind him," Goldschmidt said of Fried. "He did a good job staying focused and just continuing to attack them. It wasn't a perfect outing, by any means. We kind of hurt him on defense a couple times... It just showed a lot about his character, the type of pitcher he is to not give in."

It's no secret that the Yankees are heavily relying on Fried to take command of the starting rotation. The team lost Gerrit Cole to season-ending elbow surgery earlier this month, and when they signed Fried to an eight-year, $218 million contract in December, he assumed ace-level responsibilities.

The pressure on Fried is immense -- he's the de facto ace. But the results from Saturday aren't indicative of what's to come. The 30-year-old lefty earned two All-Star nominations during his eight-year run with the Atlanta Braves, and his 3.08 ERA over the last six seasons ranked third among starters with 800-plus innings.

Fried is slated to make his second start on the road next Friday, when the Yankees begin a three-game set against the Pittsburgh Pirates. Manager Aaron Boone isn't the least bit worried about the prized lefty, even if the anomalous offense and defense make the trip to Pennsylvania.

"Obviously we didn't catch the ball great, that's an understatement. Probably not his best command, hitting a couple of guys," the skipper said of Fried. "As great of a fielder as he is, he didn't make a play. I thought overall he threw the ball fine, we're just giving way too many outs. It's hard to get a read on the outing, but I thought stuff-wise, he threw the ball well."

Yankees flaunt revamped offense in slugfest against Brewers: 'We love our lineup'

With Juan Soto playing across town now after his one-year stint in The Bronx, the Yankees knew they had to do something during the offseason to make up for the loss of the generational 26-year-old.

That something was bringing in a cast of characters, including Paul Goldschmidt and Cody Bellinger, in an effort to lengthen their lineup and help with their depth outside of Aaron Judge. In just New York's second game of the season, those moves paid off in a big way.

Facing former Yankee Nestor Cortes and the Milwaukee Brewers in Game 2 of the regular season, Goldschmidt, Bellinger and Judge hit three straight home runs -- on three straight pitches -- off the lefty to start the game. Before most of the 46,683 fans in attendance could even sit down and take a bite out of their hot dog, the Bronx Bombers -- true to their name -- had a 3-0 lead.

"Swing first pitch," Judge said with a laugh on what was going through his mind walking up to the plate in that first inning. "The place was rocking once I got up there. I was just trying to control [my] breathing and just get a good pitch."

Good pitch he got, indeed, sending an 88-mph cutter 468 feet to left field, the farthest and loudest of the three first-inning home runs.

But it was Goldschmidt, making his first plate appearance at the leadoff spot, who got the party started with a solo shot to lead things off, just as Austin Wells, who was as unfamiliar batting first as Goldschmidt, did in Thursday's season opener. It was the 37-year-old's first hit as a Yankee.

Overall, the first baseman went 2-for-3 with a double, a walk and three runs scored, passing his first test batting leadoff with flying colors.

"It’s tough to start better than that," Goldschmidt said. "I just tried to take my same at-bat, my same mindset. Fortunately I was able to get a good pitch to hit and get it out of there."

Congratulations, Aaron Boone, you're two for two.

Fellow newcomer Bellinger followed soon after with a blast to right center field and in the blink of an eye, New York was on top, 2-0.

"That was a really cool moment," Bellinger said. "Super unique to be a part of and it was just nice to get the party started."

After hitting his first home run in pinstripes, Bellinger noted that Saturday's win was a great way for all of the newcomers to feel comfortable with their new team and get some of those firsts out of the way. Whether it be first hit with the new club, first home run, or even just first game as it was for J.C. Escarra, who made his MLB debut by pinch-hitting in the seventh inning.

Another first almost happened, too.

Following his first-inning homer, Judge hit a second home run (this one a grand slam) in the third before going yard again in the fourth for his third three-home run game, tying him with Joe DiMaggio and Alex Rodriguez for second in Yankees history behind Lou Gehrig's four.

"It’s a special group," Judge said. "Any time you get mentioned with those guys, with what they’ve done in the game and the careers they’ve had, it’s pretty special. Our story’s not done yet, so hopefully we can keep adding to those lists."

The reigning AL MVP would have three more plate appearances to try at his first four-homer game, something accomplished by just 18 players in MLB history.

In fact, Judge came a few feet away from achieving that feat after his RBI double off the right field wall in the sixth inning. Then in the eighth, facing position-player and former Yankee Jake Bauers, Judge hit another long fly ball to left field that barely left the yard but was caught.

"Nothing’s out of reach for him," Boone said. "I wanted to give him that opportunity at least."

Judge ended his day 4-for-6 with three homers and eight RBI -- quite the contrast from his less-than-stellar spring training.

As for the rest of the lineup, Wells, Anthony Volpe, Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Oswald Peraza also went deep, giving New York a total of nine home runs on the afternoon, a franchise record.

"We like where we’re at. We love our lineup, we love our depth, we love the guys that we got in this locker room and it’s gonna be fun," Bellinger said. "This is a very difficult game, but we got a lot of guys that have been there and are gonna have some fun doing it."

Rays put OF Josh Lowe on 10-day IL with strained right oblique, a year after he had similar injury

TAMPA, Fla. — The Tampa Bay Rays put outfielder Josh Lowe on the 10-day injured list with a strained right oblique.

The Rays recalled outfielder Jake Mangum from Triple-A Durham on Saturday to take Lowe’s spot on the roster.

Lowe was hurt in Tampa Bay’s opener on Friday, a year after he missed 46 games with a similar injury.

He grounded out in his first at-bat and felt discomfort when he fouled off a pitch during his plate appearance in the fifth. Lowe hit a single on the next pitch and winced as he left the batter’s box and ran gingerly to first.

The 27-year-old Lowe hit .241 with 10 homers, 34 RBIs and 25 stolen bases in 106 games last season. He had hip inflammation during spring training in 2024. He strained his right oblique and didn’t make his season debut until May 6, then was sidelined by the ailment between May 22 and June 5.

Mets' Francisco Alvarez participates in receiving drills with injured left hand

Francisco Alvarez still isn't expected to make his regular-season debut until sometime in late April, but the injured Mets catcher is continuing to make strides in his recovery.

Prior to Saturday's rubber game against the Houston Astros, Mets manager Carlos Mendoza shared a positive update on Alvarez, revealing that the 23-year-old participated in receiving drills with soft baseballs while using his surgically-repaired left hand. Mendoza simply called the workout "a good sign."

Alvarez, who fractured his left hamate bone on March 8 during live at-bats in camp, had stiches removed from his hand on Monday. Mendoza mentioned on Wednesday that baseball activities were on the horizon for Alvarez once strength work began. The latest news suggests that he's still on track to return on the shorter end of the initial six-to-eight week recovery timeline.

"Maybe six weeks," Alvarez said on March 12. "My goal is to make that as quick as possible... They said after the third week, maybe I can start hitting. It's on me. If my body takes more time than normal, maybe take eight weeks. But it's very on me. If I feel comfortable, if I feel good, I can move quicker."

Due to the injury, Alvarez was limited to just nine spring training games in which he hit .227 (5-for-22) with five walks, two RBI, and 11 strikeouts. He's also dealt with a string of bad luck to his left thumb, as he tore a ligament last April against the Los Angeles Dodgers and needed surgery that kept him out of the lineup until mid-June.

Only time will tell how Alvarez's thumb responds to additional catching and hitting activities, but the Mets are counting on his production in the heart of the lineup. He wound up playing 100 games last season, slashing .237/.307/.403 with 11 home runs, 14 doubles, and 47 RBI in 342 plate appearances.

Scherzer allows two HRs, leaves Blue Jays debut after three innings because of right lat soreness

TORONTO — Three-time Cy Young Award winner Max Scherzer left his debut start with the Toronto Blue Jays on Saturday because of soreness in his right lat muscle.

Facing Baltimore, Scherzer allowed two runs and three hits, including two solo home runs. He threw 45 pitches in three innings, 28 for strikes. Scherzer struck out one and walked none.

Earlier this month, the 40-year-old Scherzer had a spring training start pushed back because of thumb pain.

Baltimore’s Colton Cowser put Scherzer in an early hole with a 417-foot drive to center on the second pitch of the game.

Jordan Westburg’s two-out drive off Scherzer traveled 434 feet for the longest home run of his career.

Scherzer signed a one-year, $15.5 million contract with Toronto in February. He went 2-4 with a 3.95 ERA in nine starts for Texas last season, starting the year on the injured list while recovering from lower back surgery. He also had a stint on the IL with shoulder fatigue and didn’t pitch after Sept. 14 because of a left hamstring strain.

Right-hander Richard Lovelady replaced Scherzer in the fourth.

Red Sox prospect Kristian Campbell hits first career MLB home run

Red Sox prospect Kristian Campbell hits first career MLB home run originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Boston Red Sox prospect Kristian Campbell is making his presence felt.

The Red Sox rookie hit his first career MLB home run in the fourth inning of Saturday night’s road game against the Texas Rangers.

Campbell crushed a pitch over the middle of the plate and sent the ball 431 feet over the fence in left-center field:

Campbell went 1-for-3 in the Opening Day win over the Rangers on Thursday before going 2-for-4 at the plate in Friday’s loss.

Campbell entered the season as the Red Sox’s second-best prospect and the No. 7 ranked prospect in all of baseball, per MLB.com.

He’s a tremendous hitter and a quality defender. Don’t be surprised if Campbell plays a meaningful role in Boston’s success this season.

Yankees set franchise record with nine home runs, including three from Aaron Judge, in 20-9 win over Brewers

The Yankees hit a franchise record nine home runs to beat the Milwaukee Brewers, 20-9, on Saturday afternoon.

Here are the takeaways...

- New York started the game off with a splash, well ... four splashes, to be exact.

Paul Goldschmidt -- batting in the leadoff spot for the first time in his career -- Cody Bellinger, and Aaron Judgecrushed back-to-back-to-back home runs on three straight pitches from former Yankee Nestor Cortes in the bottom of the first inning. It was the first time in MLB history a team has hit home runs on the first three pitches they saw (h/t Sarah Langs).

Then, with two outs, Austin Wells joined in on the fun and hit his second homer of the year to give New York a 4-0 lead.

- It didn't take long for the Yanks to add to their lead, as Anthony Volpe hit a three-run homer in the bottom of the second inning to make it a 7-3 game. New York kept its foot on the gas, knocking Cortes out of the game and loading the bases in the third inning for Bellinger, who singled to drive in another run. Judge then dropped the hammer with a grand slam, pushing the lead to 12-3. Jazz Chisholm felt left out and hit a solo shot to join the party, upping the score to 13-3. The seven home runs through three innings is the most in MLB history.

- The Yanks continued the barrage in the bottom of the fourth inning. Bellinger drove in Trent Grisham on a sac fly and Judge hit his third homer of the afternoon, a two-run blast, to make it 16-4. That gave New York eight home runs in the game, tying a franchise record. The major league record for home runs in a game is 10, set by the Toronto Blue Jays on Sept. 14, 1987.

- Overlooked by the record-setting offense was Max Fried, who took the mound for the first time in pinstripes. After a quick first inning, Fried got into some trouble with two on and one out, and let up an RBI single to Vinny Capra. A throwing error by Volpe allowed another run to cross the plate, and then Fried gave up a single and made an error of his own to give the Brewers their third run. He struck out William Contreras with runners on second and third to escape the jam.

Fried got through the third inning unscathed, despite his second HBP of the day. He allowed a one-out double to Jackson Chourio in the fourth, and after a third error, surrendered an RBI single to Rhys Hoskins. Errors continued to plague the Yanks, as Pablo Reyes had his second and Chisholm had one to give Milwaukee runners on the corners. Chourio grounded out back to Fried, allowing the runner to score from third, and Christian Yelich drove in another for their sixth run, ending the lefty starter's day.

Overall, Fried allowed two earned runs on seven hits with two walks and four strikeouts across 4.2 innings (94 pitches).

- Bellinger's RBI single and Judge's RBI double made it 18-6 in the bottom of the sixth. Oswald Peraza pinch-hit forReyes in the seventh inning and hit a two-run homer to put the Yanks up 20-6, helping set a new franchise record with nine jacks in one game.

- J.C. Escarra made his MLB debut in the bottom of the seventh, pinch-hitting for Wells. The 29-year-old struck out swinging against LHP Chad Patrick. Escarra popped out to third in his second at-bat in the eighth inning. With the score out of hand, veteran Carlos Carrasco tossed the final two innings and allowed three runs on five hits, including a homer, with two strikeouts.

Game MVP: Aaron Judge

Judge recorded his third career three-homer game, tying him with Alex Rodriguez and Joe DiMaggio for second in Yankees history behind Lou Gehrig's four.

The reigning AL MVP finished 4-for-6 with three homers, a double, and a career-best eight RBI.

Highlights

What's next

The Yankees and Brewers wrap up their three-game series in The Bronx on Sunday. First pitch is set for 1:05 p.m.

Marcus Stroman is set to take the mound and will go up against RHP Aaron Civale.

Aaron Judge homers three times, Yankees go deep on first three pitches vs. Brewers

NEW YORK — Aaron Judge homered three times, also combining with Paul Goldschmidt and Cody Bellinger to go deep on the first three pitches from Milwaukee’s Nestor Cortes, and the Yankees tied a team record with eight home runs in taking a 16-4 lead over the Brewers on Saturday.

Judge had seven RBIs, hitting his ninth career grand slam, a solo drive and a two-run shot for his 40th multi-homer game. He hit three homers in a game for the third time.

Goldschmidt, Bellinger and Judge homered starting the first on the unusually warm 78-degree afternoon. Major League Baseball said this was the first time a team homered on its first three pitches since tracking of pitch counts began in 1988.

Austin Wells homered later in the inning as New York hit four home runs in the first inning for the first time in its century-plus history. Anthony Volpe added a three-run drive in the second for a 7-3 lead against Cortes, who allowed a career-high five home runs.

Judge’s first homer went 468 feet and he added his ninth career slam in the fourth on a 396-foot drive to left-center off Connor Thomas, a 27-year-old left-hander making his major league debut. Jazz Chisholm Jr. followed with a home run, boosting the lead to 13-3.

Judge hit a 425-foot, two-run homer to center in the fourth against Thomas.

New York’s homers tied the team record set at the Philadelphia Athletics on June 28, 1939, and matched against the Chicago White Sox on July 31, 2007.

Batting leadoff for the first time in his 15-year major league career, Goldschmidt drove a fastball 413 feet into the Brewers bullpen in left field against Cortes, who was making his Milwaukee debut following a December trade from the Yankees.

Bellinger sent a fastball over the Yankees bullpen and into the right-field bleachers and Judge drove a cutter 468 feet into the left-field second deck.

After a mound visit by pitching coach Chris Hook, Chisholm took a called third strike, Volpe grounded out and Wells hit a fastball 372 feet into the left-field seats.

Milwaukee closed to 4-3 in the second against Max Fried, who lasted 4 2/3 innings in his Yankees debut, and Volpe hit a cutter 349 feet into the left-field seats.

Wells led off Thursday’s game with a home run off Freddy Peralta, becoming the first catcher to hit a leadoff homer on opener day. The Yankees joined the 2011 Texas Rangers as the only team to lead off with a home run in its first two games. Ian Kinsler went deep starting both those Rangers games.

Cortes, a 30-year-old left-hander who pitched for New York from 2018-24, had never before allowed more than three homers in a game. He is remembered by Yankees fans for allowing a first-pitch grand slam to Freddie Freeman in the 10th inning of last year’s World Series opener that lifted the Los Angeles Dodgers to a 6-3 win, starting them to the title.

Pitching with his hair dyed blond, Cortes gave up eight runs, six hits and five walks in two innings and left with a 36.00 ERA.

Thomas allowed his first five batters to reach and allowed eight runs, six hits and two walks in two innings.

Promising signs aplenty as Phillies throw up 11 runs in win

Promising signs aplenty as Phillies throw up 11 runs in win originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

WASHINGTON — Could this be a sign of what’s to come for a healthy Bryson Stott?

A glimpse of contract year Kyle Schwarber?

A foundation for newcomer Jesus Luzardo?

The Phillies came back to beat the Nationals on Saturday for the second straight game to begin their season, surging in the middle innings after Keibert Ruiz gave Washington another early lead with a home run.

Stott, who dealt with a balky elbow for two-thirds of the 2024 season, tied the game in the fourth inning when he kept a two-run homer just inside the right-field line. He also doubled, walked twice and scored three runs. Not once last season did Stott double and homer in the same game. Both extra-base hits came with two strikes, which was a theme all throughout 2023 when he was neck-and-neck with Freddie Freeman for the most two-strike hits in the National League.

Schwarber and Brandon Marsh broke the 11-6 win wide-open with three-run homers in the top of the sixth and seventh. Both were patient frames for the Phils and examples of what can happen when the bottom of the order does its job. Nick Castellanos and Stott drew one-out walks and Marsh singled ahead of Schwarber’s three-run bomb. Castellanos and Stott walked again in the seventh ahead of Marsh’s longball.

The Phillies have derived tremendous value from the four-year, $79 million contract they signed Schwarber to before the 2022 season. Between the regular season and playoffs, he’s homered 145 times in 501 games as a Phillie while also becoming the leader of a team filled with big names.

Marsh singled twice before the homer. He and Stott are both coming off down years entering their age-27 season and their improvement will go a long way in determining how far the Phillies advance. Without much turnover in the lineup, the Phillies are relying on that sort of internal improvement.

The big sixth inning made a winner out of Luzardo, who struck out 11, tied with Jim Bunning for the second-most ever for a debuting Phillie behind only Garrett Stephenson in 1997.

Luzardo was animated walking off the mound at the end of his final inning, pumping his fist after striking out the side and stranding a runner on second base.

The Nationals whiffed on 12 of the 16 sweepers/sliders Luzardo threw and 19 of the 43 pitches they swung at overall. His velocity was up nearly two mph from last season. Luzardo averaged 97 mph with his four-seam fastball and 96 with his sinker, hitting 98 mph 11 times with 30 different fastballs of at least 97.

This was an encouraging introduction for the Phillies’ most important offseason acquisition. They acquired Luzardo from the Miami Marlins for their No. 4 prospect at the time, shortstop Starlyn Caba. Luzardo has this year and next under contract with the upside of a No. 2 starter. He was one in 2022-23 before missing ample time with a back injury in 2024.

The 2-0 Phillies look to finish off a sweep on Sunday afternoon behind Aaron Nola. It remains to be seen whether Trea Turner and J.T. Realmuto will be in the lineup. Turner was scratched an hour before Saturday’s game with a low back spasm, and Realmuto was removed for precautionary reasons with a left foot contusion in the seventh inning of a seven-run game after fouling a ball off his foot.

Promising signs aplenty as Phillies throw up 11 runs in win

Promising signs aplenty as Phillies throw up 11 runs in win originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

WASHINGTON — Could this be a sign of what’s to come for a healthy Bryson Stott?

A glimpse of contract year Kyle Schwarber?

A foundation for newcomer Jesus Luzardo?

The Phillies came back to beat the Nationals on Saturday for the second straight game to begin their season, surging in the middle innings after Keibert Ruiz gave Washington another early lead with a home run.

Stott, who dealt with a balky elbow for two-thirds of the 2024 season, tied the game in the fourth inning when he kept a two-run homer just inside the right-field line. He also doubled, walked twice and scored three runs. Not once last season did Stott double and homer in the same game. Both extra-base hits came with two strikes, which was a theme all throughout 2023 when he was neck-and-neck with Freddie Freeman for the most two-strike hits in the National League.

“That was a pitch last year that I struggled with,” Stott of his homer on a low-and-in curveball, “and just to see it come to life again two days in is awesome.”

Schwarber and Brandon Marsh broke the 11-6 win wide-open with three-run homers in the top of the sixth and seventh. Both were patient frames for the Phils and examples of what can happen when the bottom of the order does its job. Nick Castellanos and Stott drew one-out walks and Marsh singled ahead of Schwarber’s three-run bomb. Castellanos and Stott walked again in the seventh ahead of Marsh’s longball.

The Phillies have derived tremendous value from the four-year, $79 million contract they signed Schwarber to before the 2022 season. Between the regular season and playoffs, he’s homered 145 times in 501 games as a Phillie while also becoming the leader of a team filled with big names.

Marsh singled twice before the homer. He and Stott are both coming off down years entering their age-27 season and their improvement will go a long way in determining how far the Phillies advance. Without much turnover in the lineup, the Phillies are relying on that sort of internal improvement.

“I was just late, trying to get both arms moving at once and kinda slowed everything down,” Stott said of the difference last year. “Losing my barrel made it even worse. But now I feel good.”

The big sixth inning made a winner out of Luzardo, who struck out 11, tied with Jim Bunning for the second-most ever for a debuting Phillie behind only Garrett Stephenson in 1997.

Luzardo was animated walking off the mound at the end of his final inning, pumping his fist after striking out the side and stranding a runner on second base.

“I knew it was my last inning, Topper had mentioned it before,” Luzardo said. “Just excited to finish off strong. After the mistake in the second, I feel like I got into a groove in the end.”

The Nationals whiffed on 12 of the 16 sweepers/sliders Luzardo threw and 19 of the 43 pitches they swung at overall. His velocity was up nearly two mph from last season. Luzardo averaged 97 mph with his four-seam fastball and 96 with his sinker, hitting 98 mph 11 times with 30 different fastballs of at least 97.

Luzardo has always had a slider, but the sweeper is a new pitch. One more thing for hitters to think about.

“Today felt really good so we leaned on it a little bit more,” he said. “I think it’s just another way of getting guys out. Different swing types, different profiles for a hitter. It just fits into the game plan in different ways than I would use my normal slider.”

This was an encouraging introduction for the Phillies’ most important offseason acquisition. They acquired Luzardo from the Miami Marlins for their No. 4 prospect at the time, shortstop Starlyn Caba. Luzardo has this year and next under contract with the upside of a No. 2 starter. He was one in 2022-23 before missing ample time with a back injury in 2024.

The 2-0 Phillies look to finish off a sweep on Sunday afternoon behind Aaron Nola. It does not sound like Trea Turner or J.T. Realmuto will be in the lineup. Turner was scratched an hour before Saturday’s game. His back locked up while fielding a grounder. Realmuto was removed for precautionary reasons with a left foot contusion in the seventh inning of a seven-run game after fouling a ball off his foot. X-rays were negative.

“We’ll check them out tomorrow but I’m not gonna put them in any type of danger at this point,” manager Rob Thomson said. “We’ll know more tomorrow but I’m gonna be really careful.”

Letters to Sports: Dodgers display depth and talent in home opener

Los Angeles, CA - March 27: Fans arrive for the Dodgers Opening Day game with the Detroit Tigers at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles Thursday, March 27, 2025. On Friday night the Dodgers will celebrate their eighth World Series title with a Ring Ceremony. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
Fans arrive for the Dodgers' home opener against the Detroit Tigers on Thursday evening. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

I'm watching Blake Snell, who started the Dodgers' home opener, and later Tanner Scott, who pitched the eighth inning, and I'm thinking that maybe I'll see these pitchers in October. Jack Harris reported recently that Snell (who has made at least 20 starts in every full season of his nine-year career,) and Scott (who has racked up 275 appearances over the last four seasons) are durable pitchers.

Knowing the bad luck the Dodgers have had with injuries in recent years, I wouldn't bet on any Dodger pitcher still being available in October. It's fortunate that the Dodgers are very deep.

Vaughn Hardenberg
Westwood


What with the Dodgers and their fans confident of a World Series repeat — and assuming the team is already looking at bigger and flashier 2025 championship rings — I have a suggestion for MLB commissioner Rob Manfred. It’s simple and will keep baseball fans somewhat interested as the Dodgers strive to clinch a playoff spot before Memorial Day.

So, if (and that’s a big IF) they actually lose a few games, in addition to crediting them with a loss, subtract a win from them in the standings and place it in a third column called either “Oops” or “My Bad!” It could be both funny and entertaining, and trust me subtracting a few wins is not going to have any effect on the final outcome. But, it could save the baseball season from an absolute borefest. At least until the 2026 season, when the Dodgers' payroll is guaranteed to increase again to well over $400 million!

Richard Whorton
Studio City

White out

As a lifelong Dodgers fan (66 years old) I am sickened to hear the team is intending to visit the Trump White House. If they follow through with those plans I will never go to another Dodger game and stop rooting for the Dodgers. Manager Dave Roberts saying it’s an honor to visit Trump is offensive to me and to the fan base. I will be removing the Dodgers hat from my head.

Mark Bedol
Claremont


The team of Jackie Robinson, with the largest Hispanic fan base in the history of American professional sports, has lost this lifelong fan forever.

I will never root for or support the Dodgers again in any way, shape or fashion.

Charles L. Freeman Jr.
Baldwin Village


As a Dodger fan since 1958 I cannot give the team a pass for agreeing to visit the White House. Given what this president is doing to dismantle our government and the number of people he is hurting, I do not want my team to take any part in this “tradition.”

I have tickets for the game on Friday night when the players will be getting their World Series rings. If the team shows up at the White House on April 7, I will not attend another game this season and possibly forever. There has to be consequences for normalizing what Trump is doing to our country and our world.

Larry Weiner
Culver City

October musings

How soon they forget. A Plaschke quote: “They re-signed all of their free agent postseason heroes.” Except for perhaps one of the biggest, Walker Buehler, whose postseason performance was exceptional and who will be pitching for the Red Sox this season.

Jack Wishard
Los Angeles


Bill Plaschke opined the Dodgers must repeat as World Series champs this season if they want a dynasty.

I say Shohei Ohtani with his All-Star play will lead the way to another joyful October day in L.A.

Mark Sherwin
Los Angeles

Repeat performance

The article re: Freddie Freeman and Kirk Gibson, World Series game-winning home runs, reminds me of Jack Nicholson's Colonel Jessup diatribe in the movie “A Few Good Men.” “I did my job. I’d do it again.”

Oscar Rosalez
Diamond Bar

What the Halo?

Nothing concretizes futility like declaring “wait ‘til next year” on opening day more than the Angels using a position player to pitch in a blowout against the team a season removed from the dubious distinction of having lost the most games in Major League Baseball history.

Steve Ross
Carmel


Can the Angels be any more vindictive by DFA-ing Mickey Moniak because he beat them in arbitration? They released him over a difference of $500,000. With a team philosophy like that, it's no wonder they've not won anything in forever and likely won't. Maybe they don't deserve to.

Thomas Filip
Moorpark

Purple and fool's gold

Three weeks ago I wondered if the Lakers were the real deal or fool's gold. They had just won eight straight games and were on a roll.Since that time, they have gone 4-8. Looks like they were indeed fool's gold.

This team can't hold a lead. They get killed by the opponent's backcourt. They play the I-hope-they-miss defense. JJ Redick stands on the sideline as if he is taking advice from Darvin Ham. Luka Doncic disappears in the second half. LeBron James is showing his age. The bench is non-existent. And, oh yeah, they tied a record for giving up the most points at home in a non-overtime game in Lakers history. Lack of coaching. Lack of size. Lack of offense. How about just a lack of all around.

Geno Apicella
Placentia

March happiness

Alabama’s record-breaking three-point shooting display in its Sweet 16 victory over BYU brought back great memories of No. 11 Loyola Marymount’s 149-115 victory over defending champion and No. 3 Michigan in the 1990 NCAA tournament.

I attended that game in Long Beach. Starting with Bo Kimble taking and making his first free throw left-handed (in tribute to Hank Gathers), and continuing throughout — LMU was led Jeff Fryer’s and Kimble’s scintillating three-point shooting; they scored 41 and 37 — this was the most exciting non-championship sporting event I have ever witnessed.

Ken Feldman
Tarzana

Nothing original there

I have to admit, I did a double take when I saw in last Sunday's letters, not just one, but two USC detractors dredged up the same tired old jab, "The University of Spoiled Children." Well at least it gives credence to the old adage, " Clichéd minds think alike."

Joe Kevany
Mount Washington

Grappling with this issue

Penn State won the NCAA wrestling championship for the 12th time in the last 14 years. They scored more points than any team has ever scored. One of their wrestlers, Carter Starocci, became the first wrestler to win five Division 1 championships. It is a record that will probably never be broken as he was granted an extra year of eligibility due to COVID. Penn State became the second team to have all 10 wrestlers finish as All-Americans. To top it off, the seemingly invincible wrestler from Minnesota, Olympic gold medalist Gable Steveson, lost in the championship on a takedown in the last 30 seconds. Yet nary a word in The Times. Perhaps it is time for UCLA to resurrect its wrestling program so The Times might provide some coverage.

Mark Kaiserman
Santa Monica


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