Why Posey believes Harrison still has ‘bright future' with Giants

Why Posey believes Harrison still has ‘bright future' with Giants originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

CINCINNATI — When the Giants lined up at Great American Ball Park on Thursday, two of their best young starting pitchers were announced. A third was 2,000 miles away.

Kyle Harrison will start the season with Triple-A Sacramento, but the Giants still believe he’ll have plenty of opportunities to start games at the big league level this season. President of baseball operations Buster Posey said before the opener that right now they want the lefty to focus on his development. 

“We think the world of Kyle,” Posey said. “It’s a disappointment for him, but we still have belief in a bright future for him. It’s a luxury to have the amount of arms that we have, and it is difficult to have to send somebody of his stature down, but I’m hopeful that he uses this as an opportunity to just continue his growth and developing pitches and just his overall aptitude as a Major League pitcher.”

Harrison spent all of last season in the big leagues, making 24 starts while also twice going on the IL with minor issues. An ankle sprain cost him time early in the summer and he wasn’t quite right when he came back, leading to shoulder inflammation that required an offseason of rehab. He was behind all camp, and the fifth starter competition ended up being Landen Roupp against Hayden Birdsong

Harrison will start the 2025 season in a pretty strong Triple-A rotation. The Giants haven’t announced their minor league rosters yet, but Keaton Winn, Tristan Beck, Mason Black, Carson Whisenhunt, Trevor McDonald, Carson Seymour and Carson Ragsdale all could be options for the Triple-A rotation and big league appearances this year. 

Roupp ended up winning the fifth spot, and he’ll take the ball Tuesday in Houston. Birdsong is in the bullpen for now, but the Giants aren’t worried about harming his development as a starter. They believe he can stay stretched out, and there are zero concerns about the mental aspect of going back and forth. 

“He’s got the quiet confidence walking around the clubhouse, on the mound, he’s got it in his interactions with his teammates,” Posey said. “For us to have him here in the bullpen, it obviously gives us some more length in the pen along with (Spencer) Bivens. It’s electric stuff that can carry you for three, four, five innings if you need to. It’s a big weapon.”

Harrison was behind from a workload standpoint in late March, but he did show signs of progress the further he got into the spring. His velocity was back in the 93-95 mph range as the Giants prepared to head home. 

“I think he’s trending in the right direction,” Posey said. “We’ll see, we’ll keep an eye on him. Is velo important? Yeah, velocity is important. It’s not everything, but it is important and he’s moving in the right direction.”

The Top Guy

The Giants aren’t ready to announce where Bryce Eldridge will begin the season, but it appears likely he’ll be in Arizona a bit longer. Eldridge missed a lot of March with left wrist soreness, but the Giants don’t have long-term concerns. The tests came back clean, they say. 

“He just needs a little more rest,” Posey said. “He’s still feeling it a little bit, but nothing we’re concerned about.” 

Eldridge is the organization’s top prospect and the hope is that he can debut at first base at some point in the second half. He finished last season in Triple-A, but played only about a week in Double-A, and the Giants are giving strong consideration to having him return to Richmond initially. 

Trainer’s Room

Jerar Encarnacion certainly would have been in the lineup on Saturday had he stayed healthy, but instead he’ll have surgery on his hand fracture on Friday. Encarnacion was scheduled to have the procedure on Monday but there was a travel delay. The Giants will have a better idea of his recovery timetable after the procedure is done. 

Encarnacion was supposed to get a lot of the DH at-bats, and many of them will now go to Luis Matos. Wilmer Flores, the hero of Thursday’s win, will be the primary DH but also will play first base against lefties. 

Download and follow the Giants Talk Podcast

Snell wins Dodgers debut, Hernández and Ohtani go deep in 5-4 home-opening victory over Tigers

LOS ANGELES — Blake Snell won his Dodgers debut, Teoscar Hernández hit a three-run homer and Los Angeles defeated the Detroit Tigers 5-4 in its home opener Thursday.

Shohei Ohtani launched his second home run of the season and scored twice for the Dodgers. Tommy Edman also went deep.

Snell (1-0), a two-time Cy Young Award winner who signed a $182 million, five-year contract with Los Angeles as a free agent in the offseason, allowed two runs and five hits over five innings. The left-hander struck out two and walked four.

Hernández connected off Tarik Skubal (0-1) on his first pitch with two outs in the fifth, putting the Dodgers back in front 4-2. Ohtani reached on a fielder's choice and Mookie Betts walked to set up Hernández.

Ohtani's solo homer in the seventh extended the lead to 5-3.

The Dodgers improved to 3-0, having opened the season with two wins over the Chicago Cubs in Tokyo this month.

The defending World Series champions and a sellout crowd of 53,595 saw the Commissioner's Trophy arrive on the field in a blue convertible driven by rapper Ice Cube before the game.

Snell’s wild pitch led to Spencer Torkelson scoring the Tigers’ first run in the fourth.

Snell gave up back-to-back singles to Gleyber Torres and Riley Greene before walking Torkelson to load the bases in the fifth. Detroit took a 2-1 lead on Manuel Margot’s sacrifice fly.

Torkelson homered to cut the Tigers' deficit to 4-3 in the seventh. They again got within a run in the eighth on Kerry Carpenter's sacrifice fly off Tanner Scott.

Blake Treinen entered to pitch the ninth with the Dodgers leading 5-4. He put two runners on, then retired Trey Sweeney and Colt Keith for the save.

Skubal, last year's AL Cy Young Award winner, gave up four runs and six hits in five innings. The left-hander struck out two and walked one.

RHP Jack Flaherty, who left the Dodgers in the offseason to return to Detroit, makes his 2025 debut. RHP Yoshinobu Yamamoto (1-0, 1.80 ERA) goes for Los Angeles.

Austin Wells becomes 1st catcher in MLB history to hit opening day leadoff homer

NEW YORK — Austin Wells drove Freddy Peralta's fastball into the first row of Yankee Stadium's right-field short porch and landed in the history books: the first catcher in a century and a half of Major League Baseball to hit a leadoff home run on opening day.

“Obviously, not playing to break records," he said, “but it's pretty cool.”

Yogi Berra never did it. Neither did Bill Dickey, Elston Howard, Thurman Munson or Jorge Posada. Then again, until Thursday the Yankees had not had a catcher bat leadoff in any of their previous 19,451 games.

Wells' home run, which would not have been out of any other big league ballpark, started the defending AL champions to a 4-2 win over the Milwaukee Brewers.

“There’s just presence to him,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said.

With the departure of Gleyber Torres to the Detroit Tigers, Boone needed a new leadoff hitter. He told Wells before his second spring training game, against Toronto on Feb. 28, he was being moved to the top of the order.

“I didn’t really take it seriously,” Wells said. “I thought maybe he’s like just messing with me, but then it just kind of continued to happen and had success, so here we are.”

Wells led off that exhibition game with a home run against Jake Bloss. Boone prefers a left-handed hitter with righty Aaron Judge moved up to the No. 2 slot following the loss of Juan Soto to the New York Mets as a free agent.

“I get it. It’s unconventional. It's the catcher and it’s not a burner and all that,” Boone said. “I think that’s where he is as a hitter now.”

A first-round draft pick by the Yankees in 2020, Wells made his big league debut in September 2023 and was known for his bat and not his defense.

“The industry had real questions about him behind the plate, and as did we even coming up through the system,” Boone said. “It's remarkable, really is, to see where he’s at now is - to me, one of the game’s really good defensive catchers. It’s a testament to the work he’s put in.”

New York hadn't hit a catcher leadoff in 19,014 regular-season and 437 postseason games, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

Wells took two balls from Peralta, then turned on a 93.4 mph pitch at the top of the strike zone.

“Kind of exciting just to kind of getting to hit in front of Aaron Judge and try to get on base for him,” Wells said.

Judge smiled when he heard about that remark.

“Going all the way back to January, February working out with him, my man was focused and hungry and ready to go,” Judge said. “He's just the ultimate team guy. It's been fun to see him - even as a rookie he fit right into this team. He was comfortable. He was joking with us. He was having a good time, but he’s always been about the guy next to him. I think that’s where hearing the comment about `I'm just excited' to hit in front of me, that just speaks volumes of what type of person he is."

Skenes and Alcántara show early dominant flashes in hyped opening day matchup

MIAMI — Hyped as the most appealing starting pitchers’ matchup of opening day, Paul Skenes outlasted Sandy Alcántara but neither was involved in the decision of the Miami Marlins’ 5-4 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Thursday.

Pittsburgh’s Skenes is the reigning NL Rookie of the Year. Alcántara, the veteran Marlins right-hander who won the NL Cy Young Award in 2022, missed last season after undergoing Tommy John surgery.

Skenes struck out seven over 5 2/3 innings of two-run ball. The 22-year-old right-hander had a 4-1 lead but was lifted after issuing consecutive walks to Xavier Edwards and Kyle Stowers in the sixth.

“I got a little sloppy there at the end,” Skenes said. “I had to execute a little quicker in that sixth inning. Not getting into those 3-2 counts and that’s probably a different story at the end.”

Alcántara’s outing ended after he allowed a two-run single to Bryan Reynolds in the fifth that put the Pirates ahead 2-1. Alcántara gave up two runs, two hits, struck out seven and walked four.

He kept Pittsburgh hitless until Ke’Bryan Hayes’ two-out single in the fifth. Alcántara then walked Isiah Kiner-Falefa and Tommy Pham.

“We know I didn’t do my best job out there,” Alcántara said. “I was trying to give it my best but if you take away the walks from the fifth, the results would have been better.”

Even after his sluggish end, Skenes was in line for the victory in the first opening day start of his career. But Pirates relievers Colin Holderman and David Bednar allowed three runs over the final two innings that gave Miami the walkoff win.

“It’s early and there are always adjustments to be made,” Skenes said. “We’ll do that. It was a cool environment. A lot of energy in the building.”

Skenes acknowledged the matchup against Alcántara.

“He’s a really good pitcher but at the end of the day I have to go out there and pitch my game,” Skenes said.

Alcántara had not pitched since Sept. 3, 2023. He immediately proved he was ready in the at-bat against Pham to start the game. The seven-year veteran threw only fastballs that ranged between 98.1 and 99.6 mph to strike Pham out.

“I had a lot of emotion out there. I was close to crying but I’m hard to cry,” Alcántara said. “Finally, I’m back in a big league mound. Grateful to God that I returned to my mound here in Miami to compete.”

Despite his absence, Alcántara wants to quickly regain the form that made one of the sport’s workhorses. Alcántara, who reached 200 innings in 2021 and 2022 and had thrown 184 before the injury that ended his 2024 season, understands it will require a gradual progression of workload. He finished Thursday with 91 pitches.

When he was called up from the minors May 11, Skenes immediately lived up to the lofty expectations pinned on the first selection in the 2023 major league draft. Skenes won his first six decisions and finished 11-3 with a 1.96 ERA over 23 starts. He struck out a club rookie record 170 in 133 innings.

Yankees Opening Day Notes: Anthony Volpe's improved timing, Carlos Rodon's pitch mix

The Yankees began their 2025 campaign with a 4-2 win over the Milwaukee Brewers on Thursday in The Bronx. Here are some notes from Opening Day including details on Carlos Rodon's start, Anthony Volpe and more...

Anthony Volpe's improved timing

The Yankees' offense has question marks after Juan Soto signed with the Mets in the offseason. Will they score enough runs, especially with all the injuries to the starting rotation?

Thursday, Austin Wells and Volpe helped answer that question -- at least for one game -- as their solo homers powered the offense. Volpe's home run was impressive in that he turned on a 95.4 mph fastball from Freddy Peralta and went opposite field, depositing it 373 feet into right-center field. The blast gave the Yanks a 2-0 lead, and although it was Volpe's only hit -- he finished 1-for-4 with one strikeout -- Aaron Judge is seeing a difference in the young shortstop's approach at the plate.

"His timing. That’s been the biggest thing I’ve noticed since being called up in 2023," Judge explained. "He just has better timing, looks comfortable in the box. When you’re aggressive in the box that’s when you start to take those tough pitches. It just starts by having that mindset of going up there, being confident and taking your swings."

The Yankees will need Volpe, Wells and other youngsters like Jazz Chisholm and Jasson Dominguez to do a bit more this season if the team hopes to make it back to the World Series.

But the Yankees captain is confident the kids will get it done. 

"I'm excited about our young guys and what they’re going to do," he said. "Wells, Volpe, Jazz, Dominguez all those guys are going to be a big part of our success this year and it’s cool to see those guys get off to a good start."

Austin Wells' confidence behind the plate

Wells was always scouted as a bat-first catcher, but last year and this spring has shown he can be a very good defensive catcher and pitch-caller with the rotation.

"To see where he’s at now is to see one of the game’s really good defensive coaches," manager Aaron Boone said. "Ultimately, his ability and his commitment, and the one thing I always noticed, there’s just presence to him. I felt that way about him the first big league camp with us. There’s something about him you notice."

Thursday's starter Carlos Rodon echoed his manager's sentiments about the young backstop. 

"His presence behind the plate, he brings a lot of confidence in who he is," Rodon said. "This is a guy who does his homework this is a guy who spends his time at the ballpark preparing for the game ahead. He’s grown tremendously defensively, as we know. I know it’s one game, but he has a good bat as well."

Wells led off Thursday's game, becoming the first Yankees catcher to do so. He also hit a leadoff homer, making more Yankees history and finishing 1-for-3 with a walk.

Mar 27, 2025; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees starting pitcher Carlos Rodon (55) pitches against the Milwaukee Brewers during the third inning at Yankee Stadium.
Mar 27, 2025; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees starting pitcher Carlos Rodon (55) pitches against the Milwaukee Brewers during the third inning at Yankee Stadium. / Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Carlos Rodon's pitch mix

Rodon has always been known as a two-pitch pitcher. His "break and butter," as Boone calls it, are his fastball and slider. Well, the southpaw used six different pitches in his Opening Day start and it seemingly worked against a good Brewers team.

The left-hander allowed just one run over 5.1 innings while striking out seven. It was a solid start for a rotation that needs him to be that No. 2 guy behind newly-acquired southpaw Max Fried and with Luis Gil and Gerrit Cole out for long periods of time -- in the case of Cole, the whole season.

Despite that, Boone doesn't think Rodon needs to "step up" when asked about it after the game.

"He was incredibly consistent for us last year. He’s capable of it if not more so," he explained. "I just want him to really focus on his job every single day. Not just the day he pitches, now starts the process of when he gets back out there in six days. If he does that, the results will handle themselves. He has ability. That’s always my message to Carlos, just focus on chopping wood everyday."

So whose idea was for Rodon to throw six pitches? Well, Wells of course.

“Wells was great with the pitch. We get a plan together and I just roll," Rodon said. "There’s not much decision-making on my part. We get into a rhythm, he calls the pitch and I throw. We featured a lot of today and I thought he was great behind the plate." 

"[Rodon's] slider was really good today too. That’s still going to be his calling card, but I think the changeup is really good now," Boone said. "The ability to slow it down with the curveball and then introducing that sinker… He’s capable of doing that and to have real longevity in this game as a pitcher is to be able to evolve and adapt and add and subtract from your arsenal."

Rodon was asked if incorporating these new pitches makes him less predictable, and the 32-year-old said it does.

"The scouting report on me the last few years jas been four-seam’s up in the zone, slider’s below," he said. "The plan as a hitter was to cover the fastball and react to sliders.  The rounding of the repertoire and adding a few other pitches that move different and the change of speeds, it makes it less predictable especially the usage portion of it."

Opening Day Mets insights from Juan Soto and Clay Holmes

HOUSTON -- Juan Soto was clearly angry, and you love to see it. What artist is ever happy with what they make? This is the curse of greatness.

The Mets clubhouse after their 3-1 Opening Day loss to the Astros was appropriately calm, fine, confident, whatever. It’s just one game. But then there was Soto, agonizing over his at-bat against Josh Hader.

“He got me,” a downcast Soto said of the game-ending strikeout that stranded the tying runs on base. “A pretty good pitch, a slider down and away that I wasn’t expecting.”

And what was he expecting?

“His best pitch,” Soto said. “His best pitch is the fastball, so I was thinking the fastball.”

Soto rarely guesses wrong, but it happened this time. His meek wave at Hader’s slider was an aberration, and one that left him brooding.

Immediately after the obligatory discussion with reporters, Soto left the clubhouse. He did not stop to smile, schmooze, chit chat or join his teammates in the food room. The rest of the Mets had perspective: It was a noble comeback, it fell short, what are you gonna do, let’s eat.

Soto was just like, dammit. I’m going home. He’s probably still thinking about it.

HOLMES WAS ALSO REFLECTIVE

In spring training, Clay Holmes threw his vaunted sinker 34 percent of the time. The former All-Star reliever was a starting pitcher now, and featured a wide array of pitches: four-seam fastball, sweeper, slider, cutter, changeup.

But when the bell rang for the regular season, 49 percent of Holmes’ pitches were sinkers. He threw the changeup -- the big new pitch that wowed Mets officials in February and March -- just four times. This was partly because the Astros are a righty-heavy offense, and Holmes’ changeup works best against lefties, but it was also because Holmes reverted to his comfort zone.

Spring training is not big league game speed. Spring training is when you throw whatever whenever, and try to sharpen the pitches. The regular season is when you have to sequence those pitches in a way that deceives and defeats batters. This is new for Holmes.

“Maybe the second time through [the lineup] there was room for the changeups more, but that’s something we’ll feel out more and learn as we go,” Holmes said.

Imagine yourself in this situation: Sinkers made you a star. Sinkers are your path toward success. You’re in the intensity of the moment, and what are you going to do? Probably what you’ve always done.

Another question that followed Holmes into his transition to the starting rotation was his ability to hold his command for multiple innings. This requires mental and physical endurance beyond what a reliever needs to find.

A veteran scout watching from the stands said that Holmes’ “delivery opened up front side a little more [mid-game, meaning that his] legs probably got tired.”

Holmes said that he lost his command, and probably some stamina, in the second and third innings -- but regained them in the fourth. This is a positive indicator. Now he knows that he can lose it and get it back in the same game, a luxury that closers do not have.

Plaschke: Honoring past, dominating present, unbeaten Dodgers shine in home opener

The Dodgers marched in from center field on a blue carpet. The Commissioner’s Trophy cruised in from the parking lot in an icy blue convertible.

The championship flag was raised by the owners. The championship sign was unveiled by two fire department officials.

The pregame festivities before the Dodgers’ home opener at Chavez Ravine was nicely rolling along Thursday when suddenly, appropriately, in its final moments, sweet became spectacular.

The ceremony finished with a homer from the guys who hit the homers.

Gibby actually met Freddie.

Moments after Freddie Freeman and his family were honored for his Game 1 game-winning grand slam in last year’s World Series, out of the Dodger dugout popped Kirk Gibson, the Game 1 homer-hitting hero of 1988.

Read more:Shohei Ohtani hits one of Dodgers' three homers to beat Tigers in their home opener

Gibson walked to the mound. Freeman walked behind home plate. Gibson tossed him a pitch. They hugged. The crowd roared in surprise and appreciation. Goose bumps everywhere.

As the Dodgers’ mascot and trophy chauffeur Ice Cube once famously said, “Today was a good day.”

For those wondering what the defending champions can possibly do for an encore, they began to answer that question Thursday on a perfectly choreographed return to town in front of a sellout crowd that screamed like it was still guzzling last October’s champagne.

On the field, their shirts and caps adorned in gold lettering honoring their championship, the Dodgers remained untarnished with a comeback 5-4 win over the Detroit Tigers. Just like so many times last season, big hits powered the victory. And just like so many times, they came from Teoscar Hernández and Shohei Ohtani, who homered in the fifth and seventh innings, respectively, to help the Dodgers beat defending AL Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal.

Three games, three wins, and you have to ask … 162-0 anyone?

Off the field, the organization classily honored their present with a bow to their past, bringing Gibson back for a rare appearance that reminded their enduring fan base why they keep coming back opener after opener.

“I thought the ceremony was fantastic... we nailed it,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said.

The Dodgers' 2024 World Series sign is unveiled at Dodger Stadium before the start of the 2025 home opener Thursday.
The Dodgers' 2024 World Series sign is unveiled at Dodger Stadium before the start of the 2025 home opener Thursday. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

It was particularly special for fans such as 92-year-old Phil Brooks, the retired physician attending his 60th consecutive home opener, more than half a century experiencing rebirth from the field level.

Brooks was wearing a faded 20-year-old Dodger jacket, but his passion was undimmed.

“I just love the home opener,” he said. “It’s a renewal, when all hopes are possible.”

Like many Dodger fans, this is a tradition Brooks has passed on to his family, as he was accompanied Thursday for the 40th consecutive opener by his son, Stan. During the rest of the season Stan brings his three sons to the games, prepping them for the time when they will take their destined spot in the home opener seats.

“I’ve loved sharing this day,” Phil said. “Every year is the beginning of new hopes and dreams.”

Dodger Stadium was filled with both for a team that had already swept its first two games against the Chicago Cubs in Tokyo. While those first two games counted in the standings, they really didn’t count in the soul, which was newly refreshed in a home opener that featured stars familiar and new.

Read more:Shaikin: Apple's documentary on Dodgers provides 'all-access' look at World Series run

Tommy Edman, the hero of last fall’s National League Championship Series, blasted a second-inning homer.

Hernández, who the Dodgers smartly retained as a free agent this winter, hit a three-run homer in the fifth inning after an Andy Pages single and a Mookie Betts walk.

Ohtani, whose bat understands big moments better than any in baseball, clinched the win with a solo blast in the seventh.

“It was amazing,” Hernández said. “It was a great feeling to be back at Dodger Stadium.”

Then there were the new kids, starting with Blake Snell, the two-time Cy Young winning starter who signed a five-year $182-million contract in the offseason. He was frustrating but efficient, walking four and loading the bases twice but eventually yielding two runs in five innings for the win. Snell was eventually followed by a shaky one-run inning from new reliever Tanner Scott, who was in the dugout when last season’s World Series-clinching hero Blake Treinen finished it.

“I’ve got a lot to learn... a lot to improve on,” Snell said.

No matter who was starring, every good Dodger play was greeted with a roar that rang of familiarity. This is how Dodger Stadium sounded last year. This is why the Dodgers have such a powerful home-field advantage.

“The fans, just feeling the energy and how much the fans love the team... while I was getting ready I could feel how encouraging they were before the start, how much they showed love to me, that was pretty cool,” Snell said. “Then you go out there and you want to do everything you can to win.”

These fans deserved one more chance to celebrate the title. This opening weekend series, which features a Friday ring ceremony, gives them that chance.

Dodgers fan George Serrano, center, cheers as F-35s and F-15s fly over Dodger Stadium before the home opener Thursday.
Dodgers fan George Serrano, center, cheers as F-35s and F-15s fly over Dodger Stadium before the home opener Thursday. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

"I'm telling you, I just think that our fan base has waited a long time for this kind of culmination," Roberts said. "It was a huge offseason for the organization, for the club, and then you kind of go to Tokyo and get a chance to be received in Japan like we were. And all the while, our fans here are just watching in anticipation for us to come back here. There's just a lot of excitement and traction, momentum, whatever you want to say, with the Dodger fan base. Our players feel it."

The Dodgers' loud homecoming emphasized not only the Dodger muscle, but the strength of their fans. 

"Huge advantage,” Roberts said. “You can talk to any relief pitcher that faces us in the late innings, seventh, eighth and ninth inning, and they feel the pressure, and they feel it when the game's on the line. So I would say probably the biggest advantage is when we're hitting in the bottom half of the inning in the later innings."

The home opener ended early Thursday evening with the sweetest noise of all.

Welcome back, Randy Newman.

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

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Clay Holmes' first foray into Mets' starting rotation suggests work-in-progress

So Clay Holmes made his first start for the Mets on Thursday and he was more meh than masterful against the Houston Astros. His sinker blipped in and out like spotty WiFi and he was generally too wild, all while he was navigating the complexities of a new job. 

Indeed, Holmes’ transition from reliever to starter is still a work in progress, even after a glossy spring camp that had blue-and-orange hopes soaring. Understatement alert: Nothing in the major leagues is easy. Maybe we should’ve expected this, even in the afterglow of his camp. 

Still, there were some moments for Holmes and even those stray glimmers might offer some assurance that Holmes-to-the-rotation, one of the biggest Met pitching moves of the offseason, can work. 

Here’s one of the major pluses for Holmes – the insane sweeper he threw to Jose Altuve in the first inning for strike three. Altuve, a future Hall-of-Famer, flailed wildly at the 82.4 mph pitch, which broke abruptly as if Holmes were steering it with a remote control. It wound up in the left-handed batter's box and Altuve wound up walking back to the Astros bench.

Holmes had set up the finishing pitch with a sinker outside for a called strike and then a swinging strike off a sinker that veered in on Altuve. Altuve, a three-time batting champ, was primed for a big breaker outside and Holmes executed it perfectly. 

In the second inning, with two runners on, he struck out Altuve again, battling back from being down in the count, 3-1, and putting Altuve away with a sinker in. In the third, he caught Yordan Alvarez, one of the game’s most dangerous hitters, looking at a backdoor sweeper that grabbed the outside corner for strike three.

All nifty pitches. Overall, though, Holmes, who was pitching on his 32nd birthday, allowed three runs (two earned) and five hits in just 4.2 innings. He struck out four and walked four – too many – and hit a batter. He threw a career-high 89 pitches (53 strikes). If you think this matters this early, his ERA stands at 3.86. 

All the hits he allowed were singles, though there was some hard contact. Holmes knows he succeeds, as most pitchers, by limiting an opponent’s slugging. Thursday, that advantage was torpedoed by his walks. “Walks that didn’t need to happen,” as he put it to reporters in Houston. 

Maybe, he noted, there were times he was thinking too much. 

And over-relying on an old friend – his sinker. The plunging pitch helped him bloom into one of MLB’s true ground-ball monsters as a reliever. It’s a big reason he was a two-time All-Star relief pitcher for the Yankees. Maybe it was the familiar weapon he counted on too much on a day it wasn’t working. 

Experience should help him streamline his work as a starter. After all, now he has real-time competition data to take into his five-day break in between starts. 

Not that spring training or his relief experience has no application, but now that Holmes has banked his first start since his rookie year (2018) with the Pittsburgh Pirates, he’s got more of a sense of how a starter must attack a lineup and what pitches from his arsenal to use and when. He’ll continue to learn about the intricacies of preparing for a start while sorting through days of waiting for another chance.

The Astros used a righty-heavy lineup against Holmes, which made him think he should perhaps shy away from the kick-change that became such a buzz pitch in camp. He only threw four and only one of those was a strike. But his sinker wasn’t cooking enough to be a weapon against all those righties. In some cases, Holmes said, the sinker was the right pitch to throw in a situation, but they ended up too plump, up high in the strike zone.

Does that fit with his self-evaluation that he, at times, might’ve been thinking too much? Perhaps. Maybe that’s something he can learn from. And he knows, despite his 0.93 ERA in spring, that he’s got plenty to figure out about his new gig. That’s another reason to think he can succeed at this. 

“It’s different than spring training,” Holmes said of his first real start in years. “It’s definitely a learning process.”

Shohei Ohtani hits one of Dodgers' three homers to beat Tigers in their home opener

LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 27: Los Angeles Dodgers two-way player Shohei Ohtani (17) is introduced.
Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani smiles during pregame player introductions before a 5-4 win over the Detroit Tigers on Thursday at Dodger Stadium. Ohtani hit a home run in the seventh inning to provide a key insurance run. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

The 2025 Dodgers looked a lot like the 2024 Dodgers on Thursday.

Just with gold lettering adorning their World Series championship jerseys.

In a 5-4 win over the Detroit Tigers in their home opener, this year’s Dodgers produced all the same hallmarks of last season’s title-winning club.

Timely offense, epitomized by Teoscar Hernández’s go-ahead, three-run home run in the fifth inning off reigning American League Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal, and Shohei Ohtani’s solo blast in the seventh for a key insurance run.

Read more:‘Generational upgrade.’ Inside Dodgers’ offseason renovations to their home clubhouse

Starting pitching that was just good enough, with two-time Cy Young winner Blake Snell limiting damage in a five-inning, two-run debut with the team.

And effective relief from the bullpen, which nursed a narrow lead to the finish line for a home-opening win and 3-0 start to the Dodgers’ championship defense.

Thursday was always going to be about 2024 more than 2025.

Over a 30-minute pregame ceremony, the Dodgers raised a “2024 World Champions” banner up the center-field flagpole, unveiled a new “2024” sign next to their other seven World Series plaques in right field, and were delivered the Commissioner’s Trophy by Ice Cube — via a Dodger blue Chevrolet Bel-Air the hip-hop artist drove across the warning track.

Fans cheer as recording artist Ice Cube arrives at Dodger Stadium in a classic convertible.
Fans cheer as recording artist Ice Cube arrives at Dodger Stadium in a classic convertible with the 2024 World Series trophy before the start of the Dodgers' home opener Thursday. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

To commemorate their title, the Dodgers also wore special gold-trimmed jerseys and caps, just as they will again Friday when they are presented their World Series rings.

And if all that wasn’t enough, the ceremonial first pitch came with a fitting twist. Kirk Gibson, the walk-off hero of the club’s 1988 World Series, took the mound to throw the ball. Freddie Freeman, the walk-off hero of last year’s Fall Classic against the New York Yankees, squatted behind the plate to catch it.

The accompanying roar from the early arriving Dodger Stadium crowd wasn’t quite to the level of either man’s iconic October home run. But for a hazy afternoon in late March, it was deafening nonetheless.

The Dodgers’ goal is to be back in the World Series, aiming to become Major League Baseball’s first repeat champion — and undisputed dynasty — since the New York Yankees of 1998 to 2000.

But first they will have to tackle another grueling 162-game schedule. So far, they’re off to an unblemished start.

Dodgers pitcher Blake Snell delivers during the first inning Thursday against the Tigers.
Dodgers pitcher Blake Snell delivers during the first inning Thursday against the Tigers. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

After sweeping their season-opening series against the Chicago Cubs in Tokyo last week, the Dodgers faced a new task on home soil against Skubal, the 28-year-old left-hander who rolled to last year’s Cy Young with an 18-4 record and AL-leading 2.39 earned-run average.

For four innings the Dodgers couldn’t crack him, a second-inning home run from Tommy Edman representing their only scoring.

Snell, the biggest star of the Dodgers’ half-billion offseason spending spree, was less clinical in his first Dodgers start. Though all five hits he gave up were singles — most of them hit softly — the $182-million star struggled to find the strike zone, walking four and putting himself under constant stress.

Snell stranded runners at second and third in the second inning, then another at third base in the top of the third. But with the bases loaded and two outs in the fourth, he spiked consecutive two-strike curveballs, the second bouncing all the way to the backstop to plate a run. In the fifth the Tigers loaded the bases again with two singles and a walk, setting up Manuel Margot for a sacrifice fly to center.

It was an imperfect outing for Snell, who despite owning two Cy Youngs still is known for a lack of consistent efficiency, having topped 130 innings just twice in his nine-year career.

But on this loaded Dodgers team, his ability to limit damage — the Tigers were 0 for 9 against Snell with runners in scoring position and 0 for 15 on the day — was enough.

Just like in the latter stages of last season, when Hernández punctuated his bounce-back, All-Star season with a penchant for clutch hitting that continued into the playoffs, manager Dave Roberts bumped Hernández ahead of Freeman in Thursday’s batting order, putting the right-handed-hitting slugger third against a left-handed starter, and the left-handed-hitting Freeman fourth.

“I just like it,” Roberts said before the game. “There's a Teoscar tax, to get through Freddie the third time.”

Teoscar Hernández celebrates after hitting a three-run home run in the fifth inning Thursday against the Tigers.
Teoscar Hernández celebrates after hitting a three-run home run in the fifth inning Thursday against the Tigers. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

Indeed, with two on and two outs in the fifth, Skubal paid it on a first-pitch fastball, leaving a 96-mph heater over the heart of the plate that Hernández blasted to center, turning a 2-1 deficit into a 4-2 lead.

Two innings later Ohtani answered a Spencer Torkelson solo homer in the top of the seventh, the Japanese star's second long ball of the season just three games in.

And after Tanner Scott and Blake Treinen combined to close out the game in the eighth and ninth innings, respectively, Dodger Stadium erupted in the same way it did so often last fall, celebrating a home-opening victory from a club beginning another long march toward World Series glory.

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, Juan Soto discuss game-ending strikeout against Josh Hader: 'He just got me'

You could not have scripted it any better if you were the Mets.

After struggling to get any offense going against Astros starter Framber Valez, the Mets had prized offseason acquisition Juan Soto up with a chance to steal Opening Day from Houston.

Astros closer Josh Hader had a rocky start to the ninth, allowing the Mets to load the bases with no outs. After scratching across a run, the Mets were down to their final out with men on the corners for Soto.

Soto worked the count in his favor 3-0 before taking a get-me-over slider. Hader threw a 95 mph fastball up in the zone that Soto fouled back. The 26-year-old slugger looked primed and ready to do something special. He’s done it multiple times before in his career, including in the postseason for the crosstown rival Yankees a year ago.

But Hader’s sixth pitch of the at-bat was an 86 mph slider that went west to east outside of the zone. It's a pitch that we've been accustomed to seeing Soto, and his unreal eye, scoff at but instead, he swung weakly at the offering for strike three, ending the Mets’ rally and the game

“Pretty nasty pitch there by Hader,” manager Carlos Mendoza said of the at-bat after the game. “That 3-1 fastball, [Soto] put an A-swing there and just missed it. Hader’s pretty good too. He got him this time with a pretty nasty slider there.”

“He’s one of the best closers in the league,” Soto said of his ninth-inning at-bat. “His stuff is nasty, everything he do. And he’s really smart on the mound. That’s why he’s been so effective.”

Soto went into the at-bat 2-for-4 in his career against Hader, so he had some familiarity with the southpaw so when he was asked what he was looking for on that final pitch, Soto said plainly, “His best pitch. His best pitch was the fastball and I was sitting fastball.”

“Everyone was like ‘Let’s get Juan up and see what happens,’” Thursday’s starter Clay Holmes said of the feeling in the dugout in that ninth inning. “More times than not we feel good about it… At the end of the day, if we have Juan up and a chance to win the game, you like your chances.”

“I was expecting to be up in that moment, in that situation,” Soto said. “[Hader] let that ball go on the last pitch and he got me. It was a pretty good pitch, down and away. It happens.

"We all want to do something in a big spot. We all want to get that knock and bring the runs in and try to help the team either way. For me, I don’t mind taking a walk right there. Pete [Alonso] behind me and he’s a really good power hitter...He just got me in that situation."

Soto finished the day 1-for-3 with two walks, showing how he can help this Mets offense with his ability to get on base at an insane clip. And that’s what Mendoza takes away from Soto’s first official game with the Mets…along with the fact that he knows his star has a great chance to reverse the result next time he’s in that situation.

“As a competitor, he always wants to come through,” Mendoza said. “I thought he had some good at-bats today and even on that one. He got 3-0 and then 3-1, that pitch he got there he just missed it. And then pretty good pitch [on 3-2]. He’ll come through.”

And there’s no reason not to feel that way. Soto is historically a clutch hitter, so Thursday was just the exception to the trend. 

Entering Opening Day, Soto is a career .294 hitter and has smashed 17 home runs with two outs and runners in scoring position. Last season, when he finished third in AL MVP voting with the Yankees, he hit .375 with seven home runs in that same situation.

Despite the disappointment, Soto and the Mets understand it’s just one game and that there is good to come from the Opening Day loss. Despite being outmatched by a great starter, the team clawed its way back in the later innings, a hallmark of last year’s rollercoaster season, and now Soto is along for the ride, and is happy to be on it.

“I was expecting to win the game but it’s not how we wanted,” he said of his Opening Day experience with the Mets. “They are a really good team over there. For me, It was a good experience, these guys are amazing we’ve been having a good time since spring training we just have to bring that all the way.”

Yankees' feel-good Opening Day win tested by new closer Devin Williams

Devin Williams was one more poor pitch from coming out of the game or blowing his first save opportunity and ruining an otherwise outstanding Opening Day for the Yankees

The bases were loaded and the right-hander had to feel as if the roof was caving in on him as his old team, the Milwaukee Brewers, were making his job difficult, especially in not chasing the changeup that has made him one of the most dominant relievers in baseball the last few years. 

In the end, however, Williams found a way to avoid disaster and get the job done, limiting the damage to one run while striking out the last two batters even as his pitch count climbed into the 30s. 

And so afterward manager Aaron Boone was quick to smile at his press conference and say, “I love that he didn’t break. He was in a corner there but he kept making pitches. It’s not always easy but we know how good he is.”

The result was that Williams and the Yankees escaped with a 4-2 win on Opening Day in the Bronx, a win that offered reason for them to feel good about their ballclub after their injury-plagued spring. 

There was Carlos Rodon, pitching like at least mostly like an ace in the absence of Gerrit Cole, dominating the Brewers over five innings before a couple of walks elevated his pitch count and knocked him out of the game. 

There was Austin Wells, the newly-minted leadoff hitter, making all sorts of history, from becoming the first Yankee catcher ever to lead off to becoming the first catcher in the majors ever to hit a leadoff home run on Opening Day. 

And there was the depth of the bullpen on display, as Tim Hill, Mark Leiter Jr., and Luke Weaver got eight outs while allowing only two baserunners before things got hairy in the ninth with Williams. 

“A great team win,” Wells called it. “We had so many good things happen.”

Intriguing as well, starting with Rodon. 

Boone was candid even before the game, talking about Rodon’s difficulty to adapt to pitching in such a pressurized environment after signing his big contract two years ago with the Yankees.

“As rough as his first year was,” Boone said, “that could have derailed a lot of people. But he really leaned into that. He connected with the people he needed to connect with and developed a really good routine to focus on the task at hand.”

Boone admitted that controlling his emotions on the mound has been the most difficult part for Rodon, and as such the manager was looking at the season-opening start as a test of just how far the lefty had evolved as a Yankee.

So after Rodon delivered his strong 5 1/3 innings that included seven strikeouts and only those two sixth-inning walks, Boone was beaming. 

“He was really in command of his emotions,” the manager said. “If he does that he’s capable of that every time.”

Boone also made the point that Rodon has expanded his repertoire since coming to the Yankees mostly as a fastball-slider guy, and has weapons to make him a much more complete pitcher. 

“The changeup is a very important pitch to him now," Boone said. "To have longevity as a pitcher you’ve got to be able to evolve, and he’s doing that.”

As for Wells, the first-inning home run was quite a jump-start to his career as a leadoff hitter, a slot for which Boone thought he fit well because of his on-base percentage and his aura, if you will, even as a young player. 

“There’s just a presence about him,” Boone said. “Something you notice right away. I think he’s going to be one of the best two-way catchers in the league.”

Perhaps, but Wells admitted he didn’t believe Boone was serious when the manager approached him about it in spring training. 

“I really thought he was messing with me,” Wells said. “But then I did it, and it continued, and here we are. I’m good with it.”

Together with a home run by Anthony Volpe, a blast off the right-field wall by Ben Rice, and Wells’ first-inning blast it was a statement of sorts about what it will take for the 2025 Yankees to win big. They’re going to need breakout years from their young players, including Jasson Dominguez as well, if this team is going to have enough offense to overcome the loss of not only the injured Giancarlo Stanton but the departed Juan Soto

In that sense it was a feel-good day at Yankee Stadium, with things falling into place nicely for eight innings, setting the stage for Williams, the closer for whom they traded with these Brewers. 

Then suddenly a quiet came over the Stadium as Williams struggled. Nerves likely played a part but there was also the question of lingering scar tissue from that Pete Alonso home run last October that Williams gave up to blow the wild-card series against the Mets.

Disaster loomed, to the point where Boone went to the mound to take Willliams’ temperature and give him some rest, worried that he might have to pull him. 

“But he kept making pitches,” Boone said. 

Finally he began getting results: a sac fly, then he struck out Jackson Chourio swinging at a changeup, and after going to 3-2 on Christian Yelich, knowing he was coming out of game soon as his pitch count sat at 35, Williams reached back and blew 95 past Yelich for a strikeout to end the game.

Afterward Williams called it “a weird day” facing his old teammates, and thought their familiarity with him worked to their favor. 

“My command wasn’t great but they laid off some tough pitches,” he said. “They really made me work for it. But I just focused on making pitches. I know there are more eyes on me here with the Yankees but I wasn’t thinking about that on the mound. I’m pretty laid-back. I was able to get the job done.”

He didn’t break, as Boone put it, and maybe that bodes well for both him and the Yankees this season. On this day, anyway, it was the last bit of positivity to make these Yankees believe they can have a special season, injuries and all.

Mets’ Luisangel Acuña makes up for Opening Day error with terrific late-inning at-bat: ‘That’s what you want to see’

Luisangel Acuña has a big opportunity early on this season.

With starting second baseman Jeff McNeil sidelined for the first couple of weeks with a mild right oblique strain, the Mets will turn to Acuña and Brett Baty to split time in his place until he’s ready to return. 

While Baty is expected to see the bulk of the opportunities after his monster showing during spring training, it was Acuña who received the start for the Mets’ Opening Day matchup against Astros left-hander Framber Valdez

Things, however, didn’t quite begin as planned -- as the 25-year-old went hitless in each of his first three at-bats and made a costly error in the third when he rushed a throw on what should’ve been a routine inning-ending double play. 

Acuña had plenty of time to throw out slow-footed catcher Yanier Diaz, but instead, his throw sailed way past Pete Alonso and into the Mets’ dugout, prolonging the inning and bringing home the third run of the game. 

“It was just a bad throw, he had time and just threw it away,” Carlos Mendoza said. 

But the youngster did ultimately make up for it as the game went on -- recovering with some slick plays in the field and then putting together one of the best at-bats of the afternoon against Astros closer Josh Hader in the top of the ninth.

With the Mets still trailing by three and two men on with nobody out, Acuña fought off pitch after pitch from the All-Star left-hander as he battled his way to a 12-pitch walk, loading the bases and giving the top of the order an opportunity.

Hayden Senger then struck out in what was his first career at-bat and Francisco Lindor drove in a run with a sacrifice fly, before Juan Soto chased a 3-2 slider way out of the zone to strand the tying run on base. 

The comeback effort fell short and the Mets were defeated on Opening Day for the second consecutive season, but the skipper was still encouraged by the young slugger’s impressive late-inning at-bat. 

“That’s what you want to see,” Mendoza said. “Especially out of a young player -- he’s 0-for-3, he already made an error, he’s facing one of the best closers in the game. For him to have an at-bat like that says a lot. He showed us that ability to move on to the next play, the next inning, the next at-bat.”

After first Mets start, Clay Holmes ready to 'build off this and keep moving forward'

If Clay Holmes' Opening Day start taught the Mets anything, it's that converting a reliever into a full-time starting pitcher is going to take a lot of work.

Now, it wasn't a terrible start for Holmes who went 4.2 innings against the Houston Astros in New York's 3-1 loss on Thursday, but it also didn't come as seamlessly as it did for the right-hander during spring training where Holmes looked untouchable.

Overall, Holmes allowed two earned runs on five hits. However, he walked four (and hit a batter), adding plenty of traffic on the basepaths and forcing him to throw extra pitches which didn't allow him to go deep into the game.

"I think the big thing was the walks," Holmes said about his first outing. "... I think if those walks were limited then we have a lot better chance at winning that game."

He continued: "Obviously the walks, they were not at good times. They were not good walks, all of them really. I think part of it was there’s a lot of new, maybe I’m thinking too much versus just attacking."

Despite making five starts during the spring and totaling 19.1 innings -- and looking dominant in the process -- Thursday's start was Holmes' first in the majors since his rookie season in 2018. Since then, the 32-year-old appeared in 300 games, all as a reliever, before taking the mound in the first inning against the Astros.

And even after catching up to speed during the trial run during camp, making a start in a MLB game (especially Opening Day) is a different beast entirely.

"I mean it’s different than spring training. You’re facing a lineup one through nine where they have a gameplan, there’s a lot more scouting both ways," Holmes said. "It’ll definitely be a learning process on how you navigate that, what pitches I can go to, how I can use my full arsenal, all those types of things and kind of building trust with it."

Facing a majority right-handed lineup, Holmes stuck with his sinker, his bread and butter pitch as a reliever, and hardly threw any changeups. But with a larger arsenal at his disposal and facing a lineup more than once through, Holmes will need to learn to trust some of his other pitches in big spots as well.

It's another sign that transitioning from the bullpen to the rotation can be difficult. Not to mention the difference in stamina required to pitch deeper into games, something Holmes has already discussed as being different for him.

"It’s a different approach to the game, it’s a different level of endurance," he said. "The more I get under me the more I’ll start to feel that and handle it."

As mentioned, Holmes' outing wasn't terrible and there are certainly positive things that can be taken away and built off of. One thing he referenced was being "able to limit the big innings."

The Astros scored one in the second and two in the third, but one of those came thanks to a throwing error by Luisangel Acuña that should've ended the inning but instead brought home a run. In fact, if New York's offense wasn't stymied by Framber Valdez's seven innings of work, the Mets had a real good chance of winning the game.

They came close in the ninth, loading the bases with nobody out and eventually sending Juan Soto to the plate as the go-ahead run. Soto struck out and finished his first game in blue and orange by going 1-for-3 with two walks.

"I think there’s gonna be a lot of growth and learning, especially here early on," Holmes said. "I think figuring out the things that I really need to nail down, how I want to attack lineups, how I want to use the arsenal, all those things.

What the prep looks like in between outings, the bullpens, the workload, what feels good. All those types of things, it’s gonna be important to assess and continue to build on where I’m at."

As for starting on Opening Day, the righty was thankful for the opportunity and will cherish the "special" moment.

"It’s a cool moment," Holmes said. "I don’t know if I ever pictured myself in this moment, but to be able to take it in, try to enjoy it as much as I could. It was special. It was cool to take it in, but we’ll build off this and keep moving forward."

Rockies at Rays Prediction: Odds, expert picks, starting pitchers, betting trends and stats for March 28

The final MLB season opener is in Tampa, FL where the Rays will entertain the Colorado Rockies.

Kyle Freeland is slated to take the mound for Colorado against Ryan Pepiot for Tampa Bay

Lets dive into the matchup and find a sweat or two.

We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on the how to catch tipoff, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.

Follow Rotoworld Player News for the latest fantasy and betting player news and analysis all season long.

Game details & how to watch Rockies at Rays

  • Date: Friday, March 28, 2025
  • Time: 4:10PM EST
  • Site: George M. Steinbrenner Field
  • City: Tampa, FL
  • Network/Streaming: Rockies.TV, FDS

Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out.

Odds for the Rockies at the Rays

The latest odds as of Thursday:

  • Moneyline: Rockies (+168), Rays (-202)
  • Spread:  Rays -1.5
  • Total: 7.0 runs

Probable starting pitchers for Rockies at Rays

  • Friday’s pitching matchup March 28, 2025: Kyle Freeland vs. Ryan Pepiot
    • Rockies: Kyle Freeland
      Spring Training - 5GP, 19.1 IP, 2-1, 6.16 ERA, 24 Ks
    • Rays: Ryan Pepiot
      Spring Training - 3GP, 8.1 IP, 0-2, 3.38 ERA, 9 Ks

Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player newsfor all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!

Top betting trends & insights to know ahead of Rockies at Rays

  • The Rays have won 7 of their last 9 games at home
  • The Rays' last 5 home games have stayed under the Total
  • Junior Caminero and Brandon Lowe each belted 4 HRs in Spring Training for the Rays
  • Kris Bryant had just 4 hits in 31 ABs in Spring Training for the Rockies

If you’re looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our MLB Top Trends tool on NBC Sports!

Expert picks & predictions for Friday’s game between the Rockies and the Rays

NBC Sports Bet Best Bet

Please bet responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, call the National Gambling Helpline at 1-800-522-4700.

Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts.

Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Friday's game between the Rockies and the Rays:

  • Moneyline: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the Tampa Bay Rays on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: NBC Sports Bet is leaning towards a play ATS on the Colorado Rockies at +1.5.
  • Total: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the over on the Game Total of 7.0.

Want even more MLB best bets and predictions from our expert staff & tools? Check out the Expert MLB Predictions page from NBC

Follow our experts on socials to keep up with all the latest content from the staff:

  • Jay Croucher (@croucherJD)
  • Drew Dinsick (@whale_capper)
  • Vaughn Dalzell (@VmoneySports)
  • Brad Thomas (@MrBradThomas)

Severino shows he's worth every penny in dominant Athletics debut

Severino shows he's worth every penny in dominant Athletics debut originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Up until the bottom of the sixth inning on Thursday night at T-Mobile Park, Luis Severino was cruising through his Athletics debut against the Seattle Mariners.

The team’s prized offseason acquisition had struck out five through five scoreless innings — but now, a walk and a single placed runners on first and second base with one out. Athletics manager Mark Kotsay made eye contact with Severino from the visiting dugout, but both knew the right-hander wasn’t going anywhere.

Kotsay’s confidence in Severino paid off, and he looked every bit worth his three-year, $67 million contract — an Athletics franchise record — as he hurled a sweeper past a frozen Rowdy Tellez to get out of the jam, showing plenty of emotion as he walked off the mound.

The Athletics ended up losing 4-2 on Opening Day of the 2025 MLB season, but Severino had to feel good about his performance. His night ended with the Athletics leading 1-0 after the sixth, having struck out six with four walks, three hits and no runs on 99 pitches.

It was a debut to remember with his new team despite the final result — and the last strikeout showed the Athletics just what he can do for them.

“I saw [Kotsay] was looking at me, and he [asked] me if I was good, and I told him, ‘I got this,’” Severino told reporters after the loss. “I knew I had enough in my pocket that I can reach [in] to throw a little harder, throw some nasty pitches. We looked at a lot of good pitches, and we threw a nasty sweeper at the end. …

“Just for me, [Tellez] was my last hitter in my head, so I was like, ‘I’m going to throw everything I got, my nastiest stuff.’ Like I said before, I had the opportunity to reach back and get more velocity, so I went into that at-bat to throw the nastiest stuff that I got.”

The Athletics gave Severino one run of support while he was on the mound, by way of first baseman Tyler Soderstrom’s booming home run to center field in the fifth inning.

When Tyler Ferguson replaced Severino on the hill in the bottom of the seventh, the Mariners were able to get on the board after a pair of walks set up Victor Robles’ sacrifice fly. But the 1-1 tie didn’t last long as Soderstrom hit another homer in the top of the eighth — this one an impressive line drive over the right field wall.

With the blast, Soderstrom became just the third player in Athletics franchise history with a multi-homer game on Opening Day, joining Khris Davis (2017) and Jason Giambi (2000), per Sarah Langs.

Severino appreciated Soderstrom’s efforts, calling the 23-year-old’s night at the plate “unbelievable.”

“So happy for him,” Severino said. “I mean, you don’t see guys like that. He seems so comfortable at the plate right now. Hopefully he can continue doing that.”

Both standout performances by the new Athletics teammates weren’t enough, however; José Leclerc relieved Ferguson in the bottom of the eighth and surrendered two home runs that put the Mariners on top for good. Seattle third baseman Jorge Polanco celebrated his go-ahead, two-run shot with a bat spike that showed the emotions of the moment.

The last time Severino pitched, it was in the New York Mets’ loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers during Game 3 of the 2024 NLCS. He felt just as much energy on the mound in Seattle on Thursday night, and he exuded plenty of spirit for the Athletics in return.

“The last game I threw was in the playoffs, and first game [of the season], it was like a playoff atmosphere,” Severino said. “I was excited to be out there, to compete for this team, and I went out there to do my best.”

It certainly wasn’t the Opening Day the Athletics had hoped for. But with one game of a marathon season officially under their belts, their new ace should be a bright spot moving forward.