Manager Carlos Mendoza among those eagerly anticipating Juan Soto’s New York Mets debut

HOUSTON — Juan Soto’s debut with the New York Mets has seemingly the entire baseball world excited.

“Yeah, put me in that category too,” manager Carlos Mendoza said Thursday. “I’m excited to watch him today and every day.”

Soto was set to bat second and play right field in his first game with the Mets on Thursday against the Houston Astros after signing a blockbuster 15-year, $765 million contract this offseason.

Soto, who played for the Yankees last season, joins the Mets as they chase their first World Series title since 1986.

“He’s an elite player,” Mendoza said. “I’m excited how he fit in right away since the first couple of days when he showed up in spring training. You’ve got to give guys in here a lot of credit because they made him feel like home... right away.”

“He’s a special player, but he’s also understanding that he’s human and he’s gonna struggle at times,” Mendoza continued. “But I’m excited to watch him day in and day out.”

The 26-year-old Soto hit .288 with 41 homers and 109 RBIs last year and won a Silver Slugger Award for a fifth straight season.

Soto is a career .285 hitter with 201 home runs and 592 RBIs in seven major league seasons where he also played for the Nationals and the Padres.

White Sox’s Josh Rojas, Bryan Ramos, Mike Tauchman placed on 10-day injured list

CHICAGO — The Chicago White Sox placed infielders Josh Rojas and Bryan Ramos and outfielder Mike Tauchman on the 10-day injured list on opening day on Thursday.

Chicago also added right-hander Mike Clevinger, outfielder Travis Jankowski and infielder Nick Maton to its active roster before its game against the Los Angeles Angels. Left-hander Jake Eder and outfielder Dominic Fletcher were designated for assignment.

Ramos has a right elbow strain, and Rojas is dealing with a right toe fracture. Tauchman has a right hamstring strain.

Left-hander Tyler Gilbert was placed on the 15-day IL, and right-hander Drew Thorpe went on the 60-day IL. Gilbert is dealing with left knee bursitis, and Thorpe is out for the season after he had Tommy John surgery.

Andrew Benintendi was in the starting lineup against LA as the designated hitter. He broke his right hand when he was hit by a pitch on Feb. 27.

The 30-year-old Benintendi is wearing a hand guard at the plate for another couple of weeks. He will be back in the outfield for the final two games of the opening series, first-year manager Will Venable said.

“I’m ready right now. I feel confident in that part of my game,” Benintendi said of playing defense.

Clevinger, Jankowski and Maton joined the team on minor league deals in the offseason. The 34-year-old Clevinger is going to work out of the bullpen after spending most of his career as a starter.

Eder, 26, was acquired in an Aug. 1, 2023, trade that sent Jake Burger to Miami. Eder, a fourth-round pick in the 2020 amateur draft, pitched two innings of one-run ball in his lone major league appearance on Sept. 17 at the Angels.

Fletcher, 27, came over in a February 2024 trade with Arizona. He batted .206 with a homer and 17 RBIs in 72 games with the White Sox last season.

Red Sox takeaways: Abreu's HRs help Boston beat Rangers on Opening Day

Red Sox takeaways: Abreu's HRs help Boston beat Rangers on Opening Day originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Red Sox started the 2025 MLB season with a 5-2 win over the Texas Rangers at Globe Life Field, and Wilyer Abreu made it possible.

The Red Sox right fielder hit two home runs, including a three-run blast that broke a 2-2 tie in the top of the ninth inning.

Outside of Abreu, the Red Sox weren’t able to produce much offense against Rangers starter Nate Eovaldi and the rest of Texas’ pitching staff. Boston’s best hitters — Jarren Duran, Rafael Devers and Alex Bregman — combined to go 1-for-12 at the plate with five strikeouts and zero walks.

Red Sox prospect Kristian Campbell made his major league debut and collected his first career hit in the top of the ninth inning. He finished 1-for-3 with one walk and one strikeout.

The team’s marquee offseason addition, left-handed starter Garrett Crochet, pitched five innings in his Red Sox debut. The bullpen took over in the sixth inning and allowed just two hits with zero walks and three strikeouts the rest of the way. Aroldis Chapman pitched a scoreless eighth inning and earned the win in his Boston debut. Justin Slaten threw a 1-2-3 ninth inning for the save.

Here are three takeaways from the Opening Day victory.

Wilyer Abreu shines

The bulk of the Red Sox’s offense came from Wilyer Abreu, who went 3-for-3 with two home runs, a single, three runs scored, four RBI and a walk. Boston had three hits through five innings, and Abreu tallied two of them.

One of those hits was a solo home run in the top of the fifth inning that tied the score at two. Abreu crushed a four-seam fastball from Eovaldi and sent it 415 feet into the right field stands.

Abreu hit a three-run homer in the top of the ninth inning that gave Boston a 5-2 lead:

Abreu played his first full MLB season in 2024 and batted .253 with 15 homers and 58 RBI in 132 games. He really shined on defense and won an American League Gold Glove in right field, becoming the first Red Sox rookie to win a Gold Glove since Fred Lynn in 1975.

If you’re looking for a Red Sox player who could have a breakout season, Abreu should be at or near the top of the list.

Garrett Crochet solid in debut

Crochet’s much-anticipated debut was a good one. He started it in fine fashion by striking out the first batter he faced. He pitched a scoreless first inning but needed 18 pitches to do it.

The Rangers opened the scoring in the second inning when Kevin Pillar hit an RBI double to center field. After a scoreless third inning for Crochet, he allowed a run in the fourth when Kyle Higashioka hit an RBI double to center.

Crochet bounced back with a scoreless fifth inning to complete his day. He ended up throwing 88 pitches (61 strikes) over five innings and allowed five hits, two earned runs and two walks, while striking out four. He had 15 swings-and-misses.

It wasn’t a dominant performance from the 25-year-old lefty, but it was a solid outing against a very good Rangers lineup.

Rafael Devers really struggles

The Red Sox need a bounce-back season from their superstar slugger, and he did not take a positive step forward toward that goal Thursday.

Devers went 0-for-4 at the plate with three strikeouts. He had five swings-and-misses in his first two at-bats and had a lot of trouble with Nathan Eovaldi’s breaking balls (see video below). Overall, the 28-year-old veteran just didn’t look comfortable at the plate.

It might take Devers a little bit to adjust to his full-time designated hitter role. Devers has played third base throughout his Red Sox career, but the offseason addition of Alex Bregman — who is much better defensively — has resulted in Devers shifting to DH.

Ramos recaps epic battle vs. Greene that ended with big homer

Ramos recaps epic battle vs. Greene that ended with big homer originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

CINCINNATI — As Heliot Ramos finished an exuberant jog around the bases, Mike Krukow noted that it shouldn’t be a surprise when the Giants left fielder goes the opposite way. Ramos, Krukow reminded everyone, is the only right-hander to ever hit a homer into McCovey Cove. It turns out that Ramos is often thinking about that blast, too.

“I’m not even going to lie,” he said, smiling. “The ‘splash’ gave me a lot of confidence last year, too, but I always knew that I had that pop, that power [the opposite way]. I just needed to make it better and polish it.”

Ramos always has had swagger, but last year the results caught up, landing him in the MLB All-Star Game and securing an everyday job in the big leagues. He hit 22 homers and had a wRC+ of 120, but you didn’t have to dive too deep to find a troubling trend. Against lefties, he was basically Aaron Judge. Against righties, he at times looked like he was headed for life in a platoon.

The Giants will give Ramos every opportunity to show that he can be the same guy for 162 games, and the early returns are positive. Wilmer Flores had the game-winner on Thursday, but the Giants were only hanging around because of Ramos, who hit a two-run homer in the fourth that cut the deficit to one and helped knock Cincinnati Reds starter Hunter Greene out of the game after five innings. The Giants ended up winning 6-4

“With the way he was throwing, it just felt like we were lucky to get a hit, let alone a run off him,” Giants manager Bob Melvin said. “He was just throwing his fastball by everybody and slider just enough to get you off a 100-mph fastball. As the [Ramos] at-bat went along, you’re like, these at-bats usually end up pretty good for the hitter when you’re making him work like that. There’s a little frustration that comes in, too, having to throw that many pitches.

“He was not trying to pull him, because of the velocity, and he finally got a ball he could handle. We’ve seen him hit the ball to right-center field, so it was just staying with his approach the entire at-bat.”

Ramos fell behind 1-2 before taking two pitches to work the count full. Then the fun started. 

Greene’s four-seamer was the best for any NL starter last year by some metrics, and he threw Ramos seven straight, with five being fouled off in a row as the battle got to an 11th pitch. All were 98 or 99 mph, and Ramos kept making contact. 

“In my mind I’m like, ‘Damn, how am I not getting to the fastball? This is insane, he’s throwing it right there, I feel on-time, my body feels good,'” Ramos said. “But I didn’t get off my plan, obviously. I was just trying to stay compact and just put the ball in play.”

Ramos figured Greene might at some point elevate a fastball or go away with a slider, but he also knew that with Jung Hoo Lee on first, he probably didn’t want to issue another walk to bring the tying run to the plate. Ramos told himself to keep an up-the-middle approach, and when the 11th pitch came in at 98.7 mph, down and away, he put a quick swing on it. 

The ball kept carrying and carrying, as has often proven to be the case with Ramos’ fly balls. It landed in the second row, stunning Greene, but not Ramos. 

“Yeah, I knew it was gone,” Ramos said.

The homer came on Ramos’ first Opening Day. A year ago at this time, he was in Triple-A, having been surprisingly optioned early in camp. He ended up carrying the lineup for long stretches of the summer, but the second half also showed him there were adjustments to be made. 

Ramos spent the whole offseason working on his approach against right-handed pitching, and did the same this spring. He had a .673 OPS against righties last year, but he’s confident much better days are ahead. He’ll have to wait a bit to get another test, though. 

The Giants face left-hander Nick Lodolo on Saturday, meaning Ramos will be atop the lineup. He’s never lacking confidence, but he’ll have a bit extra the next time out after putting Greene in his book. He said the whole team should feel good about Thursday’s result and build off the win. 

“I feel like we never gave up,” Ramos said. “We struck out [17] times but we never gave up. We have a pretty good team, we have a pretty good set of players. I think it’s just [going] up from now. He’s one of the best pitchers in the National League. Not everyone is like that, so they have to watch out, for sure.”

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State audit shows Angels have upheld their stadium lease obligations

The Angels will be playing at Angel Stadium in Anaheim at least through the 2020 season.
The Angels last month exercised their option to extend their stadium lease in Anaheim through 2032. They have two additional options, through 2035 and again through 2038. (Stephen Dunn / Getty Images)

The Angels have upheld their obligations under their stadium lease, the state auditor said in a report released Thursday, and disputes between the city of Anaheim and the team are largely the result of vague language in a lease that dates to 1996.

“We did not uncover any instances in which Angels ownership violated the terms of the lease agreement,” state auditor Grant Parks wrote in his report.

The only specific financial outcome of the report: Auditors discovered the Angels had overpaid $95,000 in ticket revenue to the city in 2021. The city agreed to refund the money to the team, the report said.

The Angels last month exercised their option to extend their stadium lease through 2032. They have two additional options, through 2035 and again through 2038. The city says there are no talks underway on a new deal with the team.

Read more:Could the Angels lose their Angel Stadium lease? New state audit to probe land deal

The audit, requested last year by state legislators representing the stadium area, was one of several actions pursued by elected officials after the collapse of a previous deal.

In 2022, after the release of an FBI affidavit disclosing a public corruption investigation of then-Mayor Harry Sidhu, the city killed the deal in which Angels owner Arte Moreno would have bought Angel Stadium and the surrounding property, renovated the stadium and built a neighborhood around it.

According to his plea agreement, Sidhu disclosed confidential city information to the Angels at a time when the city was negotiating with the team. He is scheduled to be sentenced Friday.

The collapse of the deal meant the Angels would remain a tenant at the stadium, under the terms of the 1996 lease.

In their audit request, State Sen. Tom Umberg (D-Santa Ana) and Assemblyman Avelino Valencia (D-Anaheim) cited “deep concern” that the team had withheld revenue owed to the city and failed to comply with stadium maintenance requirements stipulated in the lease.

That lease does not allow the city regular access for stadium inspections, meaning that the city “cannot ensure that its own stadium is properly maintained,” according to the report. The city and team have squabbled over access to the stadium for a property assessment authorized in 2023 that has still not been completed.

The city and team also have disagreed on the funding of maintenance and capital expenditures and the interpretation of “first-class stadium” in the lease, which requires Angel Stadium to be maintained on par with Dodger Stadium and Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City but does not define specific requirements or say as of what date those comparisons should be valid.

If the city and team cannot resolve those issues, Anaheim will “face the possibility of litigation,” the report said.

In accordance with the lease, the Angels pay no rent to play at the stadium, and share no ticket revenue with the city unless they sell more than 2.6 million tickets. The city agreed to waive rent because Disney, then owner of the Angels, paid for all but $20 million of a $117-million stadium renovation.

At the time of the 1996 lease, the Angels had sold more than 2.6 million tickets four times since moving into the stadium in 1966. Under Moreno — and in the wake of the only World Series championship in franchise history — the Angels topped 3 million every year from 2003-19. Attendance fell below 2.6 million in two of the last three full seasons; the Angels have not posted a winning record in 10 years.

"The failure of the Angels to put a decent product on the field means that the city is basically paying the Angels to play baseball in their stadium," Umberg said in a statement.

The auditor also noted the lease allows the city to perform an audit twice per year to ensure the Angels’ compliance with the lease. According to the report, the city has conducted two such audits in the last 12 years.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Flores gifts Posey birthday present with first Giants win

Flores gifts Posey birthday present with first Giants win originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

CINCINNATI — After meeting with the media and watching batting practice, Buster Posey went up to the executive’s suite a bit earlier than he normally will. Posey never before had gotten to soak in all the pageantry of an Opening Day, but with his catcher’s gear gathering dust, he was excited to sit down and watch the festivities.

The rest of the day, which also was his birthday, couldn’t have gone much better. Wilmer Flores’ three-run homer in the top of the ninth inning gave the Giants a 6-4 win over the Cincinnati Reds in Posey’s first official game as president of baseball operations. Afterward, Bob Melvin said he planned to present the lineup card to Posey as a gift. It was a memorable 38th birthday, with just one complication.

Not many Giants seemed to actually know that it was Posey’s birthday.

Flores had no idea. Opening Day starter Logan Webb’s eyes widened when he found out. He laughed and said he had a 30-minute conversation with Posey earlier in the day and it didn’t come up. Heliot Ramos, who kept the Giants in the game early on, said he spoke to Posey multiple times without passing along birthday wishes.

“Oh man,” he said, smiling. “I just told him, ‘Congratulations on your first day as the boss.'”

It would have been one to celebrate regardless, but it was extra special thanks to Flores, Ramos, Jung Hoo Lee, Patrick Bailey and others, including a stream of lockdown relievers. A big part of Posey and Zack Minasian’s plan to get the Giants back to contention is situational hitting, and on Thursday, hitters came through in big spots.

Ramos capped an 11-pitch at-bat with a two-run homer, which not only kept the Giants close, but helped knock dominant Reds starter Hunter Greene out earlier than expected. That caught up to the Reds in the ninth. 

Lee, who earlier had walked ahead of Ramos’ homer, drew a one-out walk from Ian Gibaut. Matt Chapman singled to right, and after Ramos’ strikeout — one of 17 for the Giants — Bailey lined a single into right-center to tie the game. That set up Flores, who presented Posey with one of his most interesting decisions of his first offseason in charge. 

There was no doubt that Flores would opt in for the final year of his deal after a disappointing 2024 that ended with knee surgery, but nobody would have blamed the new executive if he had gone in a different direction at first base. Posey played with Flores, though. He knows how valuable he can be in the late innings, and the Giants came to camp hoping the veteran would look like his old self. When he did, he became an easy choice to return to the first base/designated hitter mix. 

On a day when Reds pitchers lit up the radar gun, Flores waited for something soft in the ninth. Gibaut floated a 1-2 slider and he crushed it to left. 

“He’s usually better when there’s more money on the line,” Melvin said. 

Flores smiled a few minutes later and said he had told Willy Adames during the game that he had never hit an Opening Day homer. The blast came two innings after an 11-pitch battle, which ended in a strikeout but showed that Flores was back to his grinding ways. When healthy, he’s as tough of a late-inning at-bat as there is on the roster.

“It showed today on the first day, but we want to keep it going,” Flores said of the situational-hitting success. “Not only today, but we’re going to try to push it all year. We talk about having good at-bats and I feel like we had a lot of good at-bats that didn’t end in a good result.”

Greene struck out seven in the first three innings, but he lasted just five. The Reds are without closer Alexis Diaz and when the game got to the ninth, the Giants took advantage. As Flores rounded the bases, Adames burst from the dugout and ran along the rail. Ramos and Lee excitedly grabbed each other on the top step. 

“I wouldn’t expect nothing (less). He’s a veteran, he’s built for those moments,” Ramos said of Flores. “The fact that it was him, it’s super-cool to see. He’s bouncing back from last year and all the injuries and all that. We were ready, I feel like the whole game we were all focused, we were all trying to push in the same direction. Obviously Hunter Greene was doing a pretty good job today and he was nasty — he had his stuff going on. But we never gave up, I feel like we took good at-bats and we were battling.”

For all of the pageantry and attention that’s paid to Opening Day, it’s just one game. There are no guarantees, but there sure were some positive signs Thursday.

The homer was one of Ramos’ best swings against a right-hander in the big leagues, a very intriguing development. And if Flores is back to his 2023 form, the lineup is going to be much deeper than anticipated. 

Two years ago, Flores primarily hit second or third in the lineup. On Thursday, he was seventh on that lineup card that was headed Posey’s way, and the man in charge can surely relate. 

When Posey returned from a year off in 2021, he hit seventh in the opener. Nobody knew what he would give the Giants, but he ended up homering on Opening Day and looking just like his old self for six months. The hope is that the same proves true for Flores. 

“It was just about health for him. I mean, it looks the same,” Melvin said. “Last year he couldn’t drive off his leg. We saw some homers this spring where he was pulling some balls, he’s pretty good about sitting on pitches at times and he has always been a clutch guy. He has a lot of walk-offs in his career and the bigger the situation, the better he has been.”

“There’s still a lot to like about Flo.”

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Mets DFA Alexander Canario and Jose Azocar

The Mets have designated outfielders Alexander Canario and Jose Azocar for assignment, after both players did not make the Opening Day roster, reports Anthony DiComo of MLB.com.

Canario and Azocar, who are out of minor league options, will be available for any team to claim on outright waivers unless the Mets work out a trade within the next seven days.

If one or both players clear waivers, the Mets will be able to outright them to the minor leagues.

The 24-year-old Canario, whom the Mets acquired from the Cubs via trade in February for cash considerations, is an intriguing prospect.

He spent most of the 2024 season with the Cubs' Triple-A affiliate in Iowa, slashing .243/.336/.514 with 18 home runs in just 64 games.

Canario started slowly with the Mets in spring training but got hot late. Overall, he hit .306/.419/.611 with three home runs and two doubles in 36 at-bats over 17 games.

For the Mets, it simply came down to the fact that they didn't have room on the roster for Canario since they opted to go with a four-man bench and eight-man bullpen.

Yankees' Giancarlo Stanton takes big step in recovery, but still has no timeline for return

A few hours before Carlos Rodon throws the first pitch of the Yankees' 2025 regular season, manager Aaron Boone gave an update on Giancarlo Stanton's progress.

Stanton, who was placed on the 10-day injured list on Wednesday (retroactive to March 24) with right and left elbow epicondylitis, is making progress, according to Boone, but the team is still not putting a timetable on when the 35-year-old could be back in the lineup.

"He's doing pretty well. I think we've all been encouraged by the last couple of weeks," Boone said. "Still no timetable on anything, but he's been able to swing the bat and feel like there's been some steady improvement day after day. Encouraged by the last couple of weeks, but we've still got a ways to go."

Swinging a bat is obviously a huge step for Stanton, who has received multiple rounds of PRP injections to try to ease the pain in both elbows, an ailment that he played through during parts of last season.

Stanton had a down 2024 regular season by his own standards, posting an OPS of .773 while hitting 27 home runs and driving in 72 runs. His numbers were better in the postseason, but it's clear that if the Yanks want to make a run to the World Series, they're going to need better production from their veteran designated hitter.

What we learned as Wilmer Flores' homer seals Giants' Opening Day comeback win

What we learned as Wilmer Flores' homer seals Giants' Opening Day comeback win originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

BOX SCORE

CINCINNATI — It was mentioned every day during spring training. Situational hitting, situational hitting, situational hitting. The Giants needed to get better with runners on base. 

It appears all of that work paid off. 

Patrick Bailey tied it up with two outs in the ninth on Opening Day and Wilmer Flores followed with a three-run homer, stunning the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park. With a 6-4 victory, the Giants gave one hell of a birthday present to Buster Posey, who was in the executive’s booth for the first time as president of baseball operations. 

The late rally started with a Jung Hoo Lee walk and included a Matt Chapman single. After Bailey’s single, Flores unloaded on a hanging slider from Ian Gibaut. 

During the first three innings, the Giants got a reminder of how dangerous it is to trust spring training results. They didn’t face many marquee pitchers while winning 21 games during the exhibition season, but Reds ace Hunter Greene came out sitting at 100 mph and dominated for the first hour. The Giants struck out six times the first lap through the order and 16 overall, but they came through when it counted. 

Greene is a dark horse Cy Young candidate, and he might have the National League’s best four-seamer. He threw it 70 percent of the time, topping out at 101.7 mph and averaging 99.2. The Giants were stuck in the mud until Heliot Ramos took Greene deep in the fourth, cutting the deficit to one. Logan Webb kept it there and the bullpen had a strong day, with Ryan Walker closing it out after Flores’ bomb.

Great American Small Park

Can you lock up at-bat of the year on the first day of the season? It’ll be hard for any Giant to top what Ramos did in his second at-bat.

The Giants had just one hit when he came up in the top of the fourth, but he fouled off five straight two-strike pitches from Greene — all at 98 or 99 mph — before hitting a high fly ball to left that kept carrying and snuck over the wall for a two-run homer.

The first Giants homer of the year came on the 11th pitch of the at-bat. That was the most pitches seen by a Giant before homering since May 12, 2023, when Michael Conforto unloaded on the 12th pitch of an at-bat.

Slow Start

The best time, sometimes the only time, to get to Webb is in the first inning. The Reds did it with a two-out rally and then tacked on two more runs in the third. In his fourth consecutive Opening Day start, Webb was charged with three earned runs in five innings on six hits and three walks. 

Webb struck out five, and his first of the 2025 MLB season came on his cutter, a pitch he didn’t even throw until last May and rarely used before this spring. He threw 13 of them against a Reds lineup heavy on left-handed hitters. 

Webb threw his changeup only nine times, although there were some characteristics there he’ll probably be happy with. He’s trying to widen the velocity gap between his changeup and sinker; the change averaged 86 mph on Thursday and the sinker was at 92.3, topping out at 94.8. 

The New Guy

Willy Adames has 19 career homers against the Reds and he nearly got his 20th. In the top of the fourth, he hit a high fly ball to right that kept carrying the same way Ramos’ did, but Jake Fraley caught it on the track. 

Overall, it was a quiet debut for the longtime NL Central star. Adames struck out in his other three at-bats, including a leadoff whiff in the ninth. The most notable moment defensively was a tricky one. 

Adames made a slick stop of Gavin Lux’s grounder up the middle in the third, but he couldn’t beat Elly De La Cruz to the bag at second and the hesitation cost him a chance to get Lux at first. With the bases loaded, Jeimer Candelario drove in a pair with a single.

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What we learned as Wilmer Flores' homer seals Giants' Opening Day comeback win

What we learned as Wilmer Flores' homer seals Giants' Opening Day comeback win originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

BOX SCORE

CINCINNATI — It was mentioned every day during spring training. Situational hitting, situational hitting, situational hitting. The Giants needed to get better with runners on base. 

It appears all of that work paid off. 

Patrick Bailey tied it up with two outs in the ninth on Opening Day and Wilmer Flores followed with a three-run homer, stunning the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park. With a 6-4 victory, the Giants gave one hell of a birthday present to Buster Posey, who was in the executive’s booth for the first time as president of baseball operations. 

The late rally started with a Jung Hoo Lee walk and included a Matt Chapman single. After Bailey’s single, Flores unloaded on a hanging slider from Ian Gibaut. 

During the first three innings, the Giants got a reminder of how dangerous it is to trust spring training results. They didn’t face many marquee pitchers while winning 21 games during the exhibition season, but Reds ace Hunter Greene came out sitting at 100 mph and dominated for the first hour. The Giants struck out six times the first lap through the order and 16 overall, but they came through when it counted. 

Greene is a dark horse Cy Young candidate, and he might have the National League’s best four-seamer. He threw it 70 percent of the time, topping out at 101.7 mph and averaging 99.2. The Giants were stuck in the mud until Heliot Ramos took Greene deep in the fourth, cutting the deficit to one. Logan Webb kept it there and the bullpen had a strong day, with Ryan Walker closing it out after Flores’ bomb.

Great American Small Park

Can you lock up at-bat of the year on the first day of the season? It’ll be hard for any Giant to top what Ramos did in his second at-bat.

The Giants had just one hit when he came up in the top of the fourth, but he fouled off five straight two-strike pitches from Greene — all at 98 or 99 mph — before hitting a high fly ball to left that kept carrying and snuck over the wall for a two-run homer.

The first Giants homer of the year came on the 11th pitch of the at-bat. That was the most pitches seen by a Giant before homering since May 12, 2023, when Michael Conforto unloaded on the 12th pitch of an at-bat.

Slow Start

The best time, sometimes the only time, to get to Webb is in the first inning. The Reds did it with a two-out rally and then tacked on two more runs in the third. In his fourth consecutive Opening Day start, Webb was charged with three earned runs in five innings on six hits and three walks. 

Webb struck out five, and his first of the 2025 MLB season came on his cutter, a pitch he didn’t even throw until last May and rarely used before this spring. He threw 13 of them against a Reds lineup heavy on left-handed hitters. 

Webb threw his changeup only nine times, although there were some characteristics there he’ll probably be happy with. He’s trying to widen the velocity gap between his changeup and sinker; the change averaged 86 mph on Thursday and the sinker was at 92.3, topping out at 94.8. 

The New Guy

Willy Adames has 19 career homers against the Reds and he nearly got his 20th. In the top of the fourth, he hit a high fly ball to right that kept carrying the same way Ramos’ did, but Jake Fraley caught it on the track. 

Overall, it was a quiet debut for the longtime NL Central star. Adames struck out in his other three at-bats, including a leadoff whiff in the ninth. The most notable moment defensively was a tricky one. 

Adames made a slick stop of Gavin Lux’s grounder up the middle in the third, but he couldn’t beat Elly De La Cruz to the bag at second and the hesitation cost him a chance to get Lux at first. With the bases loaded, Jeimer Candelario drove in a pair with a single.

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Watch Heliot Ramos hit San Francisco Giants' first home run of 2025 MLB season

Watch Heliot Ramos hit San Francisco Giants' first home run of 2025 MLB season originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Giants left fielder Heliot Ramos started the 2025 MLB season with a bang.

The 25-year-old crushed San Francisco’s first homer of the year — a two-run shot — in the top of the fourth inning against the Cincinnati Reds on Thursday at Great American Ballpark.

Ramos earned the long ball, which came on the 11th pitch of the at-bat against Reds starter Hunter Greene. The homer run cut Cincinnati’s lead to 3-2.

The 2024 NL All-Star finished with 22 homers last season, second most on the Giants, and he picked up right where he left off.

The 2017 first-round draft pick hit fifth in the Giants’ Opening Day lineup and extended San Francisco’s historic streak of having a different player start the opener in left field.

The Giants expect big things from Ramos in his second full MLB season, and so far, he’s delivering.

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Mets at Astros: How to watch Opening Day on SNY on March 27, 2025

The Mets face the Astros on Opening Day in Houston on Thursday at 4:10 p.m. on SNY.

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


Mets Notes

  • Clay Holmes is on the mound for the Mets in what will be his first big league start in the regular season since his rookie year with the Pirates in 2018
  • Juan Sotois making his official Mets debut
  • Francisco Lindor is beginning his fifth season as a Met. Over his first four years in Queens, Lindor has finished in the top 10 in National League MVP voting three times
  • Pete Alonso is 26 home runs shy of tying Darryl Strawberry for No. 1 in franchise history

METS
ASTROS

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Jose Altuve, LF

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Isaac Paredes, 3B

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Yordan Alvarez, DH

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Christian Walker, 1B

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Yainer Diaz, C

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Jeremy Peña, SS

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Cam Smith, RF

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Brady Rodgers, 2B

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Jake Meyers, CF


What channel is SNY?

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How can I stream the game?

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For more information on how to stream Mets games on SNY, please click here

Mets Opening Day Mailbag: Is Kodai Senga on a pitch limit, can Brett Baty 'Wally Pipp' Jeff McNeil?

SNY's Andy Martino is responding to and breaking down answers to Mets questions from readers. Here's the latest...


Is Kodai Senga on a pitch limit, for sure? – @KrankingKranick

I’m told that all Mets starting pitchers, including Senga, will be on a somewhat limited pitch count in the early part of the season. This isn’t Senga-specific, though he might be built up a bit less than the others.

Big picture, the best way to talk about the Mets’ pitching might be to think of it in terms of a staff rather than a "rotation.”

The Mets will be comfortable using their bullpen aggressively behind all their starters and will expect to use their organizational depth – not to mention external additions – to cycle through fresh arms over the long season.

The front office has acquired, and the player development staff has developed, pitchers with high-end stuff, many of whom are relievers. Manager Carlos Mendoza will utilize these pitchers at all points in games.

The philosophy will, at times, challenge traditional baseball discussion. If Mendoza removes, say, a reasonably effective Tylor Megill with one out in the fourth inning at 75 pitches, some talk radio callers will go bananas. But it’s worth noting at the outset of the season that this is the expected approach.

Does Brett Baty have a chance to ‘Wally Pipp’ Jeff McNeil? And do you see him sticking around once McNeil returns if not? Are the Mets happy with the Jose Siri/Tyrone Taylor platoon in center? – @tmcgrathBC

To cut to the very heart of your first question, it’s not clear that either of the players you name will be the Mets’ long-term solution at second base. McNeil’s hold on the position has clearly weakened over the past year, but David Stearns and Mendoza value plus defense up the middle. McNeil offers more of that than Baty, who, through no fault of his own, was born with the body of a corner infielder.

Baty dove wholeheartedly into learning second base, taking great pleasure in the newness of positioning, cuts, throws, etc. The Mets are lucky to have a touted prospect so willing to do whatever he can to make the roster. Not long ago, teams valued offense more than defense at second base – remember the Dan Uggla era? – but that is generally no longer the case. On the plus side for Baty, he has a strong throwing arm, an underrated tool at second that is useful in turning double plays.

Consider this, though: Baty is on the team essentially as Jose Iglesias’ replacement. Remember Iglesias’ above-average range and magic hands? If McNeil and Nick Madrigal (the infielder originally signed to replace Iglesias, who is now out for the year) were healthy, it’s hard to see Baty making the Opening Day roster. He remains an imperfect fit for that role. But he has worked his tail off, and he can hit. Let’s see what happens.

Mar 1, 2025; Port Charlotte, Florida, USA; New York Mets outfielder Jose Siri (19) runs the bases after hitting a three run home run against the Tampa Bay Rays in the third inning during spring training at Charlotte Sports Park.
Mar 1, 2025; Port Charlotte, Florida, USA; New York Mets outfielder Jose Siri (19) runs the bases after hitting a three run home run against the Tampa Bay Rays in the third inning during spring training at Charlotte Sports Park. / Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

To answer your second question, the Mets are in great shape in center field. Siri is an elite fielder in the Harrison Bader mold. Count on Stearns to always bring in a plus-plus glove at that position to help offset Juan Soto in right. The Yankees were unable to this last year with Aaron Judge in center, but Stearns will not fall into that trap. Siri will also contribute power from the bottom of the lineup. And Taylor’s ability to play whenever and somehow produce makes him a manager’s dream.

Do you think Stearns will make a move for a high-end starter this year? – @StengelCase

Yes.

Who do you see as the top pitcher at the end of the year for the Mets? It can even be a player the Mets trade for. – @TaddHilyard3

Dylan Cease or Michael King.

If Pete Alonso struggles in the 3 hole, how long till Mendy makes a change? – @steve60264894

Mendoza will not have this problem because Alonso will hit at least 50 home runs this year. I mean it.

Why you always talking about the Yankees? – @kelsan2415

Here at SNY, we are proud to offer coverage of the entire New York pro sports scene. My question is, why you mad about it?

Are you excited or are you excited? – @metsandanime

I am excited.

Yankees Opening Day Mailbag: Why is NY being secretive about Giancarlo Stanton?

SNY MLB Insider Andy Martino answers Yankees questions from readers...


Why are they so secretive with Stanton? Has he officially been placed on the IL and for how many days? No replacement, so is it Rice\righty platoon at DH? - @BillBrown35

I don’t know about secretive. I am told that Stanton responded well to the PRP shots and should be back to contribute before too terribly long. There is no exact timetable, but it does not sound nearly as dire as, well, Stanton made it sound when he called the injury “severe.”

Yankees officials were not as alarmed as fans by Stanton’s choice of words. The organization has long known Stanton as a player who does not sugarcoat injuries or provide overly optimistic prognoses. He’ll be out a while, don’t get me wrong. But the expectation is that he’ll be back with more than enough time to provide his typical late-season and October heroics.

In the meantime, yes, Ben Rice along with Aaron Judge and others will take the DH at-bats. External additions are always possible, too. Brian Cashman and his staff never stop looking.

Why do you think we care about the Yankees so much? Most of us are Mets fans. Genuine question! - @HeismanHedley

Your phrase “most of us” struck me. For whom are you presuming that you speak? Your social media bubble, which is naturally self-curated? Who are you to define what “us” means?

This is like when people on Twitter say “Mets fans think this” or “Mets fans think that.” Baseball fans are a diverse group with a wide range of opinions, most of whom are not on Twitter. Why not just speak for yourself? I accept and respect that you do not care about the Yankees.

Why can’t Juan Soto keep the Yankees out of his mouth - he chose to take the most money from the Mets , but he’s trying to play the victim card here by saying he still keeps tabs on the Yankees and their offseason … why can’t he just move on - @shamshirosenfe2

I find the fan angst on both sides of town regarding Soto’s feelings about the Yankees to be strange.

He is a human being who had a profound experience with his previous employer, coworkers and fan base. He initially hoped to return to that job, and then made a difficult decision to accept a new job at a company whose resources and culture left a strong impression on him and his family. He subsequently balanced feelings of loss with excitement about the new coworkers and fan base.

When reporters ask him about this, he does his best to answer openly, likely knowing that social media bullies will parse his every word despite his good faith attempts to share nuanced and evolving feelings.

In other words, let’s all give this young man a break.

What's your favorite vendor at Yankee Stadium? - @benjamntenison1

Christian Petroni meatballs and cheesy garlic bread. Yum yum.

Do the Yankees still win the division? - @drjevans182

I have Boston winning the American League East and the Yankees making the playoffs. My reasoning is that the Red Sox have dramatically improved their starting pitching by adding Garrett Crochet and Walker Buehler and imported championship-caliber edge (and elite third base defense) with Alex Bregman. Alex Cora is a difference-making manager whose clubs exploit opponents’ weaknesses -- remember the Jose Trevino stolen base extravaganza at Fenway last year?

The Yankees should still be good, even without Gerrit Cole and, for several months, Luis Gil and Stanton. They have Max Fried and oodles of homegrown talent that could lead the offense. Players like Cody Bellinger, Austin Wells and Rice feature swings perfectly tailored to Yankee Stadium. And like the Red Sox, they have one of the best managers in the game.

Top moments in Mets Opening Day history

Here is my list of the top Opening Day memorable moments for the Mets all time...

1) Gary Carter’s Debut: Mets 6, Cardinals 5, 10 innings, April 9, 1985, Shea Stadium

Acquired in a surprise trade from the Montreal Expos the previous December, Carter was viewed as the final piece of a team with championship potential. So when he sent a full house at Shea home happy with a game-winning home run off former Met Neil Allen in the bottom of the 10th, this Opening Day had a Hollywood feel to it.

It was also the first shot fired in a season-long battle with the Cardinals for NL East supremacy, and Carter went on to have a great year, hitting 32 home runs with 100 RBI. As it turned out, of course, the Mets finished three games behind the Cards in ’85 and so it wasn’t until the next year that Carter helped deliver the championship GM Frank Cashen envisioned when he made the trade to get the future Hall of Fame catcher.

2) The Franchise Returns: Mets 2, Phillies 0. April 5, 1983, Shea Stadium

Six years after the Mets infuriated their fan base by trading Tom Seaver to the Cincinnati Reds, their star pitcher was back at age 38, having been acquired from the Reds the previous December after the worst season of his career.

Welcomed back with a standing ovation as he took the mound, Seaver pitched six scoreless innings in a duel with Steve Carlton and wound up getting a no-decision when the Mets scored two runs in the seventh. 

It made for a feel-good story in an otherwise forgettable season as the Mets went 68-94, their seventh straight losing season, and then lost Seaver again when the Chicago White Sox surprised them by claiming him in a free agent compensation draft the following January.

3) Darryl Strawberry’s Roof Shot: Mets 10, Expos 6. April 4, 1988, at Montreal

Having been there for this Opening Day, I’d make the case that you had to see Strawberry’s mammoth home run off Randy St. Claire to truly appreciate it. It’s still the longest, highest shot I’ve ever seen, as it seemed to climb forever above the right field stands until it crashed into the rim of lights just below the roof of Olympic Stadium.

Long before the Statcast technology that now measures home runs, a physics professor from a local college in Montreal calculated that the ball would have traveled 525 feet had it not essentially hit the top of the dome. For Strawberry it was his second home run of the day and quite a start to a superb season that included 39 home runs and 101 RBI as he finished second in the NL MVP voting to the Dodgers’ Kirk Gibson.

4) First Opening Day Win: Mets 5, Pirates 3, 11 innings. April 7, 1970, at Pittsburgh

Nope, the Mets didn’t always win on Opening Day. In fact, they lost the first eight season openers before breaking through on this day at Forbes Field in their first game following their miracle championship ’69 season.

Seaver pitched eight strong innings but the game was tied until Donn Clendenon, fresh from winning the World Series MVP Award the previous October, delivered a pinch-hit, two run single in the 11th, and Tug McGraw then got the last three outs for the save.

5) Raising The Flag: Mets 3, Pirates 2, April 7, 1987, Shea Stadium

The 1986 world championship was the second in franchise history but because the Mets opened the season in Pittsburgh after their ’69 title, this was the first Opening Day they could celebrate by raising the championship flag.

Nevertheless, the day had a bittersweet feel to it for the Mets, coming only a week after they were stunned to learn that Dwight Gooden had tested positive for cocaine and entered a rehab facility in New York. 

In what he said was a tribute to his teammate, Darryl Strawberry wore Gooden’s uniform pants in the opener and had the decisive hit, a three-run home run in the first inning that Bob Ojeda and Jesse Orosco made stand up for the win. 

6) The Strangest Day: Mets 1, Braves 0, July 24, 2020, Citi Field

At 81 degrees it had to be the hottest Opening Day ever but that was hardly the strange part. Due to the pandemic, no fans were allowed in the ballpark, and while crowd noise was pumped in via the sound system, the quiet was eerie at times, especially when Yoenis Cespedes hit a solo home run in the seventh inning to provide the only run of the game.

Cespedes’ heroics seemed to be a good omen for the 60-game season, but within a month he was gone, opting out due to COVID-19 concerns, though reports surfaced of his unhappiness at potentially being benched at times. Meanwhile, the Mets would never climb above .500 the rest of the season, losing seven of their next nine games en route to a disappointing 26-34 record.

7) Johan Santana’s Debut: Mets 7, Marlins 2, March 31, 2008, at Miami

After their historic September collapse in 2007 the Mets were hoping that acquiring Santana from the Minnesota Twins in a blockbuster trade would be the boost they needed to get back to the postseason. And Opening Day, as usual, offered plenty of promise.

The two-time Cy Young winner pitched seven strong innings andDavid Wright, in what would be a spectacular 33-home run, 124-RBI season, had a pair of doubles and three RBI to lead the Mets to an easy win. Santana would go on to pay dividends on the trade all season, posting a record of 16-7 with a league-leading 2.53 ERA, but the Mets fell short of the postseason again, eliminated from wild card contention on the final day of the season in a loss to the Marlins, the last game played at Shea Stadium.

8) Extras In Atlanta: Mets 6, Braves 4, 10 innings, April 3, 2001, at Turner Field

Coming off their World Series season in 2000, the Mets had high expectations, all the more so after their Opening Day win against the team they could never seem to beat when it counted in those days.

Al Leiter pitched seven strong innings, then both teams blew late-inning leads before Robin Ventura’s two-run home run in the 10th off Kerry Lightenberg put the Mets ahead and Armando Benitez closed out the win. 

However, with Mike Hampton gone via free agency the Mets couldn’t repeat their success of 2000, finishing 82-80, making for second-guessing that maybe they should have taken up free agent Alex Rodriguez on his desire to play in Queens.

9) Pedro Martinez’s Debut: Reds 7, Mets 6, April 4, 2005, at Cincinnati

It felt like a hugely important day as Martinez, freshly-signed after his 2004 championship season with the Boston Red Sox, signaled the start of a big-spending era under GM Omar Minaya, racking up 12 strikeouts in six solid innings.

However, closer Braden Looper gave up two home runs in the ninth to blow a 6-4 lead and the Mets would lose five straight games before new manager Willie Randolph got his first win. 

Pedro delivered a strong season, going 15-8 with a 2.82 ERA, and though the Mets fell short of the postseason with 83 wins, their first winning season in four years set the stage for big things to come in 2006.

10) Meet The Mets: Cardinals 11, Mets 4, April 11, 1962 at St. Louis.

After four years without a National League team in New York, thanks to the Giants and Dodgers leaving for the west coast, the Mets began play as an expansion team on this Opening Day in St. Louis, and the ugly loss, which included three errors, turned out to be a sign of things to come.

Gil Hodges did make history in this game by hitting the first home run for the new franchise, and that proved to be a bit poetic when he later managed the Mets to their 1969 championship. But it was an awfully long inaugural season as the Mets stumbled to a record of 40-120, which included a 17-game losing streak in May and June, finishing a mere 60 ½ games behind the first-place San Francisco Giants in the National League.