Robbie Ray rights the ship

Robbie Ray throwing a pitch.
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 7: Robbie Ray #38 of the San Francisco Giants pitches against the Philadelphia Phillies in the first inning at Oracle Park on April 7, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Brandon Vallance/Getty Images) | Getty Images

On Monday, the San Francisco Giants lost to the Philadelphia Phillies 6-4, and I crafted an entire maybe-I’m-thinking-about-this-too-much narrative to go with it. In my recap, I mentioned the sloppiness and (in)attention to detail that has plagued the Giants through this cold, hard, long two-week season, and how they appeared to rid themselves of it on Monday, only to have it boomerang back and smack them in the face.

On Tuesday, the Giants beat the Phillies 6-0. This time there would be no boomerang. There would be no fakeout. There would be no false hope and ensuing punishment for emptying your retirement savings to throw money at the salesman selling the false hope at your doorstep.

There were mistakes, however. We’ll cover those. And then we’ll circle back to them at the end of this article, for the grand aha! moment. Not unlike a boomerang. Just not a rude boomerang that sends you to bed miserable and leads your therapist to ask you why you let a group of adults who have never met you dictate your mood for nearly seven months of the year.

It was an ominous beginning, as one of those aforementioned mistakes arrived early, like the monster in the opening credits of a horror film that then disappears, and you’re not sure whether it’s going to come back as a key part of the plot, or if it was just a silly little juke. Robbie Ray got Trea Turner to ground out on the second pitch of the game, before ceding a first-pitch single to Kyle Schwarber. It then took Ray all of one pitch against two-time MVP — and one of Monday’s heroes — Bryce Harper to get the lefty slugger to chop a tailor made double play ball to second base.

Ray had taken the opening part of Philly’s lineup — a trio of hitters with a combined 14 All-Star appearances, currently on contracts that will pay them a combined $780 million — and retired them on all of four pitches.

Or so you thought at the crack of the bat. Unfortunately, even with plenty of time to make a good throw and a fine feed from Luis Arráez, Willy Adames missed first base badly, allowing Harper to reach on a fielder’s choice.

It had the potential to be a painful mistake, robbing Ray of not just a quick inning, but possibly a scoreless one, given that lefty masher Adolis García was stepping to the plate.

But Ray struck him out. Sure, it meant throwing an extra six pitches, but so what. He picked his teammate up.

In the bottom half of the inning, Adames’ picked himself up. Facing a star pitcher in Christopher Sánchez, Adames immediately made the fans at Oracle Park forget about his gaffe with a deep drive to right field that crashed off the bricks.

According to Statcast, it was a home run in 17 parks. At Oracle, it was just a feel-good double.

Matt Chapman followed by turning an 0-2 sinker inside-out for an opposite-field single, and third base coach Hector Borg wisely put on the stop sign for Adames at third.

It was a smart move. García, the right fielder, has a NASA-inspired rocket ship in his throwing arm, there were no outs, and the best contact hitter in baseball, Arráez, was about to step to the plate.

You can score in any manner of ways in baseball, and on this particular occasion, Arráez opted for a 56.7-mph grounder that bounced two feet in front of the plate, ultimately resulting in his own out, but also a run scored.

But this game was the very essence of a devil on one shoulder, angel on the other affair. There were multiple instances where the baseballing seemed to repeat itself, only to offer an opportunity to choose a different, more dangerous path.

And so it was that Adames led off in the third inning, too, and once again hit a double. And so it was that Chapman once again followed up with a single, which once again was hit to right field. And Borg was once again faced with the reality that García has a cannon, there were no outs, and the best contact hitter on the planet was about to step into the box.

Sometimes you do things just to feel something, and so Borg, perhaps unwilling to go to bed tonight without knowing what would have happened had he sent Adames to challenge García, gave him the wave around.

Perhaps it would have been the right call had Heliot Ramos, who hit 0-4 with three strikeouts, been up next. But no: it was contact maven Arráez, who never got the chance for the RBI, because García threw out Adames at home.

Borg chose the angel in the first inning and the devil in the third, and the Giants had made another mistake.

Another such situation occurred, though it was less an angel on one shoulder, and more a second devil that offered a free pass before getting back to his devilish ways.

In the second inning, with one out and a runner on base, Daniel Susac bopped a single, bringing up Jared Oliva for his first plate appearance of the year. He chopped a grounder to the left side, where Edmundo Sosa fielded it and kicked off an inning-ending double play.

In the fifth inning, Susac led off with a single, making him a perfect 5-5 (with a walk!) in his young MLB career (he would be retired for the first time in his next at-bat). Oliva again came up to bat, and again chopped an easy double play ball to the left side of the infield.

This time it went to Turner, who looked up to check on the runners, and consequently forgot to catch the ball. He would make no throw, and neither runner would be out. But, as if to atone for the fact that he had failed to hit the double play he was supposed to, Oliva was then promptly back-picked at first base.

In all, it was a rough first start of the year for Oliva, whose night ended when he awkwardly went to the batter’s box for a third plate appearance without realizing that he was being pinch-hit for.

But that seemingly-costly mistake (the out at first, not the pinch-hitting blunder, which presumably was the fault of someone in the dugout) did not haunt the Giants, as they unveiled something we haven’t seen much of this year: two-out magic. After Adames popped out for the second out of the inning, Chapman (who is heating up in a big way) blasted his third hit of the day, a 111.7-mph double to score Susac.

Arráez, eager to have so many opportunities with runners in scoring position, showed off his two-strike prowess with a 1-2 single into center, scoring Chapman. Suddenly the Giants led 3-0.

They weren’t done. Perhaps the most important bit of turning a mistake into a positive came an inning later, when Rafael Devers led off with a single. That brought up Casey Schmitt, who returned to the lineup as the DH after a few days out with an injury.

Sánchez had gotten the best of Schmitt to that point. He struck him out in the second, and then struck him out on three pitches in the fourth. He had so much ownage on Schmitt to that point, that Schmitt started off the at-bat by attempting a bunt. A bunt! In this economy!

He did not succeed, and soon he was down in the count 1-2, with no choice but to swing. And swing he did, lifting a ball deep into triple’s alley, though it hopped over the fence, costing him a third bag and an RBI. Instead, that work would fall to Jung Hoo Lee, who entered the game as a pinch-hitter and easily brought the run home with a sacrifice fly.

All of this, however, was made possible by Ray, who thoroughly outclassed the Phillies. Ray didn’t always make it easy for himself, but he did always escape. Following that one-out single to set the table for Harper, Ray gave up a leadoff double to Sosa to open up the second. He followed that up with a leadoff walk to Harper in the fourth.

But he got out of those situations each time. And while he wasn’t exactly operating with peak efficiency, he was getting the job done as well as anyone.

Despite a rising pinch count, Ray was permitted to take his shutout all the way to the seventh inning, which was very understandable given the way the bullpen has behaved lately. It was there where, for the first and last time, Ray got himself into a pickle he couldn’t quite remove himself from.

It started, once again, with a leadoff runner reaching base, this time a Sosa walk. He recovered to get the next two outs, before losing a long battle to Dylan Moore, and issuing the second walk of the inning.

With that, Ray had not only started to show some wavering command, but had reached 109 pitches, and his night came to an end.

Which brings us back to Monday. During that game, Tony Vitello let Adrian Houser start the seventh, before pulling him with two runners on, and bringing in Ryan Borucki, who let both inherited runners score to bloat Houser’s ERA.

On Tuesday, and admittedly with two more outs, Vitello turned to his don’t-call-him-a-closer-just-call-him-when-you-need-him reliever, Ryan Walker, who inherited the two-on, two-out situation.

Walker, as he does, scared the [MadLibs: noun] out of you, turning an 0-2 count into a 3-2 count, while throwing a wild pitch that advanced the runners. But finally he got Crawford to ground out, ending the biggest threat of the night, and preserving the 4-0 lead.

That put a cap on a stellar Ray line: 6.2 innings, three hits, three walks, seven strikeouts, and no runs. When a team is struggling, they need a veteran with star potential to take over a game sometimes, and make life easier for everyone else.

Take note, hitters.

From there, it was all about having a little fun, giving you another little scare, and scoring a few extra runs, just for the hell of it. Walker stayed in to pitch the eighth and, despite having a few issues locating the strike zone, and giving up a leadoff infield single to Turner and a one-out walk to Harper, got out of the inning unscathed.

The offense, meanwhile, tacked on some insurance with a delightful eighth inning rally, which began when Ramos reached base on a leadoff error (which probably should have been an infield hit), and continued when Schmitt drew a one-out walk.

And then, with two outs, came the big hit: Susac, the feel-good story of the year, tripled down the first-base line, scoring both runners, and securing his second three-hit game in as many Major League starts. He now has twice as many three-hit games in the Majors as his brother, and somewhere the A’s are wondering what in the world they’ve done.

Which brings us back to the moral of the story: teams make mistakes. All teams make mistakes. All teams make mistakes in all their games. For most of this season, the Giants have not had the talent or ability to overcome their own mistakes, so it has felt like those mistakes are out to get them. But then games like this happen, and you get to the end and barely remember Adames’ errant throw, or Oliva’s baserunning blunder, or Borg’s decision, or Ray’s leadoff hitters. Because when you play well, the mistakes are just speed bumps, instead of boulders dropped on your car like a freaky Mario Kart level.

The Giants worked around them. They should do that more often. I hear it’s what the good teams do, not that I’d know anything about that.

Down bad by the Bay: Giants 6, Phillies 0

Apr 7, 2026; San Francisco, California, USA; Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Cristopher Sánchez (61) walks off the mound after being removed from the game during the fifth inning against the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park. Mandatory Credit: Ed Szczepanski-Imagn Images | Ed Szczepanski-Imagn Images

The struggle against left-handed starters continued for the Philadelphia Phillies (6-5) as they dropped the middle game of their series against the San Francisco Giants (4-8) on Tuesday night by a score of 6-0.

Christopher Sanchez had a rough night, allowing 11 of the Giants’ 12 hits, the second highest total against him in his career. A rough night for the Phillies’ ace is still a decent night for some, as only two of the four runs credited to him during his 5.0+ IP were earned due to several miscues by his backing group.

Giants’ lefty starter, Robbie Ray, dominated all night, scattering six baserunners on three hits and three walks across 109 pitches with seven punch outs.

Ultimately, the additional damage inflicted by the poor defense didn’t matter as the Phillies’ offense offered little resistance to Ray and the rest of the Giants’ staff. With a left-hander on the mound, Alec Bohm out of the lineup nursing a sore groin, and JT Realmuto leaving the game after the first inning following a foul ball ricocheting off his right foot, the lineup featured the whole bench in Edmundo Sosa, Otto Kemp, Dylan Moore and Rafael Marchan.

Sanchez’s only clean inning came in a 1-2-3 bottom of the fourth, but he allowed multiple runners to reach base in each of the four others. He didn’t have his usual putaway stuff as eight of his eleven hits allowed came in two-strike counts.

The defensive gaffes were punctuated by a fielding error by Trea Turner, a throwing error by Marchan and a weak throw-in by Justin Crawford that allowed Wilson Ramos to tag-up from first and take second on a fly ball to center. But there was also the around the horn double play started by Sosa to relieve the jam in the second inning, a dart throw by Adolis Garcia to cut down Adames at home plate in the third, and a pick off throw behind the runner at first by Marchan in the fifth.

The Giants opened the scoring in the bottom of the first on an RBI ground out by Luis Arraez that scored Willy Adames who led off with a double.

They would tack on two more in the fifth after a leadoff single by Daniel Susac, an RBI double by Chapman and an RBI single by Arraez.

Sanchez gave way to Zach Pop in the sixth after surrendering a single to Rafael Devers and a ground rule double to Casey Schmitt with no outs. Pop allowed one runner to score on a sacrifice fly by Jung Hoo Lee but kept his own line clean, as did Tanner Banks in the seventh.

Orion Kerkering made his 2026 debut and likely saw ghosts as his first hitter faced, Ramos, knocked a dying dribbler in between Kerkering and Marchan that, after an instant’s hesitation by both battery members, was fielded by Marchan and errantly thrown to first for an error. That error may have been a mercy in disguise for Kerkering who conceded a walk to Schmitt and a triple by Susac that piled on two more runs for the Giants, neither counting against his ERA.

The offense was 0-6 with runners in scoring position. Their lone extra-base hit was a double by Sosa in the second inning and a runner didn’t reach second base again until Sosa and then Moore walked in the seventh.

Bryce Harper worked two walks and reached on a single. Turner and Kyle Schwarber each had one of the team’s four hits.

It’ll be Aaron Nola versus Tyler Mahle in the series decider tomorrow afternoon.

Padres Reacts Survey: How do you grade Craig Stammen’s managerial tenure so far?

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 27: Manager Craig Stammen #14 of the San Diego Padres looks on before the game against the Detroit Tigers at Petco Park on March 27, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across MLB. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Padres fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

Craig Stammen was a reliever for the San Diego Padres long before he was their manager. By all accounts he was a beloved teammate who could relate to anyone on the roster no matter their age, background or nationality. He was the perfect teammate. Perhaps this is the reason it was so surprising that Stammen, who was assisting the Padres front office with managerial interviews before general manager A.J. Preller asked him to consider interviewing for the position, landed the job. Stammen went from being a teammate to the man in charge.

Padres fans were right to wonder if Stammen could assume the leadership role and get the most out of players he played with like Manny Machado and Joe Musgrove. That question has yet to be answered on the field with just 11 games played this season, but it is a storyline that will no doubt be watched and documented as the season progresses.

What we have seen so far under Stammen is the San Diego offense continues to struggle with run production and at times, the defense has been spotty. Of course, at this point in the season there is nothing to say that what we have seen from the Padres under Stammen is what they will be going forward, but like anyone in a new position, there are multiple areas where fans can and should expect improvement as the first-year manager settles into the new reality of being the one making decisions in the dugout rather than running in from the bullpen.

San Diego has played three series under Stammen and will complete the fourth against the Pittsburgh Pirates on Wednesday at 9:35 a.m. PST. The Padres dropped the first two series at home winning one game in each before taking two of three from the Boston Red Sox on the road. The series in Pittsburgh is tied 1-1 and San Diego has Michael King on the mound in the rubber match.

For this week’s Padres Reacts Survey Gaslamp Ball asks you to grade Stammen’s performance to this point in the season. There is a lot of time between now and 162, but everyone has an opinion on how things are going, so here is your chance to tell us yours. Results will be posted later in the week.

Braves, Angels throw punches as Atlanta wins 7-2

Apr 7, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; A fight breaks out between Atlanta Braves pitcher Reynaldo López (40) and Los Angeles Angels right fielder Jorge Soler (12) during the fifth inning at Angel Stadium. Mandatory Credit: William Navarro-Imagn Images | William Navarro-Imagn Images

In what was an otherwise routine and mostly quiet game on Tuesday night between the Atlanta Braves and Los Angeles Angels, a big time brawl broke out between Braves starter Reynaldo Lopez and former World Series hero Jorge Soler.

Let’s set the stage. Earlier in the game, Lopez hit Soler in the hand with a fastball. In the fifth inning, another high fastball sailed over the head of catcher Jonah Heim. Soler took offense to it, and after the two stared each other down, the former World Series hero charged the mound. Punches were thrown, Walt Weiss made a perfectly formed tackle to take Soler down — seriously, watch the video — and both players were ejected.

We will see what the league decides to do, but a suspension for both players seems highly likely.

As for the rest of the game, the Angels took an early 2-0 lead on a Soler homer that was aided earlier in the inning on an errant throw from Austin Riley. The Braves would chip away by way of an Eli White RBI double in the second to cut the lead in half. In the fourth, Austin Riley delivered a much-needed RBI single to tie it, followed by a White sacrifice fly and Jonah Heim bloop single to give Atlanta a 4-2 lead. Ozzie Albies delivered a much-needed insurance run with a solo homer to right in the top of the eighth.

In the bottom half of the eighth, Aaron Bummer allowed two runners to reach scoring position with just one out. Weiss aggressively brought Raisel Iglesias in, who promptly struck out back-to-back hitters to escape the jam without a run scoring.

In the ninth, the Braves added some valuable insurance runs by way of a Drake Baldwin RBI single and Matt Olson 5-3 double play with the bases loaded to score another run.

The series and long west coast road trip will wrap up on Wednesday afternoon with Grant Holmes set to take on lefty Reid Detmers. First pitch is 4:07 p.m. ET.

Padres starting pitchers need to tread water until bats come alive

San Diego Padres SP Walker Buehler (Photo By Winslow Townson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In baseball, you’re only as good as your last game. The San Diego Padres lost four of the first six games in the 2026 campaign. The Friar Faithful were concerned about the starting pitching outside of Randy Vasquez. Speculation was growing over how much longer Craig Stammen can stick with the current rotation before making changes.

However, a weekend in Boston has changed everyone’s spirits. It is a small sample, but the Friars’ starting pitchers need to tread water until the bats come alive.

A starting rotation is a team’s life source

The Padres starters are well-equipped to take the lead and take down the opposing lineups this week. Not every pitcher needs to register a stellar performance, but everyone wants to see some consistency in their starts.

You want them to become more comfortable on the mound, but their control does not have to be sparkling. The hope is that the third start of the season ends on an upward trend. They must limit baserunners by throwing strikes and recording outs.

If not, you fall into the trap of pitching into hitters’ counts. Usually, the results are not good, as hard-hit balls occur, and runners cross home plate.

Friars are searching for SP consistency

The Padres’ rotation is in flux, as Joe Musgrove is working his way back onto the active roster. Moving forward, Michael King, Nick Pivetta, Walker Buehler and German Marquez need to become more reliable in their starts.

The Friar Faithful might have raised the white flag after Stammen brought in Kyle Hart after another poor outing from Buehler. But the move made all the sense, as Hart has put himself back into the conversation as a rotation replacement option. Shutting down the Boston Red Sox for two-plus innings has definitely opened some eyes. 

But to get on an extended winning streak, the Friars’ offense must hold up its end of the bargain. 

Bats must come alive

The Padres have one more game against the Pittsburgh Pirates before coming home to host the Colorado Rockies in a four-game series at Petco Park this weekend. It offers plenty of time for Manny Machado and Fernando Tatis Jr. to have more quality at-bats.

As proven run-producing hitters, both are expected to anchor the lineup. But their production has been spotty at best to start the 2026 season. Machado and Tatis Jr. have to make opposing pitchers dread the prospect of pitching against them, especially with runners in scoring position.

Together, they need to put fear back into the mind of opposing pitchers and give the impression they’re ready to breakout from their slow starts. 

Yes, there is a discrepancy between expectations and actual production done at the plate. 

It seems everything is going in the right direction. But it’s too early to tell.

Yankees' Amed Rosario becomes unlikely hero in win over Athletics after getting rare start

The Yankees continue to roll to start the 2026 season, with different players putting their stamp on each game and Tuesday night wasn't any different.

Going up against the Athletics, Yankees manager Aaron Boone decided to start Amed Rosario (his second this season) at third base instead of Ryan McMahon. Despite the A's having right-hander Aaron Civale on the mound, the Yankees skipper chose Rosario instead of the left-handed McMahon because of Civale's reverse splits. And that proved to be the right move.

Rosario got the Yankees' scoring started with a solo shot in the second to put them up 1-0. But once the offense stalled, Rosario came to the rescue again in the eighth inning. Going up against former Yankees reliever Mark Leiter Jr., Rosario launched a three-run blast to give the Yankees the lead and the eventual win, 5-3. 

The 30-year-old launched the 0-1 splitter 414 feet (107.3 mph off the bat) into the second deck in left field. Rosario knew he got all of it and turned to his dugout to hype his team up.

"A lot of emotions there," Rosario said through an interpreter of the go-ahead homer. "Looking for a pitch that I could do some damage. I got it."

The Yankees traded for Rosario at the trade deadline last year to help bolster their bench. He provided that much-needed right-handed depth, hitting .303 with a home run, three doubles and five RBI in 16 games in 2025. The team re-signed him to give Boone that bench option again, and the skipper knew he could deliver when needed.

"One of the things that struck me about him last year, just how good he was at staying ready and prepared in the role," Boone said. "He’s really good at what he needs to be ready every single day. I liked him against Civale today, not only he hits one there, but a no-doubter to pull the victory out. Just a big night for him."

Another reason the Yankees brought back Rosario was his clubhouse presence. Even when he wasn't playing, he brought an energy to the dugout, constantly encouraging his teammates. He's become a favorite amongst his teammates. 

"We brought Rosie back not only because he’s a good player, but a tremendous teammate and sets an amazing example for everyone," Boone said. "He’s become beloved in that room in short order. They all get thrilled by his successes, too."

"He’s great to have on the team. Great to have someone like him on the team," Jose Caballero said of Rosario. "He never has a bad day. He always comes with high energy. It’s good for the clubhouse, good for him, and good for everyone." 

"He’s great. High-energy guy," Cam Schlittler added. "Goes out there and does something like that tonight. We don’t win that game without him.

Boone recalled last year when Rosario wound up on the IL after running into a wall in the outfield when he first came over in the trade. When Rosario was ready to come back after a short stint, he didn't need a rehab start; he told the team he was ready to go immediately, and that stuck with Boone. 

"Although I’m not playing every day, I try not to let that affect me mentally," Rosario said of staying ready. "Over the years, I’ve created a routine that’s allowed me to do my job."

That's why Boone is comfortable inserting Rosario in the lineup when needed, perhaps even more than last season. 

The decision is also made easier by McMahon's tough start to the season offensively -- 2-for-23 with an OPS of . 363. However, Boone isn't committing to a change after Rosario's performance on Tuesday. He likes the options he has in Rosario and McMahon and will create his lineup accordingly.

"There's certain matchups that I like [Rosario] in," Boone explained. "We've got a number of lefties coming up. Competition's always a good thing."

Tuesday was just the third instance where Rosario had a multi-homer game. As a Yankee, Rosario has hit .302/.295/.581 (13-for-43) with three doubles, three home runs and 10 RBI in just 20 games.

If McMahon continues to struggle, Rosario will have more opportunities to build on those numbers. 

 

What Walker Buehler, Germán Márquez have shown so far

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 31: German Marquez #33 of the San Diego Padres pitches against the San Francisco Giants during the first inning at Petco Park on March 31, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The San Diego Padres signed a starter in the offseason that they knew would not be ready for at least a month to two months in Griffin Canning. With Spring Training well underway, they discovered that their rehabbing workhorse, Joe Musgrove, was not recovering well from his buildup and he was put on hold. Matt Waldron, who worked hard during the offseason to lose weight, increase strength and improve his velocity, suffered an infection of a hemorrhoid and needed surgery.

That left two reclamation projects, Walker Buehler and Germán Márquez, as the last two pitchers to fill out the rotation. Both left-handers JP Sears and Marco Gonzales, as well as righty Triston McKenzie, showed early that they didn’t have the needed command to break camp with the team.

At least Buehler and Márquez are experienced veterans who know how to pitch. Even with diminished stuff after elbow surgeries, they both showed the ability in spring games to develop into acceptable fill-ins for a while.

So, after two starts each, what have we learned about Buehler and Márquez?

Walker Buehler

In 6.2 innings pitched over two starts, Buehler has had two good innings to start each game. Then everything falls apart and he can’t get it back. In the first two innings of the two starts, Buehler has allowed two hits, no runs, one walk and has had six strikeouts. Over the next 2.2 innings pitched in the third and fourth innings of the two games, Buehler has allowed six hits, seven runs, three walks and has had one strikeout. He has a seven-pitch mix with a fastball that tops out at 93-94 mph. His command and execution are the issues, and it seems that he had to change his arm angle and mechanics to accommodate his injured elbow. Now that he is healed, going back to a previous arm angle has been a problem.

In his Padres Daily newsletter, San Diego Union-Tribune Padres beat writer Kevin Acee quoted Buehler on his struggles.

“By nature of doing new stuff for three or four days, I can hold it for a (while) and then it goes away. It’s just getting the new stuff into the throw…. I feel good about the first two innings. So net positive, I guess.”

All that is well and good if we were still in spring games. But these games count and a starter that can hold his delivery for only two innings is not a starter. That would be a bullpen pitcher, at best. The bottom line appears to be whether Buehler can bring his new mechanics into the games more consistently and soon enough so as not to cost the Friars too many games. Taxing the bullpen for five or six innings every fifth day is not a winning approach.

There will be an end line for this experiment. Matt Waldron is almost done with his rehab and Griffin Canning has begun his starter progression. Buehler’s 9.45 ERA is representative of how poorly he pitches after reverting back to old habits in his delivery. The Padres can’t afford to let that continue for too long.

Germán Márquez

In eight innings pitched over two starts, Márquez had one horrible performance and one really gutsy one. In his first start, he lasted three innings, allowing four runs on eight hits and a walk. His locations on his pitches were missing and he was hit hard.

Then, in a Padres notebook by Jeff Sanders of the San Diego Union-Tribune, Ruben Niebla revealed that Márquez was tipping his pitches and the hitters took advantage. They worked on his delivery in his between starts bullpen session. Márquez pitched through five shutout innings while scattering six hits with one walk and four strikeouts Monday against the Pittsburgh Pirates. He benefitted from some good defense as well as some Pirates mistakes in the Padres win.

Márquez lives and dies by his knuckle curve. He used it 45% of the time versus the Pirates and his 94 mph four-seamer 47% of the time. He threw five sinkers and one changeup in his 92 pitches. The curve had a 38% whiff rate and the fastball a 25% whiff rate. His curve is the only pitch that rates out as a plus-pitch.

Márquez has to be almost perfect with his curve and fastball to be successful pitching this way. Mixing in other pitches would presumably make him less predictable but if he can locate the knuckle curve and it moves like it did on Monday, maybe a fifth starter job can work for him.


The conclusion for both of these veteran starters is that they have to hold onto their altered delivery and mechanics if they have any hope of sticking as MLB starting pitchers. Both are former ace pitchers who have lost velocity after elbow surgery and must now rely on command in order to be effective. It seems that both have the potential to succeed but time will tell if the adjustments they have made can carry them through to an effective second career as a finesse pitcher.

The Padres, luckily, have other options on the horizon if either or both of these pitchers are unable to adjust to their new realities. For the sake of the team, we can hope that at least one of them is able to succeed.

Watch Angels-Braves fight: Two ejected after inciting benches-clearing brawl

There was some serious angst in Anaheim as benches cleared during the Angels' game against the Atlanta Braves on April 7.

The baseball brouhaha broke out in the bottom of the fifth inning when Angels hitter Jorge Soler did not appreciate Braves pitcher Reynaldo López throwing some high heat. Soler — perhaps not noticing that López had a baseball in his hand — ran out to the mound and the two started throwing punches, though neither appeared to connect with López throwing hands while still holding the baseball. Angels and Braves players ran onto the field and the mayhem moved toward the first base line before the brawl was broken up.

Watch as Soler and López exchange unpleasantries before throwing haymakers.

The groundwork for the benches-clearing brawl was laid earlier in the game. Soler homered in his first at-bat off López, a two-run shot that also scored Mike Trout. In the third inning, López plunked Soler. Two innings later, the two met again and the kerfuffle ensued. Both López and Soler were ejected by first base umpire Vic Carapazza.

The high pitch that angered Soler went over catcher Jonah Heim, and Nolan Schanuel — who had walked prior to Soler's at-bat — advanced to second base. Schanuel advanced to third base on a wild pitch by López's replacement, Tyler Kinley. However, Soler's replacement — Jeimer Candelario — struck out to end the threat.

The biggest stories, every morning. Stay up-to-date on all the key sports developments by subscribing to USA TODAY Sports' newsletter.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Angels Braves fight: Reynaldo Lopez and Jorge Soler incite brawl video

Blue Jays sell over 100,000 hot dogs during 77-cent promotion night

hot dog
hot dog

Blue Jays fans scarfed down an insane amount of hot dogs on Tuesday night while their team got beaten by the Dodgers, 4-1. 

The Jays sold hot dogs for 77 cents in honor of their inaugural season in 1977, which resulted in fans grabbing more than 100,000 hot dogs during the nine-inning game. 

The final total was reported as 100,204 by Bill Shaikin of the Los Angeles Times and 100,202 by the Toronto Star

The jumbotron is pictured during a media tour of Rogers Centre showing changes made to the stadium celebrating the Blue Jays 50th anniversary in Toronto. Toronto Star via Getty Images

Tuesdays are traditionally dubbed “Loonie Dog Night” when the hot dogs are sold for $1, but they cost even less this time due to the special occasion. 

“Back by popular demand, Loonie Dogs Night presented by Schneiders returns to Rogers Centre for every Tuesday home game of the 2026 season,” the Blue Jays website read. “On Loonie Dogs Night presented by Schneiders, fans will have the opportunity to purchase $1 hot dogs from various concession stands around the ballpark. Don’t miss out on this hot dog of a deal!”

Blue Jays fans seem to love their Loonie Dogs and set a record in 2025 of consuming 826,308, toppling the previous record (727,819) set the year prior. 

Tuesday’s game was also the second game of a three-game set between the Dodgers and Blue Jays, a rematch of last year’s World Series. 

The Blue Jays dropped their sixth straight game and fell to a 4-7 record to start the season. 

The Blue Jays had a 77-cent promotion for hot dogs. Emily – stock.adobe.com

Yoshinobu Yamamoto pitched six innings for the Dodgers, giving up one run on five hits and striking out six. 

Shohei Ohtani hit an RBI single in the third inning to drive in the first run of the game, and Will Smith was able to bring in a second run later that inning. 

Alex Freeland and Kyle Tucker hit RBIs in the fifth and ninth innings, respectively. George Springer drove in the only Blue Jays run in the sixth.

In the middle of the loss, Toronto skipper John Schneider was ejected from the game for arguing a balk call.

Braves and Angels throw punches in wild benches-clearing brawl

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows Los Angeles Angels' Jorge Soler (12) and Atlanta Braves' Reynaldo López (40) fight during the fifth inning of a baseball game, Tuesday, April 7, 2026, in Anaheim, Calif, Image 2 shows Benches clear as pitcher Reynaldo López #40 of the Atlanta Braves and right fielder Jorge Soler #12 of the Los Angeles Angels fight on the field during the fifth inning at Angel Stadium of Anaheim on April 7, 2026, Image 3 shows Baseball players from two teams fighting on the field, with an umpire attempting to intervene
angels brawl

The Braves and Angels went from zero to 100 real quick on Tuesday night.

And it wasn’t exactly heavenly in Anaheim.

The teams got into a chaotic benches-clearing brawl during Atlanta’s 7-2 win that even saw Angels designated hitter Jorge Soler and Braves starter Reynaldo Lopez throw punches at each other.

With two outs in the bottom of the fifth, Soler took a pitch up-and-in that went to the backstop, which allowed Nolan Schanuel to go from first to second base.

Jorge Soler (12) and Atlanta’s Reynaldo López (40) fight during the fifth inning of a the Angels-Braves game on April 7, 2026, in Anaheim, Calif. AP
Benches clear as Atlanta pitcher Reynaldo López (40) and Los Angeles right fielder Jorge Soler (12) fight on the field during the fifth inning of the Angels-Braves game. Getty Images

But things only escalated from there. Soler appeared to take exception to the pitch and stared down Lopez as he got a new ball for the next pitch. The starter held out both of his arms, seemingly in disbelief at the reaction. But before long, Soler dropped his bat and the two both threw punches as the dugouts emptied.

As the action veered toward the first base line, a few Braves players tackled Soler to the ground before he could inflict any real damage on Lopez. Angels star Mike Trout and Braves first base coach Antoan Richardson pushed Lopez back to keep him out of the fray as the rest of the teams converged around Soler.

Jorge Soler (12) and Atlanta’s Reynaldo López (40) fight during the fifth inning of the Angels-Braves game. AP

Once the brouhaha was completely quelled, Soler and Lopez walked off and were done for the night, getting ejected from the ballgame. No other players were tossed.

Soler hit a two-run homer in the first inning, the only two runs Lopez allowed in his abbreviated outing.

Cubs ace Cade Horton headed for elbow surgery, will miss the rest of the 2026 season

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Chicago Cubs pitcher Cade Horton will miss the rest of the 2026 season after an MRI revealed UCL damage in his right elbow, Chicago manager Craig Counsell said Tuesday.

“Cade is gonna have surgery,” Counsell said before the Cubs game against the Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field. “He’s gonna miss the rest of the year.”

The exact procedure, whether it will be a full Tommy John reconstruction or an internal brace repair, won’t be determined until surgeons go into the elbow. Horton visited renowned elbow specialist Dr. Keith Meister in Arlington, Texas, on Tuesday.

No surgery date has been set.

The announcement confirms what Cubs fans feared when Horton walked off the mound in Cleveland on April 3, after just 17 pitches. His velocity had dropped from 96 mph in the first inning to 93.8 mph on his final pitch before he waved toward the dugout.

It will be the 24-year-old right-hander’s second elbow reconstruction surgery. He had Tommy John surgery as a freshman at Oklahoma in 2021. He was the No. 7 overall pick in the 2022 draft and broke through in the majors last season with an 11-4 record and a 2.67 ERA in 118 innings. He finished second in NL Rookie of the Year voting. In his 2026 debut, Horton held Washington to two runs in 6 1/3 innings just one week before the injury.

The blow is particularly tough because the Cubs are already without ace Justin Steele, who is recovering from his own UCL surgery and is not expected back until late May at the earliest. With Matthew Boyd also on the injured list, the Cubs will lean on Colin Rea and Javier Assad in the rotation. Rea stepped up in a similar role last season, posting a 3.95 ERA across 27 starts after Steele went down.

“Colin’s going to be asked to pitch more innings out of the bullpen, and then somebody’s going to take Colin’s bullpen innings,” Counsell said. “That’s how it’s going to be addressed on paper. But it’s not all on Colin. ... We all have to just do our part.”

Sandy Alcantara throws shade for getting pulled before Marlins blow game: ‘Make sure to ask me’

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Sandy Alcantara #22 of the Miami Marlins delivers during the seventh inning against the Cincinnati Reds at loanDepot park on April 07, 2026 in Miami, Florida, Image 2 shows Sandy Alcantara #22 of the Miami Marlins walks to the dugout following the eighth inning against the Cincinnati Reds at loanDepot park on April 07, 2026 in Miami, Florida
Miami Sandy Alcantara

Entering the ninth inning on Tuesday, Sandy Alcantara hadn’t allowed a single run this season.

And after recording the first out, he was two outs away from his second straight shutout.

But a double from Matt McCalin and a walk to Elly De La Cruz put two Reds runners on base, and even with Alcantara at 95 pitches, Miami skipper Clayton McCullough saw enough to bring in reliever Anthony Bender, leading to some boos from the loanDepot park crowd.

Sandy Alcantara throws a pitch during the seventh inning of the Marlins’ 6-3 loss to the Reds in 10 innings on April 7, 2026 in Miami. Getty Images

The decision quickly blew up in Miami’s face. And the Miami ace wasn’t particularly thrilled with the decision-making.

Bender blew the lead, and the Marlins fell to the Reds, 6-3, in 10 innings.

Alcantara, the 2022 National League Cy Young Award winner, said that at his pitch count and a right-handed hitter coming up for the Reds, he felt he could have stayed in for at least another batter.

“I’m just a player,” Alcantara told reporters. “I understand there’s a decision, and you cannot control it. It just happened. It just happened. So I’ll be there with my teammates and my coaches, but I think next time, they have to make sure to ask me before taking me out of the game.”

McCullough said he was ready to go to Bender after the walk to De La Cruz put the potential tying runner on base.

“I know he felt like he had plenty left to go finish that game out,” McCullough said, per the Miami Herald. “Didn’t give him that opportunity.”

Sandy Alcantara walks to the dugout following the eighth inning of the Marlins’ loss to the Reds at loanDepot Park. Getty Images

It’s been a journey for Alcantara after he won the Cy Young, as he struggled in 2023 with an ERA over 4.00 before undergoing Tommy John surgery, forcing him to miss all of ’24.

Last season’s return, while successful in the fact that he was on the field and threw 174 2/3 innings, did not provide great results with his 5.36 ERA and 1.271 WHIP.

All the while, Alcantara faced plenty of speculation and rumors that he would be shipped out of Miami.

This season has been a complete 180, with the two runs that scored in the ninth on Tuesday being the only ones charged on his ledger through 24 1/3 frames. The Marlins are 6-5.

Mariners lose another one-run game against the Rangers that they should have won

ARLINGTON, TEXAS - APRIL 7: Josh Naylor #12 of the Seattle Mariners fouls off a pitch against the Texas Rangers during the eighth inning at Globe Life Field on April 7, 2026 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Ron Jenkins/Getty Images) | Getty Images

There will come a period in this season when time unspools languorously, with the unobtrusive ease of a sport that plays a game nearly every day. The edges will soften, the agonies and exaltations abating in equal measure. You cannot sprint 162 times over.

Now is not that period. Now, time does not unspool. Time is a rusted coil of cables that has adhered to its massive spool on the docks through weather and neglect. It screeches when moved, an outraged howling against itself. Any ecstasy in progress makes the inevitable stoppage even more excruciating. Orange leeches onto hands, smears across wood, stains all it touches, etching its furious reluctance into everything it possibly can.

Eventually, it will not feel like this.

The Mariners are 12 games into the 2026 season, and…

…they have lost eight of those games.

(including the game tonight, against the Texas Rangers.)

…seven of those losses have been by two runs or fewer; five of them by one run.

(including the game tonight, against the Texas Rangers.)

…their starting pitching has looked so good.

(including the game tonight, against the Texas Rangers, when George Kirby went eight full innings with just 90 pitches, giving up three runs and no walks. He deserves to be Furious.)

…their defense has looked appalling.

(including the game tonight, against the Texas Rangers, when Brendan Donovan’s throwing error ultimately allowed a run to score. Which is never ideal, but is particularly not ideal when you lose a game by one run.)

…their baserunning has appeared wildly suspect.

(including the game tonight, against the Texas Rangers, when Luke Raley completely missed stepping on first base in the ninth inning and had to double back, which left him out of scoring position when J.P. Crawford singled in the next at-bat.)

…their offense has been putrid.

(including the game tonight, against the Texas Rangers, when they went an anemic 1 for 7 with runners in scoring position. Anyone remember Miles4RISP? Simpler times.)

…there are 150 games left in the regular season.

(Complimentary.) (Derogatory.)

…I have watched a lot of Rockies games.

(Go M’s)

Mariners lose another one-run game against the Rangers that they should have won

ARLINGTON, TEXAS - APRIL 7: Josh Naylor #12 of the Seattle Mariners fouls off a pitch against the Texas Rangers during the eighth inning at Globe Life Field on April 7, 2026 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Ron Jenkins/Getty Images) | Getty Images

There will come a period in this season when time unspools languorously, with the unobtrusive ease of a sport that plays a game nearly every day. The edges will soften, the agonies and exaltations abating in equal measure. You cannot sprint 162 times over.

Now is not that period. Now, time does not unspool. Time is a rusted coil of cables that has adhered to its massive spool on the docks through weather and neglect. It screeches when moved, an outraged howling against itself. Any ecstasy in progress makes the inevitable stoppage even more excruciating. Orange leeches onto hands, smears across wood, stains all it touches, etching its furious reluctance into everything it possibly can.

Eventually, it will not feel like this.

The Mariners are 12 games into the 2026 season, and…

…they have lost eight of those games.

(including the game tonight, against the Texas Rangers.)

…seven of those losses have been by two runs or fewer; five of them by one run.

(including the game tonight, against the Texas Rangers.)

…their starting pitching has looked so good.

(including the game tonight, against the Texas Rangers, when George Kirby went eight full innings with just 90 pitches, giving up three runs and no walks. He deserves to be Furious.)

…their defense has looked appalling.

(including the game tonight, against the Texas Rangers, when Brendan Donovan’s throwing error ultimately allowed a run to score. Which is never ideal, but is particularly not ideal when you lose a game by one run.)

…their baserunning has appeared wildly suspect.

(including the game tonight, against the Texas Rangers, when Luke Raley completely missed stepping on first base in the ninth inning and had to double back, which left him out of scoring position when J.P. Crawford singled in the next at-bat.)

…their offense has been putrid.

(including the game tonight, against the Texas Rangers, when they went an anemic 1 for 7 with runners in scoring position. Anyone remember Miles4RISP? Simpler times.)

…there are 150 games left in the regular season.

(Complimentary.) (Derogatory.)

…I have watched a lot of Rockies games.

(Go M’s)

Mariners lose another one-run game against the Rangers that they should have won

ARLINGTON, TEXAS - APRIL 7: Josh Naylor #12 of the Seattle Mariners fouls off a pitch against the Texas Rangers during the eighth inning at Globe Life Field on April 7, 2026 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Ron Jenkins/Getty Images) | Getty Images

There will come a period in this season when time unspools languorously, with the unobtrusive ease of a sport that plays a game nearly every day. The edges will soften, the agonies and exaltations abating in equal measure. You cannot sprint 162 times over.

Now is not that period. Now, time does not unspool. Time is a rusted coil of cables that has adhered to its massive spool on the docks through weather and neglect. It screeches when moved, an outraged howling against itself. Any ecstasy in progress makes the inevitable stoppage even more excruciating. Orange leeches onto hands, smears across wood, stains all it touches, etching its furious reluctance into everything it possibly can.

Eventually, it will not feel like this.

The Mariners are 12 games into the 2026 season, and…

…they have lost eight of those games.

(including the game tonight, against the Texas Rangers.)

…seven of those losses have been by two runs or fewer; five of them by one run.

(including the game tonight, against the Texas Rangers.)

…their starting pitching has looked so good.

(including the game tonight, against the Texas Rangers, when George Kirby went eight full innings with just 90 pitches, giving up three runs and no walks. He deserves to be Furious.)

…their defense has looked appalling.

(including the game tonight, against the Texas Rangers, when Brendan Donovan’s throwing error ultimately allowed a run to score. Which is never ideal, but is particularly not ideal when you lose a game by one run.)

…their baserunning has appeared wildly suspect.

(including the game tonight, against the Texas Rangers, when Luke Raley completely missed stepping on first base in the ninth inning and had to double back, which left him out of scoring position when J.P. Crawford singled in the next at-bat.)

…their offense has been putrid.

(including the game tonight, against the Texas Rangers, when they went an anemic 1 for 7 with runners in scoring position. Anyone remember Miles4RISP? Simpler times.)

…there are 150 games left in the regular season.

(Complimentary.) (Derogatory.)

…I have watched a lot of Rockies games.

(Go M’s)