Dodgers continue run against overperforming teams

Aug 25, 2024; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers shortstop Mookie Betts (50) pumps his fist as he rounds the bases after hitting a two-run home run in the eighth inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

Following a couple of series away from home against the Pirates and White Sox, the Dodgers return home to face yet another team with a record above their initial expectations—a Rays team battling neck and neck with the Yankees for the AL East lead. Right at the center of this phenomenal campaign of the Rays lies the stabilizing work of veteran right-hander Nick Martínez alongside Drew Rasmussen at the top of the rotation. While Martinez’s terrific numbers in 2026 come as a surprise given his recent track record, specifically for Dodger fans, it is no new thing to see him perform well.

When Martinez takes the mound for the 41-27 Rays against the Dodgers, he’ll put on the line the finest numbers of his career against any big league club. Martínez has a 2.50 ERA in 36 innings against the Dodgers across three starts and another 10 appearances out of the bullpen. Mookie Betts, for instance, the Dodgers’ player with the most at-bats against Martínez, has a near .200 average in 29 at-bats against him.

As a team, the Dodgers didn’t get out of Chicago with a lot of positives, but one of them was seeing Betts’ bat coming alive, with the shortstop piling on five hits in the last two games, including a homer. Betts now carries this spark into a tough challenge facing a pitcher he has routinely struggled against.

Monday’s game info

  • Teams: Dodgers vs. Rays
  • Ballpark: Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles
  • Start time: 7:10 p.m. PT
  • TV: ESPN
  • Radio: AM 570 (English), KTNQ 1020 AM (Spanish)

Yankees' Jose Caballero embraces role as pitch-clock instigator: 'I’m winning the battle'

Once a week these days, it seems, Jose Caballero annoys an opponent so much a baseball game stops because of it. Last week, it was Cleveland Guardians catcher Patrick Bailey. This week, Toronto Blue Jays manager John Schneider and young pitcher Spencer Miles.

Sometimes, the games stop for a few seconds as pitchers grapple with his unique approach to the limits of the pitch clock. Sunday, the game stopped for nine minutes as Caballero argued with home plate umpire Steven Jaschinski after Jaschinski stopped play with nine seconds left on the pitch clock to scold Caballero when, by rule, the Yankees’ sparkplug need not be set until eight.

“There’s a lot of major league players in this league,” Blue Jays manager John Schneider told reporters in Toronto after the game, frustrated with the delay that ensued as Caballero argued his innocence.

“There seems to be one guy that has an issue with it. It sucks that a pitcher like Spencer Miles has to sit out there for as long as he did. Seems like it could have been handled a lot quicker and a lot more efficiently than it was. But, again, that’s not why we lost, but it’s Major League Baseball, everyone knows the rules.”

Funnily enough, that one guy with an issue might know the rules better than anyone. And he does not shy away from his willingness to use them to his advantage.

The plan, familiar to many by now, is this: Caballero must be set and looking at the pitcher with eight seconds left on the pitch clock to avoid a violation. So as the pitcher readies himself with 15 or 12 or even 10 seconds left, Caballero will step in to the batter’s box, tap his bat, and look set. But he will not look up until the clock hits eight seconds, forcing the pitcher to wait until he does.

“My thing is, I don’t want the pitcher to take control of the at-bat,” Caballero said, while kneeling gleefully, arms hanging over the back of his chair in the Yankees clubhouse.

“So if I am ready right when the clock starts, he has 17, 18 seconds to work with it, and I don’t want to be stuck in there thinking about oh, what’s he gonna throw? He might be shaking his head seven times and then I’m in there just thinking and I get tired of having my bat ready. I don’t want that.”

Caballero was in the Tampa Bay Rays organization when the pitch clock was tested in the minor leagues, so he says he has been honing this strategy since 2019. The clock didn’t hit the big leagues until 2023, so he thinks he has an advantage over veterans who did not grow up playing with it. He says the idea to delay as long as possible was his, and he is not surprised more players do not try it.

“It’s not always an advantage to do it. Sometimes there is more bad than good that you can get out of it – that’s why I’m always involved in all of these bad things,” Caballero said with a smile, referencing his early June disagreement with the Guardians over his approach.

Jun 3, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees shortstop Jose Caballero (72) rounds the bases after hitting a solo home run during the fourth inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Yankee Stadium.
Jun 3, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees shortstop Jose Caballero (72) rounds the bases after hitting a solo home run during the fourth inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Yankee Stadium. / Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

“[Those disagreements] do bother me because it’s the rules. You’re supposed to call the rule,” he said. “Why do I have to stop my at-bat to let you know about the rule you’re supposed to be knowing? If I’m running, and you as a pitcher balk, why would I have to tell the umpire to call it? You know he’s making a mistake. Call the mistake. Simple as that.”

Caballero said every time the game stops because of his late set-up, the argument is “something different.” 

Last week against the Guardians, for example, he said umpires told him he looked up once before looking down again, which Caballero disputed, and that Guardians catcher Patrick Bailey said he was waiting to look up until the last minute on purpose. Sunday, John Schneider said he took issue with how long Caballero argued with umpires about the situation. 

In both cases – as in every case – Cabellero said he does not understand why anyone is still surprised by his strategy.

“The rules are the rules, and I have my time to do so, and I always do it. It doesn’t matter what inning, it doesn’t matter what count. It’s not like I’m trying to mess you up. You already know,” Caballero said. “I’m pretty sure every team has a meeting before facing us about it. You already know! All you have to do is wait until seven seconds and come set. It’s that simple. If you want to make it a scene, I’m going to look like the bad guy, but the rule is the same for everyone.”

Caballero, 29, probably draws more angst in part because his reputation as someone who tries to distract opponents precedes him. His manager, Aaron Boone, once referred to Caballero’s on-field agitating as “Woody Woodpecker stuff.”

“The instigator,” Boone said.

The Yankees have not had many instigators in Boone’s tenure – or perhaps, more accurately, in Aaron Judge’s reign. Judge towers over a notoriously buttoned-up clubhouse, one known for a business-like approach punctuated only by Jazz Chisholm Jr.’s fearless candor in recent years. When asked about how his willingness to push opponents’ buttons plays with his teammates in a clubhouse full of rule-followers, Caballero interrupted.

“I’m following the rules! It’s just a different way to follow the rules,” he said, smiling and twisting his chair side to side like an energetic kid who could not wait for class to end.

“It’s not that I want to get in trouble But for me, it’s a battle. If I can make you think about something else, I’m winning the battle right there,” he said. “I’m trying to get on base, no matter how, so if that bothers you, I couldn’t be more happy.”

Shohei Ohtani, Max Muncy, Andy Pages, Freddie Freeman lead All-Star voting

Jun 22, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers third baseman Max Muncy (13) celebrates with right fielder Teoscar Hernandez (37, left) and two-way player Shohei Ohtani (17, right) after hitting a three-run home run during the seventh inning against the Washington Nationals at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images | Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images

The first unveiling of the first round of fan voting for the All-Star Game showcases the popularity of the Dodgers, as two-time defending champions. Four Dodgers have the most votes at their position, and three others are in line to advance to the second round of voting.

Shohei Ohtani leads all MLB players with 1,165,133 votes thus far, while Freddie Freeman leads all National League first basemen, Max Muncy leads at third base, and Andy Pages leads all NL outfielders.

NL designated hitter

  1. Shohei Ohtani 1,165,133
  2. Kyle Schwarber 820,009
  3. Dominic Smith 371,508

Ohtani has been voted by fans to start at designated hitter in each of the last five seasons, including in both 2024 and 2025 with the Dodgers.

NL first basemen

  1. Freddie Freeman 870,606
  2. Matt Olson 802,848
  3. Bryce Harper 651,792

Freeman has played in the last seven All-Star Games with five starts, including in 2023 and 2025 for Los Angeles. After a slow start this season, Freeman has been hot the last four weeks and is now hitting .275/.365/.473 with a 133 wRC+.

NL third basemen

  1. Max Muncy 941,218
  2. Alec Bohm 386,425
  3. Nolan Alrenado 363,091
  4. Austin Riley 353,394

Muncy leads all National League third basemen in home runs (16), runs scored (46), on-base percentage (.371), slugging percentage (.532), OPS (.903), wRC+ (151), Outs Above Average (+5), and FanGraphs WAR (2.9)

He was an All-Star in 2019 and 2021 and started at designated hitter in his second midsummer classic, before the DH starter was selected by fans. The last Dodger to start an All-Star Game at third base was Ron Cey in 1977.

NL outfielders

  1. Andy Pages 800,496
  2. Ronald Acuña Jr. 693,472
  3. Brandon Marsh 668,191
  4. Michael Harris II 635,473
  5. Teoscar Hernández 507,625
  6. Jordan Walker 437,071

Pages is tied with Walker for most RBI (56) among NL outfielders and is fifth among NL outfielders with 2.4 fWAR (2.4), hitting .273/.319/.498 with 124 wRC+ with 13 Defensive Runs Saved.

In addition to Teoscar Hernández, who is expected to miss a month with a hamstring strain, both Will Smith and Mookie Betts are in line to at least advance to the second round of voting despite slow starts to their seasons.

NL catcher

  1. Drake Baldwin 972,813
  2. Will Smith 682,883
  3. J.T. Realmuto 446,915

Smith has been an All-Star in each of the last three seasons, starting in 2025. This year he’s hitting 249/.338/.382 with six home runs and a 105 wRC+. He’s currently on the injured list with neck inflammation.

NL shortstop

  1. CJ Abrams 579,796
  2. Mookie Betts 567,566
  3. Elly De La Cruz 473,485
  4. Trea Turner 414,652

Betts hasn’t hit much at all this season, and missed five weeks with an oblique strain. He’s also one of the games biggest stars and a surefire future Hall of Famer who’s an eight-time All-Star, so it’s not all that surprising that he’s among the top at the position in fan voting.

The first round of fan voting runs through 9 a.m. PT on Thursday, June 25, with the top two at each position plus the top six outfielders advancing to the second phase of voting. The player with the most first-round votes in each league automatically is named a starter at their position, without needing the second phase of voting. Ohtani was the top NL vote-getter last year, for instance.

The Short Porch is looking ahead to the All-Star Game

It may be hard to believe but we are less than a month away from MLB’s All-Star Game, which will be hosted at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia on July 14. Voting is underway for the National League and American League squads so now is a great time to check in on a few Cubs hitters who have made a strong case that they should be part of the festivities in Philadelphia. I’ll do a similar look at Cubs pitchers later this week.

Pete Crow-Armstrong

The most obvious candidate to represent the Cubs in Philadelphia is their star centerfielder, Pete Crow-Armstrong. While he’s not quite on the 30/30 pace he was setting early last season, picked up the pace since some early season struggles and is currently slashing .267/.343/.463 with 12 home runs, 16 stolen bases and a wRC+ of 126. He’s also setting the standard for elite defense in the National League, his 13 outs above average are tied with rookie shortstop JJ Wetherholt for the NL league. That defense has him leading the National League in fWAR as of this writing with 3.5 WAR, just a smidge above the Nationals’ James Wood. PCA represented the Cubs in last year’s game, which led to this adorable moment where he told his young fans to be themselves:

He’s also the top vote getter for the Cubs so far according to MLB with 265,408 total votes (next up in raw vote totals is right fielder Seiya Suzuki with 239,224 votes). However, he’ll need a push to make the team as a starter. That vote tally is good for just 14th overall in the balloting.

Michael Busch

After a slow start to the season the Cubs’ first baseman has been carrying the offense for more than a month. Recency bias certainly matters for these types of contests and Busch has been slashing .301/.436/.517 with a wRC+ of 169 and six home runs in 181 plate appearances since the calendar flipped to May. He’s got an 11.6 percent barrel rate on the season despite the slow start and a 14.4 percent barrel rate with a monster 51.9 percent hard hit rate since May. If Busch can stay hot he could make a case to the coaches that he should be the guy to back up whoever wins the fan vote race for a starter that currently looks like a two-man contest between the Dodgers Freddie Freeman and the Braves Matt Olsen.

Ian Happ

Ian Happ is in the final year of his contract with the Cubs and leading the team with 16 home runs midway through June. That’s good for a tie for seventh overall in the National League in bombs. While the .224/.337/.478 slashline doesn’t jump off the page, the 126 wRC+ indicates he’s been 26 percent better than league average at creating runs. He’s barreling the ball at a 15 percent clip, which is the highest barrel rate of his career. He’s also hitting the ball hard, with a 46.3 percent hard hit rate according to Statcast. Are there question marks about whether Happ should be in the All Star Game this season? Yes, and Happ isn’t currently in the top 20 outfield vote getters for the NL so far according to MLB. But he’s been the face of this franchise since 2021 and it’d be a joy to see him back in the Midsummer Classic representing the Cubs one more time.

Random Rookie Cards: Alan Zinter

Alan Zinter in an Astros uniform in a 2002 Fleer rookie card.
Alan Zinter in an Astros uniform in a 2002 Fleer rookie card.

Getting picked 24th overall in the draft isn’t necessarily a ticket to being one of the greats; of players who were drafted 24th and signed, the most valuable by bWAR is Rondell White. He was taken 24th in 1990 and posted a respectable 28.2 bWAR. Alex Fernandez was taken in 1988 but didn’t sign; he’d go on to post 28.5 bWAR, which is the most by anyone picked 24th regardless of signing. Nico Hoerner will likely pass both White and Fernandez before too much longer.

Sandwiched between Fernandez and White was Alan Zinter, picked 24th in 1989 and the 149th player in Diamondbacks’ history. It was actually the second time he’d been drafted; the Padres had selected him out of high school in 1986. Zinter signed with the Mets but wouldn’t reach the major leagues until over a decade later and on his seventh organization, not counting time in Japan. He had solid power and drew his share of walks, but spent his time as a AAA player as his defense at catcher never came around (he threw out just 15% of base stealers) and so he played mostly first base. Across 18 seasons of minor league ball, Zinter slashed .258/.355/.461 with 250 home runs. Between the minor leagues, Japan, and independent baseball he had over 7000 plate appearances. He got 84 plate appearances in the big leagues.

His longest run in the big leagues came with the Astros in 2002. He debuted on June 18 and was up and down most of the remainder of the season, but made just one start. He pinch hit in 33 of his 39 games. He signed back with the Astros for 2003 but spent the entire season in the minor leagues, and then signed with the Diamondbacks that offseason. It was actually his second stint with the organization; he’d been dealt from the Cubs to the Diamondbacks in 2000 and tore up Tucson in the 11 games he spent there.

He made his Diamondbacks debut on June 8, taking over for Shea Hillenbrand and playing the ninth inning at first base. He got his first plate appearances the next day when Carlos Baerga was injured running the bases; Zinter took over and finished the day as DH (the game was in Baltimore). He walked in both of those plate appearances and picked up his first hit with the club the next day, in his first start.

Then it was back to National League parks and pinch hitting appearances. Zinter’s first hit came on June 10; he was sent back to Tucson before he got another hit, and his second hit as a Diamondback didn’t come until September 3. But with expanded rosters still a thing, he at least got to stick around this time.

On September 28, with the season winding down and the Diamondbacks a dismal 48-109, the Brewers came to town. Brandon Webb got the start and committed an error in the first inning that led to a run, but he also struck out to end the bottom of the first inning, meaning that he had a 4-1 lead. Considering the 2004 Diamondbacks averaged 3.8 runs per game, such run support must have astounded him. He allowed three more runs, but the Diamondbacks led 5-4 in the ninth inning before everything went insane.

Geoff Jenkins hit a home run to put the Brewers up 7-5. Then came the changes, thanks to the expanded rosters. Chad Tracy pinch hit to lead off the ninth and drew a walk. Baerga pinch hit and got a single. Josh Kroeger ran for Baerga, and Danny Bautista would later single in Kroeger as the tying run before he was stranded at third as the potential winning run.

For some reason, Bautista had to be pulled at the start of the 11th inning. Perhaps he’d picked up a slight injury on a fly ball in the 10th. It wasn’t surprising that it was his final game with the Diamondbacks, but no one thought it would be his final major league game, as he would retire after an ankle injury in spring training. Al Pedrique moved Chad Tracy (who had never played the outfield before) to left field, which meant that Hillenbrand had to move to third base, and Zinter came in to play first base. The Brewers made it 8-7 on a Lyle Overbay single. Josh Kroeger and Andy Green made quick outs in the bottom of the 11th before Alex Cintron pushed a single through second base, bringing Zinter up.

The Brewers still had a 90% chance of winning the game. So far in franchise history, the biggest hit by win probability added was a Tony Womack home run off of Dave Veres in 2000, at 70%. So up stepped the most improbable figure, the former prospect hanging on, the 36 year old rookie. He took ball one. He fouled off a pitch. He took ball two. He took strike two. He fouled off a pitch. He took ball three. He fouled off yet another pitch. And on the eighth pitch of the at bat (and fourth with two strikes) he lofted a fly ball into the (primarily empty) right field seats of Bank One Ballpark, collecting what is still the third-highest win probability added figure of a hit in franchise history. (Two Ryan Roberts home runs have narrowly surpassed it.)

His major league career after that point consisted of three plate appearances in which he walked, singled, and struck out. He spent 2005 in Tucson and 2006 with Round Rock (then Houston’s AAA team) and another year in independent ball before getting into coaching. And he possibly had a bigger effect on the Diamondbacks in that role, for he was hitting coach at Visalia in 2010 and Mobile in 2011, where one Paul Edward Goldschmidt was playing. He’s still coaching, currently at the Royals’ complex.

The changes (both to the minor league system as a whole and September rosters in particular) that Major League Baseball has imposed may have improved the quality of individual September games. The downside is that they ensure there will never be another Alan Zinter. With limited roster spots in the minor leagues, teams aren’t going to hang on to a player like him, particularly not into his mid-30s. And even if they did, he’s not going to have a roster spot on the big league team in September. So unless we have a pitcher come up in a similar situation, Alan Zinter will likely continue to hold the most improbable hit in franchise history.

The Viva El Birdos Podcast: Episode 69 – Minor League Roundup with Andy Carroll and Alex Coil

This week, we were joined by ScoopswithDannyMac.com reporter Andy Carroll and AAA Memphis Play-By-Play man Alex Coil to talk about all things Memphis and Springfield! Many names were discussed this week, including Josh Baez, Leo Bernal, Jimmy Crooks, Liam Doyle, Jurrangelo Cintje, Chase Davis, Rainiel Rodriguez, and MORE!

During the survey, several of you indicated you really enjoy the episodes centered around the minor leagues, and we will certainly continue to center content around that! Next week is our Father’s Day special, when I will be joined by AA RHP Ryan Murphy, who we had on back in January, and his father, to talk about the role of a father in both amateur and pro sports!

Spotify:

YouTube:

Transcript:

Alex Coil (00:00)
When he’s out there throwing and being a jock and just dominating you, like he he he gets into a flow, he works quickly, and all of his stuff works. It it it it f fires in there, it feels like it’s ⁓ a turbo mode out of his hand and and he dominates people and that’s what he’s shown over his last three or four starts.

Jake Wood (@woodbat28) (00:26)
Welcome to the Viva El Birdos podcast. As always, I am your host, Jake Wood, and I am joined this week by fellow writer Gabe Simonds Today, ⁓ we are talking all things minor leagues with writer for scoops with dannymac.com, Andy Carroll, and triple A Memphis play-by-playman Alex Coil

So tonight I wanted to go ahead and start off with Alex. ⁓ the life of a triple A manager can be a cruel one because once a guy is, you know, ready and producing, he’s whisked up to the big leagues. So with both Jimmy Crooks and Blaze Jordan now in the show, is manager Ben Johnson’s star outfield Josh Baez the next in line?

You’re muted, Alex.

Alex Coil (01:09)
Yeah, it helps to to know technology. But ⁓ ha hot start, stay hot. But it like look, he he’s definitely the one that

Jake Wood (@woodbat28) (01:11)
Great start. We’re we’re off and rolling.

Ha ha ha ha.

Alex Coil (01:18)
that i is i is showing the highest ceiling at the moment, that’s for sure. I I think ⁓ you know, one thing that I’ve I’ve mentioned with a with a number of guys, especially Jimmy Crooks, ⁓ you’d like to see a little bit more consistency out of Joshua Baez, some of the that swing and miss can can come and go and and play a big factor, a lot of multi strikeout games. It’s always gonna be there for him. It’s always gonna be there for for most power guys. But ⁓ man, when he when he gets a hold of one, it’s fun to watch, that’s for sure.

Gabe (01:46)
Alex, I’m Alex, I I gotta wonder, because a lot of people have been wondering about Blaze Jordan’s defense at third base, in your opinion, what does that what can we expect ⁓ longer term? He’s looked decent so far, but it’s been two games.

Andy Carroll (01:46)
Yeah.

Alex Coil (02:01)
Yeah, well obviously small sample size up at the big league level. I I can say a couple of things. Number one, like he takes a ton of pride in in defensive progression, a lot more than than people may ⁓ even think about. Like the amount of he works defensively, i you know, not as much as anybody does at the plate, but but he he puts in a lot of work there, takes pride in it. and look

Before his last start at third base at Triple A, he didn’t have an error all season at at the third base bag. He had more starts there by almost double digits at at third than he did at first this year and again had had no errors. The only two errors that he had in that last start were a hundred and five mile an hour line drive that he got a glove on, and then one where he threw it just slightly high for Leo Bernal and hit off of of Leo’s glove. And so both errors were charged to him.

⁓ obviously it’s a big step up to play third base at the Major League level. It’s a premium defensive position, especially with the barometer lately in the last five, seven years in the Cardinals organization of who was playing third base there. ⁓ are those shoes going to be filled? No. But Blaze Jordan is gonna put in the work to be a serviceable third baseman. I don’t think he’s going to be a hole there. ⁓ and I think, you know, part of

You saw a a two, three week span where Blaze didn’t play a lot of third base. Part of it may have been, okay, they wanted to see him more at first base and and so th there were some headlines out there, they’re moving him off third base. They don’t see him playable. But when you look at that, it was almost exact moment that Jimmy Crooks got called up to the big leagues. That means and of course Jimmy and Leo Bernal were starting the season ⁓ splitting catching reps and Leo would get some time at first base, which was a newer position for him.

At least playing consistently. So when Jimmy goes up to the big league level, especially before Pozo comes down and is able to report, Leo has to take over everyday catching duties, which creates a hole at first base, and Blaze had to had to play a lot of those innings. So I think that it was a little bit of both there, but he certainly put a lot of work, got the trust of of the front office and and everybody that in the developmental ranks that that obviously gave the approval to go play third base at the big league level.

Jake Wood (@woodbat28) (04:21)
Wanted to throw it over to our friend Andy. Andy, good evening to you. When you look at Springfield, you know, the rotation arms what really get your attention between Liam Doyle and Jurrangelo Cintje You know, how are those guys performing and progressing at Springfield? And do you think maybe our good friend Alex could be in line to see them in the near distant future? Not too distant future, I should say.

Andy Carroll (04:42)
Yeah, well real quick before I that first thanks for having me, Jake. And you know, if we do need a pinch third baseman, there was a guy named Jordan Walker who played a whole bunch of third base down here. So we can just, you know, move him right back over to where they were developing him as the third baseman of the future.

Jake Wood (@woodbat28) (04:52)
No, no, no, no,

no, no, no, no, no. Don’t even start that. No, no, we don’t endorse that here. No, no, no. Anyway, about Liam Doyle and Jurrangelo Cintje

Andy Carroll (04:59)
No, we do not.

Yeah, so you know, Li Liam is a guy that ⁓ you know, obviously arrived in Springfield late last year, ⁓ got a got a quick look in the fall, and then, you know, came in this season, you know, highly touted, number one prospect in the organization. ⁓ and you’re seeing flashes of obviously, you know, what you A A, he’s an ultra competitor. and as a personality, you know, it’s it’s been fun to get to know him ’cause he just does come out like

He just came out of a Boston area bar fight, you know, as as a as a guy when he comes out to talk to you. So he’s he’s a he’s the type of person on the mound that I think ⁓ you know, the Cardinals are attracted to that personality. And they, you know, speaking to Patrick Anderson about him, they’re like, we really want to embrace who he is, how he pitches. and so, you know, part of his player plan and the way that they’re working with him is to, you know, obviously help him develop a lot of those secondary pitches and then find out how he can be effective in the zone. Those are the two areas where he’s spending a lot of time.

And I spoke to him, you know, sp for the longest interview I had with him was early in the season. And he was really, you know, he was making an impression that ⁓ a lot of the pitches that he was throwing were with a purpose. So he’s like, I threw my sweeper a ton last night, right? And if he were in the SEC trying to get an out, you know, at Tennessee, you know, he’s probably going back to his fastball. But he’s trying to do what the organization is helping him develop those secondary pitches. He likes his curveball, his sweeper he’s not comfortable with yet.

But even as fastball, he hasn’t been able to command the way that you really, you know, need to at this level to succeed consistently. So he had a great month of May. He was holding batters to under a 200 batting average. ⁓ you know, but continuing to he’s his I think he’s about 19 pitches per inning, which is a little higher than what you’d like to see. He’s not very efficient. So, you know, the with with with better command, that efficiency will come. His stuff will play. So I think the Cardinals, you know, I don’t think you’ll

If you do see him in Memphis this year, it would be late in the season and after he really continues to p starts to starts to put together more consistent outings in Springfield. Cintje is a lot of fun to watch, man. Like that guy, Jurrangelo is is he’s he’s a interesting personality, speaks a bunch of different languages. I mean, just a very smart guy. Like he’s as you get to know him when you do see him, Alex, like he’s he he’s a very interesting person to talk to and to get to know. But also a guy who can pitch with both arms and has at Springfield this year.

I know going into the season, you know, there was the sense that they were gonna make him throw right-handed only, exclusively. ⁓ and and he’s he’s pitched picked his spots to use his you know, to to switch that glove and and go left-handed. But he did about a week or two ago strike out the same guy in a game once right-handed and then once left-handed. So you don’t see that very often. It’s been a lot of fun to watch him pitch. And I do think, you know, it’s it wouldn’t surprise me if he were called up before Liam Doyle. I think they’re they’re working on Liam. I mean, Liam’s the higher

you know, ceiling prospect, but I think you’ll see Jurrangelo probably get to Memphis first.

Gabe (07:52)
So, Alex, the the Cardinals fan base is clamoring for bullpen reinforcements from Memphis, and I’m curious, do you think Luis Gastelum Max Rajcic maybe Brycen Mautz well probably not Brycen Mautz ’cause they want to keep him starting, but do you think there are people in the Memphis bullpen right now that they would feel comfortable promoting, say, in a week?

Alex Coil (08:11)
Max Rajcic definitely had the the start of the season that would make that case next up. ⁓

i but you know, he’s gone through a little bit of a slump over those last two weeks. Of course he was named Cardinals Minor League pitcher of the month for for May, led the team in E R A and even qualified as a as a reliever to do so, just ’cause he he he used got used so much and and went multiple innings and was able to nail down five saves so far. On Luis’s side, I mean that guy’s change up is is unbelievable. ⁓ you know he’s

I I forget off the top of my head the the exact name of the reliever for the the Mariners ⁓ on the back end. but he trains with him in the off season and ⁓ like his ability to adapt and learn the pitch from from ⁓ guys at the major league level have made him that much more effective. It’s one of the best change ups a at the triple A level that we’ve seen in in a while since I’ve been here in Memphis and ⁓ you know, needs to to get a little bit more on the fastball, not necessarily more velocity or or anything, but sometimes

it’s a little fat and ⁓ g gets hit hard at times. but look, he he’s pretty dang gross when he is able to get to that change up and and works off of it quite a bit.

Jake Wood (@woodbat28) (09:25)
You know, since Jimmy Crooks was elevated to Saint Louis Alex, I’ll keep it going with you. You know, it seems like Leo Bernal has really taken his game to the next level since that promotion. You know, which of the top prospect backstops have you been more impressed by this season, you know, from your unique seat? Is it is it Jimmy Crooks or have you been more impressed with Leo Bernal ⁓ behind the plate this year?

Alex Coil (09:46)
I would have to say Jimmy, ⁓ just because ⁓ having ⁓ a baseline of me seeing him for a full season last year, ⁓ and knowing ⁓ okay, that was a good year. It was it was a very solid year, ultimately got him his major league call up. ⁓ but knowing what he needed to get better at.

⁓ and how he did that. Controlling the strike zone at the plate, ⁓ handling the the pitching staff behind the plate, right? ⁓ Memphis started the season thirteen and with him catching games. ⁓ and only lost a handful of games before he got called up ⁓ with him as the catcher. And so gaining trust ⁓ of the pitching staff and and being able to guide through guide guys through games, not only ⁓ to to get through through their high stuff, but when they’re struggling a little bit, he’s

The guy that is is a fantastic motivator behind the plate, knows what makes each guy tick, and and so he’s obviously done enough here at this level to to get the chance to to play ⁓ at least twice every time through the rotation at the up at the big leagues. On the Leo side, ⁓ his his highs are really good. Yeah, they’re they’re they’re fantastic. ⁓ but but you still want to see a little bit more consistency defensively. ⁓ obviously coming off of ⁓ a Rawlings

Gold glove ⁓ as as a minor league or a catcher, you’re expecting him to be unflappable and never make a single mistake and and throw at every single runner. There have been some some inconsistencies in and ⁓ in in his glove so far this year. I don’t know how much of that is, you know, he’s he’s learning or at least playing first base more than he ever has in his career, and and and how much of that is taking the mind off of the development ⁓ behind the plate.

I think it’s very good thing that that you’re as a catcher especially, you are developing a secondary position to play, especially if you want your bat to be in the lineup. ⁓ we saw that in the development of a lot of catchers’ career. the one that really sticks out to me is Buster Posey and and added a couple of more years to his career simply because he was able to develop into the first base ability toward the end. So I think that will help his staying power once he is able to get up there. But I think

Andy Carroll (11:56)
Mm.

Alex Coil (11:59)
⁓ he still has has some boxes to check here at Triple A and and and I think he will do so in some time though.

Gabe (12:07)
Sticking to backstops, Andy, ⁓ the Springfield has two really good backstops right now. One everybody knows Raniel Rodriguez, but also Ryan Campos is having a surprisingly good offensive season. ⁓ have you gotten to see much of Rodriguez yet? ⁓ or Campos and what are your thoughts on them?

Andy Carroll (12:23)
Yeah. So Rainiel got here. He’s played twenty three games at double A. ⁓ got called up when the team went on the road, so we had to wait for about a week to see him. But ⁓ you know, obviously his reputation precedes him as a nineteen year old getting to the double A level. ⁓ you know, you’re starting to see more of that, but it’s still pretty darn rare for a guy that age to get here. ⁓ and I think the the first thing that jumped out about the to me, you know, watching him play is it’s such a quiet load, real quick hands and just a natural hitter. And when I, you know, got to talk to him for the first time, he

He said, you know, I’m really spending a lot of time working defensively. He goes, hitting, I I know, I know how to hit. Which, you know, maybe is a little bit of teenage arrogance there. But ⁓ like I think that there’s he just has so much confidence in his ability, ⁓ even at this age, getting to this level that that his hands and his bat will play. And, you know, it it was an adjustment that you would expect. And I think that it’s gonna be ongoing. He’s he’s gonna be at this level probably for a little while. ⁓ but you know, he hit two home runs the other night, both pullside, you know.

shots over over the bullpen into the off the manual scoreboard and then one just to the left of it. And so you you can see just the raw, you know, talent that he has, but he’s also a fairly polished hitter for his age. And that’s really what stood out to the Cardinals when he came to the complex two years ago and had a tryout. It was just like this guy just hits, you know, like we’re we’re signing him today. So it was the complex down the Dominic Dominican that that that hosted the tryout for him. So yeah, he’s he’s very impressive. The Cardinals have mostly been, you know

having him catch, but he has ⁓ he’s also started a handful of games at first base. He’s been in the designated hitter spot. And so you know, Campos again also, yeah, offensively he’s had a great season. He handles the pitching staff really well. the Cardinals, you know, and maybe this is a question I’ll kind of turn back to to you guys, Gabe and Jake. Like when you look at the Cardinals depth at the catcher position, and you know, maybe this is an old baseball philosophy now, but there’s still still a lot of truth in that you want to build your team through the from through the middle out. So, you know, that’s catcher, short, second, center field, right?

And if you look at the Cardinals, they’ve got, you know, between Herrera, Crooks, and Pages those guys are all 27 and under. You know, they’re in their pre arb years. You’ve got, you know, Bernal, and then you’ve got Rodriguez. And it’s like, I I do think it’s going to be interesting to see whether I doubt it’s a deadline thing this year, but into the offseason, into next year’s deadline, how does the industry look at the Cardinals’ depth in that position? Who are the guys that they’re calling Heimblum and asking about? If you if the Cardinals start to look to add a piece here and there.

Is there a name that, you know, would make sense in a package? Because I do think that there’s they’re gonna have to find clarity in in that spot, but it’s a great position to have depth

Gabe (14:52)
I don’t think we know more than you do on that one. We’re we’re just as curious how the Cardinals are gonna handle the catchers ⁓ going forward because it’s it’s there’s a lot of them.

Andy Carroll (15:00)
It’s something to keep our eye on. I just think it’s it’s something it’s not it’s a position that’s desirable. It’s not, you know, it’s not common to have depth at that position. And I think, you know, that’s I would be I I’m interested to see how the over the next eighteen, twenty-four, thirty-six months the organization figures out how they’re gonna, you know, where they see that position going in the long term and how they’re gonna, you know, maybe use those assets wisely.

Jake Wood (@woodbat28) (15:22)
Yeah, I agree. I think

If I’m looking down the road, I still look at like, you know, where the organization is, you know, from like a third base position standpoint. And maybe perhaps the Cardinals look to where they have a little bit of surplus potentially behind the plate. Maybe they look for another young third baseman somewhere ⁓ to fit into the organization some because there’s really no long-term future third baseman in the organization currently, it feels like. Now I know that Jesus Baez is he’s still at high A, but that might be the closest thing to like a future at

third

base, but there’s nobody like Andy, what you’re getting to watch on a regular basis, or Alex what you’re getting to watch on a regular basis, from my standpoint that the Cardinals have longed unless you want to count I I don’t even know, because Nolan Gorman just made it to Memphis, and so that’s a whole other conversation in of itself. But if the Cardinals were looking to try to find a different way to use, you know, their their exa like this kind of falls into

You know, w you draft the best player available and then later on you figure out that problem. And so like the Cardinals have all of these great catchers. Now it’s getting to that point where eventually they’re gonna need to figure out that problem and find a way to y use that piece for another piece they may need in the future. That’s kinda how I look at it.

Alex Coil (16:38)
I think one of the best examples of y Andy brought up the point of of building your team through the middle. ⁓ Cardinals are the catching example right now of of the young core. But what the White Sox have done ⁓ and they have shortstop playing almost every single position, right? Well the exactly but but but in terms of the youth in and how young the White Sox are. ⁓ Myrath playing second ba second base, Antonacci who’s been a shortstop his entire life

Jake Wood (@woodbat28) (16:54)
Padres too. Yep.

Yeah, for sure.

Alex Coil (17:07)
moving out to left field and that brings up a path for him to play up there. It’s a lot easier when you build through the middle, as Andy was saying, it’s easier to to be versatile, right? Because a center fielder can play any outfield position. A shortstop can play pretty much any position on the field, right? A catcher is easily transferred over to first base and depending on the arm, possibly can can pick it over a third as well. And so if you can find those guys in in the the

Obviously you just traded a a Brendan Donovan, but guys that can play multiple positions and and it just opens up so many other options for And I think that’s where you’re seeing the game go, especially with young talent. The White Sox are gonna take another shortstop one one overall this year too.

Jake Wood (@woodbat28) (17:50)
Great point. It it really is a great point, Alex, like you said. And I think that the Padres are the ones who you and I think that the White Sox are taking it that direction as well. But I think the Padres really started it. You look at Merrill and Tatis and Machado and you know Bogarts and Cronenworth and look all of those guys came up as shortstops until they couldn’t anymore. ⁓ and so I think that that really is like

When we talk to ⁓ Joe Doyle, who, you know, is very good ⁓ in terms of like the amateur side of things and he talked about like his conversations with the Cardinals and the way they’re looking at things and based off of, you know, how they were looking at it last year, it’s y they want shortstop, they want the hot the best, most athletic guys on the field that are transferable to other positions and that and as they move down that quote unquote defensive spectrum, you know, their defensive abilities are gonna start to play up and it’ll it’ll just bring a more athletic ⁓

side of of of style of play to their all-around game. Andy, I wanted to throw it back over to you really quick. You know, from a guy that was ⁓ that’s fresh to double A to a guy that’s been there for a while. Let’s talk about Chase Davis. He’s he’s been stuck at AA seemingly forever. You know, do you think he’s done enough in the first half of the season for a promotion? Cause I know Alex is gonna get the cupboard is gonna get really bare for him to watch here before too long if you know Chaim Bloom keeps promoting at the rate that he is.

Do you think that he’s he’s ready for that next challenge at Triple A, or is there another level to his game that you’re still kind of waiting for him to get to before you think he he earns that call?

Andy Carroll (19:23)
Yeah, so I think the answer is yes. I think there’s another level to his game, and I think that the Cardinals, you know, may he may even just need that change of scenery. ⁓ you know, I I I don’t I don’t know necessarily that that would unlock, you know, something that’s missing, but you know the I you know, kind of if you’ve you’ve got a large enough sample size at double A, and I think at this point we do, we we sort of see what we have. We have y you can see the player that you know, left handed power, ⁓ you know, plus defensively, plus arm, and he’s shown all of those things. You know, you you can see

Just all of the raw talent and ability. And I mean, the guy is is also pretty he’s pretty built. So you know, every time I talk to him though, like, you know, a lot of times you’ll talk to these guys. I I know when I I got to speak with Jordan Walker all the time, he would sit there and to talk hitting with you for 30 minutes. You know, here’s all the things I’m working on, here’s mechanically, all the stuff. Chase Davis has got a million dollar smile and he’s got the he’s he’s mastered the Bull Durham art of saying, you know, I’m here to help the ball club. So

I’ve not I haven’t gotten, you know, I I know from tea speaking to other people within the organization what they’re trying to work with him, you know, on on it’s more consistent contact. It’s he he draws a lot of walks, so he’s it’s not that he has bad pi plate discipline, but I think selecting the right pitches to swing at and you know and how to be aggressive in counts and and and those things are or what they’re working on, taking the ball the opposite way, you know, which he has shown signs of being able to do. You know, defensively he’s every bit ready for triple A and and probably higher than that.

⁓ but but the bat just has not consistently shown. It it’s shown flashes, he’s had games, he’s gone on spurts, ⁓ and then you’ll kinda look up and it’s like, well, you know, you’re right back to to to where you were after another week or two. He’s also been on the DL, so I think he last played May twenty ninth. So he the what the I’ve asked around, I didn’t get much information. Somebody did and they say it’s t hi hamstring tightness. That’s now about two weeks and the the Cardinals down here are very ⁓ they guard those injuries pretty closely when you ask about it. So

⁓ I you I don’t know when his expected timetable has come back. They don’t seem to think it’s serious, but at the same time it’s now been it was a seven day DL and it’s been longer than that. So I you know, it’ll be interesting. I think when he comes off the DL, probably likely to stay here, but I do think he’ll get to Memphis this year. Whether or not he’s his play has warranted it from like, we’ve he’s gotta be promoted, you know, we’ve gotta move him up. I think it might just as well be we kinda know what he’s done at double A. Let’s get him to triple A. Let’s get him a new scenery. you know, kind of see if that shakes things loose because he’s very talented.

but being able to consistently put it together has been a struggle.

Gabe (21:47)
Another player that has kind of been at the same place for a while, but it’s been because of control is Quinn Matthews. But the last few starts it looks like he maybe has figured it out a little bit. He hasn’t walked many guys. Do you think first off, what do you think has been causing his control issues and what can he do to like remedy that before he gets a promotion? ‘Cause I think the only reason he hasn’t been promoted is St. Luis is ’cause they haven’t had to add him to the forty man. I think if he was on the forty man, he might have gotten the Brycen Mods treatment already.

Alex Coil (22:15)
I I totally agree with that last point. as far as what was causing the control issues, there were a lot of variables that the Cardinals were ⁓ interested in and trying to figure out last season. That’s why you spent some time on the injured list ⁓ in in the I guess middle third of the season. ⁓

There was some some thought, maybe the the adjustment from double A to triple A, not only is there a level but also a a completely different baseball that you’re throwing. This year the philosophy has been okay, maybe we use that too much of as a as a crutch and and didn’t actually try try to treat the plan. ⁓ but I I the main thing that I have noticed and and completely honest, this is

It it’s just intent ⁓ and and confidence on the mound. When Quinn Matthews gets into a flow and has the ⁓ I know I’m better than you and I’m going to show you that I’m better than you, as opposed to, ⁓ my gosh, th things aren’t going right, I need to f why am I so bad? ‘Cause he is such a smart guy.

Stanford wanted to be investment banker, all that kind of stuff. Sometimes he he he starts to think a little bit too much. When he’s out there throwing and being a jock and just dominating you, like he he he gets into a flow, he works quickly, and all of his stuff works. It it it it f fires in there, it feels like it’s ⁓ a turbo mode out of his hand and and he dominates people and that’s what he’s shown over his last three or four starts.

Jake Wood (@woodbat28) (23:44)
Yeah, ⁓ you took my last question, Gabe. Gosh dang it. ⁓ let’s let’s let’s think about it from this perspective. I wanna end with you guys on on this note. ⁓ I want you to look d each look down a level and then pluck one player from the level below that you’re excited to see over the last three to four months of the season. So ⁓ Alex, I’ll let you go ahead and start real quick.

Gabe (23:48)
Yeah.

Jake Wood (@woodbat28) (24:10)
And somebody from Andy’s neck of the woods that you’re excited to hopefully pluck and see ⁓ firsthand at the end of this season, then Andy, you from from High A.

Alex Coil (24:22)
I am a pitching guy first and will always be a pitching guy first, especially in this ballpark, especially with some of the offense that we have seen. We’ve seen enough home runs, we’ve seen all of the ⁓ all of the good stuff offensively, consistent pitching and dominant pitching and especially as I was just mentioning with Quinn, the tenacity and you know, I don’t wanna s but the the I know I’m better than you and I’m going to go out and and k and and

And dominate you and impose my will on you, Liam Doyle. He brings all of that. some people affectionately called him a a a tweaker at Tennessee, which is just awesome. Like that that’s the type the type of college baseball pitcher that I want to take, ⁓ especially with with how much stuff he has. I wanna see that version on the mound. I wanna see that the bulldog there. And if the Redbirds can finish one game better than the Rochester Red Wings this week.

Wanna see him pitching in the International League Championship Series here at AutoZ?

Andy Carroll (25:24)
Yeah, so I’ll I’ll I’ll definitely answer the question, but just to kind of piggyback on your answer there, Alex, one of the things that’s been a lot of fun too, just in the early days of Raniel being up here with the double A club is to see Liam throwing to him, which has only happened ⁓ once or twice, I think. But I did ask Patrick Anderson about that. I said, you know, you’ve you’ve been around a bunch of different organizations. How often have you had a number one prospect in an organization be a pitcher or a catcher, and then the one right behind him, you know, form a battery at the same level? And he talked about ⁓ Salvador Perez and his time with the Royals and some of the pitching staff.

They had come up because you’re yeah, you’re right, it’s very rare. and so it’s kind of neat to see them start to, especially as you know, Liam’s really figuring out, you know, what’s gonna help make him ⁓ an effective you know pitcher at the big league level and working through some of those secondary pitches, to be able to do that with a catcher that may end up being that long-term piece. You know, I mean again as the Cardinals kind of figure out the puzzle pieces there at the catcher position, but it just wouldn’t be surprised if what’s kind of starting to form down here between those two lasts, you know, for a long time.

for it’s Tanner Franklin. I’ll I’ll stick with the pitching mode. I you know, and I guess the Tennessee the Tennessee pitchers. But yeah, you know, I mean it’s been interesting to see Peoria, which for forever that league has been such a hitter’s paradise that or I’m sorry, a pitcher’s paradise that now all of sudden it’s it’s been it’s been tough on pitchers in that league this year, which is is, you know, reverse of what we’ve seen for so many years. So to hit for the way he’s pitched down there, ⁓ you know, I I think it’s Springfield definitely one of the things that

I’m going off a little out of left field here, but that I I found interesting talking as we did with, you know, the organization higher ups a couple weeks ago, Jake, is hearing some of the chatter that in the draft they might be pr prioritizing hitting, which just kind of the first time I heard it, I thought, no, like we we need more pitching in the organization. I mean, that’s really what’s missing. If you look at, you know, the Cardinals even now at the big league level, like their offense is clicking and humming and you can see how that’s gonna play, you know, in the future and and and the likelihood that that’s gonna continue with those guys.

And you’re wanting to add, you know, as many pieces to that rotation as you can get. And then I started to look down through like, well, I listened to Larry Larry Day today on KMOX talking about there’s Cooper, you know, rehabbing. Tink’s getting back into it. you know, Brandon Clark from who came over in the sunny tr grade trade is is getting close. And then at the double A level, we’ve got so many left handers and Mason Molina, Liam Doyle, Braden Davis. you talk about change ups, we’ve got two of them here with Molina and Davis that just are ought are outstanding and awesome.

⁓ you know, and I just as I started to think, I was like, wow, you we would have a lot more pitching in the organization than I I guess I thought of. So, you know, Tanner’s another one of those guys, get him up to Springfield. it’ll be you know, a another piece to see him then having to pitch again in another league where it typically is really hard on pitchers. The Texas league is brutal. So it’s really where you start to see a pitcher, you know, kind of have to really face ad adversity for the first time in the professional career a lot. It’s it’s when you get to double A, that’s when you can show

you know, c if you can have success in the Texas League and those parks against those hitters that you’re for real and I’m looking forward to him getting here.

Alex Coil (28:16)
If I could, I wanna add two more names to the the pitching idea too. That the like who knows where they’re gonna factor into plans coming back. But Tekoah Roby and Sem Robberse as well, right? ⁓ so th there are there and you mentioned how many left handers, so it feels like the entire Memphis rotation right now is all left handed as well. So it’s it’s never bad to have enough south paws though.

Jake Wood (@woodbat28) (28:20)
Please.

Andy Carroll (28:27)
Yeah.

And Ixan Henderson also, you know, is a guy who’s on on the way back. I mean, they’re just yeah, I mean, like I I think I think I start at just as I started to kind of walk through to my brain, I’m like, you’re right. Like maybe and I think the with the pitching development, the way that they’ve started to kind of turn a corner on on how they develop pitchers in-house, maybe they are feeling a little bit confident about a lot of the art you know, that they don’t need they don’t need they don’t need to hit on every single name there, but I mean they can they can hit on enough of them that they that they can prioritize looking for that third baseman of the future or drafting that

Jake Wood (@woodbat28) (28:40)
I think that’s another good one.

Alex Coil (28:43)
Yeah, that’s another

one. Yeah.

Andy Carroll (29:07)
you know, maybe two or three guys at the shortstop position and then determining how they’re gonna outlay those guys, you know, into the organizational plans.

Jake Wood (@woodbat28) (29:14)
Well, you guys are throwing out names. I want to have some fun and throw out some names. How about Pete Hansen? You know, Yhoiker Fajardo you know, what about ⁓ who is the other name that just popped into my head? Chenwei Lin? Like there there are so many names that are that are floating through the Cardinals, you know, pipeline right now that that can bring some real excitement. But because I want to play I also want Gabe to play this game. I want you to pluck a name from Alex’s team at Triple A and tell me who you want to see at the major league level.

Gabe (29:23)
Yeah. Take a bottle.

Jake Wood (@woodbat28) (29:42)
in the near future because, you know, we we kinda hinted at it that the bullpen has been ⁓ you know, d bad though this recent stretch, and so is is there a name out there that you’re kind of angling for to to see in St. Louis in the near future?

Gabe (30:00)
⁓ well bullpin is such a boring answer. ⁓ I kind of want to answer. Yeah.

Jake Wood (@woodbat28) (30:03)
I it could be a starter that you bump a starter

to the bullpen. You could do either or.

Gabe (30:08)
I wanna see Quinn Matthews, honestly. I’m ready for Quinn Matthews there to start. ⁓ I’m I’ve been waiting for that the walks to come down and I’m I’m ⁓ holding on tightly when ⁓ he he doesn’t walk batters in his start. I’m like, okay, let’s get him to St. Louis It’s it’s just because Memphis it’s hard to not walk guys for some reason. That’s what that’s what I’m looking for is ⁓ Quinn Matthews. Luis Gastelum probably on the reliever side if in an immediate sense, because I know he’s been pitching out of his mind for the last month. I think he’s got like one walk in his last seventeen innings, and that was

the main I mean he wasn’t really striking people out at the beginning of the year. But yeah, something clicked and something because he’s been unbelievable the last month.

Jake Wood (@woodbat28) (30:45)
Yeah, I think I’m right there with you. I think it’s it’s gotta be Quinn that I’m just a like an antsy to get up to the big leagues and see what that looks like. I think we’ve watched Kyle Leahy and ⁓ you know, Matthew Liberatore unfortunately. Like they’re these guys like Libby’s strikeout rate has gone up lately, but it’s still the the quality of contact against him is not getting any better, unfortunately. He’s still getting hit around. There’s these big snowball innings that’s getting away from him. And so I wonder if maybe those guys might just ultimately

you know, long term are earmarked for the bullpen. I would like to see, you know, like like we mentioned, Quinn Matthews get back to ⁓ get get his first deserved call up, maybe get Hunter Dobbins back you know, as soon as possible, get those two guys installed and kick Leahy and and Liberatore back to the bullpen. And that would be another way that you can kind of boost the bullpen as well and kind of strengthen that group because they seem to have start is starting to leak some oil. ⁓ so I I think maybe getting a couple guys whose stuff play up out of the bullpen might help that group as well as as Hunter

Chaim Bloom has, you know, shown now. I I I I’m I’m so like enthralled with what he’s going to do because I think over the last like two to three weeks he’s made moves that I did not anticipate him like like that took some stones to send down Victor Scott the second. It took some stones to send down Nolan Gorman. You know, I I did not think that he was going to do that. I and I’m so I I I said this to people before the season started, like

Take away every expectation you’ve had or come to know from the John Mozeliak era of building a roster because it’s gonna be different. And I fell right into the same trap that these guys are young, they’re gonna get runway, we’re gonna, you know, let them, you know, struggle, and they let them struggle for

⁓ you know, a a third of the season and then said, sorry boys, you’re not getting it done, and away they went and and new fresh pieces who are producing came up. So it’s it’s been really refreshing. I’ve seen a lot of people online, especially, ⁓ who are really excited about the aggressiveness that the Cardinals are showing right now. And Derek Goold just before we hopped on, I saw had had put out a piece. I didn’t have a chance to read it yet, but you know, the tagline said something about the Cardinal like Chaim Bloom is looking to be as aggressive with the

the the pitching as he has been recently with the hitting and so I would look for there to be some some potential movement coming up and down ⁓ in the near future. ⁓ I do want to go ahead and say, you know, once again you can hear ⁓ Alex on the call nightly for the Triple A Memphis Redbirds and you can read all of Andy’s fine work at scoopswithdannymac.com. Fellas, it was an absolute pleasure. thank you so much for for jumping on as always and you know we’ll look forward to catching up with you boys down the road.

Andy Carroll (33:28)
Yeah, let’s do it again. Thanks, Jake.

Alex Coil (33:30)
Thanks for having me.

Jake Wood (@woodbat28) (33:31)
Absolutely. Gabe, thanks for

Being here as always, really appreciate your your inclusion in this, and I love to not be able to have to do this alone. We’ll we miss Scott a little bit, just a little bit, but he’ll be back with us, you know, in a couple weeks, whenever we have a very special VIP guest sl slated to join us. Can’t give away those details just yet. but next week, ⁓ y I do want to let you guys know that we will be doing our annual Father’s Day episode with double-A pitcher Ryan Murphy and his dad will be joining us.

so make sure you are on the lookout for that. Thank you so much for joining us for this episode of the Viva El Birdos Podcast. Don’t forget to rate and review and hit that subscribe button so you’re notified every Monday morning when a new episode is released. We will talk to you all next week when once again we’re joined by Double A Pitcher Ryan Murphy and his father. Join the show for a special Father’s Day episode. Have a great week and let’s go cards.

MLB Power Rankings: Cam Schlittler showing Cy Young form for Yankees, White Sox aren't going away

Featured in this week’s MLB Power Rankings, the Braves finally hit a speed bump, Braden Montgomery announces his arrival with authority, Geraldo Perdomo goes racing, and Yordan Álvarez continues to mash at a prodigious pace.

As a reminder, this article is a combination of current performance and long-term outlook.

Let’s get started!

Note: Rankings are from the morning of Monday, June 8

Check out this week’s recommended fantasy streaming SPs from Eric Samulski!

1) Atlanta Braves

Last week: 1

After losing just two series in their first 20 this season, the Braves have now lost back-to-back series and four out of their last five games overall. Ronald Acuña Jr. is back on the IL with a hamstring injury and Spencer Strider is also sidelined again with an elbow injury that the pitcher said “doesn’t look great.” The Braves still have a very comfortable lead in the NL East, but three other teams in the division are over .500 and the Mets are clearly capable of better.

2) Los Angeles Dodgers

Last week: 2

One of these days, it’s going to happen. After losing a no-hitter on a Jackson Holliday homer in the ninth inning last year, Yoshinobu Yamamoto came oh-so-close again on Saturday against the White Sox. An error by Mookie Betts ended his perfect-game bid in the eight before Tristan Peters homered in the ninth to break up the no-hitter.

Yamamoto also fell one batter shy of tying the longest consecutive batters retired streak since the expansion era. Much like members of the 1972 Dolphins, I have to assume Yusmeiro Petit got out a bottle of champagne knowing that his record is safe for now.

3) Milwaukee Brewers

Last week: 3

Well, this is just getting ridiculous now. “The Miz” reached new levels of dominance in Friday’s start against the Phillies, as he spun a one-hitter with a career-high 15 strikeouts. Despite the high strikeout total, he still managed to throw a “Maddux,” which is a shutout with fewer than 100 pitches. Nobody has ever struck out more batters in a "Maddux" performance. Misiorowski faced the minimum in the game, as he gave up a leadoff single to Kyle Schwarber in the fourth before he was erased on a double-play grounder. Much like Yamamoto above, it feels like a no-hitter for Misiorowski is more of a “when” than an “if.”

4) New York Yankees

Last week: 4

Is this Starting Pitcher Week or what? I swear I didn't do this on purpose, but it’s becoming abundantly clear that Cam Schlittler has the runway for the AL Cy Young Award. After saying that Blue Jays fans are “easy to rage-bait,” the 25-year-old fired seven innings of one-run ball on Saturday to lower his ERA to 1.82 for the year. Despite missing Aaron Judge, the Yankees have won six out of seven to climb to first place in the American League East.

5) Tampa Bay Rays

Last week: 5

The Rays swept the Red Sox before losing two out of three to the Angels over the weekend. It was nice to see three homers to salvage Sunday’s finale, but that’s a rare event for this team. The Rays are last in the majors with 57 homers this season. Can they maintain their early-season pace with this style of play?

6) St. Louis Cardinals

Last week: 6

We’ve given a ton of love to Jordan Walker in this column this season, but how about Alec Burleson? The 27-year-old recently homered in four straight games and added another on Sunday. He’s sporting a 14-game hitting streak and is just five RBI away from Walker and Dodgers outfielder Andy Pages for the NL lead. Burleson's quality of contact has improved across the board, setting him up to easily surpass his career-high of 21 homers. The Cardinals clearly have the lineup to continue to surprise, but the big question is if their pitching can hold up.

7) Chicago White Sox ⬆️

Last week: 9

It’s a great time to be a White Sox fan. The club took two out of three from the Dodgers over the weekend and find themselves in first place for the first time since 2022. Moments like the one below from Braden Montgomery in his MLB debut make you start to believe that this is a charmed season.

8) Philadelphia Phillies

Last week: 8

What’s going on with Trea Turner? While the Phillies continue their slow climb back into playoff position, Turner is hitting just .172/.209/.264 over his last 21 games. The slow start is no fluke, as he’s striking out more than ever before while continuing a downward trend in quality of contact. He’s remained near the top of the lineup for Phillies interim manager Don Mattingly, but we could see some changes there soon. Some have even clamored for him to get benched as a mental reset. It feels like this week could be a tipping point.

9) Cleveland Guardians ⬇️

Last week: 7

If there’s a team who can’t afford to lose their star player, it’s the Guardians. We’re about to find out what this team is made of as they’ll be without José Ramírez for the next 4-6 weeks due to a fractured hamate bone in his left hand. He previously broke the hamate bone in his right hand in 2019, which is the only other time he’s ever been on the injured list in his career.

10) San Diego Padres ⬆️

Last week: 12

Yes, this hasn’t been the start to the season that anyone would have imagined for Fernando Tatís Jr., but it feels like he’s the only one in this Padres lineup who has been hitting recently.

Not a bad way to get your second homer of the season. Tatís is hitting .383 with a .414 on-base percentage over his last 19 games.

11) Washington Nationals ⬆️

Last week: 16

At this point, most fans know about the type of offense that the Nationals are bringing to the table, but their starting rotation has been surprisingly effective as well. The club ranks eighth in the majors in rotation ERA (3.79 ERA) over the past 30 days, including a gem from Miles Mikolas against the Mariners on Sunday. This rotation is a big reason why the Nats are on the verge of cracking our top 10.

12) Chicago Cubs ⬇️

Last week: 11

Remember how great Nico Hoerner looked at the start of the year? Well, he’s hitting just .180 over his last 35 games. He’s probably due some better batted ball luck — he’s at .244 this year despite a career BABIP of .301 — but this goes to show that avoiding strikeouts and making contact isn’t everything.

13) Arizona Diamondbacks

Last week: 13

Geraldo Perdomo was a thorn in the Reds’ side on Sunday. In addition to crashing the Reds’ mascot race below, he connected for a go-ahead two-run homer in the sixth inning.

While the power has gone missing this season, Perdomo is hitting .297 over his last 21 games.

14) Seattle Mariners ⬇️

Last week: 10

The Mariners just completed a rough 4-6 roadtrip and they saw both Josh Naylor and Andres Muñoz exit due to injury on Sunday. Fortunately, neither injury is considered serious and both Cal Raleigh and J.P. Crawford are close to returning, as well. I'm very confident in saying that we haven't seen the best from the Mariners yet.

15) Miami Marlins ⬆️

Last week: 21

At 10-2, the Marlins have the best record in baseball so far this month. Max Meyer outdueled Paul Skenes on Sunday and Jakob Marsee did his best Superman impression with this diving catch to snuff out a potential rally.

16) Pittsburgh Pirates ⬇️

Last week: 14

Six straight losses for the Buccos, who will be missing Oneil Cruz for the 4-6 weeks due to non-displaced fractures in his left hand. It’s a major loss for a team who is already without star rookie Konnor Griffin.

17) Athletics ⬆️

Last week: 19

The A’s went 4-2 during their chaotic weeklong stay in Las Vegas. While the pitching staff was punished at times, including a 23-9 loss to the Rockies on Sunday, they pounded out 47 runs — and 20 homers — over the six-game stretch at Las Vegas Ballpark. Jacob Wilson also made his return from the injured list in another boost for the offense.

18) Texas Rangers ⬇️

Last week: 15

Once again, we’re waiting for the Rangers to climb above the .500 mark. The Rangers salvaged the finale against the Red Sox on Sunday Night Baseball on NBC and Peacock, but they did it without Corey Seager, who missed his third straight game following a collision at home plate on Thursday. It was initially reported that he was dealing with soreness to his jaw and ribs, but he’s also experienced some concussion symptoms.

19) Toronto Blue Jays ⬇️

Last week: 17

The Blue Jays have been banged up all season, with Vladimir Guerrero Jr. being the latest to miss some time, but you can begin to see the light at the end of the tunnel here. Alejandro Kirk made his long-awaited return from the injured list on Friday and Shane Bieber is on the verge of joining the Blue Jays’ rotation.

20) Cincinnati Reds ⬇️

Last week: 18

The Reds have dropped five straight series and 12 out of 16 games overall to fall into last place in the NL Central. At least recent call-up Noelvi Marte is making his case to be a lineup mainstay, as he's homered in each of his last three games.

21) Baltimore Orioles ⬇️

Last week: 20

Orioles fans are witnessing the best of Pete Alonso right now. The $155 million man is hitting .327 with five homers, 12 RBI, and a 1.067 OPS so far this month.

22) Minnesota Twins

Last week: 22

Apparently something clicked for Royce Lewis during his demotion to Triple-A. Returning to a more pronounced leg kick, the oft-injured 27-year-old is hitting .379 (11-for-29) with three homers since the Twins brought him back earlier this month.

23) Houston Astros

Last week: 23

I said in last week’s column that health might be the only thing that gets in the way of Yordan Alvarez winning the AL MVP this season. After seeing him hit two homers in the first inning on Friday, I stand by that opinion.

While the Astros have been spinning their wheels recently, there’s reason for optimism this week with staff ace Hunter Brown set to return from the injured list on Tuesday.

24) New York Mets

Last week: 24

At long last, Bo Bichette is doing Bo Bichette things again. After a brutal first two months as a Met, the 28-year-old is hitting .333 with three homers and 12 RBI this month. With Francisco Alvarez back in the fold and Francisco Lindor potentially heading out on a rehab assignment in the coming days, this lineup is about to look much more potent.

25) Boston Red Sox

Last week: 25

You couldn’t have asked for a better atmosphere than Sunday Night Baseball at Fenway Park. The Tartan Army descended upon the Rangers-Red Sox game for “Scotland Day,” one day after Scotland defeated Haiti 1-0 at Gillette Stadium in the World Cup.

Up next for Scotland is Morocco on Friday.

26) Detroit Tigers

Last week: 26

Tarik Skubal gave up three runs (two earned) in 4 2/3 innings and took the loss in his return from the injured list on Saturday against the Guardians. It’s safe to say that he wasn’t happy with his performance.

Skubal's next start comes against the White Sox on Friday, which is the start of a crucial 10-game homestand. Where they stand after that could determine their course going into the trade deadline.

27) Kansas City Royals ⬆️

Last week: 28

A brutal start to the season just got worse for Vinnie Pasquantino, who will be sidelined for at least the next four weeks following surgery to remove the fractured hamate bone from his right hand.

28) San Francisco Giants ⬇️

Last week: 27

Last week, 21-year-old Bryce Eldridge became the youngest player in MLB history to hit a walk-off grand slam. And while the drama of the actual home run is a lot of fun to watch, so is Eldridge’s reaction to learning about his place in history.

29) Los Angeles Angels

Last week: 29

Angels rookie right-hander Walbert Ureña has quietly been a nice story during the first half, as he’s posted a stingy 1.84 ERA over his last eight starts. While the control has been an issue (23 walks in 44 innings during this stretch) for the hard thrower, the 22-year-old misses lots of bats with his elite changeup and has shown an ability to keep the ball on the ground. Some hope for Angels fans moving forward.

30) Colorado Rockies

Last week: 30

How ironic is it that the Rockies set a new club record with 23 runs scored on Sunday against the Athletics, but it didn’t happen at Coors Field? More importantly, is this a proper use of irony? Alanis Morissette wasn't the best influence for me.

Braden Montgomery’s big debut part of a week that left the White Sox atop the AL Central

Braden Montgomery showed up for his big league debut and immediately became part of the fun.

The Chicago White Sox have been one of baseball’s most pleasant surprises this season. With a 38-32 record, they’re atop the AL Central. That’s after losing 102 games last year and a record 121 in 2024. So the vibes already were good when Montgomery played his first major league game.

Then he sent a drive to left in the bottom of the 10th for a two-run homer to win the game, 6-5 over the Atlanta Braves. Montgomery became the fifth player to hit a walk-off homer in his debut, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. He joined Billy Parker, Josh Bard, Miguel Cabrera and Carlos Pérez.

Montgomery is Chicago’s No. 2-ranked prospect according to MLB Pipeline. The outfielder was a first-round draft pick by Boston in 2024, then he was part of the trade that sent Garrett Crochet to the Red Sox before last season.

The White Sox finished the week by taking two of three from the Los Angeles Dodgers. That was after beating Atlanta twice in a row.

Performance of the week

There are two obvious candidates this week. Yoshinobu Yamamoto retired the first 23 batters he faced and took a no-hitter into the ninth inning before allowing a leadoff homer in the Dodgers’ 7-1 win over the White Sox.

But even that wasn’t as impressive as Milwaukee’s Jacob Misiorowski’s one-hitter against Philadelphia. He struck out 15 in a 6-0 win and threw a pitch at 104.5 mph, the fastest by a starter since tracking began.

Trivia time

Misiorowski became the fifth pitcher since 1903 to strike out at least 15 with no walks while throwing either a no-hitter or a one-hitter. Who were the others?

Comeback of the week

The San Francisco Giants were eight runs behind in the eighth against Washington when they scored five runs in each of the final two innings to win 11-10. San Francisco’s win probability was 0.2% in the eighth according to Baseball Savant.

Matt Chapman and Rafael Devers led off the bottom of the eighth with home runs, and after a pair of walks, Daniel Susac doubled home a run. Two more came home on a groundout and a wild pitch.

After the Nats extended the lead to 10-6, Luis Arraez and Chapman led off the bottom of the ninth with consecutive doubles to pull the Giants within three. After a walk and a single loaded the bases, Bryce Eldridge won it with a grand slam.

Teams trailing by at least eight runs in the eighth inning or later had lost 4,291 consecutive games, according to Sportradar. The last team to win after facing such a deficit was Cleveland against Tampa Bay in 2009.

Trivia answer

Kerry Wood of the Chicago Cubs struck out 20 in a one-hitter on May 6, 1998, against Houston.

Pedro Martinez of the Boston Red Sox struck out 17 in a one-hitter on Sept. 10, 1999, against the New York Yankees.

Max Scherzer of the Washington Nationals struck out 17 in a no-hitter on Oct. 3, 2015, against the New York Mets.

Clayton Kershaw of the Los Angeles Dodgers struck out 15 in a no-hitter on June 18, 2014, against Colorado.

Only Misiorowski faced the minimum 27 batters.

Twins vs. Rangers prediction: Odds, recent stats, trends, and best bets for June 15

The Minnesota Twins (33-40) open a road series in Arlington on Monday night against the Texas Rangers (35-36). The Rangers pulled back to within a game of .500 with a 6-4 win to salvage the final game of their weekend set against Boston. Minnesota took two of three in their weekend series at home against St. Louis including a 5-4 win yesterday. Each team sits in third place in their respective division but right in the hunt for one of the wild card berths.

On the mound, the Twins are expected to send right-hander Mike Paredes (0–0, 4.35 ERA) against the southpaw MacKenzie Gore (4–5, 4.18 ERA) for Texas. Gore has allowed more than two earned runs just once in his last six starts. This will be Paredes’ fourth start. The rookie has yet to finish the fourth inning in his first three outings.

 

At the plate, Minnesota continues to lean on Byron Buxton, who leads the club with 22 home runs and a .276 average, along with Josh Bell, who has driven in 40 runs already this season. For Texas, Jake Burger remains the primary power threat with 12 homers and 42 RBI, while Josh Jung has been the Rangers’ most consistent bat, hitting over.300 this season. on the year.

 

Lets dive into tonight’s matchup and find a sweat or two.

 

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

 

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

Game Details and How to Watch: Twins vs. Rangers

  • Date: Monday, June 15, 2026
  • Time: 8:05PM EST
  • Site: Globe Life Field
  • City: Arlington, TX
  • Network/Streaming: MLB.TV, Rangers Sports Network, Twins.TV

 

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

The Latest Odds: Twins vs. Rangers

The latest odds as of Monday courtesy of DraftKings:

  • Moneyline: Minnesota Twins (+135), Texas Rangers (-163)
  • Spread: Twins +1.5 (-162), Rangers -1.5 (+134)
  • Total: 8.0 runs

Probable Starting Pitchers: Twins vs. Rangers for June 15

  • Rangers: MacKenzie Gore
    Season Totals: 71.0 IP, 4-5, 4.18 ERA, 1.35 WHIP, 76K, 33 BB
  • Twins: Mike Paredes
    Season Totals: 10.1 IP, 0-0, 4.35 ERA, 1.06 WHIP, 8K, 6 BB

Who’s Hot? Who’s Not! Twins vs. Rangers

  • Brandon Nimmo was 2-10 vs. the Red Sox this weekend
  • Jake Burger has hit safely in 6 of his last 7 games (10-23)
  • Austin Martin has 1 hit in his last 6 games (1-15)
  • Brooks Lee was 2-11 over the weekend against the Cardinals

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

Top Betting Trends & Insights: Twins vs. Rangers

  • The Twins are 38-35 on the Run Line this season
  • The Rangers are 37-34 on the Run Line this season
  • The OVER has cashed 43 times in Minnesota’s 73 games this season (43-25-5)
  • The OVER has cashed an MLB-low 29 times in the Rangers’ 71 games this season (29-36-6)

Expert picks & predictions: Twins vs. Rangers

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

 

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

 

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for today’s game between the Twins and the Rangers:

  • Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Twins on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: Rotoworld Bet is staying away from a play on the Run Line.
  • Total: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Game Total OVER 8.0

 
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Ronald Acuña Jr., Ozzie Albies and Drake Baldwin currently in line to start at 2026 MLB All-Star Game

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - MARCH 27: Drake Baldwin #30 of the Atlanta Braves reacts with Ozzie Albies #1 after hitting a solo homer against the Kansas City Royals during the third inning of the home opener at Truist Park on March 27, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Major League Baseball has released the first round of updates for All-Star voting for this year’s MLB All-Star Game, which will be taking place in Philadelphia this season. Assuming things remain as they are, the locals will get an opportunity to boo three players in particular once the introductions are made, as the Braves currently have three players who are leading the voting in their respective positions for the National League team.

Ronald Acuña Jr., Ozzie Albies and Drake Baldwin are each leading their positions in All-Star votes at the moment. Here’s more from MLB’s press release on the voting results so far:

The Atlanta Braves, who own the best record in MLB at 46-25, have three players among the NL leaders. Reigning NL Jackie Robinson Rookie of the Year Drake Baldwin, seeking his first All-Star assignment, ranks second among all NL players and is leading NL catchers with 972,813 votes…

Baldwin is joined by second baseman Ozzie Albies and outfielder Ronald Acuña Jr. of the Braves. Albies (517,147), who is bidding for his fourth All-Star selection and first fan-elected starting assignment, is trailed by a pair of potential first-time All-Stars in Philadelphia’s Bryson Stott (399,729) and Brice Turang of the Milwaukee Brewers (373,656). Albies would become Atlanta’s first second baseman to win a fan election since Dan Uggla in 2012…

Acuña Jr. (693,472) ranks second among NL outfielder behind positional leader Andy Pages of the Dodgers (800,496). The duo is joined by Philadelphia’s Brandon Marsh (668,191), while Atlanta’s Michael Harris II (635,473), two-time All-Star Teoscar Hernández of the Dodgers (507,625) and Jordan Walker of the St. Louis Cardinals (437,071) are currently in position to advance to Phase 2…

Dodgers teammates Freddie Freeman and Max Muncy are currently leading at the corner infield positions, joining Ohtani and Pages among Los Angeles positional leaders. The nine-time All-Star Freeman (870,606) is narrowly edging out three-time All-Star Matt Olson of the Braves (802,848) while eight-time All-Star Bryce Harper of the Phillies (651,792) ranks third. Freeman, who has won five of the last seven fan elections, is aiming for his sixth fan-elected start, while Olson seeks his first and Harper his eighth.

So as you can see, while Acuña, Albies and Baldwin are currently leading, both Michael Harris II and Matt Olson are at least primed to make things interesting in their respective races to get voted into the All-Star Game. Additionally, Austin Riley is currently running in fourth place among NL Third Basemen, Ha-Seong Kim is running sixth in the Shortstop voting, Dominic Smith is third among all Designated Hitters and Mauricio Dubón is 11th among outfielders. The rest of those names are long shots to get in but hey, it’s still pretty cool to see this many Braves players even in the mix at this point.

The next round of updates will be released at this time next week, with Phase 1 of the balloting ending at 12:00 p.m. ET sharp on June 25, finalists being announced at 6:00 p.m ET that same day and Phase 2 beginning on June 29. If you’re trying to get your favorite Braves players to Philadelphia for the Midsummer Classic, you’d better get to voting (or keep voting).

MLB Same-Game Parlay Predictions: Our Best SGP Picks for Monday, June 15

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Let's get the week started with a few plus-money Silly Goose Parlays (SPGs). That is what SGP stands for, right?

I dug through the slate and found a handful of spots backed by mouthwatering trends, strong matchup data, and hitters who are swinging a hot bat.

If you are looking for a little fun with your MLB picks this evening, these are the MLB same-game parlay predictions catching my eye tonight.

Today's best MLB SGP picks

Rockies vs Cubs SGP: Pitchers in trouble

I am fully expecting both offenses to carry over the success they had in their previous series as the Colorado Rockies and Chicago Cubs square off tonight at Wrigley Field.

Cubs left-hander Shota Imanaga enters with a favorable Batters-Box rating, sporting poor marks in matchup ISO, hard contact rate, and ground ball rate. In 20 previous favorable matchups, he has allowed 5+ hits in 85% of those starts and has gone over 5.5 hits allowed 50% of the time. This season, the Cubs southpaw owns a 5.13 ERA at home while allowing a 42% hard contact rate and a 10.29% barrel rate to opposing hitters.

Michael Lorenzen brings similar concerns to the mound, entering with the worst pitcher rating on the slate. In 17 previous poorly rated matchups, the Rockies right-hander has allowed over 5.5 hits in 52.94% of those outings. His struggles have been even more pronounced on the road, where he owns a 6.68 ERA while allowing a 49.15% hard contact rate and a 12.71% barrel rate.

Both offenses are loaded with hitters in favorable matchups, making this a strong spot for the bats to stay hot tonight.

  • Time: 8:05 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: Marquee, COLR

See full analysis of this game in our Rockies vs. Cubs predictions.

Marlins vs Phillies SGP: Philly...with Gusto!

Get ready to drool, numbers nerds, because there are some juicy trends in this Miami Marlins vs. Philadelphia Phillies matchup.

Phillies veteran right-hander Zack Wheeler enters with an elite rating on Batters-Box. In 32 previous elite-rated starts, he has recorded six-plus strikeouts 87.5% of the time. At home this season, Wheeler owns a 26.6% strikeout rate along with a 36.1% chase rate outside the zone. He draws a Marlins lineup that features five hitters with a strikeout rate of at least 27.9%, including four north of 30.6.

On the other side, the Phillies offense gets a favorable matchup against Ryan Gusto, who has to navigate three elite-rated hitters and one strong-rated hitter. All four will bat from the left side. Throughout his career, left-handed hitters have given Gusto trouble, batting .316 with a .560 slugging percentage and a .402 wOBA.

Kyle Schwarber stands out as my favorite to record a hit against Gusto. He owns the number one hitter rating in this matchup along with the highest arsenal coverage against Gusto’s pitch mix. When elite at home, Schwarber records a hit 63 percent of the time across a 100 game sample.

With all four lefties possessing strong arsenal coverage against Gusto, this sets up for the Phillies to jump out early and cruise to a win.

  • Time: 6:40 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: NBCSP, MIAM

Tigers vs Astros SGP: Southpaw slugfest

I have always been a big advocate of a little plus-money three-leg hit parlay. They are tough to come by, but they are always worth a look. This evening, Detroit Tigers young studs Riley Greene and Kerry Carpenter find themselves with elite ratings over on Batters-Box as they take on Houston Astros right-hander Kai-Wei Teng.

Teng owns the third-worst pitcher rating on the slate, carrying poorly rated marks in matchup ISO, hard contact rate, and ground ball rate. Over his last five outings, the right-hander has allowed 42% hard contact while posting a 1.48 WHIP.

Both Tigers have been scorching the baseball lately, producing plenty of hard contact and barrels over their last 30 at-bats against right-handed pitching. Each hitter also owns at least 50% arsenal coverage against Teng's pitch mix. On top of that, both have strong trends when carrying an elite Batters-Box rating, recording a hit in at least 63.79% of those opportunities.

Finally, adding the most dangerous bat in baseball to simply record a hit, as he carries nearly 90% arsenal coverage against Tigers right hander Troy Melton. Astros slugger Yordan Alvarez has also recorded a hit in nearly 67% of his elite rated games over the last three seasons, a 218 game sample size.

At +180, asking these three to simply do the floor and record a hit feels well worth the squeeze this evening.

  • Time: 8:10 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: DSN, SCHN

See full analysis of this game in our Tigers vs. Astros predictions.

Colby Marchio's 2026 Transparency Record
  • 2026 Record: 218-376-35, +9.10 units

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
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Series Preview #24: Angels @ Diamondbacks

PHOENIX, AZ - JUNE 17: The Angels' Mike Trout, Dino Ebel and Mike Scioscia watch the final out of the Halos' 3-2 loss to the Diamondbacks Wednesday night at Chase Field. ///ADDITIONAL INFO: angels.0618.kjs --- Photo by KEVIN SULLIVAN / Orange County Register -- 6/17/15 The Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim take on the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field in Phoenix, Arizona Wednesday night. 6/17/15 (Photo by Kevin Sullivan/Digital First Media/Orange County Register via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images

We won.

Lately my previews are always a race against the clock. I start this preview well ahead of the first game starting time, so you could say I am save, but I just remembered that the Spain game starts 30 minutes from now and, since I live in Spain, I feel obliged to watch the team, beside it being probably one of the most fun teams to watch this World Cup.

But, before that, we have to take a look at this series preview.

The Diamondbacks won a series against the Reds. That is good news. I am sharing a subscription now with someone and was very disappointed on Saturday when I noticed that the Friday game was on Apple TV. On Saturday we had a huge neighbourhood party and early morning Sunday I went out for a game of squash. After that life happens so I hadn’t been able to watch the Saturday game either and then my country played Japan. Conclusion: I haven’t seen the Snakes this weekend.

Of all the people on the Injury List, Lourdes Gurriel Jr. should be close to returning: Taking machine batting practice, running and doing outfield work. Manager Torey Lovullo said on June 14 that the team is honing in on a plan for a return. I guess that is positive news, no matter how much he has sucked so far or how much we need a left-handed batter. Can’t be much worse than Pavin Smith, Jorge Barroso, or Adrian Del Castillo.

Now the Angels though…

Dead last Angels.

They didn’t do much last year, and notable departures were probably only veteran Kenley Jansen’s and his 29 saves. In the off-season they signed long-time former Pirate and second baseman Adam Frazier, third baseman Yoan Moncada and outfielder and Rays’ Jose Siri. Their biggest movements were on the reliever market, where they signed Drew Pomeranz to a $5MM contract. I had no idea he was still pitching but he apparently threw almost 50 good innings for the Cubs last year. Brent Suter, Kirby Yates and Jordan Romano are other well-known names. The Angels also took a flier on the fallen-from-grace Blue Jays’ pitcher Alex Manoah.

Though those are not really spectacular signings, and indeed some haven’t been able to contribute that much, you also have to admit that the Angels haven’t been lucky with injuries.

Jorge Soler, Vaughn Grissom, Adam Frazier, Travis D’Arnaud and Yoan Moncada are currently all without a timetable for return. On the pitching side Yusei Kikuchi, and Ben Joyce are also out, though they might return in July. Currently, Wade Meckler and Grayson Rodriguez are day to day.

You haven’t read the name of Mike Trout and that is good news for all Angels and baseball fans. The future Hall of Famer has been troubled by many injuries over the past seasons, but 2026 has treated him kindly so far. He has played 71 games this season and his 134 OPS+ and 15 homeruns lead the team. Over the past two weeks Mike Trout has been in a slump though, batting a miserable 34 WRC+, but others have stepped up to make sure that the Angels are a middle of the pack hitting team at the moment. Jose Siri, rookie Wade Meckler, Nick Madrigal and Jo Adell have been riding a hot bat. Zach Neto is one of the other bats that stand out, hitting a bit above average.

On the pitching side you could say that only Reid Detmers really stands out and every off-season signing hasn’t panned out so far. That probably explains why the Angels are 29-43 and dead last in the AL West. Yet another lost season for Anaheim, like there already have been so many.

It didn’t look that bad at the beginning of the season. They stayed around .500 for the first month of the season until they entered a long streak of losses, going 6-24 in the next 30 games, from an 11-10 record to 17-34. The last two series though, they have been able to string some wins together, beating both Houston and Tampa Bay. Two weeks ago the Rockies beat the Angels 2-1 in their series, so that should be our benchmark.

Matchups.

Game #1 Mon 06/15 6:40 PM MST, Ryne Nelson (ARI) vs Walbert Ureña (LAA).

  • Ryne Nelson. 14 GS, 76.1 IP, 2 W-5 L, 5.19 ERA, 5.53 FIP, 1.23 WHIP, 57/22 K/BB. $3,000,000.
  • Walbert Ureña. 12 G, 10 GS, 55.1 IP, 4 W-4 L, 2.44 ERA, 4.01 FIP, 1.36 WHIP, 55/33 K/BB. $780,000.

What do you get when you have Dilbert walking into a Walmart? You get a very bad joke that ends with Walbert. The names kids have in the Dominican never stop to amaze me and if you think you have seen it all, well, Walbert shows up. The jokes do not do justice to his career and hat off for this Dominican 22-year old who makes his debut in the MLB this season. Signed in 2021 and making his professional debut in 2022 in the complex league, Ureña has skyrocketed through the Angels’ farm system. FanGraphs hasn’t been high on him, pointing out that he is more of a thrower than a pitcher. Perhaps that explains why Ureña is already in the MLB. He throws 101 mph and we all know that the Angels love some gas on their pitchers. The pattern of poor control and allowing way too many free passes has haunted him since his early days into the MLB. However, until now he has been able to keep the damage controlled. But expect to see a wild one in this first game.

Nelson had a terrible performance against Miami, after a good one against the Dodgers, so it is time to bounce back. For Ryne it will be the second time that he faces the Angels, though this season for the first time at Chase Field. Last season he got a no-decision, struggling over 4 innings, allowing 4 runs.

Game #2 Tue 06/16 6:40 PM MST, Merrill Kelly (ARI) vs Reid Detmers (LAA).

  • Merrill Kelly. 11 GS, 64.1 IP, 5 W-5 L, 5.46 ERA, 5.90 FIP, 1.45 WHIP, 38/27 K/BB. $18,000,000.
  • Reid Detmers. 14 GS, 81.0 IP, 2 W-5 L, 4.00 ERA, 2.87 FIP, 1.05 WHIP, 97/24 K/BB. $2,625,000.

Just like Walbert Ureña, Merrill Kelly isn’t able to strike anyone out either. Though, where Ureña is earning league minimum, Kelly is earning some real big money, but you could say that this is payback for all those years where he was steady and excellent while earning crap for the value he provided to this team. Well, that value might be at its lowest right now. Merrill struck out just 1 Marlin in his latest performance and before that, the Nationals knocked him around for 7 runs. Last season Merrill notched a win against the Angels, though what value has his performance of last season?

The loss looks a certainty with Reid Detmers on the mound. Detmers has had two stinkers though also seems to be a victim of some bad luck. That is evidenced by the 97 men he has mowed down so far this season. In that category Detmers has only Jacob Misiorowski and Paul Skenes in front of him. His fastball averages 94.1, which isn’t that much, and he combines it with excellent control, command and and a great slider and curveball.

Game #3 Wed 06/17 12:40 PM MST, Eduardo Rodriguez (ARI) vs Samuel Aldegheri (LAA).

  • Eduardo Rodriguez. 14 GS, 81.1 IP, 5 W-2 L, 2.55 ERA, 4.09 FIP, 1.23 WHIP, 60/32 K/BB. $21,000,000.
  • Samuel Aldegheri. 5 G, 2 GS, 17.0 IP, 2 W-1 L, 2.12 ERA, 3.87 FIP, 1.29 WHIP, 12/8 K/BB. $500,520.

Italy will be happy to know that, although the Azzuri is not at the World Cup (part of me likes to believe that they get punished for years of catenaccio – what is equivalent to destroying football), Italy is at the highest level in the MLB in the form of Samuel Aldegheri. That is terrific for this pitcher, who was born in 2001 in Verona. After starting his career for well-known team Parma, he signed for the Phillies in one of the international amateur signing periods and ended up in Anaheim in 2024 in a trade for former Rockie Carlos Estévez. Aldegheri was ahead of Ureña in the Angels farm ranking on FanGraphs, projected as a back-end starter with good command but without any outstanding pitch and oscillation in his velocity. Aldegheri made his debut in 2024 in the majors, making him the 5th Italian born pitcher in the leagues, but had a little crisis in 2025 with declining velocity. He has been up and down this season, but got the start almost a week ago against the Tampa Bay Rays and pitched well enough to earn another one. His four-seamer sits around 92 mph and he also uses a curve, slider and changeup.

E-Rod struggled against the Reds. That was after an already tough performance against the Nationals in his performance before that one. The last time E-Rod saw the Angels was in 2023. In 11 plate appearances, Mike Trout has a .919 OPS, with 1 homerun, against Rodriguez. Trey Mancini, recently added to the team and last year, for a while, in Reno, has seen E-Rod in 48 plate appearances, good for a .811 OPS.

Astros Need to Play Their Best Players Every Day to Get Back in Hunt

HOUSTON, TEXAS - MAY 16: Jose Altuve #27 of the Houston Astros celebrates with teammate Isaac Paredes #15 after hitting a solo home run in the first inning against the Texas Rangers at Daikin Park on May 16, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Houston Astros/Getty Images) | Getty Images

To play or not to play? That has become the question Astros fans are debating following Houston’s 4-0 loss to the Kansas City Royals on Sunday.

With an opportunity to complete a three-game sweep and continue building momentum, the Astros elected to keep two of their most important hitters, Isaac Paredes and Jose Altuve, out of the lineup. The result was a noticeably less potent offense that performed exactly as many feared it would, managing little at the plate in a shutout loss.

Let me be clear: I am not one of those people calling for Joe Espada’s job because of a lineup decision. I’m also not naive enough to believe the manager is solely responsible for filling out the lineup card. General Manager Dana Brown, the analytics department, and other members of the baseball operations staff undoubtedly have significant input in those decisions on a daily basis.

That said, this isn’t the first time we’ve had this discussion.

The Astros have once again found themselves digging out of an early-season hole, spending much of the first half trying to make up ground in both the division and Wild Card races. When you’re playing catch-up, every game matters. Every opportunity to gain ground matters. And in those situations, I believe your best players need to be on the field as often as possible.

Houston had an off day on Thursday. Yes, Saturday night’s game featured a 90-minute rain delay, but shortly after play resumed, the Astros wrapped up the victory in the next inning. It’s not as though the club had endured a grueling stretch of baseball leading into Sunday afternoon.

That’s why I struggle to understand sitting two of your top four hitters when a sweep was there for the taking.

A victory would have given the Astros four wins in six games on the road trip, continued the momentum they’ve built over the last several weeks, and helped them inch closer to .500 while narrowing the gap in both the Wild Card and division races.

Instead, the lineup looked diminished from the start, and the offense never found its footing.

The larger question is one that has divided Astros fans on social media.

Do you subscribe to the belief that the season is a marathon, not a sprint, and that key players should receive rest whenever the organization believes they need it, regardless of circumstance?

Or do you believe that when a team starts slowly and spends months trying to recover lost ground, the urgency changes? That every game carries added significance and your best players should be in the lineup whenever reasonably possible to maximize your chances of winning?

I fall into the latter category.

Had it been my decision, both Altuve and Paredes would have been in Sunday’s lineup. The team had just enjoyed an off day earlier in the week, and they were headed home immediately after the game. Given the circumstances, the opportunity to secure a sweep and continue gaining ground outweighed the need for rest.

The good news for Astros fans is that the season is far from over. Houston remains within striking distance, sitting only a few games out of a Wild Card spot and still close enough to keep an eye on the division race. As injured players continue to return and the roster gets healthier, the Astros should only improve.

But if they’re serious about climbing back into contention, I believe their best players need to be on the field as often as possible.

What do you think? Should teams prioritize rest no matter the circumstances, or should the urgency of the standings dictate when stars get days off?

San Diego takes momentum into Cardinals series

BALTIMORE, MD - JUNE 14: Rodolfo Durán #48 of the San Diego Padres celebrates as he rounds the bases after hitting a two-run home run in the seventh inning during a baseball game against the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yard on June 14, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Mitchell Layton/Getty Images | Getty Images

The San Diego Padres haven’t won two consecutive series since April. They finally did so on Sunday against the Baltimore Orioles. After besting the Cincinnati Reds in a rubber match last week, they did the same against the O’s in the rubber match Sunday afternoon. They did so on the backs of some great pitching alongside some even better offense.

The Friars put up 17 runs in the series, including a nine-run romp of Baltimore in Game 2. They haven’t scored that many runs since they swept the Seattle Mariners in May. San Diego needs to ride that momentum into their series against a recently struggling St. Louis Cardinals ballclub.

Taking the mound

Dustin May (STL) v. Lucas Giolito (SD)

May has been off to a solid season with the Cards. He’s pitched to a 4.21 ERA through 72 2/3 innings. That was due to a difficult stretch to start the year, but he’s turned things around lately. May boasts a 3.43 ERA in his last seven starts.

He pitched well against the Friars last time they faced St. Louis. May pitched six innings but surrendered three runs (two earned) and failed to record a win for the Cards. He’ll look to improve this time around against San Diego.

Giolito has struggled with consistency in his Padres tenure thus far. He owns a 4.35 ERA through 20 2/3 innings pitched. His last few starts have been better, surrendering just three runs in his last 8 innings. Hoping to turn that around, the Friars will be using an opener for him today.

The right-hander has struggled with fastball command, but has looked better. Hopefully, Giolito can return to the form he had in his first two starts with the club (3 ER, 10.0 IP). If he can, the Padres should easily take Game 1 over St. Louis.

Batter up!

The sample size is getting bigger and bigger. Samad Taylor has been fantastic for the Friars. He’s batting .357 with a .919 OPS and went 5-for-13 with his first MLB home run in the series against Baltimore.

  1. Fernando Tatis Jr., 2B
  2. Jackson Merrill, CF
  3. Manny Machado, 3B
  4. Xander Bogaerts, SS
  5. Gavin Sheets, 1B
  6. Samad Taylor, LF
  7. Will Wagner, DH
  8. Jase Bowen, RF
  9. Rodolfo Durán, C

The star of the rubber match was Durán, who will be shouldering the catching weight with Freddy Fermin hitting the 7-day IL on concussion protocol. Durán slugged two homers in the last two games. Padres catchers have now combined for five home runs in the last week.

Relief corps

San Diego exhausted the majority of their high leverage relievers on Sunday afternoon. Bradgley Rodriguez, Jason Adam, Adrian Morejon and Mason Miller covered the final four innings of the game after Walker Buehler covered the first five and allowed just one run.

That will leave the Padres with options, though none of them have been fantastic. Ron Marinaccio, Yuki Matsui, David Morgan and Wandy Peralta will each be available in Game 1 against the Cards.

Arizona Cardinals fans think Jacoby Brissett deserves a slight increase

Jun 9, 2026; Tempe, AZ, USA; Arizona Cardinals Jacoby Brissett (7) during minicamp at Arizona Cardinals Training Center. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images | Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images

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


Happy Monday one and all.

The Arizona Cardinals are on a slight break before training camp picks up in July, and the Arizona Cardinals get a couple days extra of work since they are part of the Hall of Fame Game this year in the preseason.

Now the question that is outstanding for the Arizona Cardinals, what is happening with Jacoby Brissett?

We know he has held out all of voluntary OTA’s and held-in during mandatory minicamp, meaning he was there and did nothing, while he waits for a new contract that pays him as the starter.

While the Cardinals have not publicly said he is the starter, it was reported by Josh Weinfuss and later John Gambadoro that the Cardinals are going with Brissett.

So, we asked, would how much would you change things contract wise for Brissett? The results really surprised me:

Fans are fine giving Brissett a slight bump, raise him up to $10 million(ish) and guarantee it, and let’s move foward.

I actually am shocked that fans would only want to slightly bump or keep Brissett at the same salary, but it makes sense.

He was given an opportunity and had a modicum of success statistically, but was also the quarterback of a team that went 1-11 with him starting and lost nine straight games.

Right now, our friends at FanDuel Sportsbook have the odds of Brissett starting game one at -350, with Gardner Minshew at +420 and Carson Beck at +700. The Cardinals are not favored in a single game this season either. What is that worth