MLB Lineup Report: Here comes Bryce Eldridge, Dillon Dingler playing every day

It used to be that every team hit their fastest player at leadoff, a contact-oriented bat second, and their best all-around hitter third. The last decade changed that.

Lineups are better optimized analytically now, but that has also shifted the profiles of who accumulates runs versus RBI. That makes it more important than ever to track lineup changes throughout the season.

⚾️ Baseball is back on NBC: MLB returns to NBC and Peacock in 2026! In addition to becoming the exclusive home of Sunday Night Baseball, NBC Sports will broadcast MLB Sunday Leadoff, “Opening Day” and Labor Day primetime games, the first round of the MLB Draft, the entire Wild Card round of the postseason, and much more.

Arizona Diamondbacks

Nolan Arenado remains the everyday cleanup hitter. Ryan Waldschmidt has climbed from ninth to a regular fifth-or-sixth spot. Tommy Troy has taken over in left field with Lourdes Gurriel Jr. on the IL.

Athletics

Carlos Cortes is in a strict platoon but has led off against every right-hander since May 18. Tyler Soderstrom has moved up to cleanup against righties. Henry Bolte and Lawrence Butler are splitting center field, with Bolte getting the bulk of the starts. Zack Gelof hasn’t missed a game since May 3.

Atlanta Braves

Austin Riley has spent most of the past two weeks in the bottom half of the order. Michael Harris bats second and Ozzie Albies cleanup. Ha-Seong Kim has struggled badly since returning from the IL, opening up shortstop reps for Jorge Mateo and Mauricio Dubón, the latter of whom also sees plenty of left field.

Check out this week’s Steals Report!

Baltimore Orioles

Samuel Basallo started against just three of the first 16 lefties Baltimore faced, but he’s now gone three straight. Leody Taveras handles center field every day while Colton Cowser and Tyler O’Neill platoon in right. Coby Mayo is starting to consolidate the third-base job.

Boston Red Sox

Ceddanne Rafaela has hit second in each of his past nine healthy games. Marcelo Mayer is 0-for-3 against southpaws since shifting to shortstop, so the platoon holds for now.

Chicago Cubs

Pete Crow-Armstrong leads off against righties and bats second against lefties. Dansby Swanson is mostly hitting ninth. Nothing else has shifted here lately.

Chicago White Sox

Andrew Benintendi (vs. RHP) and Randal Grichuk (vs. LHP) have each climbed into the top four with Munetaka Murakami (hamstring) sidelined. Sam Antonacci stays atop the order against righties and has now drawn starts against four straight lefties. Jacob Gonzalez has started four of five at first base since Murakami went down and he was recalled.

Cincinnati Reds

Blake Dunn is the new everyday leadoff man. Nathaniel Lowe is swinging it well and starts against righties. Matt McLain is at shortstop with Elly De La Cruz (hamstring) on the IL. Edwin Arroyo started two of three at second base after coming up. Noelvi Marte was recalled Wednesday but didn’t start.

Cleveland Guardians

Travis Bazzana took over leadoff on May 23 and stayed there until batting cleanup on Thursday. Steven Kwan has hit seventh in every start since May 18. Kyle Manzardo is seeing more time against righties. Brayan Rocchio has sat just three times all year.

Colorado Rockies

Jake McCarthy has led off against 11 straight righties while still starting versus lefties. TJ Rumfield and Troy Johnston are holding their middle-of-the-order spots. Willi Castro continues to move all over the infield.

Detroit Tigers

Gleyber Torres returned from the IL and reclaimed leadoff immediately. Colt Keith stands to lose the most against righties after dropping to sixth on Wednesday. Dillon Dingler has sat just once since May 4.

Houston Astros

Taylor Trammell has started eight of nine since returning from the IL, though Houston added LaMonte Wade Jr. on Thursday. Cam Smith is in there daily, mostly batting fifth or sixth.

Kansas City Royals

Carter Jensen took over leadoff against righties even before Maikel Garcia missed this entire week, a move that bumped Salvador Perez down to fifth. Jac Caglianone has started against four straight lefties after sitting against them for most of the season.

Los Angeles Angels

Vaughn Grissom is the everyday first baseman, batting third or fourth with Nolan Schanuel sidelined. Wade Meckler is filling the strong-side platoon role in left with Josh Lowe at Triple-A. Jorge Soler has shifted up to leadoff with Zach Neto out the past three games. Jo Adell got his first day off Wednesday.

Los Angeles Dodgers

Andy Pages has hit second or third in every game since May 26. Mookie Betts has settled in at cleanup lately, which could mean more RBI than we’re used to seeing from him. Alex Freeland and Miguel Rojas are splitting second base.

Miami Marlins

Liam Hicks has settled into a table-setting role at the top recently, with Xavier Edwards batting cleanup when he isn’t leading off.

Milwaukee Brewers

Andrew Vaughn is the odd man out at full health, but he’s one injury away from a shot at regular at-bats. The lineup has been remarkably stable lately given the clean bill of health and a long run of right-handed starters. Milwaukee entered Thursday ranked sixth in the majors in runs per game.

Minnesota Twins

Brooks Lee has taken over the two-hole. Kody Clemens bats in the heart of the order against righties. Austin Martin has carved out a near-everyday role. Royce Lewis remains in Triple-A.

New York Mets

Benge, Bichette, and Soto have been the regular 1-2-3 since May 12. Jared Young has hit cleanup against six straight righties, eating into some of Mark Vientos’ time. A.J. Ewing has sat just once since debuting May 12.

RELATED: How to replace Aaron Judge? Check out this week’s Waiver Wire Report!

New York Yankees

Paul Goldschmidt barely played early on but has now started 13 straight, hitting third the past two games against righties with Aaron Judge out. José Caballero has sat two of 11 games since returning from the IL, with four of his starts coming at shortstop. Anthony Volpe has manned short in the other seven. Trent Grisham has seen meaningfully more time against lefties through May and June.

Philadelphia Phillies

Remarkable stability here, especially now that Brandon Marsh and Bryson Stott are starting against southpaws too. Justin Crawford is the one who platoons, typically with Edmundo Sosa.

Pittsburgh Pirates

Spencer Horwitz is leading off against righties while Oneil Cruz has slipped to mostly fifth or sixth. Jared Triolo is manning shortstop without Konnor Griffin (forearm). Nick Gonzales has become the everyday third baseman, usually hitting in the top half of the order.

San Diego Padres

Nick Castellanos was designated for assignment, which helps Ty France indirectly if it pushes Gavin Sheets into more left field. Miguel Andújar is the regular DH. Fernando Tatis Jr. is up to 25 starts at second base and 33 in right.

San Francisco Giants

Bryce Eldridge has started against four of seven lefties since being recalled, and his playing time is climbing while his expected stats hint at a breakout. Casey Schmitt is the new leadoff man, with Willy Adames back in the run-producing cleanup spot.

Seattle Mariners

Colt Emerson is the everyday third baseman with Brendan Donovan (groin) still on the IL, mostly hitting ninth. Cole Young has started every game.

MLB: Chicago White Sox at Seattle Mariners

May 19, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; Seattle Mariners shortstop Colt Emerson (4) participates in pregame warmups against the Chicago White Sox at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images

Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images

St. Louis Cardinals

Ivan Herrera has started and hit second in every game this year. Bryan Torres plays left against righties. Lars Nootbaar (heels) is expected back Friday.

Tampa Bay Rays

Chandler Simpson has held an everyday job despite not stealing a base since May 11. Cedric Mullins and Richie Palacios remain in their strong-side platoon roles.

Texas Rangers

Joc Pederson is holding the leadoff role against righties, followed most often by Josh Jung, Brandon Nimmo, and Jake Burger. Ezequiel Duran has been the regular shortstop with Corey Seager out. Evan Carter handles center against all righties and some lefties.

Toronto Blue Jays

George Springer has sat three times over the past eight games. Nathan Lukes has hit first or second against righties since returning from the IL. Jesús Sánchez and Andrés Giménez remain in platoons.

Washington Nationals

Curtis Mead has started 12 of the past 14, batting third against righties and second against lefties. Luis García Jr. tumbled from second to eighth on Wednesday as Dylan Crews slid up to the two-hole. Worth tracking this weekend with Washington ranked second in the majors in runs per game. Jacob Young is gradually climbing the back half of the order after already setting a career high in home runs.

On The Horizon: Cubs vs. Giants series preview

The Cubs and Giants will play their entire season series over the next 10 days, three this weekend at Wrigley Field and three next weekend in San Francisco.

Thanks, schedule-makers.

For more on the Giants, here’s Brady Klopfer, manager of our SB Nation Giants site McCovey Chronicles.

There’s no way to paint the Giants season as anything other than a fiasco. With the exception of Luis Arráez, who is having a renaissance on both sides of the ball, Buster Posey’s offseason moves have been a disaster. Harrison Bader, who is on the IL, has spent more time injured than healthy, and hasn’t hit when healthy. Tyler Mahle and Adrian Houser both have bloated ERAs, though neither will face the Cubs in this series (Mahle is on the IL, and Houser pitched on Thursday). And new manager Tony Vitello, straight to the Majors following a stellar run in the college ranks, has had his fair share of learning moments. Add in disappointing seasons from most of their core players – Matt Chapman, Willy Adames, Rafael Devers, Patrick Bailey (who has been traded), and Logan Webb (who is finally figuring it out) – and it’s been a season absent of much optimism, with the Giants occupying the bottom of the standings all year long. 

But there have been some bright spots, especially lately. Top prospect Bryce Eldridge is on fire, and looks like he could anchor the lineup for the next decade. Casey Schmitt is actualizing his potential and has been such an offensive force that the former Minor League Gold Glove winner at third base became the everyday left fielder when Heliot Ramos suffered an injury, despite having never trained at the position before (and, hilariously, ordering a wrong-handed glove on Amazon). Landen Roupp has been a strong starter, and Jung Hoo Lee is hotter than hot, with a 12-game hitting streak during which time he’s hitting nearly .500. As a whole, the Giants have finally started hitting, and have been one of the better offensive teams in baseball lately, after a horific start. Still, they dug a big enough hole that the rest of 2026 is likely about preparing for 2027. They’re still playing their veterans heavily and chasing wins, but you can expect a pretty big fire sale next month. 

Fun facts

A sweep of the three-game series would raise the Cubs’ victory total against the Giants to 750 since 1920, first year of the Live Ball Era. They have lost 829 and tied six.

They are 1,091-1,168-29 in all games since the rivalry began in  1883 and  355-387-2 since 1958, the Giants’ first season in San Francisco.

At home, the Cubs are 603-533 overall and 192-182 since 1958.

The Cubs won their first game against the Giants last year, at Wrigley Field, then lost the next two at home and all three at San Francisco. They split four games at Wrigley in 2024 and swept three in 2023.

(Courtesy BCB’s JohnW53)

Probable pitching matchups

Friday: Edward Cabrera, RHP (3-2, 4.00 ERA, 1.352 WHIP, 4.45 FIP) vs. Robbie Ray, LHP (3-6, 4.45 ERA, 1.404 WHIP, 5.40 FIP)

Saturday: Ben Brown, RHP (2-2, 1.92 ERA, 0.929 WHIP, 2.23 FIP) vs. Landen Roupp, RHP (5-6, 4.22 ERA, 1.313 WHIP, 2.82 FIP)

Sunday: Jameson Taillon, RHP (2-5, 5.13 ERA, 1.260 WHIP, 6.33 FIP) vs. Trevor McDonald, RHP (2-3, 4.50 ERA, 1.147 WHIP, 3.66 FIP)

Times & TV channels

Friday: 1:20 p.m. CT, Marquee Sports Network, MLB Network (outside the Cubs and Giants market territories)

Saturday: 1:20 p.m. CT, Marquee Sports Network

Sunday: 7:30 p.m. CT, NBC (full national broadcast, no blackouts), also streaming on Peacock

Prediction

The Cubs had better win at least two of three or it’s gonna be a long summer. And yes, I think they can do that.

Up next

The Cubs have Monday off, then begin a road trip with a three-game series against the Colorado Rockies in Denver beginning Tuesday evening.

Astros Prospect Report: June 4th

SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - AUGUST 06: Ethan Pecko #33 of the Sugar Land Space Cowboys pitches against the Sacramento River Cats during the first inning at Sutter Health Park on August 06, 2025 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Scott Marshall/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Another day of minor league baseball is in the books. See the results below. Check out the previous day’s recap here.

AAA: Sugar Land Space Cowboys (26-34) won 4-1 (BOX SCORE)

Sugar Land got the scoring started in the 5th inning scoring 3 runs on an Alexander RBI single and Perez 2 run single. Brown made a rehab start for Sugar Land and pitched well striking out 4 over 4.1 innings allowing 1 run. They got another run in the 6th inning on a Biggio RBI singe. Pecko closed it out tossing 4 scoreless innings with 3 strikeouts as Sugar Land won 4-1.

Note: Biggio has a .780 OPS in Triple-A.


AA: Corpus Christi Hooks (24-30) lost 3-2 (BOX SCORE)

The Hooks got on the board in the 3rd inning on a Biggers RBI single. Hicks started for the Hooks and was great striking out 8 over 6.1 innings allowing just 1 run. The Hooks took the lead in the 6th inning on a Schiavone RBI single. Rodriguez allowed a run in the 7th and Leach allowed a run in the 9th as the Travelers took the lead. The offense was unable to respond in the bottom of the 9th and the Hooks fell 3-2.

Note: Schiavone has a .834 OPS in Double-A.


A+: Asheville Tourists (14-39won 10-9 (BOX SCORE)

Asheville got on the board in the first inning scoring 3 runs on a Call RBI double, Ochoa RBI double and Nunez RBI single. Hertzler started for Asheville and allowed 2 runs over 4 innings while striking out 7. The offense picked up 3 more runs in the third inning on a Nunez 2 run double and Garcia groundout. In the 4th, Powell connected on a 2 run home run to extend the lead. The offense got some insurance with a Nunez RBI double in the 7th and a Walker RBI single in the 8th. The pen allowed 7 runs, including 6 in the 9th, but held on for the 10-9 win.

Note: Ochoa has a 1.203 OPS through three games in High-A.


A: Fayetteville Woodpeckers (24-30) lost 3-2 (BOX SCORE)

The Woodpeckers got on the board in the third inning on an Alvarez RBI single. Oakes got the start and pitched very well going 5.2 innings with 5 strikeouts. He left the game with two guys on but both scored after he was pulled. The Fireflies got another run in that inning as they took the lead. Huezo added an RBI double in the 7th but that was it from the offense as the Woodpeckers fell 3-2.

Note: Huezo has a .841 OPS this season.


Today’s minor league starters:

SL: Josh Hendrickson – 7:35 CT

CC: Nic Swanson – 7:05 CT

AV: TBD – 5:35 CT

FV: TBD – 6:05 CT

MLB Pipeline’s newest mock draft has Braves taking two top talents

Virginia outfielder AJ Gracia (29) swings for the ball during an NCAA Baseball Regional game between Southern Miss and Virginia at Pete Taylor Park in Hattiesburg, Miss., on Saturday, May 30, 2026. | Ayrton Breckenridge/Clarion Ledger / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

MLB’s prospect coverage site, Pipeline, released a new mock draft for the 2026 MLB Draft last night. In that mock draft they had the Atlanta Braves selecting two players whose names have been prominently discussed in and around the Top 10 prospects in the draft class dating back to last winter.

With the first pick, Florida high school left-hander Gio Rojas is the selection at No. 9. Per the article:

“In three of the last four Drafts, the Braves have taken a high school player, have selected a pitcher and have cut a discount (not always all at the same time). They could marry those strategies and get a below-slot deal with Rojas, saving money to spend on their next choice at No. 26 or later in the Draft. They’re linked to Burress, Hacopian, Helfrick and Bell as well.”

With the pick at No. 26 received via Drake Baldwin winning Rookie of the Year, Virginia outfielder AJ Gracia was the selection.

Among the names of local interest, Georgia Tech bats Vahn Lackey and Drew Burress went third and seventh respectively, while Etowah HS outfielder Trevor Condon was the 18th selection and Georgia catcher Daniel Jackson went 28th.

Thoughts:

In a year with a solid draft class, but also a weaker Top 10 than usual I don’t mind this first round, and could possibly really love it depending on just how underslot Rojas really is. He is the clear top prep arm in the draft, and you could make a case for him being the second best arm in the draft to Jackson Flora. Taking him in the Top 10 at an underslot would help give the Braves a larger bonus pool to be able to add both quality and quantity to their minor league system.

I love Gracia at the 26th pick. He is a guy who has dropped a bit this season from his initial preseason Top 10 ranking, though not by much. He is a player many believe can hit for both average and power and has a great swing from the left side. There have been some Kyle Tucker comps for him, and that is certainly one I can see for him.

MLB All Star Ballot is out

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - MAY 30: A 2026 All Star Game patch is worn by the Philadelphia Phillies ahead of the game against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium on May 30, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Meg Oliphant/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The 2026 MLB All Star Game ballots have been released, and you can go now to vote for your favorite Texas Rangers — and even some of the ones that aren’t your favorites — in the balloting.

The Rangers on the ballot are:

C — Danny Jansen

1B — Jake Burger

2B — Ezequiel Duran

3B — Josh Jung

SS — Corey Seager

OF — Evan Carter, Brandon Nimmo, Wyatt Langford

DH — Joc Pederson

I have generally been a believer in voting for the best players at each position, rather than whoever has had the best first two months of the season.

However, if your inclination to to vote for whoever has been playing the best so far in 2026, Ezequiel Duran would be a strong candidate for being voted in at second base. Duran has the best fWAR of any primary second baseman in the American League this year, at 1.7. Oswald Peraza (1.4), Jazz Chisholm Jr. (1.3), Chase Meidroth (1.2), Ernie Clement (1.1), and Cole Young (1.0) are the other American League second basemen with at least 1.0 fWAR.

Josh Jung’s 1.7 fWAR matches Duran’s, though he is only fourth in the American League among third basemen, behind Kevin McGonigle, Miguel Vargas and Jose Ramirez.

Let’s break down the NL Cy Young race

Jun 3, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Cristopher Sanchez (61) reacts during the seventh inning after his franchise record consecutive scoreless streak ends after a San Diego Padres run at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images | Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

There are still four months to go in the season, so trying to break down an end-of-year award at this early point may be a bit of a fools’ errand.

And yet, here I go.

This year’s NL Cy Young race is shaping up to be one of the most dynamic and competitive in the award’s history. After Cristopher Sanchez twirled 50 2/3 consecutive scoreless innings, the Phillies’ left-handed ace appears to be in the lead.

He’s currently the league leader in bWAR (4.7), fWAR (3.6), ERA (1.46), innings (86.1), ERA+ (295) and Fielding Independent Pitching (1.79). But in many of these categories, others are hot on his heels.

There are currently five qualified NL starters with ERAs under 2.50: Sanchez, Milwaukee’s Jacob Misiorowski (1.65), Atlanta’s Chris Sale (2.01), Cincinnati’s Chase Burns (2.05) and Arizona’s Eduardo Rodriguez (2.24). That doesn’t even mention Shohei Ohtani, who doesn’t have enough innings to qualify, but will soon join this list after a few more starts. His ERA is currently 0.74.

Take a look at the full leaderboard below and organize by category.

Sanchez doesn’t lead in everything of course. He’s 4th in K%, trailing Misiorowski, Harrison and Burns. He’s 2nd in BB% and 2nd in K-BB rate (Skenes). His .233 batting average allowed is good, but ranks 29th. His 1.09 WHIP is 16th.

At this stage of the game, any objective observer would have to have Sanchez in the lead, tenuous as it may be. Milwaukee’s Miz is almost as dominant, Ohtani lags behind only because he got a late start to the season, and in normal seasons, Burns, Harrison and Sale would be leading the pack with the numbers they’re sporting.

Oh, and there’s Skenes, who has not been quite as sharp but is the reigning Cy Young Award winner and will have something to say about it before the season’s over.

On my latest Hittin’ Season podcast, I broke down Sanchez’ incredible scoreless innings streak and his current reign as the BSIB.

Best Starter In Baseball.

Series Preview: Guardians at Rangers

CLEVELAND, OH - MAY 27: Cleveland Guardians catcher Austin Hedges (27) is congratulated by teammates after scoring a run during the fifth inning of the Major League Baseball interleague game between the Washington Nationals and Cleveland Guardians on May 27, 2026, at Progressive Field in Cleveland, OH. (Photo by Frank Jansky/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

And now, for something different.

The Guardians are 36-28, 15th in team wRC+ at 98, 8th in starting pitcher ERA at 3.77 (4.07 FIP), and 12th in bullpen ERA at 3.71 (3.58 FIP).

The Rangers are 30-32, 18th in team wRC+ at 97, 10th in starting pitcher ERA (4.05 FIP), and 8th in bullpen ERA at 3.33 (4.09 FIP).

On paper, the Rangers should be better than their record shows, so, buyer beware!

MATCHUPS:

Game One, Friday, 8:15PM ET: Messick vs. Rocker

Game Two, Saturday, 7:35PM ET: Bibee vs. Leiter

Game Three, Sunday, 2:35PM ET: Cantillo vs. Detroit

The Rangers are led by Josh Jung at 136 wRC+, Joc Pederson 132 wRC+, Ezekquiel Duran 122 wRC+ and Brandon Nimmo 108 wRC+.

The Guardians are led by Travis Bazzana 128 wRC+, Brayan Rocchio 123 wRC+, David Fry 121 wRC+, Jose Ramirez 118 wRC+, Rhys Hoskins 117 wRC+, Chase DeLauter 113 wRC+ and Kyle Manzardo 108 wRC+.

Let’s go, Guardians!

Yankees bring Spencer Jones back up to replace Aaron Judge

NEW YORK, NY - MAY 18: Spencer Jones #78 of the New York Yankees looks on before the game against the Toronto Blue Jays at Yankee Stadium on May 18, 2026 in New York, New York. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In light of Aaron Judge’s stress fracture in his right rib, the Yankees will be without their captain and three-time AL MVP for at least four-to-six weeks. It will probably be longer than that.

So, with Giancarlo Stanton and Jasson Domínguez still not ready to return from their respective injuries, the organization decided to call up fellow outfielder Spencer Jones from Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre to replace Judge on the roster. Jack Curry of the YES Network was the first to report the news.

Jones, who opened the year with the RailRiders, was promoted by the Yankees on May 8th to fill in for Domínguez, who was heading to the injured list following his collision with left-field wall at Yankee Stadium. By that point, Jones was slashing a cool .258/.366/.592 with 11 homers, 41 RBI, and seven stolen bases in his first 142 trips to the plate in Scranton this year.

The 2022 first-rounder’s time in the majors wasn’t particularly productive, though, as he hit just .167/.259/.167 with no home runs and a 44.4-percent strikeout rate in 27 plate appearances. He was optioned back to Triple-A on May 21st when José Caballero returned from his own minor injury.

Circumstances have forced the Yankees’ hand again, as they are now without Judge, Stanton, and Domínguez. Jones will get another chance to prove that he can conquer his demons and produce enough with the bat to mitigate the strikeouts — though with Domínguez about to go on a rehab assignment, the clock could already be ticking.

Jones had posted a .919 OPS in 10 games in Triple-A since being optioned in late May. By now, it’s pretty clear that he can produce in the upper minors: for the year, he boasts a .269/.378/.571 line with 13 home runs, nine stolen bases, 48 RBI, and a 143 wRC+ in 43 games and 185 trips to the plate.

The challenge, for Jones, will be replicating this production at the highest level, against better, more experienced pitchers ready to exploit the holes in his swing. The strikeout rate will never be pretty, but we have seen many players succeed with contact issues. It’s just about finding a better approach at the plate to cut down on them to at least palatable levels.

Jones figures to play a lot against right-handers, with the Yankees being so short-handed at the moment. He can play center field, which could go a long way in improving the team’s outfield defense. Jones will have to hit enough to justify his playing time, though. If this whiffs are still too prominent, we may see more of Caballero and Max Schuemann flanking Trent Grisham and Cody Bellinger in the outfield instead until Domínguez returns.

Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: How can you replace Aaron Judge?

Welcome to Waiver Wire Watch, our weekly fantasy baseball waiver wire guide. We'll be doing things a little differently this season, with Eric Samulski publishing the initial waiver-wire article on Friday afternoon. Then James Schiano updates it every Sunday to make sure you get the most up-to-date information.

The premise of the article is pretty straightforward. We'll give you some recommended adds each week based on recent production or role changes. When we list a player, we'll list the category where we think he’ll be helpful or the quick reason he’s listed. We hope this helps you determine whether the player fits your team's needs. Not every "trending" player will be a good addition for your specific roster.

To qualify for this list, a player needs to be UNDER 40% rostered in Yahoo! formats. We understand you may say, “These players aren’t available in my league,” and we can’t help you there. These players are available in over 60% of leagues and some in 98% of leagues, so they’re available in many places, and that can hopefully satisfy readers who play in all league types.

⚾️ Baseball is back on NBC: MLB returns to NBC and Peacock in 2026! In addition to becoming the exclusive home of Sunday Night Baseball, NBC Sports will broadcast MLB Sunday Leadoff, “Opening Day” and Labor Day primetime games, the first round of the MLB Draft, the entire Wild Card round of the postseason, and much more.

Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire Hitters

Noelvi Marte - 3B/OF, CIN (34% rostered)

(RECENT CALL-UP, POST-HYPE UPSIDE)

Noelvi Marte was recalled from the minors on Wednesday, but did not start that day. Now, maybe the Reds are really going to start Will Benson in right field and Blake Dunn in center field every day, but Benson is hitting .191/.321/.348 with a 31% strikeout rate, so, at some point, the insanity has to end. Marte is a former top prospect who had a good season in 2025 and crushed Triple-A this year after he was demoted, hitting .369/.409/.575 in 176 plate appearances with eight home runs and nine steals. Yes, he had struggled with the Reds to begin the year, but it was only 31 plate appearances over 11 games. This is still a 24-year-old who hit 14 home runs and stole 10 bases in 90 games last year while hitting .263. He's worth an add and a hope at a full-time job. You could also take a shot on his teammate Edwin Arroyo - 2B/SS, CIN (12% rostered), who was called up earlier in the week when Elly De La Cruz went on the IL with a hamstring strain. Arroyo, another former top prospect, hit 323/.383/.562 with 11 homers and nine steals in 53 games at Triple-A. The concern for Arroyo, who has already sat out one game since being called up, is that the Reds have too many infielders right now, so his playing time is not guaranteed.

Carson Benge - OF, NYM (32% rostered)

(REGULAR PLAYING TIME, COUNTING STAT UPSIDE)

Benge remains under 40% rostered, so we'll feature him here again. Rookies are going to have ups and downs, but this is still a player who, since May 1, has hit .300/.368/.458 with four home runs, 22 runs scored, 18 RBI, and four steals. That's helpful in all categories, especially while he keeps leading off for the Mets. I know he's not lighting the world on fire, but that's pretty solid production to be sitting on the wire in so many leagues.

Dylan Crews - OF, WAS (31% rostered)

(FORMER TOP PROSPECT, APPROACH CHANGE)

Crews has only gone 10-for-48 since being called up, and those swing decisions that the Nationals wanted him to work on don't appear to have carried over. He's chasing out of the zone almost 40% of the time, and even though he's making contact on a lot of those pitches, it's not contact he can do damage on. He also has a 55% groundball rate, which will not lead to many meaningful results. That being said, it's only been 13 games, and Crews did make clear strides in Triple-A, so I think he deserves a little bit more leash before you give up on him again. Another former top prospect people have soured on is Cam Smith - OF, HOU (14% rostered), who started the season hot but is hitting .216/.307/.351 on the year with six home runs and eight steals. Things are starting to get a little better over his last 15 games, with him slashing .269/.345/.462 with two home runs, seven RBI, and two steals. This is still a really talented young player, and while we can't be sure WHEN it's going to click for him, we do believe it will at some point.

Curtis Mead - 1B/2B/3B, WAS (29% rostered)

(HOT STREAK, FORMER TOP PROSPECT)

We’ve written a lot about Curtis Mead over the last month. He wasin Eric’s mid-May article on hitters who should produce more power, as well as in a video Eric recorded about his recent production and his latest article on May hot streaks. In 85 plate appearances in May (about 40 appearances below regular starters), Mead hit .261/.400/.507 with four home runs, 13 RBI, and 14 runs scored. That came with a 48.1% hard-hit rate, 90.9% zone contact rate, and 6.2% SwStr%. His exit velocities aren’t off the charts, but his 89.6 mph average exit velocity is over two mph better than his career average. He flattened his swing a bit this year and is looking to pull and lift the ball more than usual, which will make the most out of his solid but not elite exit velocities. Among 260 hitters with at least 100 plate appearances this season, Mead ranks 52nd with a Pull Air% of 22.9%. His exit velocity on his fly balls and line drives is 93 mph, which is the same as Cal Raleigh, Cody Bellinger, and Salvador Perez, so that will be just fine for power production.

Sam Antonacci - 2B/3B/OF, CWS (26% rostered)

(GREAT LINEUP SPOT, SPEED UPSIDE)

Antonacci has been productive for a while now. Since May 1st, he's hitting .315/.397/.378 with 22 runs scored and eight steals. He's not going to give you much power production, but he's hitting leadoff on a good team, so the runs will be there, and he stole almost 50 bases last season, so we know the speed will be there. An elite contact profile, combined with his multi-position eligibility, makes him a solid add in most formats. We really do wish Blaze Alexander - 2B/3B/SS/OF, BAL (4% rostered) was playing more. He appeared in Eric’s latest article on hitters to target based on their May resultsbecause, since May 1st, he's hitting .353/.384/.485 with 14 RBI and four steals in 74 plate appearances. He's making better-than-league-average contact in the zone with a better hard-hit percentage than league average as well. There is an intriguing profile here, but it's more of a deep league add right now until playing time emerges.

Keibert Ruiz - C, WAS (21% rostered)

(BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE)

Keibert Ruiz has been solid at the plate for a while now. Since May 1, he's been hitting .354/.368/.662 with four home runs and 17 RBI. Spencer Nusbaum of The Athletic wrote a great article on how a dozen coaches sat down with Ruiz to create a plan for him moving forward. The crux of that meeting was that they believed Ruiz had a great foundation for success but needed to swing harder and pull the ball more. Solid. This season, Ruiz's bat speed is up, he has a career-high 42.3% hard-hit rate, and his average exit velocity is up four mph to 90.3 mph. He's one-catcher league viable right now. Maybe Endy Rodriguez - C, PIT (3% rostered) is an option in two-catcher formats. The Pirates catcher has had two bad years of injuries, but is just 26-years-old and has hit .257/.447/.400 in 48 plate appearances since being activated this year. There was a lot of excitement surrounding him two years ago, so maybe now is the time he can make good on it.

Spencer Horwitz - 1B, PIT (21% rostered)

(EVERY DAY PLAYER, RUNS UPSIDE)

The Pirates have been a better offense than many expected, and Horwitz has played a big role in that. He has taken over the leadoff spot in the lineup and is hitting .314/.405/.510 in 29 games since May 1st with four home runs, 13 runs scored, 16 RBI, and one steal. Not much has changed from previous seasons, other than the fact that he is being far more selective (swinging 6% less overall) and making far more contact. He's not hitting the ball any harder than he has previously, and so some of this elevated batting average feels like a fluke, but it's worth chasing the results right now while he's producing.

Jorge Mateo - 2B/SS/OF, ATL (20% rostered)

(HOT STREAK, POWER/SPEED UPSIDE)

Mateo is another player Eric covered in that article on May results, where he said: "We’ve seen Mateo do this before. In 2023, when he was with the Orioles, he hit .347 with six home runs, 21 runs scored, 17 RBI, and 10 steals in just 23 games to start the season. It seemed like a full-on breakout. It was not. This season, in 52 plate appearances in May, Mateo hit .347/.384/.454 with three home runs, 13 runs scored, eight RBI, and five steals. He has seemingly wrestled the starting shortstop job away from Ha-Seong Kim and is even DHing against left-handed pitching recently...His bat speed is up two mph, and his 90.5 mph average exit velocity is about three mph up from his career mark. He’s sporting a career-high 48.2% hard-hit rate and 12.5% barrel rate and is pulling the ball 50% of the time, which is way up from his 39.6% career average." Yet, at the end of that write-up, Eric also said we’re likely getting the same player but with a quicker bat and a more pull-happy approach. That can certainly lead to more authoritative contact, but it is unlikely to finally cause Mateo to break out at 31 years old. Treat this like an Ildemaro Vargas-style hot streak.

Jung Hoo Lee OF, SF (17% rostered)

(OFF THE IL, BATTING AVERAGE UPSIDE)

Lee came off the IL on May 29 and has gone 19-for-29 in seven games since then with eight runs scored and four RBI. He's regularly been hitting fifth in the order and has even started against most left-handed pitchers since being activated. The upside isn't high here, but he makes a ton of contact, has a starting job, and hits in the middle of the order, so that's worth a look in 15-team leagues. Lars Nootbaar - OF, STL (2% rostered) is another boring outfielder who is set to come off the injured list following offseason surgery on both of his heels. We know that you've been waiting for that Nootbaar breakout for a long time, but he remains a solid/productive player who should be in an everyday role.

Jake McCarthy - OF, COL (17% rostered)

(UPCOMING HOME GAMES, STOLEN BASE UPSIDE)

We can start with the fact that the Rockies play three games at home and then three games in Sacramento next week. That's about as good as it gets for hitters. Since May 1, McCarthy is also hitting .293/.327/.505 with four home runs, 19 RBI, and four steals in 28 games. We would like to see that stolen base total tick up a little bit, but you can't get mad at that production. McCarthy is leading off against both righties and lefties, so we don't have to worry about his platoon splits. The same goes for TJ Rumfield - 1B, COL (13% rostered), who hits third basically every day. Over the last month, he's hitting .313/.391/.510 with five home runs, 15 runs scored, and 14 RBI. He's worth rostering in most formats, but shallow leagues should add him for this week as well. Check your waiver wire for most Rockies hitters during this upcoming week.

Joshua Baez - OF, STL (12% rostered)

(POTENTIAL CALL-UP, POWER UPSIDE)

We like to get ahead of prospect stashes on the waiver wire, and I think it might be time for Baez to wind up as your stash. Lars Nootbaar is coming back this week, as mentioned above, but he figures to take Bryan Torres' spot in the lineup, which means Baez is being held off by Nelson Velázquez or the Cardinals' desire to have two catchers in the lineup on most days. Baez has big-time power and hit .274/.347/.632 in 106 at-bats in May with 10 home runs, 24 RBI, and a 34/9 K/BB ratio. He’s now continued that pace to begin June and is knocking on the door. Another possible stash would be Kaelen Culepper - SS, MIN (3% rostered), who has 13 home runs and 38 RBI on the season to go along with a .261 batting average and .851 OPS. He hit .280/.4076/.540 in May with seven home runs, 21 RBI, seven steals, and a 22/19 K/BB ratio. I understand that Tristan Gray is playing well, but, at some point, a team like the Twins needs to try its top prospect over a 30-year-old journeyman. Lastly, you could look to stash Yohandy Morales - 1B/3B, WAS (0% rostered), who is now up to 13 home runs and 36 RBI on the season to go along with a .344 batting average and a 1.016 OPS. He’s ready for a chance at big league pitching, but with Curtis Mead playing well at third base, the Nationals will need to use Morales as a DH or a first baseman.

Joc Pederson - DH, TEX (10% rostered)

(HOT STRETCH, POWER UPSIDE)

Joc Pederson has found his power stroke recently, hitting .274/.382/.583 in 29 games since May 1 with six home runs and 18 RBI. We know that he is going to sit against lefties, so you'll always need to check his upcoming schedule, but Eric recorded a video this week on why Pederson is worth an add.

Bryce Eldridge - UT, SF (10% rostered)

(PLAYING TIME OPPORTUNITY, POWER UPSIDE)

Eldridge was another player featured in Eric's article on May risers. When Eldridge was first called up, the Giants openly said they were not going to force him into the lineup every day. While that upset fans, it made some sense. Eldridge is only a 1B or DH and is really more of a DH. The Giants had Rafael Devers, and Casey Schmitt, who is also on this leaderboard, was enjoying a career year. There wasn’t a clear path for Eldridge. Yet, the injury to Heliot Ramos allowed the Giants to try Schmitt in the outfield and free up a spot for Eldridge, who hit .241/.328/.448 in May with a 56.8% hard-hit rate, 89.1% zone contact rate, and 10% SwStr%. That came with a 105.9 mph EV90 and also a .285 BABIP that feels like it could have, and should have, been higher. He’s hitting more line drives this year than we saw last year, which may limit the power output initially, but we're OK with that because you want a rookie to make hard contact and gain confidence. Plus, he has the power to drive the ball out of the ballpark even without forcing it. Another young power option from that same article could be Coby Mayo - 1B/3B, BAL (2% rostered). In 71 plate appearances in May, Mayo had a 58% hard-hit rate, 89.1% zone contact rate, 10.5% SwStr%, and 109.8 mph EV90. While that didn’t immediately lead to success, he hit .300/.404/.575 with three home runs, eight runs scored, and seven RBI over the final 13 games of the month. Perhaps that was him turning a corner?

Paul Goldschmidt - 1B, NYY (9% rostered)

(PLAYING TIME OPPORTUNITY, HOT STREAK)

Don't look now, but Goldy is holding off Father Time. In 27 games since May 1st, the veteran is hitting .305/.377/.558 with six home runs, 19 RBI, and a 44% hard-hit rate. He is playing pretty much every day at first base or DH and should get extra run in the DH spot with Aaron Judge sidelined for the next 6-8 weeks and the Yankees having fewer outfield spots to juggle. He hits near the top of the Yankees' lineup, which is good for run production. If you're in deeper formats, now could be the time to stash Jasson Dominguez - OF, NYY (9% rostered), who is beginning a rehab assignment on Friday and could replace Judge in the starting lineup when he returns.

Colton Cowser - OF, BAL (6% rostered)

(PLAYING TIME OPPORTUNITY, POWER UPSIDE)

The 26-year-old has started to turn things around, hitting .310/.383/.619 over his last 20 games with four home runs, 13 RBI, and one steal. That comes with a 12/5 K/BB ratio but just a 16.7 percent hard-hit rate. Given the hot streaks we’ve seen him go on, now is the time to pick him up with the Orioles set to face 10 straight right-handed pitchers. I'm not sure I believe in what Wade Meckler - OF, Angels (1% rostered) is doing, but he is hitting .389/.421/.629 in his first 38 plate appearances for the Angels with two home runs, 10 RBI, and two steals. He's just 26 years old, has solid enough bat speed, and is lifting the ball more than he has before. He only had a 28.6% hard-hit rate in Trile-A this season, so we're not really expecting this to stick.

Isiah Kiner-Falefa - 2B/3B/SS, BOS (5% rostered)

(REGULAR PLAYING TIME, HOT STREAK)

Since Trevor Story has been injured and Marcelo Mayer has shifted to shortstop, Kiner-Falefa has been getting regular starts for the Red Sox at second base. Since the beginning of May, he’s hitting .357/.438/.476 in 49 plate appearances with one home run, eight RBI, and two steals. He can be picked up in deeper fantasy formats while he’s getting regular playing time. His teammate Caleb Durbin - 2B/3B, BOS (8% rostered) has also started to turn things around after working with a new hitting coach. Over his last 15 games, Durbin is hitting .286/.295/.476 with nine RBI and one steal. We know that he can run, and we know that the Red Sox want him to play well enough to be their everyday third baseman, so he could have 15-team league viability for speed and average if he keeps producing like this.

Vaughn Grissom - 1B/2B/3B, LAA (4% rostered)

(STARTING JOB, STOLEN BASE UPSIDE)

For a while, the results haven't been there for Grissom. Eric featured him in a Process+ article and his May hot streak article, but Grissom hit .190/.265/.309 with two home runs and five runs scored. However, that did come with 19 RBI and a .194 BABIP, which is comically low. Grissom also posted a 50% hard-hit rate, 88% zone contact rate, and 9.7% SwStr%, so he’s hitting the ball harder and making lots of contact. After spending two years in the Red Sox organization, Grissom’s bat speed is up three mph, which feels relevant because we know Boston is intense about the bat speed training they do in the minor leagues. Grissom is also pulling the ball and lifting the ball almost 10% more than when we last saw him in MLB action. Over his last 10 games, he’s hitting .300/.370/.550 with two home runs, seven runs scored, and 14 RBI. That could be a small sample size mirage, but we just discussed how good his underlying metrics were for the entire month of May, so it might also be the results simply catching up.

Jake Mangum - OF, PIT (3% rostered)

(EVERY DAY ROLE, STOLEN BASE UPSIDE)

The Pirates have started to give Mangum nearly every day at-bats, and he's delivering. Over his last 14 games, he's hitting .350/.386/.450 with one home run, six RBI, and five steals. We know that he can run, so the stolen base totals are the real pull here, but if Mangum is going to play 75% of the games for the Pirates, he's worth a gamble.

Michael Massey - 2B/OF, KC (2% rostered)

(REGULAR PLAYING TIME, RECENT HOT STREAK)

Massey is another player who has come up in a few of Eric's articles, including the last one on May results, where Eric said, "This year, Massey’s bat speed is up two mph, his average exit velocity (91.2 mph) is 2.4 mph above his career average, and his 10.4% barrel rate is amost 3% higher than his career mark. He’s done that by trying NOT to pull the ball as much. For much of his career, Massey has been very pull-happy, and then last year, he started to lift the ball a lot too. This year, he’s still lifting the ball over 50% of the time, but he’s not actively trying to pull everything, and the sweet spot of his bat is positioned more towards center field as it travels through the zone. That has allowed him to drive the ball into the gaps, but with exit velocities that can still carry it out of the park when he gets out in front of one." Over his last 20 games, Massey is hitting .309/.328/.509 with three home runs and eight RBI. He deserves to be added in many formats while he's swinging the bat like this.

Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire Pitchers

Jacob Latz - SP/RP, TEX (38% rostered)

We're not sure why Latz remains so under-rostered. Maybe because he's still a left-handed former starter who throws 94 mph, and that's not really the profile of a lockdown closer. Yet, he continues to produce. He has a 2.00 ERA and eight saves with a 26/5 K/BB ratio in 27 innings. At some point, even if the profile is not a typical one, you have to follow the results. We also think more people need to add Rico Garcia - RP, BAL (35% rostered), who continues to serve as the high-leverage reliever in Baltimore with Ryan Helsley sidelined. Helsley is slowly making his way back, but we have some more time with Garcia picking up some saves and wins in the Baltimore bullpen.

Griffin Jax - SP/RP, TB (31% rostered)

Yes, I still believe in Griffin Jax. The command of his changeup wasn't there in his last outing against Detroit, which was a problem against a team with so many left-handed hitters. That being said, Jax was able to rack up plenty of whiffs despite the struggles. He has a deep pitch mix and has managed to maintain velocity even when moving out of the bullpen. This is the profile of a pitcher who should deliver for your fantasy teams, and he gets the Angels, Nationals, and Royals for his next three starts. Don't give up hope yet.

Walbert Ureña - SP, LAA (30% rostered)

We've had Ureña on here a few times, but he's emerging as a solid streaming option this year. His power changeup (at 90 mph) is a really good pitch, and he uses it to both righties and lefties. He has showcased inconsistent command of an 87 mph sweeper, but that can miss plenty of bats to righties when it's on. He needs that sweeper because his fastball is just empty velocity, and will only be successful if he can get ahead with his other pitches and then try to get hitters to chase outside of the zone with elevated four-seamers. He gets Houston this week, which isn't a great start, but it isn't one we're scared of right now.

Dustin May - SP, STL (26% rostered)

A pitch mix change has unlocked a solid run of production for Dustin May. In his first three starts of the year, May threw almost 31% four-seam fastballs and just 11% cutters. He had a few terrible outings in that stretch and wasn't missing bats at all with a 17% strikeout rate and 7.4% swinging strike rate. Then, he made a shift. Over his next nine starts, he reduced his fastball usage to 24% and upped his cutter usage to 26%. That also enabled him to save the four-seamer to use more up in the zone for swings and misses. Since then, May has a 3.38 ERA, 1.16 WHIP, 23% strikeout rate, and nearly 11% swinging strike rate. That will work in most formats. He gets a good two-start week this week against the Mets and Twins, both on the road. He'd then get the Royals the week after that. I'm also OK using his teammate, Andre Pallante - SP, STL (9% rostered) against the Mets this week because his velocity is up, he has more vertical movement on his four-seamer, and he has always had a good slider.

Troy Melton - SP, DET (24% rostered)

Melton has not had the strikeout numbers that we hoped to see when he came off the injured list, but he does have a 1.74 ERA and 0.87 WHIP in his first three starts. He's done that with great control of a solid 97 mph four-seamer, plus a good slider and cutter. He also pairs that with a sinker, curveball, and splitter to give him a deep arsenal that we can dream on. Melton is set to face Minnesota at home this week and then will get Houston after that. We don't see him being dropped from the rotation when Casey Mize and Justin Verlander return. That would likely be Keider Montero. When Tarik Skubal returns, the Tigers will have a decision to make, but that is not imminent.

Stephen Kolek - SP, KCR (22% rostered)

We should start by saying that Kolek was placed on the Family Medical Leave list on Thursday, so we hope everything is OK with his family, and fantasy managers should monitor that situation to know if he will make his scheduled starts. If he does, he has a nice two-start week set up with home games against Texas and Houston, and then he would face the Cardinals and Rays in his two starts after that. Kolek isn't overpowering, but he wins with command and limiting hard contact. You can feel comfortable using him when he's rolling like this.

Christian Scott - SP, NYM (19% rostered)

Scott has been solid so far for the Mets with a 2.97 ERA and 1.38 WHIP. Obviously, that WHIP is not ideal, but he's gotten the walks in check a bit more of late. He's been very four-seamer and sweeper heavy of late, which remains a bit of a concern against lefties, so we do want to see Scott get better with his cutters and splitters so that he can attack those lefty-heavy lineups. Scott gets the Cardinals this upcoming week, and then it gets a bit dicier with the Reds in Cincinnati and the Cubs at home. Still, we'd at least try to hold him on our bench for those starts.

Gage Jump - SP, ATH (13% rostered)

I broke down Jump's MLB debut in my streaming starting pitcher article on Monday, so I encourage you to check that out for a deep dive. The short synopsis of it was that Jump has plus raw stuff but inconsistent command. Pair that with him being a rookie and pitching in a horrible home park for pitchers, and it makes him a bit tricky to roster in fantasy leagues. We love the talent, but there will be blow-up outings along the way. This week will be a good test. He gets to face the Rockies, which we like, but he's in Sacramento, which is not ideal. I think I still might roll the dice, and then he gets the Angels at home and Giants on the road after that, which is not a bad setup. The A's are also moving Jack Perkins - SP/RP (5% rostered) into the rotation. He's an arm I've always been intrigued by and should be monitored in deeper formats.

Keaton Winn - SP/RP, SF (11% rostered)

I don't know what to make of the Giants' bullpen, and they're the worst team in baseball, so how much do you want to go chasing this? That being said, Winn has been their most consistent reliever and has been sharing save opportunities with Caleb Kilian. Another spec closer who could be worth adding is Hogan Harris - RP, ATH (11% rostered). He has a 2.48 ERA and 25% strikeout rate in 29 innings. He has had some command issues and will likely only be used when the A's face a bunch of lefties in the ninth, but he should be on your radar.

Alex Lange - RP, KC (2% rostered)

It seems that Lucas Erceg has finally pitched his way out of the closer's role in Kansas City. That has given Lange a chance to convert the last two saves for the Royals. The former Tigers' starter has a 4.18 ERA, 1.39 WHIP, and 28/15 K/BB ratio in 28 innings, so this is not the profile of a lockdown reliever. Still, he has produced of late and seems to be getting the chances now, so he and Matt Strahm -RP, KC (10% rostered) could split save opportunities going forward. Similarly, Yoendrys Gomez - RP, MIN (10% rostered) seems to be getting the chances in Minnesota right now. Another former starter, Gomez has a 0.68 ERA, 0.83 WHIP, and three saves over his last 13.1 innings. He's also racking up plenty of strikeouts, so he could be worth a gamble right now, but don't hold on too long if it starts to go sour.

Wilber Dotel - RP, PIT (1% rostered)

Sometimes you also just want a good relief arm to help with ratios. Pirates rookie Wilber Dotel has been electric this season, with a 1.08 ERA, 0.78 WHIP, and 17/5 K/BB ratio in 16.2 innings across seven appearances. He has mainly been used as a multi-inning reliever, but the Pirates' late-inning guys are struggling. You could add Dotel right now for his ratios in the middle innings, but then you may get a closer waiting in the wings.

Tigers vs. Mariners prediction: Odds, recent stats, trends, and best bets for June 5

The Tigers (25-38) open a three-game set at Comerica Park tonight against the Seatle Mariners (33-30).

 

Although their eight-game winning streak was snapped yesterday in an 8-1 loss to the Mets, Seattle has ascended to the top of the American League West over the course of the last week. Their bats have heated up to outscore their opponents by 23 runs over the last nine games. Detroit, meanwhile, continues to try and stay afloat without Tarik Skubal atop their rotation. The Tigers take the field tonight fresh off of a three-game sweep of the AL East-leading Tampa Bay Rays. Detroit scored 25 runs over the three games while allowing just 11 and only two over the past two games. Before you get too excited, though, that sweep followed three straight losses to the White Sox. Again, just trying to stay afloat.

 

The top of the order for Seattle has led the way offensively for Seattle with Julio Rodríguez and Randy Arozarena driving production. Rodríguez has been consistent for the majority of the season. He is 11-for-44 over his last 10 games with five home runs and 11 RBI. Arozarena has been right there with him. He has six homers and 26 RBI on the season. The Mariners as a team are hitting .286 over their last 10 games. Detroit has leaned on a handful of hot bats to generate offense. Rookie infielder Kevin McGonigle has been one of the team’s most productive hitters over the past 10 games, batting .371 with a .463 OBP, while Riley Greene is hitting .367 with a .986 OPS over that same stretch.

 

Tonight’s pitching matchup features right-hander Bryan Woo for Seattle against lefty Framber Valdez for Detroit. Woo takes the mound with a record of 5-3 and a 3.44 ERA along with a solid 0.96 WHIP. Valdez, on the other hand, has struggled to find consistency since signing as a free agent in Detroit this past offseason. The veteran brings a 2-4 record and 4.39 ERA to the bump tonight. At 1.32, his WHIP is less impressive than that of his counterpart tonight.

 

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: Tigers vs. Mariners

 

  • Date: Friday, June 5, 2026
  • Time: 6:40PM EST
  • Site: Comerica Park
  • City: Detroit, MI
  • Network/Streaming: MLB.TV, Mariners.TV, Tigers.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: Tigers vs. Mariners

The latest odds as of Friday courtesy of DraftKings:

  • Moneyline: Detroit Tigers (+102), Seattle Mariners (-123)
  • Spread: Tigers +1.5 (-167), Mariners -1.5 (+138)
  • Total: 7.5 runs

 

Probable Starting Pitchers: Tigers vs. Mariners for June 5

  • Tigers: Framber Valdez
    Season Totals: 67.2 IP, 2-4, 4.39 ERA, 1.32 WHIP, 54K, 25 BB
  • Mariners: Bryan Woo
    Season Totals: 70.2 IP, 5-3, 3.44 ERA, 0.96 WHIP, 68K, 14 BB

Who’s Hot? Who’s Not! Tigers vs. Mariners

  • Dillon Dingler was 6-13 in the series against the Rays
  • Gleyber Torres was 4-9 in the series against the Rays
  • Spencer Torkelson was 2-10 in the series against the Rays
  • Josh Naylor was 1-7 in the series against the Mets
  • J.P. Crawford was 3-10 in the series against the Mets
  • Luke Raley was 0-11 in the series against the Mets

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: Tigers vs. Mariners

 

  • The Tigers are 31-32 on the Run Line this season
  • The Mariners are 24-39 on the Run Line this season
  • The OVER has cashed 29 times in Seattle’s 63 games this season (29-32-2)
  • The OVER has cashed 27 times in Detroit’s 63 games this season (27-32-4)

 

Expert picks & predictions: Tigers vs. Mariners

Rotoworld Bet Best Bet

 

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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 tonight’s game between the Tigers and the Mariners:

 

  • Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Mariners on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Mariners on the Run Line.
  • Total: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Game Total OVER 7.5
  • Team Total: Rotoworld Bet is recommending a play on the Mariners Team Total OVER 3.5 runs

 

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Zach Ehrhard’s best game of the season

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 24: Zach Ehrhard #99 of the Los Angeles Dodgers during a spring training game at Dodger Stadium on March 24, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Plenty of homers but not enough wins as both the Tower Buzzers and Loons got beaten at home.

Player of the day

For the first time this year, Zach Ehrhard recorded at least three runs and just as many RBI, courtesy of a couple of home runs that helped the Comets earn their 34th win of the season, narrowly beating the Express at home.

Ehrhard hadn’t gone deep in a game at home since the 12th of April, and he hadn’t hit two homers in the same game since June of last season, when he was still in Double-A for the Red Sox.

Triple-A Oklahoma City

Having already covered Zach Ehrhard’s key role in this 5-4 win for the Comets, the other two runs were driven in by a newcomer, Alek Thomas—playing only in his second game with the Triple-A club, Thomas was moved to the cleanup spot. Shoutout to James Tibbs III, who didn’t record a hit but displayed outstanding patience, walking in three of his four PA.

Despite allowing four runs in six innings, River Ryan kept his undefeated record, earning a third win, while the highlight was Evan Phillips securing a hold already in his first rehab outing. Phillips recorded a couple of outs on 17 pitches, walking one, allowing a hit, and recording a punchout. Seeing the big league bullpen falter in a loss to the D-backs on the same day, it certainly made plenty of people miss Phillips, a potential big-time return in the not too distant future.

Double-A Tulsa

Out-homering the opposition four to none, the Drillers ran into minimal trouble securing a late lead and beating the Sod Poodles 7-3. The double play partnership of Elijah Hainline and Zack Gelof each secured a pair of RBI, and Josue De Paula carried on his on-base streak with a two-run shot in the sixth, which isn’t getting a ton of attention because it’s nowhere near Mike Sirota’s streak of 44 straight reaching safely.

Homering four times, the Drillers managed to win this game even though they didn’t record a single hit with a runner in scoring position, finishing 0 for 13. Speaking of baserunners, starter Peyton Martin delivered a quality start despite allowing 11 baserunners in six innings.

High-A Great Lakes

The Taylor show overpowered the Loons on both sides of the ball. While starter Zane Taylor tossed 7.2 scoreless innings, in which the biggest threat was the occasional walk (four of them to be exact), outfielder Devin Taylor delivered a couple of RBIs that would’ve been enough by themselves in this eventual 4-1 win for the Lugnuts.

Designated hitter Nico Perez hit his third triple of the year, and the only extra-base hit for the Loons in this one. Those three triples are already more than what Perez had in his entire minor league career coming into this season.

Single-A Ontario

Let down by their pitching staff, the Tower Buzzers couldn’t hold on to a four-run lead after three—Ontario was beaten 9-7 by a Ports team that ran at will, finishing the game with six stolen bases without getting caught once. Three of those stolen bases belonged to first baseman Jared Sprague-Lott.

While it wasn’t enough for the win, Harlan secured three of Ontario’s seven RBI without leaving the yard. Joendry Vargas and Landyn Vidourek were the ones to homer for the sixth and third time this season, respectively.

For his outstanding work in May, Harlan was elected not only the Tower Buzzers’ but also the California League’s Player of the Month.

Transactions

Right-handed pitcher Evan Phillips began a rehab assignment with the OKC Comets. Shortstop Bryan Gonzalez Garcia was sent to Single-A while catcher Francisco Espinoza was placed on the 7-day injured list.

Thursday’s scores

  • Oklahoma City 5, Round Rock 4
  • Amarillo 3, Tulsa 7
  • Great Lakes 1, Lansing 4
  • Ontario 7, Stockton 9

Friday’s schedule

  • 4:05 p.m. PT: Great Lakes (Brooks Auger) vs. Lansing (Ryan Magdic)
  • 5:05 p.m. PT: Oklahoma City (TBD) vs. Round Rock (TBD)
  • 5:05 p.m. PT: Tulsa (Peter Heubeck) at Amarillo (Adonys Perez)
  • 6:35 p.m. PT: Ontario (TBD) vs. Stockton (Cole Miller)

Mets close out west coast schedule with three in San Diego

May 27, 2026; San Diego, California, USA; San Diego Padres player Fernando Tatis Jr. comes off the field during the sixth inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Petco Park. Mandatory Credit: Denis Poroy-Imagn Images | Denis Poroy-Imagn Images

The New York Mets (27-35) say goodbye to the West Coast time zone with one final three-game set in California, this time against the San Diego Padres (32-29). This will be the first meeting between the two clubs in 2026 after the Padres took four of six last year, including all three at Petco Park. Since 2015, the Mets have lost 20 of 34 games they’ve played at Petco Park, although they’ve played San Diego to a .500 clip (16-16) overall in that stretch.

The Mets entered the series having lost five straight at Seattle’s T-Mobile Park, while the Mariners entered on a six-game winning streak overall. All the ingredients were there for the Mets to have a bad time, and for the most part they did with losses in the first two games (3-2 on Monday in ten innings, 8-3 on Tuesday), but they salvaged the finale with an impressive 7-1 win on Wednesday to halt their Seattle losing streak and end the Mariners’ eight-game winning streak.

The offense was a real sore point in the first two games, with all five runs coming via the homer. In Game 1, they managed just two hits—a Marcus Semien solo homer and a Jared Young solo shot. On Tuesday, the lone positive was Carson Benge collecting the first two-homer game of his young career as he continues to impress since the start of May. New York, who managed just nine runs over their seven-game losing streak in Seattle—you may remember that the Mets were swept there in 2024 while scoring just one run across the three losses during their mid-August slump—erupted for seven runs in the lineup thanks to a balanced offensive attack that was led by Bo Bichette’s first four-hit game as a member of the team. It was one of the more complete efforts they’ve had in a while, with seven of the nine starters picking up at least one hit. In addition to Bichette’s great game, AJ Ewing picked up three hits, while Jared Young and Luis Torrens each contributed two hits in the victory.

It seems like every time Bichette hits a real rut, he puts together one big game to temporarily silence the doubters. Following an 0-for-16 stretch, the team’s (momentary) shortstop strung together four hits, scored a run, and drove in three. It was a nice reprieve, but he’s still been one of the biggest hindrances in the lineup. He remains in the two-hole despite the struggles, and it’s fair to wonder when it might be time to start moving him down, especially to give guys like Ewing (who has also struggled, to be fair) some more time near the top of the lineup. This could give a young kid with speed some opportunities to create more runs for the club, but it remains to be seen if anything changes with the lineup.

Semien, who homered again in the first game, has been red hot as of late, even after coming off an 0-for-5 in the win. The biggest strength in his game so far has been his ability to drive in runs, as his numbers with runners in scoring position have been better than most of his teammates. With men in scoring position, Semien is slashing .340/.379/.420 with a 127 wRC+ in 50 at-bats this season. Comparatively, he’s hitting just .181/.235/.268 with a 45 wRC+ with nobody on base. At the very least, Semien is capitalizing when presented with an opportunity to contribute, even if his overall numbers are not good for the year. Since the start of the weekend series against the Marlins, he’s hitting .286/.348/.619 with two homers and a 171 wRC+ in the six games. Hey, it’s progress?

One player who has made very little progress as of late is Mark Vientos, who is putting together another poor showing after a great 2024 campaign, which has proven to be an outlier in an otherwise unimpressive major league career. On the year, Vientos is hitting .219/.254/.380 with a 78 wRC+ and a -0.6 fWAR in 53 games. Overall, he has been one of the least productive players in the sport, as his fWAR is ahead of only Marcell Ozuna in terms of qualified hitters in 2026. With Jorge Polanco on the rehab trail and set to resume first base duties if all goes well, Vientos’ spot on the roster could soon be in doubt. Beyond his inability to hit, he is also very slow and does not play any position well on the field. For more on Vientos’ shortcomings, I would direct you to Lukas Vlahos’ tremendous and comprehensive piece.

As one final aside, this will be the final time this season that the Mets have to play on Pacific Coast Time. In fact, the team does not go beyond the Central Time Zone again in 2026, and won’t unless they make a miraculous run to the postseason. It’s been a grueling and confusing schedule for New York, who had a six-game swing in St. Louis and San Francisco immediately after their opening weekend series, then returned home for six before heading straight out to Los Angeles and Chicago. Following a nine-game home stand, they again went out west for nine with Los Angeles (of Anaheim), Colorado, and Arizona. Following some recent travels within their division, they again embarked out west for Seattle and San Diego. I can only speculate as to what the schedule-makers were thinking here, but whatever it was, it wasn’t smart! It’s no excuse for the team’s poor play, but the constant ping ponging across the country has done little to help their efforts when most other teams have made no more than two west coast trips so far in 2026. On the bright side, this means they should, theoretically be more well-rested for the “stretch run”, should they not be too far out of it.

Whereas the Mets played a team in Seattle that was on a winning streak, they find San Diego on a downward trajectory as they enter the series on a five-game losing streak. After losing their last two games in May to the Nationals, they started June by getting swept in a three-game series against the Phillies. San Diego has now dropped into a second-place tie with the Diamondbacks in the National League West, 7 1/2 games behind the first-place Dodgers. They also find themselves out of the playoff picture, a half-game back of the third NL Wild Card spot.

San Diego, as an offense, is not performing all that much better than the Mets have been this season. In fact, both lineups enter play today with an 87 wRC+, though the Mets have scored 16 more runs (251) than the Padres (235). The Padres, to date, have scored the fewest runs as a team in all of baseball.

Much of that is due to the underperformance of the team’s core of stars, headlined by Fernando Tatis Jr. He enters this series hitting .270/.340/.323 with just one home run and a 94 wRC+ in a team-high 60 games, though he leads the club with a 1.1 fWAR. Then there’s Manny Machado, who is really struggling, hitting just .174/.262/.357 with a team-low 76 wRC+ among qualified hitters. This is all despite leading the team with 11 home runs, 29 runs scored, and 34 runs batted in. The team also recently DFA’ed Nick Castellanos, who was dead last on the club with a -0.8 fWAR and had a 53 wRC+ before being jettisoned off the roster. On a positive note, Ty France has had a solid season in San Diego, slashing .286/.328/.527 with a team-high 141 wRC+ and a 1.0 fWAR in 41 games.

Their pitching hasn’t been doing all that much better. Their rotation has a 4.55 ERA and a 4.44 FIP ( both 22nd in MLB). Just about the one area they excel at is relief, so if they have a lead late, it’ll be hard to come back. Their bullpen enters action with a 3.18 ERA, which is fourth best in baseball. This is mostly due to Mason Miller’s incredible performance this year, as the closer sports a sparkling 0.72 ERA with 17 saves and 49 strikeouts in 25 innings. Earlier this year, he had a 34 2/3 inning scoreless streak, the eighth-longest scoreless streak for a reliever since 1961.

Friday, June 5: Christian Scott vs. Michael King, 9:40 PM EDT on WPIX

Scott (2026): 30.1 IP, 38 K, 16 BB, 1 HR, 2.97 ERA, 3.10 FIP, 75 ERA-

It was a long time coming, but Scott finally earned his first major league victory in his 16th major league start. Scott was solid once again in his victorious effort, matching his season high with eight strikeouts while walking two and allowing one earned run on five hits over his five innings. Scott has been really strong in his last two starts, allowing just the one run over 10 2/3 innings, but both came against an offensively-challenged Marlins team, and the Padres will present a bigger challenge for the right-hander.

King (2026): 68.0 IP, 65 K, 29 BB, 6 HR, 3.18 ERA, 3.83 FIP, 81 ERA-

King’s numbers overall on the season are quite strong—among qualified National League starters, he’s 12th in ERA, 13th in HR/9 (0.79), 16th in K% (23.8%), 17th in bWAR (1.1), and 18th in FIP. However, his last two starts have not been good, with both resulting in losses. His last time out, he allowed five earned runs on five hits over six innings against the Nationals, a start that saw him walk one and strike out a season-low two batters. Prior to that, he allowed four earned runs on five hits in a season-low 3 2/3 innings against the Athletics. In that outing, he matched a season high by walking four batters and struck out four. Walks have been an issue for King, who has the second-worst BB% (10.6%) among qualified NL starters, trailing only Robbie Ray of the Giants.

Saturday, June 6: Nolan McLean vs. Griffin Canning, 10:10 PM EDT on SNY

McLean (2026): 66.1 IP, 77 K, 24 BB, 8 HR, 4.21 ERA, 3.79 FIP, 107 ERA-

McLean’s last start was encouraging, in so far as he didn’t give up seven-plus runs. However, there were still some reasons for concern. He allowed just one earned run on two hits over five innings, with the one run representing the fewest he’s given up in a start since May 8. The issue is that he walked a season-high five batters and only struck out two, which is decidedly not what you want from your budding ace. The positive that he was able to limit the damage, but he was constantly battling traffic and throwing stressful pitches. McLean remains a work in progress but is still one of their better options.

Canning (2026): 27.2 IP, 27 K, 15 BB, 6 HR, 7.16 ERA, 5.59 FIP, 183 ERA-

Canning has had a rough year in San Diego after performing relatively well with the Mets last year before suffering an Achilles injury that prematurely ended his time in New York. He’s yet to win a game while picking up four losses in his six games since debuting on May 3 for the Padres. His best outing was his season debut, as he limited the White Sox to one earned run on three hits while striking out a season-best seven. Since then, he’s allowed at least three earned runs in each of his five starts, including back-to-back outings in which he was tagged for six earned runs. He’s given up 28 hits and been charged with 22 earned runs in 27 2/3 innings while walking 15 and striking out 27. His last time out, he lost to the Nationals while giving up three earned runs on six hits over five innings.

Sunday, June 7: TBD (Likely Sean Manaea) vs. Randy Vásquez, 4:10 PM EDT on SNY

Manaea (2026): 39.0 IP, 42 K, 16 BB, 4 HR, 5.08 ERA, 3.82 FIP, 129 ERA-

The Mets have not announced Sunday’s starter, which will likely be an opener with Sean Manaea taking on the bulk of the work in the middle innings. This worked well for the left-hander and the Mets his last time out, as he enjoyed more success than he has in any single outing this year. Manaea, who did not factor in the decision, allowed just one earned run on one hits, with one walk and four strikeouts. Aside from a solo homer, he was fairly spotless. The five innings also represents a season high.

Vásquez (2026): 65.1 IP, 50 K, 18 BB, 9 HR, 3.31 ERA, 4.32 FIP, 84 ERA-

Vásquez has been enjoying his best numbers since joining San Diego in 2023 as part of the Juan Soto trade. He’s had some mixed results, especially to end May, when he allowed seven earned runs on 14 hits over his final tow starts to the Dodgers and the Phillies, both resulting in losses. He rebounded his last time out to limit Philadelphia to two earned runs on five hits over five innings, though he did not factor in the decision in an eventual loss. He does have one start in which he shut out the Rockies for seven innings, and another where he shut out the Mariners over six frames. Arguably his best start of the year was his debut outing on March 28, when he scattered two hits over six shutout innings against the Tigers, a start that also saw him punch out a season-high eight hitters.

Padres search for answers

Over the past week, the San Diego Padres lost five of the six games played. The Philadelphia Phillies just swept the season series 6-0, while the Padres have only won four of their last 15 games; losing five in a row. Some of those losses were by one run, but a loss is a loss. They now sit with a 32-29 record, in third place and 7 games behind the Dodgers.

Roster changes

Bench player Nick Castellanos was designated for assignment while outfielder Ramón Laureano was placed on the injured list with hip inflammation. The two best hitters at Triple-A El Paso were called up to provide some power potential and defensive flexibility, per manager Craig Stammen. 

Jase Bowen, 25, has the potential to exhibit five tools but must show he can hit at the major league level. He can play all three outfield spots. Samad Taylor plays all three outfield spots and can play second base. Taylor has previous MLB experience with two other teams, but his experience is limited to 39 games.

More than one problem

The offense, which remains either the worst in baseball or the second worst in all offensive averages, is not the only problem for the Friars. Over the past nine games, in which the Padres lost eight, there have been two quality starts from the pitchers.

Griffin Canning lost 3-0 in the first game of the Phillies series at home despite going 6.2 innings with three runs allowed. Then seven games later, Walker Buehler pitched six innings against the Phillies in Philadelphia with one earned run allowed. Eventually losing 3-2, the Padres saw reliever Jason Adam allow two runs on three hits in 0.2 innings in the seventh inning.

The bullpen has seen some hiccups as well, dropping from its top slot. With a 3.18 ERA, the bullpen now sits fifth in the major league rankings. The only bright side to all the losing is that closer Mason Miller has worked once in the past nine games and should be well-rested.

Another award for Mason Miller

Speaking of Mason Miller, he won Reliever of the Month for May. This is his second time winning the award.

Manny Machado

Despite hitting .174 with a .619 OPS in 214 at-bats, Manny Machado remains on pace for his season norms for home runs and RBI. Machado has hit 11 home runs with 32 RBI despite striking out 58 times in 241 plate appearances (24% K rate). He doesn’t appear to be seeing the ball well and is uncharacteristically watching strikes pass through the center of the zone.

A shortened lineup

The bottom of the Padres lineup features hitters who have been below the Mendoza line (.200) for the season. Before his release, Castellanos was a participant at the bottom of the order and was hitting .191. Catchers Freddy Fermin (.126) and Rodolfo Durán (.083) are practically automatic outs with OBP percentages below .300. 

Catcher Luis Campusano remains on the injured list with a broken toe and hasn’t begun his rehab yet. Catcher Blake Hunt, who has a better bat than either Fermin or Durán, just finished his rehab stint and has rejoined El Paso. There will still be some time before this situation can improve.

Before his injury, second baseman Jake Cronenworth was hitting .144 with a .272 OBP. When he plays, Sung-Mun Song hits in the bottom of the order with his .154 average and .290 OBP. 

The two newly promoted bench players, Bowen and Taylor, will be hitting in the bottom third. The team can hope that they will settle in and improve on some of these numbers.

Fernando Tatis Jr.

OF/2B Fernando Tatis Jr. got his first home run of the season on May 30 against the Washington Nationals. Over the past 15 games, Tatis is hitting .379/.438/.466 with three RBI, five walks and three stolen bases. 

After making almost constant adjustments during his hitting slump, Tatis seems to have found something that has unlocked his swing. He has also resumed his spot as the leadoff hitter, even though his OBP is .321 leading off. He swings at a lot of first pitches and his average as a leadoff hitter is .243.

Injury updates

RHP Germán Márquez began his rehab assignment with Triple-A El Paso on Tuesday. He threw 2.1 innings with a hit and three strikeouts while hitting 96 mph with his fastball. He has a 30-day rehab window.

RHP Nick Pivetta has begun a throwing program by playing catch. There is no timetable for his return.

RHP Joe Musgrove began his throwing program on Wednesday. He is also just playing catch at this point and there is no timetable for his return.

Cronenworth is progressing slowly with his baseball activities. Stammen has reported that Cronenworth is swinging a bat, throwing, doing some light running, and staying under medical care as his concussion symptoms begin to subside. There is no timetable for his return.

Campusano is in Arizona, working through his baseball activities in order to resume his work as a catcher. There has been no announcement on when he will begin his rehab assignment.

2026 Cubs Heroes and Goats: Pete Crow-Armstrong is the Superhero vs. the A’s!

Two of my all-time favorite announcer calls are “Do you believe in miracles… Yes!” and “I don’t believe what I just saw.” Iconic quotes of iconic moments made by Al Michaels and Jack Buck, two of the all-time greats. With all due respect to both of them, despite the insane improbability of a Cubs team going through what it has the last three weeks, this comeback was actually the least surprising thing in this game to me.

Some thoughts I’ve had on social media tonight for discussion. This felt like a month’s worth of two-out runners in scoring position hits for the Cubs, all in one inning. For those not counting at home, there were three separate two-out runner(s) in scoring position hits for the Cubs in the ninth inning. There was an additional hit with two outs and a runner not in scoring position.

The other thought I had on social media was to wonder if a team can hit rock bottom in a game that they ended up winning? The team had two hits through six innings, four hits through seven (and eight) and then seven hits in the ninth inning. What even is that? I noted before the series that the A’s bullpen has been a bottom 10 bullpen in major league baseball this year. They had represented excellently in the first two games of the series. Your starter getting deep in all three games can make them look so much better. But then the A’s bullpen immolated in the ninth inning. I will say this, for all of the struggles of the Cubs, the Cub defense would not have let all seven of those hits find grass. We take it for granted, but this Cub defense makes a ton of plays others just can’t.

On top of the not hitting, there was a caught stealing in the middle of the rally. I know the conventional wisdom is that you don’t make the first or the third out on the bases in an inning. But I don’t really know how you can get caught stealing down two in the ninth either. I think you take second if they are giving it to you, but the A’s were in no way giving it to you. I love Nico, but I didn’t like the strategy there. I thought sure the rally was doomed there.

Then there was the missed fly ball. I love Pete Crow-Armstrong. Absolutely, the Cubs don’t win this game without his bat. But boy was that a tough watch. I saw someone say it and I’m not sure I’ve ever seen someone miss one so bad. He had to have picked up something else off of the bat and ran to completely the wrong spot on the field. In those spots, I have trouble getting mad directly at the player. The Cubs have benefitted from so many high flys at Wrigley this year that were lost in some combination of lighting and the elements. It happens. If you ever played much outfield, or probably even infield, I suspect this has happened to you somewhere along the way. But as brutal a play as you’ll ever see.

Shōta Imanaga threw quite well early in this game, but after the missed fly, he seemed to unravel. If things weren’t bad enough, that missed fly looks like a booming homer on his line. The three he allowed that left the park were not cheapies. You had to know that it was pretty dicey seeing Imanaga pitching on a night when the wind is blowing out pretty good. Simply not ideal. If there is any rebound in the Cubs, I have to imagine that in some order Ben Brown, Edward Cabrera and Matthew Boyd are their top three pitchers. You then just have to hope you can pick spots adequately with all of your depth pitchers. But if Imanaga, Colin Rea and Jameson Taillon are starting key games, this team is probably in trouble.

For math purposes, the Cubs had 3.9 percent chance of winning heading to the bottom of the ninth. Happ’s RBI double with one out had it up to 11.5 and Hoerner’s single sent it to 20.9 percent. But it cratered to 4.6 percent with the caught stealing. Seiya Suzuki’s single sent it to 16.7 percent. Dansby Swanson’s single sent it to 63.5 percent. A giant Wheee! And the Cubs walk it off for the seventh time this season. Incredible.

Three Positives:

  • I’ve never singled out a stat for a slot here, but the Cubs were 6-for-10 with runners in scoring position, left just four men in base and had three two-out RBI, all in the ninth inning.
  • Pete Crow-Armstrong had two hits, one a homer, was hit by a pitch, stole a base and delivered the walk-off winner for his first such hit of his MLB career. Kudos to a very alert Clark who located the ball in the outfield and grabbed it for PCA’s souvenir collection and almost fell over trying to scoop it up while holding the W flag.
  • Ian Happ double, homer, three runs driven in, two runs scored. I laughed because one fairly recognizable Cub fan on twitter called the two-run homer a meaningless homer in a losing cause. I’m sure he’s happy to be wrong. You never know. That’s why you keep playing.

An additional hat tip to Trent Thornton and particularly Ryan Rolison. 12 batters between them — Rolison recorded five outs on five hitters, striking out three — and holding the line. Again, it looks like they were just holding the line, but it turned out they kept it just within reach. Though PCA’s single probably scores two with two out.

Game 63, June 4: Cubs 7, A’s 6 (33-30)

Reminder: Heroes and Goats are determined by WPA scores and are in no way subjective.

THREE HEROES:

  • Superhero: Pete Crow-Armstrong (.448). 2-4, HR, HBP, 2 RBI, R, SB
  • Hero: Dansby Swanson (.397). 1-4, RBI
  • Sidekick: Seiya Suzuki (.072). 1-1, R

THREE GOATS:

  • Billy Goat: Shata Imanaga (-.191). 6 IP, 6 H, BB, 6 ER, 5 K
  • Goat: Nico Hoerner (-.152). 1-4, CS
  • Kid: Alex Bregman (-.082). 1-4, 2B, R

WPA Play of the Game: Dansby Swanson’s two-out, game-tying, RBI-single in the ninth inning. (.468)

A’s Play of the Game: Jonah Heim throwing out Nico Hoerner trying to steal second with a nice tag by Alika Williams at second. (.163)

Cubs Player of the Game:

Game 62 Winner: Colin Rea nudged Ian Happ 46-42 (131 votes)

Rizzo Award Standings: (Top 5/Bottom 5)

The award is named for Anthony Rizzo, who finished first in this category three of the first four years it was in existence and four times overall. He also recorded the highest season total ever at +65.5. The point scale is three points for a Superhero down to negative three points for a Billy Goat.

  • Michael Busch +21
  • Nico Hoerner +111
  • Ian Happ +10.5
  • Michael Conforto +10
  • Ben Brown +9.5
  • Ryan Rolison/Phil Maton/Jameson Taillon/Caleb Thielbar -8
  • Matt Shaw -10
  • Dansby Swanson -11
  • Seiya Suzuki -29.5

Win Pace: 84.9

Up Next: The Giants (25-38) come to town fresh off of winning two games in a row in Milwaukee to take that three game series. But they are 3-7 in their last 10. Edward Cabrera (3-2, 4.00, 54 IP) comes off of the injured list after a minimum stay there for blisters on his throwing hand. He was 0-2 with a 5.79 in May. Hopefully, this was exactly the kind of reset he needed.

How about another lefty starter? The Cubs have been struggling to win games started by left-handed starters recently. Robbie Ray is 3-6 with a 4.45 ERA in 62.2 innings. The former 12th-round pick of the Nationals back in 2010 is having a tough season. He had a decent start last time out against the Rockies, allowing just one run on five hits and two walks in four innings. He hasn’t completed five innings since May 8.

The Giants bullpen is 28th in strikeouts, 25th in WHIP, but 16th in ERA. They only have a collective seven losses, tied for second best in baseball. So all of the losing is actually happening while the starter is still in there. Even with the series win in Milwaukee, the Giants are just 13-22 on the road.

I know it is a big ask, but the Cubs need to sweep this team.

Yankees Rivalry Roundup: Ninth inning eruption seals Blue Jays victory over Braves

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - JUNE 4: Vladimir Guerrero Jr. #27 of the Toronto Blue Jays reacts after scoring during the third inning against the Atlanta Braves at Truist Park on June 4, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Todd Kirkland/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Yankees managed to salvage a win and avoid a sweep by the Guardians at Yankee Stadium on the back of strong solid pitching from Carlos Rodón, shutdown bullpen work, and some clutch hitting by Ryan McMahon. With the win, the Yankees climb to within a half-game of the Rays, who had the day off. The win came as a much-needed positive boost in an otherwise troubling day in Yankees universe, the team finally confirming that Aaron Judge has been dealing with a stress fracture in his ribcage that will sideline the captain for a minimum of four-to-six weeks.

It was an otherwise quiet day around the league, with only the Blue Jays in action among the Yankees’ AL rivals. They themselves avoided a sweep with a hit parade in the final game against the Braves in Atlanta, Toronto amassing seven runs on 16 hits against the best team in baseball.

Toronto Blue Jays (30-33) 7, Atlanta Braves (42-21) 2

The ageless Chris Sale continues to defy Father Time, but the Blue Jays lineup appeared to be seeing the ball as well as any team that has faced him this season. They put him to the sword early and never let up that constant pressure. Sale was lucky to escape the first two innings unscathed. George Springer doubled and Ernie Clement singled to lead off the first, but Sale got Vladimir Guerrero Jr. to fly out and struck out the next two batters to strand the pair. An inning later, Nathan Lukes drew a leadoff walk and Tyler Heineman singled with one out to put another pair on, but Sale once again stranded the runners in place.

He would not be so fortunate in the third with Toronto continuing to press forward. Vladdy doubled with one out and Kazuma Okamoto reached on an infield single to put runners on first and second for the third straight inning. This time, Charles McAdoo — called up to replace the injured Lenyn Sosa and handed his MLB debut last week — broke through, lining a single up the middle to plate Vladdy and advance Okamoto to second. Sale then hit Lukes with a first-pitch sinker to load the bases for Myles Straw, whose ground ball single up the middle allowed Okamoto and McAdoo to score, though Sale avoided further damage by getting Heineman to ground into the inning ending double play that included Lukes getting thrown out at the plate.

The Blue Jays had to love this early production against Sale considering they countered the Braves ace with a bullpen game. Opener Mason Fluharty recorded the first four outs before handing the ball to bulk man Chad Dallas making his MLB debut, and the 25-year-old righty held the potent Atlanta offense to a run on two hits and two walks in 3.2 innings. He backed himself into a corner in the bottom of the third, yielding a leadoff single to Ronald Acuña Jr., who then stole second and advanced to third on a Mauricio Dubón single. Matt Olson plated Acuña with a sac fly that also advanced Dubón to third, and a two-out walk of Michael Harris Jr. put runners on the corners. However, Dallas made a slick behind-the-back grab on a Dominic Smith grounder up the middle to end the threat.

From there, the game settled into a pitchers’ duel in the middle innings, the Blue Jays continuing to apply pressure without finding the timely hit that would put the game to bed. Sale allowed a pair of singles to Vladdy and Lukes in the fifth but induced a Straw line out to end the frame. A Springer two-out walk followed by a Clement single knocked Sale from the game in the sixth, but reliever Didier Fuentes got Vladdy to ground out to strand another pair of Toronto base runners and wrap up Sale’s final line at three runs on ten hits and two walks with six strikeouts in 5.2 innings.

It looked like these wasted opportunities would come back to haunt the Blue Jays when Dubón crushed a no-doubter solo shot in the eighth off a hanging 1-0 Braydon Fisher slider to pull within one. However, they erupted for four runs in the ninth inning off reliever-turned-starter-turned-reliever Reynaldo López to arrive at a 7-2 scoreline that didn’t flatter them in the slightest. Clement and Vladdy clubbed a pair of singles to leadoff the inning, but López quickly retired the next two hitters and came within a strike of escaping the jam to send his offense to the bottom of the ninth trailing by just a run. However, Lukes kept fouling off pitches until he was able to line a single to right to plate Clement and move Vladdy to second. From there, the floodgates opened, Straw singling Vladdy home and Heineman doubling to score both Lukes and Straw. In the blink of an eye, the Blue Jays turned a one run lead into an insurmountable five run lead to salvage a win from this series despite stranding 12 base runners on the day.