Diamondbacks 5, Rockies 4: Good Enough!

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - MAY 23: Ketel Marte #4 of the Arizona Diamondbacks celebrates after hitting a two run home run against the Colorado Rockies during the fourth inning at Chase Field on May 23, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Norm Hall/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Ah, Zac Gallen. Our one-time ace, more recently our collective repository of remarkably persistent hopes and dreams and aspirations of the “he just needs to get his mojo back and he’ll be an ace again!” variety, our late-breaking $25 Million Dollar Man (with some money deferred, of course) as we got ready to set sail for the 2026 season. Yes. Zac. I’m never thrilled, and always nervous, when I pull a Gallen start for a Saturday recap. I would say that it’s because you never know what you’re going to get with Zac these days, but I don’t actually think that’s true at this point. The truer way of putting it is that we’re going to get the same thing we always get—a handful of really stellar innings which remind us of the sort of pitcher he once was on a consistent basis, but punctuated (and punctured) by at least one complete loss of focus and competence that leads to some quantity, often a substantial quantity, of runs crossing the plate for the opponent. It’s sad, and it’s a bummer, but at this point it simply is what it is, and who Gallen is as a pitcher at this stage in his career.

To be fair, tonight was one of his better outings in 2026, though a big part of that may be that Torey Lovullo kept the leash short. Gallen was up against Michael Lorenzen tonight, who came into the game sporting an ERA above 7, while Zac’s was in the mid-5 range, so I wasn’t terribly worried. And for the first three innings, Gallen did the business, and did it admirably. He pitched around a one-out single in the top of the first to retire the side with only nine pitches thrown. In the second, he retired the Rockies in order with only eight pitches thrown. He needed a whopping 19 pitches in the top of the third, but that was mainly because, rather than recording quick outs he struck out the side in order instead, and strikeouts are always more pitch-count-intensive.

Lorenzen, meanwhile, looked shaky at the start, surrendering a Ketel Marte single and a Corbin Carroll double to put our first two batters in scoring position with nobody out to begin the bottom of the first, but managed to wriggle off the hook thanks to a Geraldo Perdomo grounder to first, a Nolan Arenado grounder to third that allowed the Rockies to throw Marte out at the plate, and then a weak Ildemaro pop-up into shallow center for the third out. In the second, he retired the Diamondbacks in order, which made me wonder if he was starting to settle in.

He wasn’t. Ryan Waldschmidt led off the bottom of the third with s line-drive single to left, flipping the lineup over for Ketel Marte, who then walked. Corbin Carroll struck out for the first out of the inning, but Perdomo lined a single to left of his own that scored Waldschmidt, and Nolan Arenado followed with a double into the gap in left center that brought home both Perdomo and Arenado:

Neither Vargas or Gabriel Moreno could do anything to get Nolan around, but we’d drawn first blood, and put up a crooked number at that. 3-0 D-BACKS

As often seems to the case these days with Gallen, though, the offense staking him a lead seemed to mess up his mojo and throw him off-kilter, and while he still seemed to be throwing the same sort of stuff and taking the same approach as he had through the first three innings, the Rockies greeted him with rather different results to open the fourth. The first four batters of the inning reached against Zac, thanks to a single to left, a single to right, a walk to load the bases, and then a single to right-center that scored Hunter Goodman, who had led off the inning. Ezequiel Tovar then grounded to short, but Perdomo’s only play was to get the force at second base, allowing another Rockie to cross the plate. Gallen then walked his second batter of the inning to reload the bases, but thankfully pulled himself together enough that he was able to end things without further damage with a strikeout and a pop-up to Perdomo. 3-2 D-BACKS

In a happy turn of events, though, our offense came back out in the bottom of the fourth and immediately got back the two runs Gallen had just coughed up. With one out, Tim Tawa, who was playing left field tonight with Lourdes Gurriel, Jr. hitting the IL this afternoon, grounded a single into left, and one out later Ketel Marte continued his offensive resurgence by hitting the first pitch he saw in his third time facing Lorenzen for an absolute moonshot that just about reached the concourse behind the right field bleachers:

So the lead was back into safer territory again. 5-2 D-BACKS

Gallen, for his part, took what was given to him this time and put up a zero in the top of the fifth, pitching around a two-out walk. Brandon Pfaadt, however, got up and started warming in the bullpen around this point, which was likely just as well because after Lorenzen put up a zero of his own in the bottom of the fifth, Zac surrendered a leadoff single to Colorado left fielder Troy Johnston to kick off the sixth inning. Johnston promptly stole second and was then advanced to third on a Tovar grounder to first, and that earned Gallen the hook as Torey went to the bullpen and brought in Pfaadt. And Pfaadt did his job, recording the final two outs, though Johnston did score from third to narrow the lead again. 5-3 D-BACKS

Lorenzen’s night was done, so the amusingly named (for Snakepit members of a certain vintage, anyway) Keegan Thompson came out of the Rockies’ bullpen and proceeded to pitch two and two thirds innings. They weren’t the cleanest you’ve ever seen, as he dealt with multiple baserunners in each inning that he worked, but he put up zeroes, which is of course what matters. Pfaadt did the same in his half of the seventh, but surrendered a leadoff home run to start the eighth, followed by a single that sent him to the showers and brought in Kevin Ginkel to once again clean up someone else’s mess. Ginkel did so admirably and with a minimum of drama, thankfully. 5-4 D-BACKS

And that was pretty much that. Our offense did nothing of significance in the bottom of the eighth, and Paul Sewald came out to pitch the top of the ninth for us in a one-run game, and shut things down by inducing a flyout to center and a flyout to right before finishing with style and panache by striking out Hunter Goodman, arguably Colorado’s best hitter, on five pitches to put this one win the books, and the win column, for the good guys.

Win Probability Added, courtesy of FanGraphs

The Majestic Redwood: Ketel Marte (4 AB, 3 H, 2 R, 2 RBI, 1 HR, 1 BB, +23% WPA), Kevin Ginkel (1 IP, 0 ER, 1 BB, +21% WPA)
The Mighty Sequoia: Paul Sewald (1 IP, 0 ER, 1 K, +16% WPA)

We had a very lively and well-attended Gameday Thread tonight, with an impressive 337 comments at time of writing. Many comments went Sedona Salmon, but none attracted enough comments to truly run away with it, so I’m more than pleased to bestow tonight’s Comment of the Game on gzimmerm, for this simple statement that actually I think goes a long way toward explaining some of the recent positive change in the team’s fortunes:

You are not wrong, and I for one have been enjoying seeing the young Baron prove that day after day after day as he embarks upon his young career.

So tomorrow we go for the series victory, and our sixth win in the seven games of this homestand. The Rockies are bringing lefthander Jose Quintana to the party, and we are countering with the inimitably Ryne Nelson. First pitch is scheduled for 1:10pm AZ time. I hope you can join us!

As always, thanks for reading, and as always, go Diamondbacks!

Mets’ Freddy Peralta a mixed bag in first seven-inning outing of season

Saturday’s outing was a bit of a mixed bag for Freddy Peralta

The right-hander did well to save the Mets' bullpen by completing seven-full innings for the first time this season, but he was knocked around a bit by the Marlins. 

Peralta allowed four runs on two walks and a season-high eight hits in a 4-1 loss

Half of those runs came via the long ball, as Miami's breakout slugger Liam Hicks jumped him for a pair of solo shots to right-center in the bottom of the third and the fifth. 

Peralta’s now allowed eight homers to start the season, four of which have come over his last three times out. 

“I never want to give up homers, but it happens,” he said. “The second one I made a big mistake on the curveball, I shook on the pitch and should've executed better, but it happens and I just learn from it.”

The veteran righty did rebound nicely following that second blast, as he retired nine of the final 10 batters he faced to close his longest outing of the season on a high note.

He also set season-highs in pitches (108) and strikeouts (nine).

Despite the shaky showing in the book, Carlos Mendoza liked what he saw from the top of the the rotation arm.

“I thought he was better than the line score, to be honest,” the skipper said. “That second inning a couple of grounders found holes, the breaking ball for the homer, but overall he goes seven innings and he competed.”

Peralta kept the Mets within striking distance, but the offense didn't do him any favors, as they managed just one run in the ninth on three hits and three walks against Max Meyer and Miami’s bullpen. 

As has been the case for the majority of the season to this point, the continued struggles putting runs on the board left the Mets’ starter with a razor thin margin for error. 

They've been held to one run or less a league-worst 14 times this season. 

"You just gotta keep going,” Carlos Mendoza said. “You can’t sit here and feel sorry for yourself, yeah we get frustrated at times, but you just gotta continue to go.”

Diamondbacks 5, Rockies 4: One-way traffic

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - MAY 23: Ketel Marte #4 of the Arizona Diamondbacks celebrates after hitting a two run home run against the Colorado Rockies during the fourth inning at Chase Field on May 23, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Norm Hall/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Colorado Rockies dug themselves into a few holes and weren’t quite able to climb out of them.

Michael Lorenzen fought traffic all night, and the offense wasn’t able to string together enough hits to put them over the top. They ended up losing, 5-4.

Traffic jams prove costly for Michael Lorenzen

Michael Lorenzen battled traffic all night, and came out on the losing end. Ketel Marte kicked things off with a single, and Corbin Carroll doubled right behind him. Luckily, Lorenzen recorded three outs behind them to hold the Dbacks scoreless in the first. He then got a 1-2-3 second of Gabriel Moreno, Jose Fernandez, and Tim Tawa. But the big damage came in the next two innings.

In the third, Ryan Waldschmidt led off with a single, and he would eventually come around to score behind more traffic. Marte walked, but then Carroll struck out. Geraldo Perdomo singled, which scored Waldschmidt, and old friend Nolan Arenado doubled to score Perdomo and put the Snakes up 3-0.

The fourth inning wasn’t any better.

Jose Fernandez flew out to right to start things off, but then Tawa singled. Two batters later, Marte launched one over the right field wall to put the Snakes up 5-2.

“It was just a fastball,” Lorenzen said after the game. “He’s usually pretty patient. 0-0, trying to go away and [I] missed in the middle.”

Lorenzen had a quick fifth, but still gave up five runs on eight hits with one walk and five strikeouts in his outing.

“I thought Mike threw the ball fine. I thought he gave us a chance to win,” manager Warren Schaeffer said. “[He had] good breaking stuff. I think on the homer to Marte — which was the game-winner, basically — he was trying to go away, missed his spot, and Marte is a really good hitter.”

Lorenzen didn’t have the same sentiments about his performance.

“[I’m] not too happy about it,” Lorenzen said. “I feel like I did everything right to put myself in a situation to have a good start. I did everything well, other than the thing that matters most, and that’s run prevention.”

Offense showing sporadic signs of life, but not enough

The Rockies scored four runs, but they struggled to string opportunities together.

The first two runs came in the fourth inning, as the Rockies gave Zac Gallen some trouble on the basepaths. Hunter Goodman singled to lead things off, followed by TJ Rumfield. Tyler Freeman then walked to load the bases, and Troy Johnston singled to drive in Goodman.

Ezequiel Tovar gounded into a 6-4 fielder’s choice, but Rumfield was still able to score and put the Rox within one.

Sterlin Thompson walked, but then Chad Stevens struck out swinging and Kyle Karros flied out to Perdomo to end the inning.

Their next run came in the sixth, when Johnston led off with a single, stole second, was bumped to third by a Tovar groundout, and then was driven home by a Thompson groundout.

But then Stevens flied out to center to end the inning.

A Home Run!

The Colorado Rockies had not hit a home run in seven games entering tonight. That all changed in the eighth inning, as TJ Rumfield launched one over the left field wall and put the Rockies within a run:

“TJ threw up four solid at-bats tonight,” Schaeffer said. “With a night where the ball definitely wasn’t flying, to get it the other way — that’s just some real strength. And TJ’s had a solid approach since the beginning of the year. [It was] a big night for him.”

Up Next

The Rockies will wrap up the four-game series in the desert tomorrow afternoon. José Quintana will duel Dbacks’ right-hander Ryne Nelson. First pitch is at 2:10pm MT.

See you then!


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24-27 – Rangers waste ample chances in 5-2 loss to Angels

May 23, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Los Angeles Angels fans gather outside Angel Stadium before the game between the Los Angeles Angels and the Texas Rangers to protest the Angels team owner Arte Moreno. Mandatory Credit: Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images | Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images

The Texas Rangers scored two runs while the Anaheim Angels scored five runs.

Before winning tonight against the Rangers, the Angels had only won two games in a row once since April 17. Even then, you’d still have to go back to the first week of this month when they won two in a row against the Chicago White Sox for the last scant winning streak for the Orange County squad.

It’s not like the Rangers are putting together many winning streaks of their own, though. It’s pretty much been win one, lose one for this team for like 900 consecutive days. The treadmill of mediocrity continues only now with the guarantee of a series loss in Anaheim this weekend.

Other trends for Texas that just won’t die? Let’s check the list:

  • First inning runs leading to early deficits –

The Rangers trailed 2-0 after the first two Anaheim batters. They raised their unsightly first inning ERA to 7.02 on the year.

  • Bases loaded opportunities that die without runs scored –

Texas left ‘em loaded in the third, fifth, and eighth innings with Jake Burger striking out to end the first two chances and a bases loaded, one out situation that ended without the tying run scoring.

  • Inability to produce with RISP –

The Rangers and Angels each had eight hits but Texas scored on just one hit with RISP in eleven chances while leaving eleven on base.

  • Doing exactly enough to lose, and not enough to win –

Despite tonight’s starter Nathan Eovaldi giving up two runs before collecting an out, he allowed just one run afterward over his seven innings of work. Despite scoring six runs last night only to lose 9-6, tonight six runs would have easily rescued Eovaldi from a loss but Texas went back to being unable to plate enough runs in a low-scoring game that the Angels put away with a couple of insurance runs the inning after Eovaldi exited.

The Rangers came into this series playing nearly inarguably the worst team in the American League with a golden opportunity to surge ahead of the .500 mark. Instead, they will leave it worse off than when they arrived and will need a win tomorrow in the finale or they’ll find themselves swept out of Anaheim.

Player of the Game: Maybe it’s Eovaldi but if you’re mad at him for the first inning runs, maybe it’s Alejandro Osuna. The Texas left fielder had three hits in his three at-bats tonight but was lifted by Skip Schumaker in one of his big brain pinch hitting maneuvers where Andrew McCutchen was called on to hit against a left-handed reliever with the tying run at second base in the top of the seventh

The Angels brought in a right-handed reliever to face McCutchen, and McCutchen struck out looking on this pitch:

Up Next: The Rangers and Angels close out this series with Texas turning to a starter they have not yet named while Anaheim will opt for LHP Reid Detmers.

The first pitch in Saturday’s finale from Angels Stadium is scheduled for 6:20 pm CDT and will be aired on Peacock.

Cubs Minor League Wrap: Iowa stops Memphis, 6-4

Mar 18, 2026; Salt River Pima-Maricopa, Arizona, USA; Chicago Cubs third baseman BJ Murray (83) hits against the Arizona Diamondbacks in the second inning at Salt River Fields at Talking Stick. Mandatory Credit: Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images | Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images

Catcher Casey Opitz was activated off the Development List and returned to Iowa.

Iowa Cubs

The Iowa Cubs clipped the wings of the Memphis Redbirds (Cardinals), 6-4.

Starter Paul Campbell threw the first six inning and allowed three runs on six hits. Two of the three runs came on a home run by rehabbing Lars Nootbaar. Campbell walked one, hit one batter and struck out one.

Gavin Hollowell retired the side in order in the top of the seventh inning and got the win after Iowa scored five runs in the bottom of the inning. Hollowell did not strike anyone out.

After Collin Snider allowed a run on a solo home run in the eighth, Christian Roa came on to pitch the ninth and got the save. Roa retired the side in order in the ninth and struck out two.

BJ Murray played outfield for the first time in his professional career, playing the entire game in left field. He also hit a two-run double in the seventh inning that tied the game 3-3. Murray was 2 for 3 with a a walk and the double. He scored once and had the two RBI.

Third baseman Owen Miller hit back-to-back doubles with Murray in the seventh. Miller was 2 for 4 with two RBI and one run scored.

DH Chas McCormick doubled in the seventh inning—back-to-back-to-back doubles with Murray and Miller. McCormick went 2 for 4 with one run batted in.

Right fielder Justin Dean was 2 for 4 with a stolen base. Dean scored one run and drove in one run.

McCormick’s double.

Knoxville Smokies

The Knoxville Smokies split a doubleheader with the Montgomery Biscuits (Rays), winning the completion of yesterday’s game 2-1 and losing the seven-inning regularly-scheduled game 2-1.

Jake Knapp started yesterday and threw two scoreless innings, allowing just one hit, before the rains came. Knapp walked one and struck out three.

Brooks Caple took the mound when play continued and got the win after allowing just one run over six innings. Caple gave up five hits but issued no walks and struck out four.

Marino Santy pitched the ninth inning, retired the side in order and got the save. Santy struck out one.

Right fielder Alex Ramirez scored both runs in game one, going 3 for 4 with a double and two runs scored.

DH Owen Ayers and shortstop Jefferson Rojas were both 1 fo 4 with an RBI.

Tyler Schlaffer started game two and got the loss after giving up two runs, one earned on four hits over five innings. Schlaffer struck out six, walked one and hit one batter.

Tyler Santana threw the final two innings and retired all six batters he faced. Santana struck three of them out.

Right fielder Alex Ramirez was a perfect 3 for 3 with a walk in game one.

Catcher Owen Ayers went 2 for 4.

South Bend Cubs

The South Bend Cubs calmed the West Michigan Whitecaps (Tigers), 5-3. The win clinched South Bend’s first series win at West Michigan since 2018.

Jostin Florentino started and allowed two runs on three hits over 2+ innings. Florentino walked three, hit two batters and struck out three.

Ben Johnson threw the next three innings, didn’t allow a run and got the win. Johnson gave up one hit. He struck out four and walked one.

Brayden Spears tossed the final three innings for the save. He surrendered one run on two hits. (Really he gave up the one run on a solo home run in the seventh inning.) Spears struck out four and walked no one. He did hit one batter.

Catcher Miguel Useche hit a solo home run in the sixth inning, his second on the season. Useche went 2 for 4. He scored twice and drove home two.

Shortstop Ty Southisene was 2 for 5 with a two-run single as part of a four-run second inning.

An RBI double for right fielder Leonel Espinoza, who was 1 for 4 with one run scored on the game.

The Useche home run.

Myrtle Beach Pelicans

The Myrtle Beach Pelicans were knocked over by the Kannapolis Cannon Ballers (White Sox), 5-4.

Noah Edders pitched the first two innings and gave up one run on no hits. He walked one and struck out four.

David Bracho threw the next three innings and took the loss. Bracho gave up four runs on three hits and five walks. He struck out four.

Hayden Frank threw the final three innings without giving up a run. He did surrender two hits and one walk. Frank struck out four.

Shortstop Alexis Hernandez went 3 for 5 with a triple and two runs scored.

Left fielder Darlyn De Leon was 2 for 4 with a double and one run scored.

First baseman Michael Carico went 2 for 4 with a double.

Right fielder Alexey Lumpuy was 1 for 3 with two walks. He drove in one run and score one run.

Lumpuy’s RBI infield single.

Center fielder Josiah Hartshorn with a two-run double. He was 1 for 3 with a walk.

ACL Cubs

Lost to the Giants, 7-5.

Braves News: Chris Sale interview, Braves shut out, more

The Braves lost a game 2-0 to the Nationals, which is unfortunate because the Nationals are very much the profile of team that you should beat if you hold them to 2 runs (though statistically that applies to every team, the Nationals are especially pitching-deficient. That said, the Braves still have a chance for a perfectly solid series win, with a win on Sunday, behind Martin Perez and facing the unimposing Foster Griffin. The Phillies won Saturday, bringing the division lead down to a still-large 9.5 games, while the Marlins beat the Mets, rounding out NL East play.

Braves News

Chris Sale gave a great interview to CBS about his career resurgence in Atlanta.

Grant Holmes posted a solid start, but the Braves’ offense couldn’t find anything against the Nationals’ struggling pitching staff, in a 2-0 loss.

MLB News

The Diamondbacks are placing Lourdes Gurriel on the 10-day IL with a minor hamstring injury.

The Angels signed former Phillies starter Taijuan Walker to a minor league deal.

The Twins activated starter Taj Bradley from the 15-day IL, DFAing Luis Garcia to make space.

Husker Baseball is Knocked Out of the Big Ten Tournament by Oregon

All good things must come to an end. It had been 2 years and 2 days since Nebraska had last lost in Charles Schwab Field, and it continues that no team has ever won 3 Big Ten Tournaments in a row.

The usually potent Husker offense couldn’t come up with anything against one of their biggest nemesis of the season, Oregon starter Will Sanford had confounded Nebraska in Eugene and his rising fastball did the same tonight.

Oregon got things started quickly. Leadoff batter Ryan Cooney drove the second pitch of the game to the left-center gap. All Big Ten Defensive Team outfielder Mac Moyer read it perfectly and made a dive at the last minute but could just barely touch it with his glove. Cooney cruised into second for a double. Back to back groundouts behind him brought him in to score. Husker starting pitcher Gavin Blachowicz struck out the final batter to limit the damage to 1 run.

The Duck loaded the bases with one out in the 3rd on Blachowicz, with a couple of singles followed by a full count walk to All Big Ten 3B Drew Smith. Blachowicz got to an 0-2 count on the batter who slapped a ball right at a shifted Rhett Stokes playing up the middle. He stepped on 2nd and fired a strike to first base for a massive double play. The crowd roared to life trying to get some momentum on their side.

Will Sanford took the mound for Oregon. He struck out 12 Huskers in 6 innings the first time they faced each other and got off to a similar start in Omaha. Two strikeouts each of the first 4 innings, and 10 retired in a row.

Oregon added one in the 4th, a solo shot from Maddox Maloney. That doubled their lead to 2-0. Maloney is 3rd in career home runs at Oregon and was All Big Ten a season ago, but had been struggling to find consistency this year.

Nebraska finally reached base on Sanford in the 4th. Sanford lost control of his fastball for a time, walking Jeter Worthley and Dylan Carey with 1 out. Case Sanderson, who carried the team last night, just got under one for a fly out to deep center. Then Sanford bounced back with a strikeout on Drew Grego, and grabbed all the momentum back in the Oregon dugout.

Blachowicz had been having a great night, battling the potent Oregon offense. He looked to be controlling the 5th, getting to 2 outs quickly, but a solo shot that barely cleared the right field wall put Oregon up 3-0. Blachowicz exited after the 5th, striking out 9, and allowing 3 runs on 6 hits, with only 1 walk. More than enough to keep Nebraska in the game.

The Huskers looked to have something working in the 6th. Jeter Worthley snuck one past the first baseman into no mans land and wound up on 2nd for a double. Then Dylan Carey smashed a ball 103 mph off the bat, but right at the Duck short stop who was shifted way towards third base. He caught the line drive and tossed the ball to the second baseman who with the shift was only a couple steps from the base, doubling off Worthley. Another strikeout looking on Sanderson ended the threat.

Oregon opened it up in the 7th. It looked like Nebraska might get out of the inning with no harm done, after a Cooper Katskee strikeout to lead off the inning. He hit a batter, but then induced a ground ball up the middle. Carey tossed to Stokes at second who bounced a ball to first that Sanderson couldn’t come up with. A walk was followed by a 2 run triple to the deepest part of the park. Katskee then threw a belt high fastball right over the middle of the plate, and that ball ended up in the Husker bullpen. 7-0 Oregon.

Oregon added another run in the 9th to bring us to the final score of 8-0.

For an offense that doesn’t strike out a lot, gets lead off batters on at a high rate, and is one of the best at batting with runners on, none of the Huskers’ weapons were working tonight. Nebraska struck out 12 times, got 2 of 9 leadoff runners on, and hit 1-9 with runners on base, hitting into 2 double plays. None of those are a recipe for success.

Oregon will face regular season champion UCLA for the Big Ten Tournament title on Sunday at 2pm CDT.

Nebraska should be firmly in place as a regional host, so waiting for the teams who are coming to Lincoln should be all that the Huskers are waiting on come the selection show on Monday at 11am CDT. Corn Nation will keep you posted and give you all the regional previews and recaps you need.

Outraged Angels fans want Arte Moreno to sell team ASAP

Los Angeles Angels fans in right field at Angel Stadium.

“Sell the team” chants have echoed across Angel Stadium this week, as Angels fans continue to be disgruntled by the state of the team.

On Saturday, Angels fans protested owner Arte Moreno before the game against the Rangers, imploring him to sell the team.

“Sell the team” chants have echoed across Angel Stadium this week, as Angels fans continue to be disgruntled by the state of the team. Reddit/KeyResolve3056
On Saturday, Angels fans protested owner Arte Moreno before the game against the Rangers, imploring him to sell the team. Getty Images

With an hour and a half before first pitch, fans made their way down State College and stopped at the main entrance of the stadium on Gene Autry Way. Roughly 100 people were part of the group, with more piling in as they entered the stadium.

The movement originated when lifelong Angels fan Johnny Gonzalez created a flyer on his Instagram account, “Angelsboycott,” at the beginning of the month.

Gonzalez said the purpose of the protest was to get fans to unite and voice their opinions about Moreno as they want him to sell the team.

When Gonzalez created the graphic that enticed fans to protest the team, it quickly went viral, gaining more than 800,000 views and 22,000 likes on social media.

With an hour and a half before first pitch, fans made their way down State College and stopped at the main entrance of the stadium on Gene Autry Way. Roughly 100 people were part of the group, with more piling in as they entered the stadium. Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images

Gaining such quick traction on the internet, Gonzalez said he heard from 500 people who were planning to attend the protest and show their support.

While the numbers initially weren’t what he was told, he said this was what he was expecting and called it the first event.

“This is the first time something like this has happened in Angels fan history,” Gonzalez said. “We’ve reached a boiling point, and you can see it. I’m just happy all the fans are here to support each other, make a message, and stand up for what’s right.”

Los Angeles Angels owner Arte Moreno in attendance for an opening day game between the Boston Red Sox and the Los Angeles Angels at Angel Stadium of Anaheim on April 5, 2024 in Anaheim, California. Getty Images

Gonzalez added that the goal of this protest is to either force him to sell the team or start investing money into the organization.

“We’re not gonna stop,” Gonzalez said. “We’re having too much fun across the street for the Anaheim Ducks, and we want the same energy over here.”

Before Saturday’s protest, Angels fans protested all week during home games by taking off their shirts and waving them around their heads. They chanted “sell the team” for the most part but Thursday’s game took a turn when fans yelled “f— you Arte.” 

However, their biggest in-game protest of the week cam Friday night when they filled multiple sections of the stadium with fans chanting sell the team, Arte sucks, and winning matters.

Gonzalez said that their was over 500 fans that were in attendance participating in the chants during Friday’s game.

When Moreno purchased the Angels in 2003 for $183.5 million, they were fresh off winning their first — and only — World Series in franchise history and were perennial winners, reaching the postseason six times over 11 years.

But in the second act of Moreno’s ownership, the Angels have failed to reach the playoffs over the last 11 years and have not had a winning record since 2015.

“He was handed a winning organization,” Angels season ticket holder Joseph Sterling said when asked about Moreno’s time as an owner. “They cared about their farm system. They had an excellent scouting team.”


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On top of losing, the Angels have also been in the public eye more often than they would like for all the wrong reasons.

On Dec. 9, 2025, the organization reached a settlement with former pitcher Tyler Skaggs’ family after he passed away from ingesting a fentanyl-laced pill given to him by ex-communications manager Eric Kay.

The Angels also are showing signs they will miss the playoffs again, entering Saturday night with MLB’s worst record at 18-34.

While the Angels haven’t won much recently, fans have continued to support the franchise. The Angels rank eighth in attendance, averaging 34,659, and have consistently stayed in the top 16 over the last six years. From 2015-2019, they were among the top five for attendance.

Kristin Galagher has been a fan since 1990 and has been going to games with her husband who’s been a fan since 1967. The two of them said they have seen the change of the Angels and are disappointed in what Moreno’s let it become.

“He doesn’t care about the fans, he doesn’t care about the club. He cares about his bottom line. He cares about calling himself a Major League Baseball owner,” Gallagher said. “But you know, how pathetic is it to completely change their operations to insulate Arte from exposure.”

Guardians Lose Game 2 as Offense Struggles Against Wheeler

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - MAY 23: Slade Cecconi #44 of the Cleveland Guardians throws a pitch in the bottom of the first inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on May 23, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It was a pretty rough game for the Guardians offense as they were held to just three hits. We have faced two of the best pitchers in the league in back to back games so we shouldn’t be too upset about coming out of that 1-1.

As for the pitching staff it was a solid outing for Slade Cecconi. Limiting the damage to 3 runs in 5 innings is all you can really ask for in a #5 starter, which I think is what he is at this point. Festa and Pallette both struggled with their control in this one as they combined for 5 walks in just two innings pitched. Shawn Armstrong also tossed a scoreless inning of relief.

The Guardians will attempt to win the series tomorrow. It will be Parker Messick against Andrew Painter at 1:35 pm ET.

Early offense not enough as Brewers fall to Dodgers 11-3

Milwaukee Brewers
Los Angeles Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman (5) beats a tag by Milwaukee Brewers catcher Gary Sánchez (99) to score on a single by catcher Will Smith during the eighth inning of their game Saturday, May 23, 2026 at American Family Field in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. | Mark Hoffman/Milwaukee Journal Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Box Score

The Milwaukee Brewers were following a familiar script on Saturday night, jumping all over the Dodgers starter for a crooked number in the first inning. The offense stagnated after that, but the Dodgers’ offense didn’t and scored 11 unanswered runs to win the game 11-3.

Milwaukee started the game with back-to-back doubles from Jackson Chourio and Brice Turang to very quickly grab the lead. Andrew Vaughn reached on an error that scored a run, Gary Sánchez walked, and then Sal Frelick singled, but Sánchez was thrown out heading to third to end the inning. An unforced mistake by Sánchez helped Roki Sasaki escape trouble, and after that, he buckled down.

The Brewers’ offense was only able to muster two hits after the first inning: A double by Jackson Chourio that just missed being a home run in the second inning and an infield single by Sánchez in the eighth.

Meanwhile, the Dodgers’ offense was able to get to Brewers starter Robert Gasser in the fourth inning as Freddie Freeman and Andy Pages had back-to-back doubles of their own. Kyle Tucker drew a walk, and it appeared Pages signaled the pitch grips that Gasser had to Teoscar Hernández from second base. Hernández promptly took an 0-2 slider deep to left field and off the foul pole for a three-run homer, propelling the Dodgers to a 4-3 lead.

“I think he got caught up and gave away some pitches that ended up hurting him. But you can’t give up 0-2 hits either way, you can’t throw 0-2 pitches down the middle,” Pat Murphy said.

The Brewers’ offense, despite being down just one run, could not muster a rally together. The Dodgers then continued to pile on with three more runs in the eighth inning and four in the ninth.

It wasn’t even a ton of hard contact and damage that the Dodgers did. The Brewers’ pitching staff gave up six walks in the final two innings alone, and five of them came around to score. They mixed in a couple of singles, taking advantage of the struggles of DL Hall and Jake Woodford.

The Dodgers had nine batters head to the plate in each of the final two innings. Mookie Betts made the last out each time and ended the day 0-for-6. His season batting average has dropped to .169. He did miss five weeks with an oblique strain earlier this year, but his struggles are still unusual for him. He was the only Dodger not to reach base in tonight’s game.

Robert Gasser finished with a line of 4 1/3 IP, 4 H, 4 ER, 4 BB, and 4 Ks. He was doing pretty well up until the fourth inning, facing just two over the minimum. Then he gave up some hard contact, gave up some walks, and couldn’t get through the fifth.

“I’m not pleased with it. This is a winning ball club, and I came in and was a part of two losses. It’s not ideal, just gotta minimize free passes and keep attacking the strike zone,” Gasser said.

The Brewers will still have a chance to win the series against the Dodgers on Sunday in the rubber match. Brandon Sproat will be on the mound for the Crew, while the Dodgers will have Yoshinobu Yamamoto. First pitch is at 1:10 p.m.

Dodgers bullpen sets record-long scoreless streak to snap Brewers skid

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Roki Sasaki (11) reacts, Image 2 shows Freddie Freeman in his Dodgers uniform after hitting a home run

MILWAUKEE –– The Dodgers have had no problem beating the Brewers in the playoffs in recent years.

The regular season, however, had been a different story.

Entering Saturday’s game at American Family Field, the Dodgers hadn’t recorded a regular-season victory over Milwaukee since Aug. 13, 2024.

Nine straight times since then, they had lost to their smaller-market –– and much less-well-funded –– fellow National League contenders, their longest active streak against any opponent.

The Dodgers have had no problem beating the Brewers in the playoffs in recent years. Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images

Finally, that rut finally ended with an 11-3 win Saturday, on a night the Dodgers came from behind early, pulled away for a blowout triumph late, and saw their bullpen make some club history along the way.

“Just across the board,” manager Dave Roberts said, “really good ball game.”

Down three runs straight out of the gate after a 35-pitch first inning from Roki Sasaki, the Dodgers surged in front with a four-run rally in the fourth; keyed by doubles from Freddie Freeman and Andy Pages, then a go-ahead three-run blast from Teoscar Hernández clanged off the left-field foul pole.

“The Teo homer was a big hit to get us a lead, when we were looking a little bit down and got behind early,” Roberts said.

It would be the start of a six-RBI night from Hernández, who matched his MLB career-high with a run-scoring single in a three-run eighth and a two-run single in a four-run ninth.

“I’m just hitting the ball in the air, hitting it hard,” said Hernández, who has busted out of an early-season slump by batting .388 over his last 14 games. “I think that’s what’s been the difference between the last two weeks.”

Overall, the Dodgers finished with 10 hits and a season-high 11 walks, including four from Freeman alone. It was their third time scoring double-digit runs in the last week.


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In between all that, the team watched Sasaki settle down to complete a five-inning outing without any further damage, then turned the lead over to their recently flawless bullpen the rest of the way.

With four more scoreless frames Saturday, the club’s relief corps has now gone 36 innings without giving up a run. That broke the franchise’s previous record-long bullpen streak, surpassing a 33-inning run from the club’s 1998 team.

It was also the 10th-straight game their bullpen went unblemished, a stretch that included a bullpen-game shutout against the Angels to start this nine-game road trip.

“They’re on a heater,” Roberts said. “It’s one of those things that, when it doesn’t go well, they get the blame, and when it does go well, they don’t get a lot of credit. But they are getting the credit now, and it’s earned. So really happy for those guys.”

Down three runs straight out of the gate after a 35-pitch first inning from Roki Sasaki, the Dodgers surged in front with a four-run rally in the fourth Getty Images

What it means

Now that the Dodgers (32-20) have won a game against the Brewers (30-19), they can go for a series victory on Sunday. The club hasn’t had one of those against Milwaukee since July 2024, and hasn’t taken a series at American Family Field since May 2023.

Those stats, of course, ignore the Dodgers’ postseason dominance of the Brewers.

In October, they have won seven-straight games in the matchup, dating from last year’s NL Championship Series sweep to a pennant-clinching Game 7 triumph in the 2018 NLCS.

The win also marked the Dodgers’ eighth in their last 10 games, and improved their record on this three-city, nine-game road trip to 6-2.

“We’ve got a chance to cap it off with three series wins tomorrow,” Freeman said.

Either way, their (regular-season) curse against the Brewers has ended.

Who’s hot

Literally everyone in the Dodgers’ bullpen lately –– including Alex Vesia, Kyle Hurt, Tanner Scott and Jonathan Hernández on Saturday.

Vesia and Hurt entered the game in high-leverage spots, protecting what was only a 4-3 lead in the sixth and seventh innings. They both did so by stranding baserunners, with Vesia working around a leadoff walk and Hurt getting away with two free passes (one of which was intentional).

While Hurt’s 0.60 ERA is the best among the Dodgers’ bullpen (minimum three outings), Scott’s contributions have been perhaps the most important.

Since Edwin Díaz’s injury, he has become the most trusted arm at the back end of games. And after a scoreless seventh inning Saturday that included three strikeouts (with a single mixed in), he now has a 1.31 ERA on the season and 14 strikeouts in his current nine-appearance scoreless streak.

Now that the Dodgers (32-20) have won a game against the Brewers (30-19), they can go for a series victory on Sunday AP Photo/Gregory Bull

Who’s not

Max Muncy was still not feeling great Saturday, after exiting Friday’s game in the eighth inning when he was hit in the wrist by a pitch.

However, Roberts reiterated that he did not expect Muncy to go on the injured list, after Friday night X-rays on Muncy’s wrist came back negative.

Muncy did not play Saturday, and might not be back in the lineup until Tuesday as he works to alleviate swelling and soreness in the area he got plunked. While the X-rays were clean, Roberts said it is possible that Muncy could go for further imaging when the team returns home Monday.

The club won’t be in a rush to get Muncy back in the lineup, especially with Kiké Hernández set to come off the injured list Monday after missing the start of the season recovering from offseason elbow surgery.

“Obviously (an IL stint for Muncy) should be considered, depending on how he responds over the next couple of days,” Roberts said. “But I doubt it (will be necessary).”

Up next

The series rubber match will be on Sunday afternoon, when Yoshinobu Yamamoto (3-4, 3.22 ERA) faces Brandon Sproat (1-2, 5.75 ERA).

Jordan Walker Crushes Another Home Run, But Reds Beat Cardinals 7-6

St. Louis Cardinals outfielder Jordan Walker (18) gestures after scoring in the second inning between the St. Louis Cardinals and Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati on Saturday, May 23, 2026. | Albert Cesare/The Enquirer / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Kyle Leahy was very sharp through the 4th inning in Cincinnati, but it was the 5th inning that came back to bite him as the Reds scored 5 runs in the 5th. The Cardinals offense would come to the rescue late, but the Reds would eventually outlast St. Louis in extra innings.

Let’s start with the good news. Jordan Walker continued his hot weekend with a 2nd inning walk that was followed by a single by Nolan Gorman where he went first to third and then scored on a sacrifice fly from Masyn Winn giving the Cardinals a 1-0 lead. Jordan would also double in the top of the 4th inning, but did not score as Gorman, Winn and Torres were unable to bring him around. Jordan’s biggest swing was yet to come, though. Wait for it.

Kyle Leahy’s great start would become less great in the 5th inning. Higgins started the bottom of the 5th with a single to left. Friedl laid down a sacrifice bunt to move Higgins to second. Blake Dunn then singled, but Higgins was held at third base, but it wouldn’t matter as Elly De La Cruz would unload on a Leahy 4-seam fastball for a 3-run homer to deep left center making it 3-1 Reds. Cincinnati wasn’t done. Sal Stewart asked for a successful ABS challenge to draw a walk. Lowe then crushed a homer to center field upping the Reds lead to 5-1.

The comeback Cardinals would come alive in the top of the 6th inning as Ivan Herrera was hit by a pitch yet again. Alec Burleson then ripped a double to right as Herrera advanced to third. It was then that Jordan Walker absolutely punished a pitch by starter Chase Petty launching it 427 feet to left-center for a 3-run blast immediately getting the Cardinals back in the game shortening the Reds lead to only 5-4. Boom!

Kyle Leahy’s final stat line was 5 innings allowing 7 hits and 5 earned runs with 8 strikeouts and 2 walks. If not for that 5th inning, what might have been? Manager Oli Marmol brought in Justin Bruihl to pitch the bottom of the 6th inning to keep the Cardinals within striking distance. That didn’t go well. Bruihl allowed a leadoff double to Steer. He was advanced to third by a sacrifice bunt by Higgins. Then Myers hit a double to nearly the same place that Steer hit his which gave the Reds a run back increasing their lead to 6-4. That inspired Marmol to bring in Gordon Graceffo to shut down the Reds and keep the Cards within 2. He did the job allowing no more damage.

St. Louis came charging back in the top of the 7th inning as JJ Wetherholt drew a walk and then went to third on a successful hit-and-run by Ivan Herrera. Unfortunately, Jordan Walker would temporarily slip back to old Jordan Walker and chase a disappearing slider for the last out of the Cardinals 7th.

Ryan Fernandez was the Cardinals relief solution in the bottom of the 7th inning. He started his outing with strikeouts of Stewart, Lowe and McLain. After the Cardinals failed to mount any kind of forward-moving offense in the top of the 8th inning, Fernandez returned to handle the bottom of the 8th which he did with no difficulty, but Victor Scott II deserves a honorable mention assist as he made a great play on a ball hit by Myers that he caught right up against the wall.

The Cardinals would again threaten in the top of the 9th inning as Jose Fermin turned around a Tony Santillan 4-seam fastball into a 373 foot home run to left cutting the Reds lead down to just 1 at 6-5. Victor Scott II walked on a questionable 3-2 no-swing call which brought up JJ Wetherholt as the potential go-ahead run. JJ just missed his pitch flying out to right-center for the first out. Ivan Herrera then struck out on 3 straight pitches for the second out. That left Alec Burleson as the Cardinals final hope. He walked on four pitches bringing up Jordan Walker. He put on his hero hat yet again and squeezed a single in between third and short as Victor Scott II raced home for the tying run. Nolan Gorman hit a weak fly ball to left to end the Cardinals 9th, but at least they had a fighting chance.

JoJo Romero was brought in with the mission to keep Cincinnati in check in the bottom of the 9th inning and send the game to extras. He made a great play on a bunt attempt by Dunn in front of home for the first out. Elly De La Cruz was up next. He reached on a weak single to left field that Torres was unable to get to as all the outfielders were playing deep. JJ Bleday watched as Elly De La Cruz was unsuccessful in trying to steal second base despite a challenge by the Reds and then struck out to send the game to extras.

The Cardinals top of the 10th would not go as planned. Thomas Saggese came into the game as the designated runner at second base. Masyn Winn would move him to third base by grounding out to third with just one out. Bryan Torres hit a ground ball that was handled cleanly by first baseman Nathaniel Lowe who fired the ball home to nail Thomas Saggese who ran on contact. The Cardinals would lose their challenge on the play at home plate and would score no runs after Yohel Pozo popped out to first to end the inning.

JoJo Romero stayed in the game long enough to intentionally walk Stewart as JJ Bleday was on second as the designated runner to setup a force play. Riley O’Brien was brought in to try and keep the Reds from walking off the game in the bottom of the 10th. He would face Eugenio Suarez and strike him out for the first out. He then got McLain on a dribbler in front of the mound for the second out. That brought up Spencer Steer. Yohel Pozo saved the game twice on two balls that were in the dirt on the first base side. O’Brien struck him out on a 3-2 pitch to end the Red’s 10th inning.

The Cardinals designated runner in the top of the 11th inning was Yohel Pozo. First man up Victor Scott II struck out. JJ Wetherholt moved Pozo to third base by grounding out to first for the second out. Herrera nearly gave the Cardinals the lead, but was robbed by a sliding catch by Dunn to end the St. Louis 11th.

Riley O’Brien answered the bell and pitched the bottom of the 11th inning. Higgins laid down a perfect sacrifice bunt for the first out moving designated runner Steer to third base. Dane Myers was walked as the Cardinals shifted to a 5-man infield. Blake Dunn then hit a ball up the middle that Masyn Winn fielded, but instead of trying to turn a double play fired the ball home. Unfortunately, the ball short-hopped Pozo as Steer slid underneath the tag giving the Reds a tough 7-6 victory which was confirmed on a crew chief video review.

The St. Louis Cardinals will conclude their stay in the Cincinnati area over the weekend as they’ll send Matthew Liberatore to the mound to take on the Reds Sunday afternoon. Cincinnati will counter with Brady Singer (2-4, 6.26 ERA, 34 SO) who will start for the Reds. First pitch at Great America Ball Park is 12:40pm central time. Game broadcast will be on Cardinals.tv.

Brewers score first again, but Dodgers score last & often

MILWAUKEE, WI - MAY 23: Teoscar Hernández #37 of the Los Angeles Dodgers celebrates with Andy Pages #44 after hitting a three-run home run to tie the game in the fourth inning during the game between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field on Saturday, May 23, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by Aaron Gash/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The Brewers had a big first inning for the second night in a row, but this time the Dodgers had an answer. Teoscar Hernández drove in six runs to turn things around in a 11-3 win for Los Angeles on Saturday night at American Family Field in Milwaukee.

Roki Sasaki needed 35 pitches to get through the first inning, a frame that started with two doubles and was exacerbated by his own throwing error and a mistimed leap by Mookie Betts at shortstop on a single that scored the third run. After trailing 4-0 after an inning on Friday, the Dodgers were down 3-0 after one on Saturday.

Los Angeles had a runner on base in each of the first two innings, including a one-out triple by Kyle Tucker in the second, but he was stranded. One of the outs was a strikeout by Hernández.

More opportunities came, and Los Angeles finally cashed in during the fourth inning, first with consecutive doubles by Freddie Freeman and Andy Pages for one run. After a walk by Tucker, Hernández hit a towering ball down the left field line that hit off the foul pole for a three-run shot that gave the Dodgers their first lead of the series.

That’s the second home run this week for Hernández, and his third extra-base hit in four games.

After a double (off the yellow line in center field, just shy of a home run) and walk with two outs in the second inning, Sasaki escaped that frame and retired his final 10 batters face, getting through the next four innings on only 52 more pitches. He left with four strikeouts and a lead.

Two walks started the eighth for the Dodgers, who cashed them in with consecutive singles by Will Smith and Hernández, plus a squeeze bunt by Miguel Rojas for a three-run frame. Hernández added another two-run single in the ninth for a season-high six RBI.

After going three weeks without an extra-base hit, Hernández since May 11 is hitting .386/.440/.682 with seven extra-base hits in 12 games.

Going streaking

After Alex Vesia and Kyle Hurt protected a one-run lead in the sixth and seventh innings, respectively, a warmed-up Tanner Scott entered with a four-run lead in the eighth and struck out three to work around a single. Jonathan Hernández got the ninth inning with an eight-run lead and retired all three he faced to finish the win.

Dodgers relievers have not allowed a run since May 12, and the bullpen’s 36 consecutive scoreless innings is the longest in modern franchise history (since 1901). On Saturday they surpassed a 33-inning streak from April 17-28, 1998.

Notes

  • Eleven walks by Dodgers batters is a season high, two more than their previous best set last Saturday in Anaheim.
  • Six RBI for Hernández match his career high, also done on June 13, 2021 with Toronto, on August 26, 2023 with Seattle, and on June 8, 2024 for the Dodgers at Yankee Stadium.
  • Freeman’s double in the fourth inning was the 561st of his career, breaking his tie for 30th place all-time with Eddie Murray and Jeff Kent. Freeman, who has five extra-base hits in his last four games, is four doubles shy of Carlós Beltrán for 29th place.
  • Freeman also walked four times, one shy of his career high set on June 17, 2024. He had two other four-walk games with Atlanta, in the regular season in 2019 and in Game 6 of the 2021 National League Championship Series.
  • Shohei Ohtani singled twice and walked on Saturday, his ninth straight game reaching base at least twice, matching his own streak from April 3-12 as the longest by a Dodger this season. The last longer Dodgers streak was Freeman with a 10-game streak from April 20-30, 2024.

Saturday particulars

Home run: Teoscar Hernández (7)

WP — Roki Sasaki (3-3): 5 IP, 4 hits, 3 runs (2 earned), 2 walks, 4 strikeouts

LP — Robert Gasser (0-1): 4 1/3 IP, 4 hits, 4 runs, 4 walks, 4 strikeouts

Up next

The Dodgers and Brewers close things up on Sunday afternoon (11:10 a.m. PT, SportsNet LA), with Yoshinobu Yamamoto on the mound against right-hander Brandon Sproat.

Jonah Tong sticking with Mets after strong outing in return from minors

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Jonah Tong pitched three scoreless innings in the Mets' loss to the Marlins on May 22, 2026 in Miami

MIAMI — Jonah Tong’s strong work Friday has earned him a stay with the Mets.

The right-hander figures into the next rotation turn, either as a starter or in a bulk relief role, according to Mendoza, after he pitched three hitless, scoreless innings from the bullpen against the Marlins in his season debut.

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With Tong in the mix, Zach Thornton was optioned to Triple-A Syracuse — allowing the Mets to add another reliever. That spot went to Jonathan Pintaro, who was recalled Saturday.

“[Tong] is a big part of the team and the organization, so we’re going to continue to give him opportunities,” manager Carlos Mendoza said before the Mets lost to the Marlins, 4-1.

“What we saw [Friday] was very encouraging and that is what we expect from him.”

Thornton allowed four earned runs over 4 ¹/₃ innings Wednesday against the Nationals in his major league debut.

Jonah Tong pitched three scoreless innings in the Mets’ loss to the Marlins on May 22, 2026 in Miami. Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

Jared Young is progressing in his rehab and could rejoin the Mets during the next homestand, according to Mendoza.

The utilityman has been sidelined for the past five weeks after undergoing surgery to repair a torn meniscus in his left knee. MJ Melendez has filled the left-handed bat, outfield/DH role in Young’s absence.


A.J. Minter was rained out in his scheduled rehab appearance Saturday for Triple-A Syracuse.

The lefty reliever has been rescheduled to pitch Sunday, his potential final appearance before rejoining the Mets.


Kodai Senga will be with the Mets in New York this week to work out with teammates and under the coaching staff’s guidance.

Mendoza did not have the specifics on Senga’s next rehab start. The right-hander threw 63 pitches over 3 ¹/₃ innings for Single-A St. Lucie on Friday.


Tylor Megill and Reed Garrett, both of whom are rehabbing from Tommy John surgery in Port St. Lucie, were with the team Saturday at loanDepot park.

“It can be a lonely place when you are far away from your teammates and them going through what they are going through,” Mendoza said.

Mets’ Sean Manaea finally seeing results after season-long struggles

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Sean Manaea delivers a pitch during the Mets' loss to the Marlins on May 22, 2026 in Miami

MIAMI — Sean Manaea is feeling as if much of his mojo has returned.

“I feel like I am going out there and attacking guys, not really falling behind on counts, not walking guys — that is the biggest thing,” the Mets left-hander said Saturday before the Mets’ 4-1 loss to the Marlins. “The velocity is up, and that is a plus. So I feel like I have a lot of quality weapons attacking guys.”

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A night earlier, Manaea had a third straight solid relief appearance, allowing one earned run on four hits over 3 ²/₃ innings in the Mets’ 2-1 loss.

Maybe the worst is behind him. After an ugly April and beginning to May, he’s pitched to a 3.12 ERA with eight strikeouts over his past three appearances, spanning 8 ²/₃ innings. Overall, he owns a 5.81 ERA in 11 appearances this season.

In his latest outing, Manaea averaged 91.2 mph with his sinker. For the season he was averaging only 89.6 with that pitch.

Manaea credited the work he’s been putting in with assistant pitching coach Dan McKinney for paying dividends.

“He’s had some ideas on drills and mechanics and stuff we have kind of been implementing,” Manaea said. “But I also think that having more reps, feeling good in my body physically and ultimately more [work] have put me in a good place.”

Manaea was squeezed from the rotation near the end of spring training, with the possibility he would be utilized as a sixth starter. But after struggling early, he was essentially relegated to mop up relief.

Sean Manaea delivers a pitch during the Mets’ loss to the Marlins on May 22, 2026 in Miami. Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

His appearance in the second inning Friday, behind opener Tobias Myers, was among just a few higher-leverage opportunities this season.

“If it’s helping the team win, that is what I am here to do,” Manaea said. “It was a higher-leverage situation than being in a game down six [runs] or something.”

The Mets could use the continued contributions from Manaea, who isn’t even halfway through the three-year contract worth $75 million he signed before last season.



Manaea’s first year of the deal was a complete bust — he strained an oblique in spring training and didn’t rejoin the club until July. In 15 appearances, he pitched to a 5.64 ERA.

Manaea’s best work with the Mets was in 2024, when he pitched to a 3.47 ERA in 32 starts and emerged as the de facto staff ace.

“He’s in a really good place,” manager Carlos Mendoza said before the Mets’ loss on Saturday. “Beginning with that outing against the Yankees [on Sunday when he allowed two earned runs over four innings] it was a really good sign and then [Friday].

“I thought just the way he is moving with his mechanics and the way the ball is coming out, I feel with like getting swings and misses with the fastball, especially at the top [of the strike zone] and just attacking, competing in the strike zone. There’s a lot to like right now and it’s good to see him being that guy, because we’re going to need him.”

Manaea was asked where he still feels there is need for improvement.

“It’s just like nitpicking, but just keep attacking guys,” Manaea said. “Not getting two balls before a strike and stuff like that, but ultimately I feel like I am headed in the right direction and feel good with where we are at.”