Pirates sweep Twins and drop some social media bragging

May 26, 2026; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Pirates starting pitcher Braxton Ashcraft (35) delivers a pitch against the Chicago Cubs during the first inning at PNC Park. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images | Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

It’s a been a while since the Pittsburgh Pirates have had bragging rights over just about anyone, but that has changed this year, as the Bucs are currently rolling along with a 32-28 record and have moved into third place in the NL Central following a three-game sweep of the Minnesota Twins over the weekend.

The Pirates scored 25 runs in the three games against the Twins, with Sunday’s 9-3 victory also showing another good outing from Braxton Ashcraft. There were also dingers from Ryan O’Hearn, his 8th of the year, plus the first homer of the year from Nick Gonzales, with both guys hovering near .300 batting, with Gonzo and .308 and O’Hearn now at .294.

Bryan Reynolds, Jake Mangum and Spencer Horwitz all had their moments in the Twins series, as the Bucs lineup is pretty much dangerous from top to bottom, outside of when Henry Davis is playing, and even he got in on the act on Sunday, with 2 RBIs, while Horwitz is now hitting .289 and is looking like a smart pick up from GM Ben Cherington.

Oh, and the Bucs dropped a little social media bragging rights on Twins as well, posting this after Sunday’s sweep.

Of course, it hasn’t been all sunshine and rainbows for the Bucs, as rookie phenom Konnor Griffin was just put on the 10-day IL. He has a forearm strain, but the Pirates don’t expect that he’ll be out long. After a slow start, Griffin has been coming into his own, now hitting .270 on the season with 4 homers and 22 RBIs.

There’s also the Carmen Mlodzinski drama right now in which he was moved to bullpen to make room for Jared Jones and responded by telling the team he would not be ready to pitch out of the bullpen. Ben Cherington then placed him on the Restricted List. The restricted list rule says:

“The restricted list is for players who are under contract but unable to play due to unexcused, personal or non-baseball reasons. There’s no limit to how long a player can stay on the restricted list, but he isn’t paid and doesn’t earn service time.”

So I guess we’ll see what happens next, but Jaiman will have some analysis and commentary on the Carmen situation tomorrow, so we’ll wait to hear from him about some more. We may have some additional clarity by tomorrow as well.

The Bucs are off tonight but will return to action tomorrow as the head to Houston to take on the Astros. That’s an 8:10PM series game to kick off the game.

When will the hot stove start cooking?

SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 29: Fernando Cruz #63 of the New York Yankees reacts after the Yankees turned a double play to end the seventh inning against the Athletics at Sutter Health Park on May 29, 2026 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images) | Getty Images

June is here, and with it a summer filled with baseball is about to start. The Yankees are in the thick of a division race that promises to go down to the wire as always, sitting 1.5 games behind the Rays but a comfortable 7.5 games ahead of the rest of Toronto, Boston, and Baltimore. Their record against the AL East hasn’t looked too promising, losing a series and splitting another with Tampa while splitting their lone meeting with the Jays, though they’ve swept Boston in their singular matchup and gone 5-2 against Baltimore thus far.

Sitting 13 games above .500 entering the month is a solid start, but if you’ve been following them day-to-day you’d know that the Yankees have ridden some high highs and some low lows already. It’s a microcosm of the roster that’s delivered their record, with a couple of elite bats trying to pull up a few deadweights in the lineup and a rotation that’s been otherworldly doing their best to keep the ball out of the hands of their shaky bullpen. Consistency is the key to getting back on top for this team, but they’ll likely need to make some tweaks to find it. Luckily, we’re now approaching that time of year where the trade deadline starts weighing on everyone’s minds — and we might even see a couple of moves pop up on the radar.

The question is just how long can the Yankees wait for the market to develop itself. They’re in desperate need of a bullpen remodeling, something that will likely require several trades to address, and they also are looking for a right-handed catching option with the potential for further additions to the lineup should the right opportunity line itself up. We’ve started to see some separation from the pack with a few truly bad AL teams claiming the bottom of the standings, so there are potential sellers now in view, but holding out for the best package is going to incentivize teams to wait it out and let the pressure of the deadline force other teams’ hands. The first offer is rarely going to be good enough to pry a solid reliever away, even if in the grand scheme of things he isn’t going to bring back a king’s ransom.

There’s no doubt that the stove will be lit and pots will be getting stirred in July, but will we see any rumors start to swirl in June? And if we do, could we see any closer to the start or middle of the month? It’d be unconventional, but not totally unheard of — just last year we saw a wildly early trade for the season involving an at-the-time superstar in Rafael Devers (this season may have shifted the narrative on him, but there’s still time for his contract to not be totally underwater). I’m willing to go out on a limb and predict that we’ll see Brian Cashman swing something before the calendar turns again, but I don’t think there’s anything cooking now to warrant an imminent deal.


We’ve got a loaded schedule in store for you today to get through the off-day on the field. Peter leads off with the next poll on Brian Cashman’s approval rating after the team’s performance in May, and then Kevin covers the Rivalry Roundup with the Rays keeping pace slightly ahead of New York. Jonathan has a double-feature, first giving Bud Metheny his flowers on his birthday before starting off our division check-ins with the AL Central, followed by John looking at the AL West and Sam the NL West. Finally, I’ll be back late in the day to open up the mailbag for the next round of questions.

Today’s Matchup

Off-day

Oldest and newest stadiums in MLB: When every active ballpark opened

Major League Baseball's 30 stadiums each have their own charms and for good reason, Wrigley Field (1912) and Fenway Park (1914) remain the home ballparks for marquee franchises.

But after the pre-World War I stadiums, baseball's third-oldest venue is nearly 50 years older, Dodger Stadium, which opened in 1962. On the other end of the spectrum, the Texas Rangers' Globe Life Field is MLB's newest stadium, which opened in 2020. The Atlanta Braves' Truist Park is the only other MLB stadium that has opened in the past decade, welcoming fans in Cobb County since 2017.

There was a major boon after Baltimore's Camden Yards began a retro-classic trend in 1992, with 12 new ballparks opening between 1994 and 2004.

What does the future look like for new MLB stadiums? The next opening will be in Las Vegas, welcoming the formerly-Oakland Athletics to their new home. Meanwhile, the Tampa Bay Rays may finally get their long-discussed new ballpark.

Here's a look at when every MLB stadium opened:

Oldest stadiums in MLB

  • Fenway Park – 1912 (Red Sox)
  • Wrigley Field – 1914 (Cubs)
  • Dodger Stadium – 1962 (Dodgers)
  • Angel Stadium – 1966 (Angels)
  • Kauffman Stadium – 1973 (Royals)
  • Rogers Centre – 1989 (Blue Jays)
  • Tropicana Field – 1990 (Rays)
  • Rate Field – 1991 (White Sox)
  • Orioles Park at Camden Yards – 1992 (Orioles)
  • Progressive Field – 1994 (Guardians)
  • Coors Field – 1995 (Rockies)
  • Chase Field – 1998 (Diamondbacks)
  • T-Mobile Park – 1999 (Mariners)
  • Daikin Park – 2000 (Astros)
  • Comerica Park – 2000 (Tigers)
  • Oracle Park – 2000 (Giants)
  • Sutter Health Park – 2000 (Athletics' home ballpark until team moves to Las Vegas)
  • American Family Field – 2001 (Brewers)
  • PNC Park – 2001 (Pirates)
  • Great American Ball Park – 2003 (Reds)
  • Citizens Bank Park – 2004 (Phillies)
  • Petco Park – 2004 (Padres)
  • Busch Stadium – 2006 (Cardinals)
  • Nationals Park – 2008 (Nationals)
  • Citi Field – 2009 (Mets)
  • Yankee Stadium – 2009 (Yankees)
  • Target Field – 2010 (Twins)
  • LoanDepot Park – 2012 (Marlins)
  • Truist Park – 2017 (Braves)
  • Globe Life Field – 2020 (Rangers)

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Oldest stadiums in MLB: See when every baseball ballpark opened

Unlikely Blue Jays star Ernie Clement's love affair with Toronto fans grows

BALTIMORE – Ernie Clement doesn’t want to let anybody down.

Perhaps that quality dogged him early in his baseball career, when he tried and failed to establish himself with the Cleveland Guardians and Oakland Athletics. And minus a top-line skill that will pry open a window and keep it open – such as the promise of consistent power, or blazing speed, or savant-like defensive ability – Clement found professional appreciation elusive.

And that makes what’s happening now in Toronto even more remarkable.

Such as Blue Jays fans lining up more than three hours ahead of gametime to snag a giveaway hockey jersey bearing Clement’s name and No. 22. Or a group of rabid supporters who learned of Clement’s penchant for walking from his residence to Rogers Centre and timed it up to stroll alongside him to work.

Or the notion that he’s beloved on two shores of Lake Ontario – within the circular confines of Rogers Centre and the gorgeous city surrounding it, along with Monroe County, New York, which presented him the key to the municipality after one of Rochester’s favorite sons became an international baseball hero.

Ernie Clement set an MLB record with 30 hits in the 2025 postseason.

It can be a lot, even for a 30-year-old who sweated out years in the minors to gain this opportunity. So Clement takes none of it for granted, even as he continues establishing himself as a star player – and a Toronto icon.

“I feel the love. It’s much appreciated and I hope I’m reciprocating it enough,” Clement tells USA TODAY Sports. “Because I love my time there. It feels more and more like home every time I go there and stay there.

“I have so much fun in the city. It’s so much fun playing in front of those fans.”

And as this season lurches toward the halfway point, it’s clear this is no fleeting love affair.

Clement has followed up his record-setting 30-hit 2025 postseason by leading the American League in both hits and doubles. He’s the hardest man to strike out in the AL, fanning just 8.2% of the time, and has played a key role in keeping the defending pennant winners afloat in a season ravaged by injury.

These Blue Jays are now 29-31, lurking in third place in the AL East. For now, it’s a near repeat of their 2025 arc, when they started 31-29, got healthy, won 94 games and the division and rode it all the way to Game 7 of the World Series.

The ride stopped there, coming as close to a championship as the two or so feet Clement’s ninth-inning fly ball needed to clear the wall in left center field with the bases loaded in the bottom of the ninth inning. The Dodgers’ Andy Pages leaped to gather it in, the prelude to an 11-inning heartbreaking defeat.

After a tearful night, the club scattered for the winter, many decamping to their offseason homes in sunnier, baseball-friendly climes.

Clement went out for Buffalo wings.

Have a day, Ernie Clement

It’s roughly 150 miles from Rochester to Toronto, even less than that as the Canadian geese might fly across Lake Ontario. So it was a strange bit of serendipity that Clement’s career would wind up so close to home, even if his hometown might lean more Yankees than Blue Jays.

The Buffalo Bills are the tie that binds, and that’s how Clement ended up in the Pittsford Pub less than 24 hours after baseball heartbreak, watching the Bills-Chiefs game, sans entourage.

Clement has surely grown to appreciate Toronto’s cosmopolitan flair, and the chance to get a world-class meal from virtually any cuisine.

But still.

“I will say, there’s no wings like the Buffalo spots, the Rochester spots,” he says.

Indeed, Clement stays true to his hometown. Three weeks after the World Series, there he was, making an appearance on behalf of the Rochester Red Wings to promote small business Saturday and goose ticket sales for the Class AAA affiliate of the Washington Nationals.

It was also declared Ernie Clement Day in Monroe County, complete with key.

Campy stuff, to be sure, all of it buttressing the notion that Clement’s a regular cat, a vibe that only accentuates his connection with Jays fans.

Yet looks can be deceiving.

Clement is also a scratch golfer, an accomplished hockey player, and can hoop a little.

“Just one of those guys who’s a sneaky-freak athlete,” says Blue Jays ace Kevin Gausman. “You might walk by him on the street and think he’s not a guy who plays in the big leagues, let alone leads the American League in hits.

“That’s really cool.”

The fans agree. They gravitated strongly toward a group of Blue Jays casually known as the “roommates” – Clement and utilityman Davis Schneider, and former first baseman Spencer Horwitz among them.

Soon, Clement integrated his Rogers Centre walk into his daily routine, which often includes a stop for an iced cold brew. Sometimes he’ll drive, too, if only to maintain an anonymity that’s increasingly shrinking.

'I proved that I belong'

There’s no plaque for being the least-famous player on a world-class team.

Yet that was the spot Clement found himself in this spring, when, coming off his 30-hit postseason, Team USA manager Mark DeRosa determined he had to have Clement for his World Baseball Classic roster.

Suddenly, Clement was a formerly itinerant player surrounded by MVPs, his 6-foot frame dwarfed by the likes of Paul Skenes and Aaron Judge, his pedigree admittedly falling short of stars like Bryce Harper and Alex Bregman.

Clement saw it as both challenge and opportunity.

It was a startling bit of company to keep, the ability to absorb best practices from some of the greatest players on the globe. And on the flip side, Clement – who got on base in three of seven plate appearances and scored three runs in four games – saw it as a chance for affirmation.

“Those are the best players in the world and there’s a reason behind it – they work their tails off. I was really fortunate to be around them,” he says. “I proved that I belong. That I can fit in with guys like that, with the best players in the world. I can help any team win. I feel like anytime I got in there, I helped that team win.

“That’s my mindset every single day here. Every time I step on that field, I just want to help us win.”

The Blue Jays certainly believe so. The club lost Bo Bichette to free agency, a key hole in both their lineup and defensive alignment. While Clement has settled in at second base, he regularly plays shortstop against left-handed starters, has played eight games at third and even 15 games at first base in 2025.

“He puts his ego aside – if he even has an ego,” says closer Louis Varland. “He’s willing to do whatever it is for the team as long as the team wins.

“He’s that kind of guy, which is the best ever.”

Ernie Clement, All-Star?

There’s one more honorific awaiting Clement, an appropriate coda to a year that saw him crowned a postseason hero, a WBC rep and Monroe County king for a day.

Clement leads all primary AL second basemen in average (.300), OPS (.771), slugging and wRC+ (113). His first trip to the All-Star Game would seem to be in order, particularly with a Blue Jays fan base clicking his name however many times their Rogers 5G Internet will allow.

It’s the next logical step for a player maximizing his window.

“As a guy who has been DFA’d,” says Gausman, “I feel like I have a different appreciation for it. There aren’t many guys who get that many second chances, especially as a position player, unfortunately.

“He’s a guy that really, from the day he came over, everybody knew the talent he had. His unique ability to not strike out. But you’ve seen him get more comfortable, more confident. Success comes with that.

“But he’s turned himself into such a complete player.”

Clement has essentially grown up with this Blue Jays team, allowed runway by manager John Schneider to produce 3.3 WAR in their 88-loss 2024 season, and then turning into a 30-hit monster in the 2025 postseason.

As success came, so, too, did a certain freedom.

“Ever since I’ve been here, they haven’t tried to change who I am and the kind of hitter I am. They let me be me,” says Clement. “Schneids and all the hitting coaches I’ve had here have helped me lean into my strengths.

“I show up to the field every day trying to prove the manager right.”

He also has a few thousand Torontonians backing him up on a given day.

When the Blue Jays distributed 15,000 Clement No. 22 hockey sweaters for an April game, the line stretched away from Rogers Centre and well into the city. (Why a club that consistently draws 40,000 fans would distribute just 15,000 souvenir giveaways is another question).

The sweaters are now going for $235 to $360 on eBay, an unscientific yet telling measure for the fanbase’s adulation.

“The city has been great to me,” says Clement. “I’m lucky to be there.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Ernie Clement's star rises for Blue Jays after record-setting playoffs

MLB power rankings: Former record-setting loser White Sox continue stunning rise

It is June, and the Chicago White Sox are a game out of first place. Is this really happening?

The franchise that lost 121 games just two years ago, that lost 102 games last season, just finished a month in which it won 18 of 28 games and capped it by sweeping the American League Central's overwhelming favorite, sending the Detroit Tigers further to a summer of irrelevance.

Yes, things are a little upside down, and the White Sox's climb seven spots to No. 9 in USA TODAY Sports' power rankings reflects that.

They rallied to beat the Tigers thanks in part to Colson Montgomery's 15th home run, his 36th since the 2025 All-Star break; only Kyle Schwarber has more. They'll get a look at Schwarber this weekend when they travel to Philadelphia, with a three-game set at Minnesota before then.

A look at our updated rankings:

1. Atlanta Braves (-)

  • Sixty games in and still on a 108-win pace.

2. Los Angeles Dodgers (-)

  • Top prospect Josue De Paula on a 20-for-37 tear at Class AA; will he figure into '26 plans?

3. Tampa Bay Rays (-)

  • Shane McClanahan almost all the way back: 4-0 with a 1.41 ERA in May.

4. New York Yankees (-)

  • Can Anthony Volpe sustain his production and truly, fully, really reclaim the shortstop job?

5. Milwaukee Brewers (-)

  • Just a Miz-tastic May: 5-0, 0.23 ERA, franchise-record 57 strikeouts in a month.

6. Cleveland Guardians (+1)

  • Tanner Bibee first pitcher in Cleveland's 125-year history to go winless in his first 13 starts.

7. San Diego Padres (-1)

  • Affable Craig Stammen earns his first ejection ever - as player or manager.

8. St. Louis Cardinals (+1)

  • Getting swept in Milwaukee taps the breaks on this joyride just a bit.

9. Chicago White Sox (+7)

  • Roch Cholowsky's season is over, so the White Sox are truly on the clock at No. 1.

10. Chicago Cubs (-2)

  • Suddenly look like the third-best team in NL Central.

11. Pittsburgh Pirates (-1)

12. Seattle Mariners (+6)

  • And away they go?

13. Arizona Diamondbacks (-1)

  • Getting swept by Mariners not the ideal appetizer before Dodgers come to town.

14. Cincinnati Reds (-3)

  • A collective Queen City gasp as Elly De La Cruz exits with hamstring issue.

15. Philadelphia Phillies (-1)

  • Nick Castellanos makes Philly return this week.

16. Athletics (-3)

  • As it gets hotter in Yolo County, home team starting to melt just a little bit.

17. Washington Nationals (+3)

  • This over-.500 thing just might be permanent.

18. Toronto Blue Jays (-3)

  • Last thing they needed was an outfielder injured by an opposing fan.

19. Baltimore Orioles (+2)

  • Three walk-offs in six days a nice vibe shift.

20. Texas Rangers (-3)

Corey Seager set to begin rehab assignment this week.

21. Minnesota Twins (+1)

  • Bailey Ober, Zebby Matthews combine to give up 15 runs in consecutive starts; Ober hits IL with elbow inflammation.

22. Houston Astros (+6)

  • Pulled within six games of .500 for first time since April 22.

23. New York Mets (+2)

  • Swept by Marlins a week ago, they return the favor. But treading water won't get them out of this quagmire.

24. Miami Marlins (-5)

  • Josh White strikes out first batter in major league debut, gives up grand slam five batters later.

25. Kansas City Royals (-1)

  • Have been swept four times since May 10.

26. Boston Red Sox (+1)

  • Jarren Duran blasted nine homers in May.

27. Detroit Tigers (-4)

  • When you go 1-5 against Angels, White Sox, does it matter when Tarik Skubal comes back?

28. San Francisco Giants (-2)

  • Rafael Devers' OPS climbs to .732.

29. Los Angeles Angels (-)

  • Jack Kochanowicz has 9.27 ERA in last five starts.

30. Colorado Rockies (-)

  • Top prospect Ethan Holliday expected to miss rest of season with stress reaction in left foot.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: MLB power rankings: White Sox climb in AL Central standings with Colson Montgomery

Yankees news: J.C. Escarra tries switch-hitting

SACRAMENTO, CA - MAY 29: J.C. Escarra #25 of the New York Yankees takes batting practice prior to the game between the New York Yankees and the Athletics at Sutter Health Park on Friday, May 29, 2026 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Don Collier/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Yahoo! Sports | Billy Heyen: During Saturday night’s game, Michael Kay revealed on the YES Network that Yankees backup catcher J.C. Escarra has been trying to become a switch-hitter. Recognizing that the team’s search for a right-handed catcher puts his roster spot in jeopardy, the former Uber driver has once again set out to do whatever it takes for him to stay in The Show. Whether or not this turns out to be successful — starting to switch-hit at the Major League level is already a tall task, let alone trying it in the middle of a season — you can’t help but admire Escarra’s tenacity.

New York Post | Greg Joyce: The biggest story of the season in the Bronx is probably Cam Schlittler, but a close second is definitely the continued breakout of Ben Rice. Following Saturday night’s game, the Yankees first baseman was not only tied with captain Aaron Judge with 17 home runs, his 1.047 OPS ranked second in the league only behind Yordan Alvarez. His teammates and his manager have been nothing short of impressed, with Judge calling his at-bats “must-watch TV” (something that has been said about Judge’s on more than one occasion) and Paul Goldschmidt praising his “ability to make adjustments.”

CBS Sports | RotoWire Staff: Prior to Saturday night’s game, the Yankees placed utilityman Amed Rosario on the paternity list. They did not announce a corresponding move; instead, the team has played with a short bench while finishing out the West Coast road trip.

MLB.com | Sweeny Murti: Yesterday marked the 20th anniversary of the famous “No, stay there!” moment, when Mike Mussina ordered Joe Torre not to emerge from the dugout and allow him to finish what he had started. To mark the milestone, Sweeny Murti talked with both pitcher and manager, dissecting a moment of passion that has become a meme not only within the baseball Internet world, but beyond.

Dodgers’ Brusdar Graterol has back surgery; return this season in jeopardy

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Dodgers pitcher Brusdar Graterol throwing a baseball, Image 2 shows Dodgers player wearing a blue jersey and white pants walks on a baseball field

Brusdar Graterol’s year-and-a-half-long injury saga took another disappointing turn Sunday.

The Dodgers reliever underwent surgery for a recent back injury he suffered while on a minor-league rehab assignment earlier this month, multiple sources confirmed to The California Post after Graterol posted about the operation on Instagram.

Dodgers reliever Brusdar Graterol’s status for the rest of the season is uncertain after he recently underwent back surgery. AP

It leaves Graterol facing another long-term recovery process, putting his chances of returning this season in jeopardy, sources said.

“I fell again, but I won’t stay down here,” Graterol wrote on Instagram. “I will rise. My goal isn’t over — it’s just beginning.”

At the start of May, Graterol went out on a rehab stint with Triple-A Oklahoma City, trying to return from a shoulder surgery that sidelined him for all of last year and the start of this one.

After his fourth outing on May 12, however, he was pulled off the assignment as his back “flared up” on him, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts announced at the time.

Graterol was transferred to the 60-day injured list a week later.

General manager Brandon Gomes said then that surgery was an option for the 27-year-old right-hander, but that the club wanted “to exhaust all options” first. 

“He’s worked really hard [to try and come back],” Gomes said.

Now, he’ll have to start all over again.

While Graterol’s exact timeline wasn’t immediately clear, sources indicated it’s likely he will require a months-long recovery process.

Graterol has a 2.78 career ERA over six MLB seasons and last pitched in the majors during the 2024 postseason. Getty Images

Roberts had hinted at a prolonged absence for the flamethrower earlier this month, saying that “it’s gonna be a slow program for a while for him, unfortunately.”

Graterol, who has a 2.78 career ERA over six MLB seasons, last pitched in the majors during the 2024 postseason, as part of a bullpen that carried the Dodgers to the first of their current back-to-back World Series championships.

After that, he underwent surgery on his labrum in November, initially ruling him out for the first half of the 2025 season. When his shoulder didn’t recover as quickly as hoped, he ended up missing all of the Dodgers’ title-defense campaign on the injured list.

Graterol was slow-played again this spring, after struggling to regain his upper-90s mph velocity in a throwing program during camp. He opened the season back on the IL but said at the end of spring training that he was confident in making his return this year.

He seemed on track for that up until his May 12 outing, when his fastball velocity dipped back under 95 mph amid his back issue.

Now, suddenly he’s essentially back to square one all over again. Facing another surgical recovery. Another elongated rehab. And, quite possibly, another season spent entirely on the shelf.

Will Warren found creative way to stay loose as Yankees poured on runs: ‘Got that long’

Will Warren, a New York Yankees pitcher, throws a baseball.
Will Warren, a New York Yankees pitcher, throws a baseball.

WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Having 43 minutes to sit in the dugout between pitches is not ideal, but Will Warren surely did not mind, given the reason for the long wait.

The fact that it came at Sutter Health Park, where there is no access to the clubhouse or any facilities underneath from the dugouts, made it all the more unique.

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But the Yankees right-hander just had to get creative as he watched his offense explode for a 13-run top of the third inning Sunday afternoon, then got back to business on the way to a 13-8 win.

Warren, who made his way out to the bullpen during the offensive onslaught to throw some pitches and stay loose after the A’s second pitching change, put up an important zero in the bottom of the third to keep a 13-3 lead intact.

He then went on to toss six strong innings in which he only gave up three runs, all of them unearned and all of them coming in the bottom of the first.

“We had the big lead, and I don’t know if I was exactly myself,” Warren said of a bottom of the third in which he gave up a pair of singles but stranded both runners. “I think I could have stepped on their throat when we wanted to. Coming back in the dugout [after the bottom of the third], [manager Aaron Boone] and I had that talk. I went back out there and finished the game strong, so that was nice to see.”

Yankees pitcher Will Warren throws to an Athletics batter during the first inning of a baseball game Sunday, May 31, 2026. AP Photo/Scott Marshall

Warren had been throwing weighted balls in the small dugout early on during the Yankees’ wild inning, in which they sent 18 batters to the plate.

But as each passing teammate got on base, Warren began to realize he may need to do more to keep moving.

“I heard him kind of asking and maybe freaking out about how he was going to stay warm,” Anthony Volpe said with a smile.

So during the A’s second pitching change, Warren jogged out to the bullpen and threw about seven pitches, then ran to the mound from there to start the bottom of the third in a bizarre scene.

Yankees starting pitcher Will Warren (29) looks skyward as he
walks off the field May 31. D. Ross Cameron-Imagn Images

“Will did a good job of settling in, dealing with that long third inning,” Boone said. “When do you see a starting pitcher go down to the bullpen? I mean, it got that long. Good job by him of locking in and giving us six strong innings there.”

The only runs that Warren gave up came after Trent Grisham dropped a fly ball to shallow center field that initially got lost in the sun with two outs.

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But he ultimately did not let that, or the long third inning, affect him as he lowered his ERA to 3.22 through 12 starts.

“A lot of time sitting there, and I just wanted to make sure I was sharp to go back out there after the boys put up 13,” Warren said. “Holding them to three with this offense is always going to be a good day.”

Max Schuemann gives Yankees a ‘good spark’ against his former team in rare start

Max Schuemann swinging a baseball bat during a game.
Max Schuemann doubles for the Yankees during their May 31 win against the A's.

WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. — With a lefty on the mound and his former team across the way, Max Schuemann got a rare start Sunday afternoon and made the most of it again.

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The former A’s utilityman started at second base for Jazz Chisholm Jr. and went 1-for-3 with a walk, two-run double and two runs in the Yankees’ 13-8 win.

“He provided a good spark,” Boone said. “I knew he’d give us good at-bats, and he did. So good to get him in there and have him play a meaningful role.”

Schuemann has drawn seven walks in 24 plate appearances this season, batting .294 with a .971 OPS in limited action since being called up last month.

Taking advantage of Amed Rosario being on the paternity list, Schuemann was right in the thick of the Yankees’ 13-run third inning, drawing a seven-pitch walk against lefty Jacob Lopez after Anthony Volpe led off with a single.

Max Schuemann doubles for the Yankees during their May 31 win against the A’s. AP Photo/Scott Marshall

In his second at-bat of the inning — still with no outs, this time against righty Michael Kelly — Schuemann drilled a two-strike double over the third baseman’s head to put the Yankees up 10-3.

“[Schuemann] has done a good job, he really has,” Boone said. “His versatility, obviously it’s been a lot of defensive replacements or pinch-running situations. The at-bats he’s given has been excellent. … That’s something we noticed in spring. We feel like he can put together a good at-bat.”


Jen Pawol, the New Jersey native, former Hofstra softball player and first female umpire in Major League Baseball, was behind the plate calling balls and strikes Sunday.

“I think she did great, especially when we win,” Aaron Judge said with a grin. “I think she did great. I had her in spring training, I think once or twice, I don’t know if it was last year or this year. She’s on top of it. She’s locked in back there. A couple times, I asked her about a couple pitches, if they were down or if that’s the bottom, and she was right there locked in.”

Pawol, a full-time Triple-A umpire who was called up for the weekend series, made her MLB debut last summer.


The Yankees thought they should have been out of the first inning Sunday when Tyler Soderstrom grounded a potential double play ball to second base with one out.



But the 6-foot-5 Nick Kurtz, running to second, trailed off toward the third base side and got in Anthony Volpe’s way of throwing to first to finish it off.

Boone argued on the field that Kurtz should have been called for interference, but the umpires disagreed.

“The rule is that it has to be intentional,” Volpe said. “I didn’t really understand it. They understood it was just a weird play, but I think by the letter of the law, they couldn’t really do anything.”


Ryan Weathers and the Yankees were gifted a free strike in the fourth inning Saturday on a pitch that was out of the zone.

Soderstrom challenged it, but there was a glitch in the automated ball-strike system, as it froze on the scoreboard and never showed whether the pitch was a ball or a strike.

Home plate umpire Adam Beck eventually announced that his initial call of a strike was upheld despite the zone on MLB.com appearing to show it as a ball.

“My understanding was that we got one,” Boone said Sunday morning with a chuckle.

Francisco Alvarez set for rehab assignment quicker than expected in promising Mets sign

New York Mets player Francisco Alvarez in the dugout wearing a blue hoodie and cap.
Francisco Alvarez is pictured during the Mets' May 25.

Francisco Alvarez appears to be making a speedy recovery from surgery to repair a torn right meniscus he suffered May 12.

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Alvarez has resumed baseball activities and Carlos Mendoza said following Sunday’s 10-1 win over Miami at Citi Field that the catcher is scheduled to begin a minor league rehab assignment with Triple-A Syracuse on Tuesday.

The Mets have survived without Alvarez thanks to the presence of Luis Torrens, who had another solid game Sunday — helping get Nolan McLean through five solid innings despite a career-high five walks, and David Peterson through four scoreless frames — as well as providing a key two-run single.

But Torrens also had an injury scare, as the catcher was hit by a pitch on his left hand during a sixth-inning at-bat.

Francisco Alvarez is pictured during the Mets’ May 25. Corey Sipkin for the NY Post

Torrens stayed in the game — and scored later in the inning on Juan Soto’s grand slam.

Still, the Mets are clearly better off with Alvarez as an option in the lineup — whether behind the plate or at DH.

Torrens, though, has again proven his value as more than just a capable backup.


Jorge Polanco could have his rehab assignment moved to Triple-A Syracuse on Tuesday as the infielder recovers from the wrist contusion and Achilles bursitis that have sidelined him since April 15.

But even when the veteran infielder returns to the Mets — potentially on the upcoming road trip in San Diego — he won’t see much time at first base, according to Mendoza.

The manager said he didn’t expect Polanco to need his glove initially when he gets back.



“I’m not anticipating a guy who’s gonna play a lot in the field,” Mendoza said.

He also used words like “manage” and “monitor” when it came to Polanco’s usage, which will include off days, time at DH and off the bench.

“Let’s get to that point,” Mendoza noted.

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Polanco has played just 14 games for the Mets since signing a two-year, $40 million deal in the offseason.


Peterson has pitched better out of the bullpen than as a starter all season and that trend continued Sunday, as the lefty didn’t allow a run in his four innings in relief of McLean.

As a reliever this year, Peterson has allowed just five earned runs in 24 innings (1.88 ERA) compared to a 7.56 ERA over 33 ¹/₃ innings in his seven starts.

“I was given the ball and I try to do my role and help the team win,’’ said Peterson, who was yanked from the rotation again and replaced by fellow lefty Sean Manaea, who has pitched better recently and seen an uptick in velocity.


Marcus Semien reached base four times for a second time this year.

He homered, walked twice and singled.

Tanner Scott’s wife posts death threats she received about newborn after Dodgers’ loss

Dodgers reliever Tanner Scott entered the game against the Phillies in the eighth inning Saturday with a 3-1 lead. As he stood on the mound at Dodger Stadium, that lead slipped until Edmundo Sosa belted a two-run homer to give his team the lead.

The Phillies walked away with a 4-3 win over the Dodgers, and Scott recorded the loss. But the nightmare was just starting for the Scott family.

Dodgers reliever Tanner Scott’s wife, Maddie, revealed some death threats that were made after LA lost to the Phillies on Saturday night. Getty Images for Netflix

Tanner’s wife, Maddie Scott, took to Instagram to expose the ghouls who are flooding her inbox and comment section with death threats toward their family, including the couple’s newborn.

“When did it stop being a game?” Maddie wrote on her Instagram Story in response to a message from a user who said “gun shot your family tonight.”

“I don’t speak out often. Ever actually,” she said. “I promise you, you don’t know what it’s like unless you’re living it.”

Maddie posted another Instagram Story captioned, “The unfortunate reality Incase you were curious,” with a screenshot of six comments posted in a three-minute span from the same user, hawk.3112090.

The user’s hateful comments were directed toward Tanner and his newborn child.

“Hope this mutt d i e s soon,” one of the user’s comments read on a photo of the Scotts’ child. Another said “I hope you get home to your family lying in puddles of their own blood.”

“Hope it’s a still b i r t h,” the user wrote under one of the couple’s photos.

The faceless accounts behind the horrid messages and comments have become more common in the rise of internet trolling — deepening safety concerns for professional athletes and their families.

Maddie gave fans a glimpse of what it is like to be the wife of a high-profile athlete, but the battles behind closed doors of a new mother dealing with threats toward their child are impossible to measure on a social media post.

Mets' Francisco Alvarez set to start rehab assignment Tuesday with Triple-A Syracuse

Francisco Alvarez is set to start his rehab assignment this week, Carlos Mendoza said Sunday after the Mets' 10-1 win over the Miami Marlins.

"As of right now, the plan is for him to play Tuesday in Syracuse," Mendoza said, referencing New York's Triple-A affiliate.

Syracuse is set to host the Yankees' Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders Tuesday at 6:35 p.m.

The Mets placed Alvarez on the 10-day injured list with a right meniscus tear May 13. He last played May 12 in New York's 10-2 win over the Detroit Tigers.

Alvarez has been catching bullpens, blocking, running and throwing.

"Just two weeks removed from surgery, it's pretty amazing to see," Mendoza said before Friday's game.

Alvarez underwent surgery May 14.

"Alvarez, I mean, this guy is unbelievable," Mendoza said last Monday. "He's already hitting, he's already doing catching. We were talking about eight weeks. I'm not sure about that now. This guy is built different. ... There's a lot of positive from him, too."

Through 37 games this season, Alvarez is slashing .241/.317/.393 with four home runs and 10 RBI.

Liberatore and Dobbins pitch the Cardinals to a 5-1 victory over the Cubs

ST. LOUIS — Matthew Liberatore took a shutout into the sixth inning and Masyn Winn hit a two-run single as the St. Louis Cardinals beat the Chicago Cubs 5-1 on Sunday night.

JJ Wetherholt and Iván Herrera each had two hits and scored twice for the Cardinals, who took two of three from their NL Central rivals after entering the series on a four-game losing streak. Alec Burleson drove in two runs.

Alex Bregman homered for the Cubs, who are 3-2 since a 10-game skid.

Liberatore (3-3) allowed three hits and one walk in 5 1/3 scoreless innings after giving up at least three runs in each of his previous three starts. He struck out four.

Hunter Dobbins relieved Liberatore hours after being recalled from Triple-A Memphis and yielded one run on four hits with four strikeouts over 3 2/3 innings for his first professional save.

Bregman hit his fifth homer this season to left field off his former Boston teammate in the sixth to spoil the shutout and extend his hitting streak to 11 games.

Burleson blooped an RBI single off reliever Ethan Roberts that landed just in front of left fielder Ian Happ to make it 3-0 in the third. Winn added a two-run single that extended the margin to 5-0.

Jordan Walker had an RBI single for the Cardinals in a two-run first.

Jordan Wicks (0-2) was charged with three runs and four hits in two-plus innings. He was removed after Wetherholt reached on an infield single leading off the third.

St. Louis opened a 2-0 lead after Wetherholt, Herrera and Walker all singled to start the bottom of the first.

Up next

Cubs: RHP Jameson Taillon (2-4, 5.37 ERA) will face Athletics LHP Gage Jump (0-1, 7.20) to open a six-game homestand Tuesday night.

Cardinals: RHP Michael McGreevy (3-4, 2.98 ERA) faces Rangers RHP Jacob deGrom (3-4, 3.77) to begin a three-game series Monday night.

Purple Row After Dark: May Rockie(s) of the Month

May 30, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; A general view in the fourth inning between the Colorado Rockies and the San Francisco Giants at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images | Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images

May is in its final hours, and the Colorado Rockies ended on a high note after scuffling hard for most of the month. After going 14-18 to start the season, they went 8-20 in May, but did finish by winning the series against the San Francisco Giants. Unfortunately, the series (and month) ended with a thud as they were outscored 19-6.

That said, it wasn’t all bad.

  • TJ Rumfield hit four home runs and continues to be an NL Rookie of the Year candidate
  • Jake McCarthy hit three homers of his own — including back-to-back games against the New York Mets — and is now hitting .301/.330/.494
  • Ezequiel Tovar has started to get out of his slump, including a two-homer performance on Friday night (that included the Rockies’ first walk-off win of 2026)
  • Brett Sullivan had as many hits (3) as pitching appearances (3) in May. While the hitting struggled, the three pitching appearances he made were scoreless and saved the bullpen against Texas Rangers, Arizona Diamondbacks and Los Angeles Dodgers. He also became the first non-Ohtani pitcher to homer this year, and nearly became the first pitcher in the history of MLB to homer twice in the same inning.
  • Antonio Senzatela continues to shine and is making a case to be a valuable trade candidate and/or an All-Star
  • Tomoyuki Sugano remains the Rockies’ most consistent starter, especially among a rotation that’s been decimated by injuries
  • Jaden Hill has been one of the Rockies’ most under-the-radar relievers, often falling behind only Senzatela in a number of statistical categories

So here’s the question for tonight: Who are your Rockies player(s) for the month of May? Let us know!


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Yankees enter June with 'lot of positives' as breakthrough at Athletics stamps late-month surge

The Yankees ended May on a high note with Sunday's 13-8 win at the Athletics. New York (36-23) is a game and a half behind the 36-20 Tampa Bay Rays in the AL East, winning six of its past seven game as it gets Monday off and returns to Yankee Stadium for this week's six-game homestand.

"Anytime you win five out of six on the road, it's a really good trip," Aaron Boone said, referencing the combination of the Yankees' three-game sweep at the Kansas City Royals earlier this week and New York's 2-1 series in West Sacramento, Calif, against the A's (28-31). "So, you take that. I feel like, for the most part, we played well. Today was one of those crazy games that I don't know what it was, but it was a win. So, obviously, a good way to go back cross country into an off day."

The Yankees' 13-run third inning created a 13-3 lead before the A's hung around with a four-run seventh and one-run eighth. New York ultimately enters this week's three-game series with the Cleveland Guardians, which starts with Cam Schlitter set to start Tuesday's 7:05 p.m. opener, on the upswing after a 16-12 month.

"Lot of positives," said Aaron Judge, whose 1-for-4 afternoon featured the RBI single in the third inning that gave the Yankees their first lead of the game as they piled on the 13-run frame. "You can take a lot of positives from the first two months here. ... It kind of starts with our pitching staff, especially the starting rotation, getting a lot of key guys back. It kind of is the main part of our team."

Judge enters June slashing .248/.375/.533 with 17 home runs and 38 RBI through 59 games, but those around him in the Yankees' order have made a difference.

"A lot of people kind of banged on us about bringing the same guys back," Judge said. "But you bring back Cody Bellinger -- he's been so efficient for us, just probably one of the best players in the game right now. And then Ben Rice, the emergence of him -- I know he had a great year last year, but he just continues to make strides."

Rice, who brought in four runs Sunday, is tied with Judge for the team lead in homers while slashing .306/.397/.658 with 44 RBI through 54 games. Bellinger, meanwhile, is slashing .271/.378/.476 with eight long balls and 38 RBI through 58 games of his second season in pinstripes.

"There's a couple things you need to clean up -- maybe a couple things defensively or couple times where, like I said, our offense isn't clicking the way it should be," Judge said. "But I like where we're at. I love this team. A lot of guys are ready to go out there and compete, and all the guys competing for a job -- so, when you do that, good things happen."