Guardians homer thrice off Cole, hold off Bombers to take series

Jun 3, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; Cleveland Guardians first baseman Rhys Hoskins (8) celebrates with third baseman Jose Ramirez (11) after hitting a two run home run during the third inning against the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images | Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Tonight, the Yankees were a cat that couldn’t catch the mouse. To be fair, the mouse in question was capable of dealing mighty blows to the cat. The Guardians grabbed their well-earned series win in the Bronx by flexing their muscles, clubbing three home runs off Gerrit Cole and always finding the timely hit to keep the tardy Yankee offense from responding with enough pop of their own. Gavin Williams was far from terrific on the mound for Cleveland, but the bullpen was able to stifle the Bombers just enough for a 5-4 final.

Cole’s scoreless streak to begin his season was snapped by a single swing in the second. Kyle Manzardo scooped a tumbling curveball — far from the worst offering of the game from Cole — and elevated it high and far to the facing of the second deck for a 1-0 Cleveland lead. We saw that power from him a few postseasons ago; his seventh long ball of the year gave the Guards the initiative.

Thankfully, the Bombers bashed back. Jazz Chisholm Jr. probably wasn’t consciously trying to clock a ball further than Manzardo did, but that’s what he did to lead off the second against Williams. Jazz turned on a belt-high heater from the tall right-hander and launched it 409 feet to reach the second deck. Of course, with nobody aboard, the homers counted the same; we were back to even.

The Cleveland offense which was in a groove last night found their stride again in the top of the fourth inning. It started with a hot line drive off the wall from José Ramírez that a strong throw in from José Caballero limited to a single. Ramírez would be able to trot home thanks to a two-out thunderstrike from veteran power bat Rhys Hoskins. Hoskins seized on a hanging slider from Cole and kept his blast fair down the left field line to make it 3-1 Cleveland.

Once again, the Yankees were able to respond quickly, albeit not with a two run shot. Still, a homer is a homer, and Caballero was more than willing to provide with a skyscraping fly ball to left that eluded the Guardians’ Angel Martínez and nestled into the glove of a Yankee fan and brought the Bombers within one.

Martínez lobbied for fan interference, but let’s face it; he’d have to be Victor Wembanyama’s height to snare that one. Or perhaps Mitchell Robinson’s — this is Knicks country, after all.

Unfortunately, Cole continued to struggle to keep the ball in the ballpark. The Guardians are not known for their proficiency against velocity, but it’s still unwise to give a center-cut offering of any speed to José Ramírez. The superstar third baseman continued his excellent career performance against Gerrit with a solo shot to right, restoring the two-run advantage at 4-2.

Manzardo continued the extra-base hit parade by smacking a double to the gap, then a walk to Hoskins spelled the end of Cole’s night. It wasn’t entirely fair to say Cole didn’t have his stuff per se, but every mistake he made was punished in a timely fashion. His breaking pitches routinely caught too much plate for a lineup that was suddenly geared to do damage, especially down the foul lines. Gerrit departed in line for the loss, replaced by Fernando Cruz.

Cruz did his job to strand the duo on base, but the Yankees had work to do against Williams, who was operating on cruise control aside from those solo homers. Ben Rice jostled him a bit with a leadoff double to start the home sixth, then advanced to third on a productive out from Paul Goldschmidt. That was sufficient to chase Williams from the mound.

Steven Vogt brought in lefty Tim Herrin to face Cody Bellinger, but the left-on-left matchup never daunts Cody. He made quality contact to center field for a lineout, and Steven Kwan airmailed the throw home to allow Rice to score easily on the sac fly. Herrin, who was in the game just as much to face Jazz as he was to face Bellinger, retired the Yankee second baseman to hold the lead at 4-3.

But the scuffling Yankee bullpen backpedaled. Tim Hill’s recent funk continued: he surrendered some more loud noises as Ramírez collected his third hit, and Manzardo nearly scored him on a booming double off the center field wall. Ramírez’s helmet flew off and obstructed him in a rare twist of good fortune, forcing him to retreat to third. Naturally Paul Blackburn entered and promptly wasted the lucky break by serving up a perfect batting practice ball to Hoskins, who scored Ramírez on a simple single to left. Once again, the Guards led by a pair.

Like last night, the Yankees bats were unable to solve Hunter Gaddis, who put up a zero in the bottom of the eighth, then a clean ninth from Blackburn brought this irritating game of cat-and-mouse to its final frame.

Goldschmidt came to the dish ready to hit against closer Cade Smith, rapping a double into the left field corner to immediately bring up Bellinger as the tying run. A lawn dart from Smith immediately moved Goldschmidt up 90 feet, Cody repeated his sixth-iunning act by grabbing a sac fly, but it seemed to have ultimately done Smith a favor. He roared back to strike out Chisholm, then got Caballero to pop out to end the night.

The Bombers continually played from behind tonight, and never found the big hit they needed to flip the script. They fell 5-4.

The Yankees will seek to salvage the final game and ward off a sweep at the hands of the AL Central leaders. Carlos Rodón will toe the slab, giving this Cleveland lineup which has found success against the Yankees’ righties a different look. Slade Cecconi will oppose Rodón, with the Thursday matinée kicking off at 1:35 PM on YES.

Box Score

Royals take down Reds and win second road series of the year

KANSAS CITY, MO - MAY 23: Stephen Kolek #32 of the Kansas City Royals celebrates with a teammate after pitching a complete game and winning the game between the Seattle Mariners and the Kansas City Royals at Kauffman Stadium on Saturday, May 23, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Kyle Rivas/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Both starters were dealing tonight. Despite that, the Royals were able to get on the board early. Vinnie Pasquantino turned on a fastball in the first inning and drove it out of the park down the right field line. Bobby Witt Jr. had walked on four pitches right before that, so the Royals had a 2-0 lead just three batters into the game.

After that, Chase Burns only allowed a few Royals on base and when he did, he would just strike everyone out to prevent them from coming around to score. He struck out 9 Royals across his six innings before turning it over to the bullpen.

Stephen Kolek also felt like striking out a lot of batters today. Through four innings he was straight up dominant before it seemed his command started to wane a bit. In the 5th inning this got him into a little trouble. Will Benson led off that inning with a bunt single because the defense was back and shaded to pull leaving the third base line a long way from any defenders. That ended up not mattering because Kolek rolled up a double play and looked like he was going to get through five without any runs, but Matt McLain had a seeing eye single to keep the inning going and get it back to the top of the lineup. Blake Dunn then saw a slider break into the middle of the zone and drove it out to tie up the game. Kolek still managed to get through 7 innings and struck out 8 for the second time in his career. The final line was 7IP, 6H, 2BB, 2ER, 8K. He had 7 Ks through three innings though, so his slider that was dominant early lost some of its power the 2nd and 3rd time through Cincinnati’s order.

In a year that has mostly gone wrong, Stephen Kolek has been a bright a spot. He now has a 3.32 ERA and four of his six starts have been quality starts. Not bad for a guy who was 7th on the depth chart for the rotation.

With the starters out, it was a new game all tied up. Daniel Lynch was the first out of the pen for the Royals. Other than a load double off the wall from pinch hitter Dane Myers, Lynch looked in control. The Reds’ relievers only allowed a single to Pasquantino in the 7th and 8th. The Royals then got something going in the 9th. Jac Caglianone led off the inning with his second single of the night, which brought in Tyler Tolbert as a pinch runner. Isaac Collins then sac bunted him to get a runner in scoring position with Michael Massey coming up. Tony Santillan was having his attention divided watching Tolbert on base and trying to pitch to Massey until finally, on the 8th pitch of the plate appearance, Michael singled to right and got the Royals back ahead 3-2. There was still only one out and a runner on. Nick Loftin came up to try and get some insurance runs. Ryan Lefebvre then said, “Loftin has not hit a home run yet this year”. Two seconds later he did just that and the Royals’ lead was extended to 3.

Lane Thomas, who pinch hit for Kyle Isbel in the 7th, walked and that ended Santillan’s night. Zachary McCambley was next up and had his major league debut. He struck out Carter Jensen and started heading for the dugout, which his teammates are going to have some fun with I am sure given that there were only 2 outs. And the Royals kept making things interesting with a Bobby Witt single and then an intentional walk to Vinnie after Bobby took second on defensive indifference. Bases loaded, Salvador Perez coming to the plate, but it was not to be as he struck out and the lead stayed 5-2.

The Royals have blown multiple saves through this bad stretch of baseball. Lucas Erceg was not given the opportunity to have a fourth consecutive blown save and Alex Lange came in to try and close it out. Spencer Steer immediately doubled into the left field corner and that sinking feeling started to creep in. The Reds did have their 7, 8, and 9 hitters coming though. Benson struck out on a check swing and Cincy decided to pinch hit with Edwin Arroyo and his 1 career hit after making his debut on Monday. He was called out on a slider that hit the top of the zone for strike three. Noelvi Marte was up and things got a little weird. He checked his swing on the first pitch for a ball, but then said it hit his arm, so the Reds decided to challenge. They did not win the challenge and Marte returned to the batter’s box. The next pitch was called a strike and Marte challenged that turning it into a ball and eventually leading to a walk. Dunn was back up with a chance to hit a second game-tying home run of the day, but then he bunted the first pitch foul? Bunting with 2 outs and runners on first and second was a strange choice. He then hit a fly ball to center than Lane Thomes caught ending the threat, giving the Royals a win for the game and the series.

That was an uncomfortable ninth inning, but the bullpen did its job tonight. Thanks to Kolek they only needed to take care of two innings and they did. Next it is off to Minnesota for four games against a division rival who is not very good, though their record is still quite a bit better than Kansas City’s.

Jays Score More Than Two Runs, Still Lose

Jun 3, 2026; Cumberland, Georgia, USA; Toronto Blue Jays left fielder Nathan Lukes (38) reacts after hitting a home run against the Atlanta Braves during the third inning at Truist Park. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-Imagn Images | Dale Zanine-Imagn Images

Blue Jays 3 Braves 7

We got more than 2 runs!!!!

They should have scored a few runs in the first inning. It started single (Nathan Lukes), single (Yohendrick Piñango) and walk (Vladimir Guerrero). The walk included Vlad challenging a called strike, which, the review showed, was easily a strike. I hate blowing a challenge in the first inning.

Anyway, I digress…..

Bases loaded, no outs, you start to hope for a big inning.

Nope.

Jesús Sánchez hit into a double play (scoring a run) and Ernie Clement struck out.

We got the other run in the third, Lukes homered.


Patrick Corbin wasn’t good. He gave up a run in the second and three more in the third (Mauricio Dubón homered). He ended up allowing four earned in five inning.

Yariel Rodríguez pitched a quick sixth and got one out in the seventh, with a walk. Adam Macko came in and gave up a single and a home run, before getting out of the inning.

Hayden Juenger had a 1, 2, 3 eighth.


Brandon Valenzuela crushed a home run in the ninth, 399 feet. But that was it for ninth inning fun.

I thought the Braves organist deserved points for playing ‘if I only had a brain’ when Myles Straw came to bat in the ninth.

We had 8 hits and 3 walks. But an 0 for 4 with RISP didn’t help (though it says a lot that we only had four runners in scoring position).

Joe did a rant about the Jays not catching a popup, saying it would the little things that were killing them. I respectfully object. They are losing because they aren’t scoring, But your mileage may vary.

Jays of the Day? Well, there wasn’t any. Lukes had the high mark at 0.07 WPA.

Other Award: Corbin (-0.24), Sánchez (-0.12), and Macko (-0.9).

Tomorrow we have game three of this series. And it is a bullpen day, while the Braves will start Chris Sale (8-3, 2.01). That should be fun.

Braves clinch 17th series win against the Blue Jays with productive offense

Jun 3, 2026; Cumberland, Georgia, USA; Atlanta Braves left fielder Mauricio Dubón (14) reacts with first baseman Matt Olson (28) after hitting a three run home run against the Toronto Blue Jays during the third inning at Truist Park. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-Imagn Images | Dale Zanine-Imagn Images

In a game that seemed to speed up within each inning, the Atlanta Braves secured a 7-3 win against the Toronto Blue Jays to secure the three-game mid-week series.

Looking at the highlight of the night first, Mauricio Dubón’s three-run homer is what forced a stop to Patrick Corbin and the Blue Jays.


After a grounded double-play by Jays’ Jesús Sánchez to kick the game off, Ha-Seong Kim hit an RBI single in the bottom of the second to bring in Eli White for the Braves’ first run of the night. Blue Jays Nathan Lukes answered back in the top of the third with a homer off Grant Holmes’ slider (2-0).

That put Atlanta on notice and brought Dubón out for his go-ahead three-run home run to drive in Matt Olson and Ozzie Albies for a two-run lead (4-2) against Toronto.

The Blue Jays stayed stuck for the remainder of the game as Corbin tried to get settled in his five innings, while keeping his team in the contest, but it only amounted to one strikeout and four earned runs off of the six hits and two walks he gave up.

Tonight was Corbin’s 22nd career start and 24th total appearance against the Braves, and the loss marked his 12-game losing streak against the team dating back to September 2019.

The story didn’t end there, however. The Braves decided they wanted to extend their stretch towards the end, so Ozzie Albies hit a three-run homer of his own in the bottom of the seventh to drive in Dominic Smith and Olson for a five-run lead, 7-2.

Fun fact: all of the Braves’ runs were scored with two outs against them.

The Blue Jays not only could get a runner in scoring position, but also couldn’t get a hit until a single from Ernie Clement in the eighth, yet it didn’t amount to a productive result until the ninth, where Brandon Valenzuela homered in an attempt to climb back in contention (7-3).

That would be the final run of the night before Tyler Kinley closed out with a string of sliders to strike out Blue Jays’ Myles Straw and seal the win.

As for Holmes, he ran into a bit of trouble with bases loaded and no outs in the top of the first inning, but ended with a quality start (6 IP/ 2 ER/ 5 H/ 2 BB/ 4 K) on 89 pitches to keep the Braves’ defense in the game and hold the Blue Jays scoreless for the remainder of his outing.

Tomorrow, the Braves look to close out their series finale with Chris Sale on the mound. Tune in at 7:15 p.m. EDT to see if the Braves pick up where they left off with the left-handed ace to back them up.



Aaron Judge-less Yankees drop another game to Guardians, losing 5-4

The Yankees offense never kicked into high gear and Gerrit Cole's white-hot start to life back on the mound ended in a 5-4 loss to the Cleveland Guardians at Yankee Stadium.

New York drops to 36-25, and is now a full game (1.0) back of the Tampa Bay Rays for the AL East division lead.

Here are the takeaways...

-Team captain and star outfielder Aaron Judge missed his second straight game due to a nagging rib injury. He is still considered day-to-day for the time being, with the organization awaiting further clarity on the severity of the issue.

-Yankees middle infield duo Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Jose Caballero dealt the only damage to Guardians righty Gavin Williams with a solo shot for each. Williams posted a strong start despite those two runs allowed, striking out six Yankees while allowing just four hits and one walk through 5.1 innings.

-Yanks ace Gerrit Cole, who hadn't given up an earned run through his first two stellar starts back from his lengthy absence due to injury, finally looked mortal on the mound. He was tagged for four earned runs, all of which came on three home runs, across 5.1 innings. He struck out just two Cleveland batters and allowed six hits before Boone called on trusty reliever Fernando Cruz, who answered the bell by retiring all four batters he faced tonight, striking out three.

-Tim Hill dug a deeper hole for the Yankees in the top of the eighth, allowing one run on two hits before Paul Blackburn relieved him to limit the damage and keep the score 5-3.

-Despite a Paul Goldschmidt leadoff double in the bottom of the ninth, eventually coming around to score and cut the lead to 5-4, standout Cleveland closer Cade Smith handled the heart of the Yankees batting order and picked up his 21st save of the season.

Game MVP: José Ramírez

J-Ram was 3-for-4 with a homer tonight, showcasing to the New York crowd why he'll very likely wind up in Cooperstown one day.

Highlights

 

What's next

The Yankees close out their three-game series against the Guardians tomorrow afternoon, with first pitch set for 1:35 pm. Carlos Rodón (3.32 ERA) is slated to make his fifth start of the season for New York, squaring off against Cleveland righty Slade Cecconi (5.25 ERA).

Headed into the weekend, the Bronx Bombers will extend their home stand with another three-game set, this time against the archrival Boston Red Sox. 

Bassitt exits early, Orioles fall 8-1

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - JUNE 03: Starting pitcher Chris Bassitt #40 of the Baltimore Orioles throws in the first inning against the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park on June 03, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Jaiden Tripi/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Orioles have played better baseball over the last few weeks, but they laid an egg tonight. Chris Bassitt labored through three innings before leaving with a possible injury, and the Red Sox broke the game open with a five-run fifth. Baltimore dropped the game 8-1 at Fenway Park.

This was the type of game that the Orioles should just flush and put behind them. The immediate attention will turn to Bassitt and any potential injury. The starter allowed a run on a single by Wilyer Abreu in the first inning, and would have allowed another if Taylor Ward hadn’t thrown out Abreu at the plate on a double by Wilson Contreras.

Bassitt retired the side in order in the second, but the Red Sox wore him out in the third. The 37-year-old picked up a pair of outs after a leadoff single, but Abreu pulled a two-run homer down the left field line. The Red Sox then proceeded to load the bases on a single and a pair of walks, but Bassitt got Isiah Kiner-Falefa to ground out to keep the deficit at three.

Bassitt had only thrown 56 pitches, but Albert Suárez entered in the fourth inning. Suárez struck out Abreu to leave runners on the corners, but he ran into some serious trouble in the fifth. Contreras got the rally started with a leadoff double, and Suárez walked Masataka Yoshida to place two on with nobody out.

Suárez generated what should have been a harmless fly ball for out number one, but Blaze Alexander never saw the ball in center field. The ball eventually found the grass, and both runners came around to score. Kiner-Falefa followed with a double off the green monster, and the game quickly fell out of reach. Boston added its seventh and eighth runs on a double by Caleb Durbin and a single by Ceddanne Rafaela.

Alexander has less than 10 major league starts in center field, but the Orioles felt comfortable sending him out to play a difficult center field at Fenway tonight. To be fair, Boston shortstop Marcelo Mayer lost a ball in the sky just one inning prior.

Suárez allowed five runs in two innings. We’ll now wait to see if the Orioles designate the veteran reliever for assignment for the umpteenth time. Suárez threw 53 pitches, but he could be saved if the Orioles place Bassitt on the injured list. Trey Gibson tossed 6.1 innings at Norfolk earlier today, so he would be on regular rest if the Orioles need him for Bassitt’s next turn in the rotation.

The Orioles wasted some early opportunities before the game was fully out of reach. Taylor Ward walked and Adley Rutschman singled in the first, but Rutschman was thrown out on a double steal attempt. Pete Alonso struck out swinging to end the inning with Ward at third base.

Jackson Holliday and Ward both singled in the third, but Gunnar Henderson and Rutschman came up short with runners in scoring position. Boston gave Baltimore an extra out when Mayer failed to catch a pop fly in the fourth, but Rutschman flew out to leave runners on second and third.

Rutschman eventually drove in Baltimore’s only run with a stand-up triple in the seventh.

Anthony Nunez tossed two scoreless innings and Grant Wolfram kept the Sox off the board in the eighth.

The Orioles fell to 29-33. They can still take the series with a win tomorrow afternoon when Trevor Rogers takes the mound. The Red Sox have yet to announce a starter for Game 3.

Red Sox finally earn double-digit Fenway victory

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - JUNE 03: Wilyer Abreu #52 of the Boston Red Sox reacts after hitting a two-run home run to bring Caleb Durbin #5 home (not pictured) in the third inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Fenway Park on June 03, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Jaiden Tripi/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Red Sox should really try to replicate this performance all the time at home to change their Fenway Park fate in 2026. 

Boston earned a long-desired 8-1 win at home and controlled the game from the jump to set up a matinee rubber match for the second consecutive series at Fenway. 

Here’s three takeaways from Wednesday’s win. 

TOLLE THRIVES

Payton Tolle continues to throw the ball exceptionally well.

The young Red Sox flamethrower tallied six shutout innings Wednesday night and had plenty of run support to work with. Tolle struck out five batters and set a career-high with 99 pitches. 

He had fun doing it. 

EVERYBODY HITS!

The entire starting lineup recorded a hit for the Red Sox in a satisfying offensive performance.

Boston exploded for a five-run fifth inning in cruise control as the Red Sox passed the baton with power. The lineup tallied seven extra-base hits on the night. 

The Red Sox have hammered Chris Bassitt the last two times they faced him, scoring 11 earned runs in five innings. 

FINALLY!

The Red Sox were still the only team in baseball without 10 home victories on the season entering play Wednesday night. 

Start the party! That club is now empty in 2026.

Dodgers vs. Diamondbacks game chat

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - JUNE 02: Shohei Ohtani #17 of the Los Angeles Dodgers bats against the Arizona Diamondbacks during the fifth inning of the MLB game at Chase Field on June 02, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Shohei Ohtani faces Ryne Nelson as the Dodgers look to take two straight against the Arizona Diamondbacks.

WEDNESDAY GAME INFO
  • Teams: Dodgers vs. Diamondbacks
  • Stadium: Chase Field, Phoenix, AZ
  • Time: 6:40 p.m. PT
  • TV: SportsNet LA
  • Radio: AM 570 (English), KTNQ 1020 (Spanish)

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50.2: Phillies 3, Padres 2

Jun 3, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Cristopher Sanchez (61) throws a pitch against the San Diego Padres during the first inning at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images | Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

All legends come to an end. If the hero fulfills his task with dignity through the end, even his defeat has something beautiful and proud in it. If he surrenders to the vice of pride before his time is over, then his defeat is only a defeat. Hercules was killed by poison, yet ascended to Mt. Olympus in death. Jason lived long enough to anger the gods who had once seen his Argonauts through many dangers, and so was killed ignominiously by falling debris from the wreck of his own ship. Cristopher Sanchez’s streak is over. Even in losing it, he found a form of nobility. There is far more of Hercules than Jason in him.

But before we can discuss the end of the legend, we must discuss how we reached it. Cristopher Sánchez entered the game with his scoreless streak at 44.2 innings, and set himself to work against the visitors from San Diego.

First on the agenda: Fernando Tatis Jr. He struck out, swinging fruitlessly at a changeup. Then Miguel Andujar. He grounded up the middle; Bryson Stott displayed his full range in grabbing the ball and tossing it smoothly to first, where it arrived just in time to send Andujar back to his teammates. The Padres challenged, the call stood. The last barrier between Sánchez and the longest consecutive scoreless innings streak any southpaw has ever produced, at least in this era, was Manny Machado. He went down 0-2 (the Padres losing an ABS challenge along the way), grounded to Trea Turner, and Sánchez etched his name in the history books.

The Phillies half of these innings, it must be said, lacked the high drama of Sánchez’ chase. Still, they dutifully lined up against Walker Buehler, and tried to produce some excitement of their own. Bryce Harper walked, Marsh lined one to right for his fifth consecutive hit, and the Phillies had runners on the corners, with two away; it came to naught.

Speaking of naught, that’s what the next three San Diegos produced. So too, unfortunately, did the next three Phils.

In the third, Sánchez faced Jackson Merrill (lined out to short), Jase Bowen (struck out swinging at a cambio), and Rodolfo Durán (walked), and Tatis Jr (grounded to short, ball tossed to second for the out). As the ball left Turner’s glove and entered Stott’s, the name “Sánchez” rose above that of Bob Gibson in the immortal ledger’s consecutive scoreless column.

In the fourth, Andujar made good contact on the first pitch he saw. A momentary chill ran through the hearts of those watching, but the ball found Justin Crawford’s glove, and all was well. Machado slapped one through the right side of the infield for a hit. But the next two Padres made outs, and the mood of the Phillies faithful resembled that of their pitcher: calm, unflappable.

He was back on the mound sooner than said fans would’ve liked. The Phillies went down in order in the fourth, with just a pair of baserunners to that point.

Ty France singled to open the fifth. No other Padre was able to follow his example in that frame.

The Phillies, playing a game of one-upmanship, opened their half of the fifth with a double from Bryson Stott. They really rubbed it in when he scored as Adolis García sent a sinker swiftly out to center. Kyle Schwarber was given the honor of an intentional walk (two nights in a row), but Turner couldn’t make them pay for it.

No Padres batter did anything productive in the sixth.

A streak is defined by an odd sort of dual inevitability: there is an ever-present sense that it will continue, must continue, and yet an ever-present sense that every sign of danger is the crack that must surely end it. In the seventh, France hit a ball up the third base line for his second hit of the night. It was a great hit, frustrating in its perfect placement, and it produced, at least in me, a dread that was greater that it ought to have been: something about the way it was hit, just inches away from being a harmless foul, made me think that something in the heavens had shifted. Shortly afterwards, Merrill received a sinker up in the zone, inside, and sent it past a diving Turner and into left. Marsh’s throw couldn’t beat France, and the streak was over. The number that will accompany Sanchez’ name through the decades was thus locked into place: 50.2.

The Phillies offense, unwilling to let Sanchez’ night be tainted by a loss, immediately went to work. Realmuto homered to left, and Schwarber homered to right, and the Phillies had a 3-1 lead.

Brad Keller replaced Sánchez. That would be a tough task on any night, and an especially unenviable one on this night. He ran into trouble, loading the bases via singles to Tatis Jr. and Andujar and a walk to Gavin Sheets. He plunked Xander Bogaerts to plate a run in particularly unpleasant fashion, but allowed no further damage.

Marsh singled to lead off the eighth, but the Phillies could not extend their lead. Jhoan Duran was thus asked to bring the night to a just conclusion: only a victory for the home club could be proper on this occasion. Let his flaming fastball light the pyre. And it did. Jhoan made Merrill line out, struck out pinch hitter Bryce Johnson, then punctuated the affair with a swinging strikeout of Samad Taylor.

Sánchez thus leaves tonight’s game without his streak, but with his bona fides as an ace, an All-Star, a conquering hero, more polished than ever. And with a win, too.

The Phillies are 32-29. They’ll conclude their series against the Padres on Thursday at 1:05.

Orel Hershiser was rooting for Cristopher Sanchez to break his scoreless innings record

PHOENIX — Orel Hershiser was getting ready to grab dinner before broadcasting the Los Angeles Dodgers’ game Wednesday night when he got the news that Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Cristopher Sanchez’s bid to break his all-time scoreless innings streak had ended.

Hershiser says he was privately rooting for Sanchez, but concedes that his family and friends were quite relieved his record 59-inning scoreless streak remains the standard. Sanchez’s streak was snapped at 50.2 innings on San Diego Padres center fielder Jack Merrill’s two-out single, scoring Ty France from second base.

“It’s a great accomplishment, it really is,’’ Hershiser told USA TODAY Sports. “It’s tremendous. I really believe you’re going to see more streaks this year. You’ve got guys like Shohei (Ohtani of the Dodgers). Miz (Jacob Misiorowski of the Milwaukee Brewers). I think with the way hitting is now, you’re going to see more of these streaks.

“Someone will break the record.’’

Just not now, with Hershiser’s 1988 record still standing after 38 years and counting.

“I was rooting for him because I know how special it is in your life,’’ Hershiser said. “He’s having a great year. He’s got to be the front-runner for the Cy Young. He’s got ridiculous stuff. And he’s a strikeout pitcher, much more of a strikeout pitcher than I was.’’

One day, maybe Sanchez will make another run.

Maybe it will be someone else.

But Hershiser is convinced that his record will be broken. It took 20 years for him to break Don Drysdale’s 58-inning streak, and 55 years for Drysdale to break Walter Johnson’s 55.2-inning streak from 1913.

“Really, when you think about it,’’ Hershiser said, “it’s a team record. Even though it gets attributed to individuals, somebody has to pick up the groundball and throw it to first. Somebody’s got to catch the fly ball in the gap. Somebody’s got to turn a double play for you when there’s first and third with one out. But it is special.

“When I think about it, it changed my life, but the bigger thing that changed my life was winning that (1988) world championship. To this day when I get together with my teammates, we celebrate that championship, and I thank them for picking that ball up and doing the things needed for 59 scoreless.’’

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Orel Hershiser loved Cristopher Sanchez scoreless innings streak

Arizona Diamondbacks Gameday Thread, #61: 6/3 vs. Dodgers

ARIZONA, UNITED STATES - AUGUST 23: A general view of the Grand Canyon West sign in Arizona, United States on August 23, 2022. (Photo by Tayfun Coskun/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images) | Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

Today’s Lineups

DODGERSDIAMONDBACKS
Shohei Ohtani – DHGeraldo Perdomo – SS
Andy Pages – CFCorbin Carroll – RF
Freddie Freeman – 1BGabriel Moreno – C
Mookie Betts – SSNolan Arenado – 3B
Kyle Tucker – RFPavin Smith – DH
Max Muncy – 3BRyan Waldschmidt – CF
Will Smith – CIldemaro Vargas – 2B
Alex Call – LFJose Fernandez – 1B
Alex Freeland – 2BTommy Troy – LF
Shohei Ohtani – RHPZac Gallen – RHP

I think it’s safe to say, most Diamondbacks’ fans are going into this game, more in hope than genuine expectation of winning. Shohei Ohtani has made nine starts this year, all but one going at least six innings. And just once has he allowed more than a single earned run. Opposing batters are hitting just .147, and of the 213 batters to have faced Ohtani this year, only two have homered. He has a 0.82 ERA. Kinda remarkable he is not 9-0. But Shohei has “only” got five wins. He lost 2-1 to both the Astros and Marlins, and also has a pair of no-decisions. Both of those came in Los Angeles defeats, but he didn’t allow an earned run in either game.

On the other hand, we have Zac Gallen. He has allowed fewer than two earned runs in only three of his eleven starts – and one of those was a curtailed three-inning outing. He has precisely two quality starts all year. They came against the Tigers and Giants, the 26th and 27th-ranked teams in the majors this year, by runs per game. Tonight, he’s facing the second-ranked Dodgers, who have scored an average of 5.26 runs per game [Somewhat fun fact: #1 are the next visitors to Chase Field, the Washington Nationals, at 5.32 R/G] Gallen’s ERA has increased after five of his last six starts.

Of course, much of the above is written in the spirit of a reverse jinx. One of the great things about baseball is, any team can win on any given day. We’ve seen this often enough before. Why not tonight? At least we should be safe from any “Why are we making this scrub look like Cy Young?” comments in the GDT! It would be nice if they end up posting those over on True Blue LA instead. As mentioned in Snake Bytes, three of our four losses to the Dodgers have been by one run. Be nice if the gods of regression smile on the Diamondbacks tonight, and give us our first one-run win over the Evil Empire. Especially on a day where we got the bad news about the return of our former staff ace.

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Phillies ace Sánchez has consecutive shutout innings streak ended at 50 2/3 by Padres

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Phillies ace Cristopher Sánchez extended his consecutive shutout innings streak to 50 2/3 before allowing a two-out RBI single to San Diego’s Jackson Merrill in the seventh on Wednesday night.

Sánchez’s streak ranks as the third-best overall dating to the start of the Live Ball Era in 1920 behind the Los Angeles Dodgers’ Orel Hershiser, with a record 59 straight scoreless innings in 1988, and Don Drysdale with 58 in 1968. He struck out San Diego’s Fernando Tatis Jr. and set the Padres down in order in the first to pass Carl Hubbell and become the career leader among left-handers.

Sánchez breezed through six scoreless innings against the Padres before allowing a two-out double in the seventh to Ty France, and Merrill followed with a hit that accounted for the only run allowed by Sánchez since the end of April.

Sánchez received a load standing ovation after the run scored, and the 29-year-old lefty stood on the mound until the applause died down.

Sánchez also passed Sal Maglie, Zack Greinke, and Bob Gibson on the shutout streak list since 1920. He surpassed Gibson’s 47 consecutive shutout innings in the same 1968 season as Drysdale, dubbed the year of the pitcher.

Sánchez — throwing a changeup that averages 86.5 mph and holding hitters to a .153 average — hasn’t been in any serious jeopardy of allowing a run since permitting two runs in the first inning of a 3-2 Phillies win over the Giants on April 30.

He worked seven shutout innings in his last start against the Padres to eclipse the Phillies’ franchise record of 41 innings, set in 1911 by Grover Cleveland Alexander.

“You don’t get to see things like this very often,” Phillies interim manager Don Mattingly said before Wednesday’s game. “It’s one of those things that’s not happened very often. It’s hard to categorize it. I don’t know if I’ve seen anything that’s really been better than this.”

Sánchez entered the game against the Padres with a 6-2 record and an MLB-low 1.47 ERA. He had thrown at least seven shutout innings in five straight starts.

Sánchez was named NL pitcher of the month for May earlier Wednesday. He went 4-0 and struck out 45 — with only three walks — over 39 innings in the month.

“It’s pretty cool what he’s doing,” Phillies first baseman Bryce Harper said before the game. “Lot of punch-outs, as well, so that helps us on defense.”

He was the NL Cy Young Award runner-up in 2025 when he went 13-5 with a 2.50 ERA and struck out 212 in 202 innings. Sánchez signed with the Tampa Bay Rays as an international free agent in 2013 and was traded to the Phillies six years later for infielder Curtis Mead in a little-noticed offseason transaction. He made his big-league debut in 2021.

“I remember they were talking about releasing him in 2020,” Harper said. “I’ve seen it from the jump, just kind of the way he approaches it. Just super special.”

Drysdale threw a major-league record six straight shutouts as part of his streak from May 14- June 8, 1968. Hershiser pitched six scoreless starts in September 1988 as part of his record-breaking streak. Hershiser, now a broadcaster for the Dodgers, said last week he was fine if Sánchez broke his record.

“I’m pulling for anybody to have a life-changing moment,” said Hershiser, who still owns the record.

Padres cut ties with outfielder Nick Castellanos after a rough 39-game stint

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The San Diego Padres designated outfielder Nick Castellanos for assignment on Wednesday, one day after he received a video tribute in his return to Philadelphia.

Castellanos was released by the Phillies in February just ahead of their first full-squad workout at spring training. The Phillies released him even though they owed him $20 million for the final season of a $100 million, five-year contract.

The Padres took a flier on him and spent only the league minimum of around $780,000 for him this season. Castellanos never returned to his two-time All-Star form in limited action with San Diego. He hit .191 with a .560 OPS, four home runs and 20 RBIs in 39 games for the Padres.

“We had conversations with him when we signed him that he was going to earn his playing time,” manager Craig Stammen said. “It was probably going to be a different role for him. It wasn’t going to be an everyday role that he had been accustomed to the last 12, 15 years of his life playing baseball.”

Castellanos spent four seasons with the Phillies but was not in the lineup for his return game, a 3-2 win by Philadelphia on Tuesday night. He tipped his cap toward cheering fans after a short video tribute that highlighted some of his sliding catches from his time with the Phillies.

Castellanos made his debut with the Detroit Tigers in 2013 and also played for the Chicago Cubs and Cincinnati. He is a .270 career hitter with 254 home runs and 940 RBIs.

“I think it was tough for him to transition from playing every single day to playing two days, then two days off, then play a day, then another day off,” Stammen said. “It’s something he probably didn’t really love, either. It didn’t feel comfortable for him.”

The Padres selected the contract of infielder/outfielder Samad Taylor from Triple-A El Paso ahead of Wednesday’s game.

Castellanos had one of the best years of his career in his second season with the Phillies in 2023 when he hit 29 homers and had 106 RBIs and helped lead the team to the World Series.

Castellanos developed a strained relationship with the Phillies in his final season, when his behavior — even more than his sagging production — became too much for the organization. The lowlight: Castellanos brought a Presidente beer into the dugout last June after he was removed from a game, which he admitted in a four-page, handwritten letter he posted to social media after his release.

“Not everything that anybody does is all positive,” Castellanos said Tuesday inside the Padres’ clubhouse. “It’s not all negative. I had highs, I had lows.”

Castellanos did not play in the Padres’ loss.

Colorado Rockies vs. Los Angeles Angels game thread: Michael Lorenzen vs. Walbert Ureña

DENVER, COLORADO - MAY 29: Michael Lorenzen #24 of the Colorado Rockies pitches in the fourth inning against the San Francisco Giants at Coors Field on May 29, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Dustin Bradford/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Colorado Rockies have certainly enjoyed the series against the Los Angeles Angels. After a wacky win to kick off the series on Monday, the boys in purple enjoyed a convincing win on Tuesday to win the series. Now, they look to complete the sweep on the road before heading home for the weekend.

Michael Lorenzen (2-7, 7.22 ERA) takes the hill against his former club, looking to right the ship. May was not a kind month to Lorenzen as he posted an 8.87 ERA over five starts, throwing 23.1 innings. He allowed five or more runs in three starts and allowed at least five hits in all of his starts. The major issue for Lorenzen has been a lack of command and consistency in his starts. It has seemed that he is typically good for one or two innings in a start that can come before or after things fall apart. The second time through the order has proven the most troublesome, as he has allowed 22 runs and issued 12 walks. The numbers, a third time through the order, haven’t proven much better. If he can attack the zone and find his spots, Lorenzen can be quite effective, but that consistency has eluded him.

In his career, he has made 11 appearances, including seven starts, against the Angels and has a 3.80 ERA. In 13 appearances at Angel Stadium, he sports a 3.47 ERA.

The Angels will send out the 22-year-old right-hander Walbert Ureña (2-4, 2.44 ERA). The rookie Ureña has done well to start his big league career, recording four quality starts in eight starts. His first two appearances of the year came out of the bullpen before he was moved to the rotation, where he has thrived. In May, he posted a 1.64 ERA over 33 innings. He went at least five innings in each outing, going six innings in three of them. He allowed more than one run just once and has done well limiting contact. However, he can struggle with command, allowing at least three walks in four of six starts last month. He can get strikeouts, but if the Rockies can work deep counts, they may be able to knock him out early since his season high pitch count is 93 pitches and he hasn’t worked past the sixth inning.

First Pitch: 7:38 pm MDT

TV: Rockies TV

Radio: KOA 850 AM/94.1 FM; KNRV 1150 (Spanish)

Lineups:


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Mets' Carlos Mendoza applauds Bo Bichette's 'typical game' after four-hit performance: 'Really good day for him'

It hasn’t been an easy first year with the Mets for Bo Bichette.

After signing a lucrative three-year, $126 million deal in the offseason to be a big part of the offense and help replace some of the production lost in free agency, Bichette hasn’t lived up to expectations.

Entering Wednesday’s game against the Seattle Mariners, Bichette was hitting .213 with a .570 OPS and was stuck in an 0-for-16 slump over the last handful of games. As if that wasn’t bad enough, Bichette, known as a great hitter throughout his career with runners in scoring position, was hitting .196 in those situations this season.

However, not only did Bichette snap his hitless streak in the series finale with a 4-for-4 day, he also came through in a big spot in the fourth inning when he singled in two runs with the bases loaded to break a 1-1 tie.

“Really good day for him,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “That first at-bat he hits that bullet to right field and then it’s just kind of a typical game from Bo when he’s going well. He’s gonna spread the ball around, he’s gonna hit line drives. Runner at third with the infield in he gets a sac fly. A very good day for him offensively.”

Despite Bichette’s struggles for the majority of the season, Mendoza hasn’t moved him lower in the order, keeping him near the top of the lineup in hopes that he gets things going. That strategy paid off for him on Wednesday.

Mendoza also believes Bichette has run into some tough luck this season, saying he’s hit the ball hard but doesn’t have the results to show for it.

“They’re human. When you look up and the numbers aren’t what they’re supposed to be at, [and] everybody keeps telling you after a good swing, after a bullet, it gets tiring at times,” the skipper said. “They wanna see results. Hopefully now he continues to get results and he gets going here, but I feel like this guy has been very unlucky, I hate to say it. He’s a good hitter.”

For what it’s worth, the stats back up Mendoza’s claims. Bichette’s xBA is .276 – a full 50 points higher than his .226 batting average and much closer to his career .288 number – which ranks in the 79th percentile, per Baseball Savant. 

Bichette’s average exit velocity (90.9 mph), hard-hit percentage (45.5 percent) and squared-up percentage (28 percent) all also rank highly around the league. Still, at the end of the day, results are what matter the most.

“I’m not gonna sit here and say I’ve been at my best,” Bichette said after admitting his latest performance felt good. “There’s been probably a lot of at-bats that could be better so just trying to focus on being more consistent.”

Bichette will have a chance at finding that consistency after an off day on Thursday. The Mets are back in action on Friday night against the San Diego Padres.

So what can he take from the success he found on Wednesday and implement it into the rest of the season?

“Just staying in the moment,” Bichette said. “There’s no secret recipe. Staying in the moment, getting good pitches to hit, competing. Whatever happens, happens and move on.”