Mets can’t get out of their own way in latest ugly loss

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - JULY 04: A ball drops in between Tyrone Taylor #28 of the New York Mets and Francisco Lindor #12 of the New York Mets for a two RBI double by Eli White #36 of the Atlanta Braves during the third inning at Truist Park on July 4, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Casey Sykes/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Hopefully, you were celebrating Independence Day with family and friends by enjoying a cookout, watching fireworks, or doing just about anything but watching the New York Mets.

The Atlanta Braves throttled the Mets 14-3 Saturday night in Atlanta, outplaying them in all facets in another ugly loss. New York’s lineup was its normal sleepy self against starter Chris Sale and the Braves bullpen. The Mets’ pitching staff was uncompetitive, as all four pitchers who made an appearance gave up at least one home run. The Braves bashed five total home runs to fully embarrass the Mets.

New York has lost 12 of their last 14 games and fallen to 17 games below .500 as the 2026 campaign continues to worsen.

The Braves scored four runs in the third inning thanks to a meltdown from starting pitcher Sean Manaea and the Mets’ defense. Manaea gave up a walk, a single, and a hit batsman to load the bases for Michael Harris II, who singled to score Drake Baldwin. Eli White, who homered off Manaea in the second inning, doubled to clear the bases and bury the Mets 5-0 early. White’s double was a pop-up that landed between Fransico Lindor and Tyrone Taylor in a hideous play. Surprisingly ruled a hit, Taylor got leather on the ball but couldn’t secure the catch while Lindor dove to the ground to avoid a collision. White has been a huge pain in Manaea’s side, hitting two home runs and two doubles in his last four at-bats against the right-hander.

Taylor’s drop put a spotlight on interim manager Andy Green’s decision to bench AJ Ewing against Sale in an effort to shield him from tough left-handed pitching. Ewing’s defense has been a strength for the Mets since being called up, with +3 defensive runs saved, which is the 10th-best mark among MLB centerfielders.

Taylor somewhat redeemed himself when he hit a solo home run off Sale in the fifth inning. Sale returned for the sixth inning but gave up a two-run home run to Mark Vientos as the Mets briefly showed signs of life. Sale gave up a single to Eric Wagaman and then hit Francisco Alvarez with a pitch before being pulled. Dylan Lee entered and struck out Carson Benge, Taylor, and Brett Baty on 11 pitches.

Lee and JR Ritchie combined to shut out the Mets offense for the final four innings. Meanwhile, the Mets fed Austin Warren to the wolves in relief of Manaea. Warren gave up four runs across his two innings on 44 pitches. Joey Gerber relieved Warren and gave up a three-run home run to Austin Riley, putting the Braves up 13-3. Backup catcher Luis Torrens relieved Gerber and gave up a home run to Harris before getting the final out of the eighth. Waving the white flag with a position player on the mound was the cherry on top for a Fourth of July performance that no Mets fan will want to remember.

The Mets stayed on brand by stranding 11 base runners and going a combined 1-for-9 with RISP. Lindor had two singles against Sale but struck out with the bases loaded against Ritchie in the eighth inning. Seven other Mets batters had a hit, but the team struck out 10 times and grounded into two double plays. Benge singled off Ritchie in the eighth to extend his hit-streak to nine games and his on-base streak to 16.

Nolan McLean is scheduled to take the mound Sunday for the Mets at 12:30 PM ET against Braves starter Martín Pérez. McLean pitched six shutout innings in his last appearance, so maybe he can at least be respectable following this Independence Day clunker.

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Win Probability Added

What’s WPA?

Big Mets winner: Eric Wagaman, +4% WPA
Big Mets loser: Sean Manaea, -27% WPA
Mets pitchers: -34% WPA
Mets hitters: -16% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: Mark Vientos home run in the sixth, +7% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: Eli White double in third, +15.0% WPA

Mets' Luis Robert Jr. completes third game of rehab assignment

Mets center fielder Luis Robert Jr. went hitless with an 0-for-4 line in the third game of his rehab assignment with Triple-A Syracuse.

He flew out twice and grounded out twice while batting second for Syracuse in Saturday's 6-5 win over the Worcester Red Sox.

Robert is hitless in his past nine at-bats, including an 0-for-4 game in Thursday's 7-5 loss to Worcester.

He singled in the first at-bat of his rehab assignment, a leadoff knock to start Tuesday's 15-5 loss to Worcester.

Robert's Thursday performance was an 0-for-4 effort from the leadoff spot with two strikeouts.

Interim manager Andy Greensaid before Saturday's 14-3 loss at the Atlanta Braves that Robert (lumbar spine disc herniation) was "doing well."

"Both those guys still have more minor league games in front of them," Green said of Robert and Jorge Polanco.

Robert, 28, has not played for the Mets since April 26.

In 24 games this season, his first with New York, he has a .224/.327/.329 slash line with two home runs and eight RBI.

Cubs Minor League Wrap: Happy 4th of July

DENVER, COLORADO - JULY 3: Fans and players and their families watch a fireworks show from the field in a general view after a game between the Colorado Rockies and the San Francisco Giants at Coors Field on July 3, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Dustin Bradford/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Shelby Miller threw live batting practice in Mesa.

Iowa Cubs

The Iowa Cubs got all dirty against the Toledo Mud Hens (Tigers), 7-6.

Starter Grant Kipp lasted four innings and gave up five runs on five hits. Three of those five hits were home runs, which accounted for all five runs. Kipp walked two and struck out seven.

Colin Snider, Aaron Bummer and Liam Hendriks each threw a scoreless inning after that. Doug Nikhazy did likewise in the bottom of the eighth and was in line for the win when the I-Cubs took the lead in the top of the ninth. Unfortunately, Nikhazy came out to pitch the ninth, faced five batters and all five batters reached on four hits and an intentional walk. So instead, Nikhazy got the loss after giving up two runs on five hits over 1+ innings. Nikhazy struck out one and had that one intentional walk.

Center fielder Brett Bateman hit a solo home run in the fifth inning, his second on the season. Bateman went 2 for 4 with a double, the home run, a walk and two runs scored.

Jonathon Long drove home both Bateman and himself in the the seventh inning with a two-run home run, his ninth on the year. Long went 2 for 4 with a walk.

DH James Triantos went 3 for 5 with a game-tying single in the seventh.

Owen Miller was 2 for 5 with an RBI triple. He scored twice.

Shortstop Ben Cowles was 2 for 4.

Bateman’s home run.

Good defense by Long saves a single.

And then Long hits a home run.

Miller’s triple.

Knoxville Smokies

The Knoxville Smokies were pulped by the Columbus Clingstones (Braves), 4-3.

Jace Beck gave the Smokies a solid start, allowing just one run on four hits over four innings. Beck did walk four, but he also struck out eight.

Tyler Schlaffer took over for Beck in the fifth and got the loss. Schlaffer surrendered three runs on five hits over 2.2 innings. He struck out four, walked two and hit one batter.

Left fielder Carter Trice hit a two-run double in the top of the first inning. He was 1 for 4.

The Smokies only managed five hits.

Trice’s double.

South Bend Cubs

The South Bend Cubs grounded the Beloit Sky Carp (Marlins), 7-3 in the completion of a game started yesterday. The regularly scheduled game was postponed. They’ll try to play a doubleheader tomorrow.

Jaxon Wiggins started yesterday’s game on a rehab assignment. He gave up one run on two hits in one inning before the rains came. One of those hits was a home run. Wiggins did not have a strikeout or a walk.

Ethan Flanagan took the mound to start today’s game and got the win. Flanagan pitched 4.2 innings and allowed two runs on three hits—although both runs came on a home run in the third inning. Flanagan struck out five and walked no one.

Brayden Spears tossed the final 3.1 innings and got his second save. Spears allowed no runs on two hits. He struck out three and walked no one.

Center fielder Kane Kepley hit a three-run home run in the second inning, It was his fifth on the season. Kepley went 1 for 5.

Left fielder Jose Escobar has been on fire lately, and he threw fuel onto that fire tonight as he went 4 for 5 with a triple and a walk. He also stole a base. Escobar scored twice. In 28 games since his promotion from Myrtle Beach, Escobar is hitting .340/.417/.590.

Shortstop Angel Cepeda was 3 for 4 with a stolen base. He scored one run.

Right fielder Miguel Olivio went 2 for 3 with two walks. He scored one run and drove home two.

Kepley’s home run.

A two-run single for Olivo.

Myrtle Beach Pelicans

The Myrtle Beach Pelicans were pinched by the Hickory Crawdads (Rangers), 7-4.

It was a great start for Brody McCullough on a rehab assignment. McCullough allowed just one run on two hits over five innings. He struck out five and walked no one, although he did hit a batter.

Henry Cone pitched next and got the loss. Cone got rocked for four runs on one hit over 1.2 innings. Three of the four runs were unearned, however. Cone walked four and hit one batter while striking out no one.

Centerfielder Alexy Lumpuy hit a solo home run in the third inning, his sixth on the season. Lumpuy went 4 for 5 with two runs batted in.

DH Jose Silva went 2 for 4 with two RBI.

Lumpuy provides some defense as well.

And then he hits a home run.

Full highlights.

ACL Cubs

Lost to the Rockies, 13-8.

Last year’s first round pick Ethan Conrad played left field for the first time as a professional. He also hit his first home run as a pro. Conrad was 1 for 3.

Braves finally back Chris Sale, as Mets’ defense provides an assist

ATLANTA, GA - JULY 04: Chris Sale #51 of the Atlanta Braves pitches in the second inning during the game against the New York Mets at Truist Park on July 4, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Jack Casey/Atlanta Braves/Getty Images) | Getty Images

With Chris Sale on the mound, the Braves were going for a much-needed win against the Mets with Chris Sale on the mound. Sale pitching is always comforting, but the Braves were unable to win a Chris Sale start in the month of June.

Both Sale and Sean Manaea worked around a base hit in the first to keep things scoreless. Eli White broke the deadlock with a two out solo homer in the second over the left field wall. It was an incredibly unimpressive batted ball for a homer, hit 93.5 MPH off the bat with a .130 xBA, but it counts as a run nonetheless.

After another clean inning from Sale, the Braves loaded the bases with two outs on a Baldwin walk, an Olson single, and Austin Riley being hit by a pitch ahead of Michael Harris. Mike delivered with an RBI single and then the Mets absolutely botched an easy pop-up off the bat of Eli White in a bases-clearing calamity with Eli ending up on second base.

Mauricio Dubon gave Eli White’s soft homer a run for its money with one out in the fourth, as he hooked a 95.0 MPH exit velocity ball just inside the left-field pole for a solo homer to make it 6-0 Braves. Tyrone Taylor pulled a run back in the fifth with a solo homer off of Sale. Sale allowed another single and a homer in the sixth, making it a 6-3 ballgame. Sale gave up another single and hit Francisco Alvarez after a long at-bat and was ultimately pulled from the game without recording an out in the sixth. The All-Star lefty really labored in those last couple innings uncharacteristically. All-Star snub Dylan Lee came in to attempt to escape the jam and needed just 11 pitches to strike out the next three Mets, thoroughly extinguishing the threat, emphasizing his All-Star snub. That preserved Chris Sale’s line at 5.0 innings pitched, 3 runs allowed, but only 3 strikeouts.

Manaea’s night was over as the sixth inning started, and the Braves took advantage of the bullpen, as Mike Yastremski worked a leadoff walk and Joey Bart scalded an RBI double off the base of the wall. Jorge Mateo tried to move Bart to third on a bunt, but the Mets struggled to field it properly and he reached first, still with no outs. Dubon brought Bart home and moved Mateo to second on a groundout to the right side, giving the second baseman only one play. Two more groundouts ended the inning, but the score was a much more comfortable 8-3 going into the seventh inning.

JR Ritchie entered the game with the additional insurance runs and grazed Francisco Lindor’s jersey to give the Mets a baserunner, but worked his way out of the inning on two strikeouts and a soft groundout. A Michael Harris single and Mike Yastrzemski homer gave the Braves another two runs in the seventh, making it a 10-3 ballgame.

Ritchie got himself into some trouble in the eighth with a single, walk, and single, all with two outs. He got out of it with a strikeout to keep the score at 10-3. Walks from Albies and Dubon preceded an Austin Riley homer to cement the blowout, making it a 13-3 game, his first homer since May 20th. Hopefully that is the beginning of a hot-hitting July for Austin. At this point the Mets went the position-player-pitching route and Michael Harris capitalized with a solo homer to the Chop House. With the massive cushion, Ritchie got the ninth and worked around a single to close out the game, covering 3.0 innings to give the bullpen a nice rest.

Join us tomorrow as the Braves go for a four-game series win at 12:30 PM ET.

Mets' July skid continues with 14-3 loss at Braves

The Mets are on a three-game skid after dropping Saturday's 14-3 game at the Atlanta Braves.

Takeaways

  1. Left-handed starting pitcher Sean Manaea allowed six earned runs for the first time since April 29, a 14-2 loss to the Washington Nationals, but was on the unfortunate end of a three-run double that bloated his 5.16 ERA. He threw a 1-0 cutter at 86 mph with two outs and the bases loaded in the third inning against Eli White, whose  to shallow center field sawshortstopFrancisco Lindor and center fielder Tyrone Taylor seemingly miscommunicate before the ball dropped and buried the Mets (36-53). The play was ruled a double instead of an error, leaving Manaea (1-4) on the hook. He subsequently surrendered Mauricio Dubón's one-out solo shot in the fourth inning to put New York down 6-0 before bouncing back with a perfect fifth, ending the night with six hits while striking out four and walking one on 108 pitches (72 strikes). Manaea gave the Mets some length despite his mixed outing, which included White's second-inning solo shot and Michael Harris II's third-inning single that scored Drake Baldwin to put the Braves (52-35) ahead by two runs early, but the damage was done.
  2. Taylor, in his fifth game back from a rehab assignment for a right hip flexor strain, homered. He went yard for the first time since May 17, taking Chris Sale deep with two outs in the fifth inning on a 1-2 fastball at 96 mph and giving the Mets -- trailing 6-1 -- a pulse.
  3. Taylor's fourth home run of the season set the stage for first baseman Mark Vientos, whose two-run homer on Sale's 2-2 fastball at 98 mph in the sixth inning had the Mets down 6-3 and within striking distance. Vientos 11th long ball of the year pumped more life into New York, but Atlanta's subsequent two-run innings in the sixth and seventh against right-handed relief pitcher Austin Warren -- he allowed four runs on four hits over his two frames while throwing 44 pitches (28 strikes) -- pushed the game back out of reach.
  4. The Mets are 0-3 to start July, losing three straight after they dropped Wednesday's 9-3 series finale at the Toronto Blue Jays and opened their four-game set in Atlanta with Friday's 5-3 defeat. New York has lost 12 of its past 14 games as it looks to salvage a split of the holiday weekend at Truist Park. Since last Friday's firing of Carlos Mendoza after two-plus years as the Mets' manager and move to Andy Green in the interim, New York is 2-6. Not much has changed for the Mets in a week, and questions linger about how many more moves should be made with eight more games until the 2026 MLB All-Star break -- and, soon enough, the Aug. 3 trade deadline.

Who's the MVP?

White, who ultimately drove home four of the Braves' first five runs to fuel a fuel a 5-0 lead through three innings that put Atlanta in command against New York.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets have a quick turnaround with Sunday's 12:30 p.m. game at the Braves.

Right-hander Nolan McLean (5-5, 3.78 ERA) is set to start for New York while Atlanta goes with southpaw Martín Pérez (6-5, 3.27 ERA).

Barbecue sauce: Phillies 6, Royals 1

Jul 4, 2026; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Philadelphia Phillies starting pitcher Jesús Luzardo (44) delivers a pitch against the Kansas City Royals during the third inning at Kauffman Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Denny Medley-Imagn Images | Denny Medley-Imagn Images

Jesus Luzardo continued his good run of form with an Independence Day gem as the Philadelphia Phillies (50-39) cruised to a 6-1 victory in their series opener against the Kansas City Royals (35-54).

Luzardo retired the first eight batters of the game, which included striking out the side in the second inning, before allowing an infield single to the speedy Tyler Tolbert in the third, who had two hits and two steals on the night.

Luzardo struck out nine, the fifth time he’s done so this season and third time in his last four starts. It was his fifth straight start going 5+ innings with two or fewer earned runs and the eighth time in his last nine starts.

The Royals’ Michael Wacha held serve with Luzardo early but succumbed in the top of the fourth. After a one-out single by Bryson Stott, JT Realmuto and Gabriel Rincones, Jr. hit back-to-back homeruns to make it 3-0.

The Royals scored their only run in the bottom of the fourth after a one-out double by Lane Thomas and an RBI single by Nick Loftin.

Alec Bohm got that run back in the sixth inning with a leadoff homer, his 11th of the season.

The Phillies tacked on another run in the seventh thanks to some heads up baserunning by Trea Turner, who went third to home on a wild pitch by Royals’ reliever, Lucas Erceg.

Doubles by Rincones and Bohm added one more run to close the scoring in the eighth inning.

Jonathan Bowlan, Orion Kerkering and Tim Mayza each pitched a scoreless frame to shut the door for Luzardo and added to his nine K’s with six of their own.

On the night he was named as an All Star Game starter, Brandon Marsh was the only starter not to record a hit and extended his baseless streak to nine plate appearances. Kyle Schwarber had three hits, all singles.

Game two of their visit to Kansas City will take place tomorrow afternoon as Aaron Nola is scheduled to face off against young righthander, Luinder Avila.

White Sox pick up a big win in Cleveland to get back to a tie for first

Sean Burke put on a pitching clinic against a chippy Guardians offense. | Jamie Sabau-Imagn Images

After two nights of being walked off, the White Sox reversed course, pushing to a 3-1 lead late and then locking the win up with zero drama. In the process, Sean Burke dazzled through six with a career-high strikeout night, Colson Montgomery celebrated a year since his debut by putting two of the three runs on the board, and Grant Taylor saved the lead by blanking Cleveland in the ninth.

But before we break down the game, let’s take a moment to celebrate Miguel Vargas, who was selected to represent the White Sox in the All-Star Game!

A first-inning walk to Vargas would haunt Parker Messick as Colson Montgomery celebrated the first anniversary of his MLB debut with a broken-bat RBI double:

Burke dazzled in the second inning, with two strikeouts, then notched his 100th strikeout of the season in the bottom of the third with back-to-back Ks, blanking Cleveland once more.

Burke collected his seventh strikeout in the bottom of the fourth, but in the next frame Austin Hedges knotted the game with a homer. Cleveland threatened to take the lead after a Steven Kwan one-out triple, but he was caught in a pickle after the Guardians called for an ill-advised contact play. Burke tidied things up with a punch out of Chase DeLauter, A rundown with Kwan and a strikeout kept Burke away from any further damage, ending the frame at 1-1.

Burke smelled a career high in Ks in the sixth, striking out the first three batters he saw to push is total to 11. However, because Drew Romo couldn’t find the ears on a K of Kahlil Watson, Watson scampered safely to first. Despite the speedster then stealing second and third, but Burke escaped the jam by coaxing Cooper Ingle to ground out to first.

The White Sox offense ultimately did enough for the win, but didn’t act with enough haste to earn Burke a much-deserved win.

Speaking of that sleepy offense, Colson Montgomery opened the eighth by driving in his second run of the game, a solo homer to make it 2-1:

Peters doubled to start the ninth and advanced to third on a failed pickoff attempt. Romo picked up a four-pitch walk, and with a sac fly, Vargas sent Peters home for a much-needed insurance run.

Brandon Eisert was fabulous in his two innings of relief of Burke (and vultured the win from him), then handed the ball to Grant Taylor for the save. stepped in to close out the ninth. The win broke a a nine-game losing streak at Progressive Field for the White Sox over the last two years, and knotted the two clubs back up at the top of the AL Central.


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Phillies bring all the fireworks to Royals’ fourth straight loss

Michael Wacha, wearing the special Independence Day uniform, throws a pitch
KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - JULY 04: Michael Wacha #52 of the Kansas City Royals throws against the Philadelphia Phillies in the first inning at Kauffman Stadium on July 04, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Ed Zurga/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Royals fell to the Phillies 6-1 after Michael Wacha allowed four runs on three homers in six innings. This was Wacha’s first start after being named a 2026 American League All-Star. While it was among his worst starts of the season, it wasn’t a terrible start overall. He even struck out 7! But the Royals’ offense had almost nothing going for it. They managed only 5 hits and didn’t walk once while striking out 15 times.

Bobby Witt Jr., just named an All-Star starter for the first time, went 0-for-4 with a strikeout. Jac Caglianone and Carter Jensen struck out a combined 5 times. Tyler Tolbert was the only Royal to reach base more than once. He hit a pair of singles and stole a base each time. His season OPS has now almost reached Salvador Perez’s.

Lucas Erceg pitched the seventh and gave up a run. Jose Cuas, just back up with Stephen Kolek returning to the Family Medical Emergency List, pitched an inning and gave up a run. Beck Way got the ninth and pitched a scoreless inning. He allowed a single and a walk, but he’s the only reliever who got a strikeout. So.

The game was over early when Wacha gave up back-to-back home runs to J.T. Realmuto (with one on) and rookie Gabriel Rincones Jr. in the fourth inning. The Royals scored their run in the bottom of that inning when Lane Thomas doubled down the third base line, advanced to third on a Caglianone groundout, and scored on a Nick Loftin infield single. That single broke an 0-for-23 slide for Nick.

Just to rub salt in the wound, Jonathan Bowlan pitched the seventh for the Phillies, striking out three in a row after allowing a leadoff single to Starling Marte. Clearly, no one was paying any attention to the game as you could hear the sounds of fireworks being fired all around Kauffman Stadium for most of the second half of the contest. I managed to turn the broadcast off before they did their usual annoying thing of attempting to broadcast a postgame show from directly underneath the after-game fireworks display. I don’t know who decided it was a good idea to do that every home Friday game, but it makes for a truly awful television experience, regardless of whether the Royals won.

The Royals will appear again tomorrow afternoon. Not on Royals TV, though. This game will be a national broadcast on Peacock at 2 PM CDT. Luinder Avila will face off against Aaron Nola. Do what you want with that information.

Orioles’ offense puts on fireworks show in Independence Day win, 8-5

CINCINNATI, OHIO - JULY 03: Samuel Basallo #29 of the Baltimore Orioles celebrates with teammates after hitting a two-run home run during the third inning of a baseball game against the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park on July 03, 2026 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Jeff Dean/Getty Images) | Getty Images

On America’s 250th birthday, the Orioles celebrated in style.

The Birds’ bats dazzled with some early fireworks, roughing up Reds fireballer Hunter Greene for eight runs in the first four innings, and the O’s held the line from there for an 8-5 victory in Cincinnati. Brandon Young struggled early but hung in to earn his seventh win, freshly minted All-Star Adley Rutschman had a pair of doubles, and new closer Tyler Wells notched his second save in as many nights.

One might have thought the Orioles were unlucky to be the first team this season to face All-Star flamethrower Hunter Greene, who was making his season debut for the Reds after undergoing surgery in March to remove bone chips from his elbow. Greene was the hardest-throwing starting pitcher in baseball in 2025, and if you thought he might need some time to ramp up to full velocity, uh, think again. In the first inning alone, Greene fired 11 pitches clocked at over 100 mph.

But that doesn’t mean the Orioles were intimidated. Gunnar Henderson lined Greene’s first pitch of the year, a 100.3-mph four-seamer, straight up the middle for a single. With two outs, Pete Alonso worked a walk after a fantastic, nine-pitch at-bat, five of which were triple digit heaters. That brought up Samuel Basallo, who similarly worked the count full.

On 3-2, Greene tried to pump another fastball past Basallo. Mistake. Samuel was more than ready for it, connecting right on the barrel and smashing it deep into the right-center field seats. That, my friends, is an Earl Weaver Special. What a blast from the rookie on 100-mph heat against a tough pitcher. I like Samuel Basallo.

The Orioles had to be feeling pretty good at that point, handing a 3-0 lead to their de facto ace, Brandon Young. This was a rematch against the team Young faced in his major league debut last April — which was also against Greene, coincidentally — but this version of Brandon is much better than that overmatched rookie from last year. In his 13 starts this season before tonight, only once had Young allowed more than three runs. So this lead was definitely going to hold, no question about it.

Yeah, uh, about that. The Reds had other ideas, and it took them less than two innings to storm back and grab the lead for themselves. They plated one in the first on an RBI single by Eugenio Suárez, and things really escalated in the second. The first three batters of the inning all tagged Young for base hits — a single, double, and triple, in that order — and in a flash, the game was tied. Two batters later, Elly De La Cruz ripped a go-ahead RBI single to right, and the early 3-0 O’s lead had become a 4-3 deficit.

But fear not: the Orioles’ offense wasn’t done bashing Greene. The Hunter became the hunted, if you will. (Now I’m just recycling puns from my Hunter Greene recap last year.) The O’s knocked him out of the game with an extended fourth-inning rally, which began with a Colton Cowser single and a Leody Taveras walk. Jackson Holliday nearly mucked things up by trying to bunt, making one futile attempt that he popped up (foul, luckily) before Greene did his work for him by uncorking a wild pitch to advance the runners. The bunt now off, Holliday worked a walk to load the bases.

Up came Blaze Alexander, perhaps the best #9 hitter in the league, and he did his thing once again by lacing a two-run single to right field, putting the O’s back in front, 5-4. Two batters later, newly minted All-Star Adley Rutschman proved why he was selected, mashing his second double of the game to plate Holliday and Alexander.

The O’s lead was up to 7-4, and a visibly fatigued Greene was done for the night. He lasted just 3.2 innings and surrendered a career-worst eight runs, the last one scoring on a Pete Alonso RBI single off reliever Sam Moll. I know it was Greene’s first start of the year and maybe he’s rusty, but still, great job by the Birds’ bats to put up that kind of damage against one of baseball’s most intimidating pitchers.

Young, with new life, kept the Reds off the board from there, though he needed a little help. He tossed a scoreless fourth and fifth and returned for the sixth with his pitch count escalating. He allowed a leadoff walk and a sharp single, and at 102 pitches, he was done for the night. It wasn’t Young’s finest outing — five innings, four runs — but he owes a debt of gratitude to Grant Wolfram, who escaped Young’s two-on, no-out jam on just three pitches by inducing a double play and a groundout to second.

In the seventh, it was Wolfram’s turn to get into trouble with a leadoff walk, and Yennier Cano wasn’t quite as generous at bailing him out. The inherited run scored on a Suárez RBI single to make it 8-5, though Cano didn’t allow any runs of his own. The O’s caught a break prior to that when JJ Bleday bounced a hit into right field and greedily tried to take second base, only to get thrown out by Taveras. If not for that baserunning blunder, the Reds might’ve put together a more threatening rally.

Andrew Kittredge mowed through a perfect eighth and, with a three-run lead in the ninth, Craig Albernaz again entrusted Tyler Wells with a save situation. Wells, the closer replacement for the injured Ryan Helsley, was seeking to record saves in back-to-back games for the first time in his career.

He got it done, but it wasn’t easy. A De La Cruz leadoff single and Sal Stewart walk immediately brought the potential tying run to the plate with nobody out. Hoo boy. Can’t we just have one stress-free win? But Wells locked it down from there, retiring Bleday on a foulout, Suárez on a fly to center — on a nifty running catch by Cowser — and Nathaniel Lowe on a popout to short. Nice job by Tyler to not let that inning get away from him.

Orioles win! The Birds now head into Sunday’s finale with the chance to earn their first sweep since late May and their first four-game winning streak of the season. And maybe they’ll give O’s fans a reason to feel just a little bit more optimistic about this team.

Colorado Rockies vs. San Francisco Giants OVERFLOW THREAD

DENVER, COLORADO - JULY 4: Sean Sullivan #45 of the Colorado Rockies pitches to Luis Arraez #1 of the San Francisco Giants in the first inning at Coors Field on July 4, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Dustin Bradford/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s been a weird night at Coors Field. It started with a weather delay, and then there was another delay after home plate umpire Scott Barry was hit with a foul tip and was removed from the game. The Rockies are currently down 6-3.

Once again, there has been a lot of action in the comments that we decided it warranted an overflow thread for the final 4+ innings!

As a reminder, here are the lineups:

Corbin Carroll and Eduardo Rodriguez named to NL All-Star roster

Pic by @Dbacks, via Twitter

The National League All-Star roster was announced tonight. The inclusion of Corbin Carroll wasn’t really a surprise. He gets his third selection in four years, coming into tonight ranked 6th for bWAR among position players in the league, at 3.3 wins. But in addition, Eduardo Rodriguez was also named to the squad, and that’s a bit of a surprise – not least because this is his first selection in his 11th season in the majors. However, his 2.21 ERA is fourth in the NL, and his 3.7 bWAR is fifth among pitchers, so you’d be hard-pushed to argue that Rodriguez does not deserve his spot.

Through 86 games, Eduardo’s ERA is the lowest by a qualified pitcher on the Diamondbacks for 17 years, since Dan Haren 2.16 figure in 2009. Randy Johnson’s 1.77 in 2000 is the only other which is better than the current campaign by Rodriguez. It’s a startling – and very welcome – turnaround for Eduardo, who struggled to an ERA above five in both 2024 and 2025. After signing a four-year, $80 million contract in December 2023, he is now well on the way towards rescuing it from the abyss of all-time awfulness, on the edge of which this deal was certainly teetering. Hopefully it’ll continue for the remainder of its duration.

Carroll’s season has been almost as fabulous as the one he put up last year, which got him an All-Star selection, a Silver Slugger award and sixth place in the NL MVP voting. His OPS is just fifteen points down (.883 vs. 868) on the 2025 figure, and his ten triples not only lead the majors, they have propelled him to the all-time franchise career mark in that department. The honor pulls Corbin into a tie with team-mate Ketel Marte on three All-Star nominations. Among position players, only Paul Goldschmidt (6) and Luis Gonzalez (5) have more, with Randy Johnson (5) joining that pair from the mound.

Dodgers vs. Padres: game chat

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 20: Yoshinobu Yamamoto #18 of the Los Angeles Dodgers reacts during the second inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Dodger Stadium on June 20, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ryan Sun/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Yoshinobu Yamamoto meets the Padres for the second straight week.

Saturday’s game info

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

San Diego Padres at Los Angeles Dodgers

LOS ANGELES, CA - JULY 03: Jackson Merrill #3 of the San Diego Padres celebrates during the game between the San Diego Padres and the Los Angeles Dodgers at UNIQLO Field at Dodger Stadium on Friday, July 3, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Nicole Vasquez/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

San Diego Padres (43-44) at Los Angeles Dodgers (58-31), July 4, 2026, 7:10 p.m. PST

Watch: Padres.TV

Location: Dodger Stadium – Los Angeles, Calif.

Listen: 97.3 The Fan



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Jacob Latz is an All Star

ARLINGTON, TEXAS - JUNE 19: Jacob Latz #67 of the Texas Rangers reacts after the final out is made to defeat the San Diego Padres at Globe Life Field on June 19, 2026 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Sam Hodde/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Texas Rangers reliever Jacob Latz has been named to the American League All Star team, it was announced today. He is the Lone Ranger representative.

Earlier this year I said I would be surprised if Latz made the All Star team, something I based more on how players are selected and the overall numbers game rather than the merits of his case. Since then, though, he’s built an even stronger case, particularly with a great June that saw him named A.L. Reliever of the Month, such that at this point I’m not surprised he got the nod.

Latz is tied for third in the American League in saves, with 18. He has a 1.71 ERA in 42 innings over 33 games.

D-backs vs. Brewers Discussion

YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, WYOMING -JULY 23: Grand Prismatic Spring, Yellowstone's largest hot spring, is nearly 300 feet wind and 121 feet deep. The thermophiles give the spring its vibrant colors on the edge on July 23, 2024 in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming. (Photo by Jonathan Newton/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Today’s Lineups

BREWERSDIAMONDBACKS
Brice Turang – 2BKetel Marte – 2B
Christian Yelich – DHGeraldo Perdomo – SS
Jake Bauers – LFCorbin Carroll – RF
William Contreras – CGabriel Moreno – DH
Garrett Mitchell – CFAdrian Del Castillo – C
Andrew Vaughn – 1BNolan Arenado – 3B
Sal Frelick – RFMax Kepler – LF
Cooper Pratt – SSIldemaro Vargas – 1B
Joey Ortiz – 3BTommy Troy – CF
Brandon Woodruff – RHPMerrill Kelly – RHP

Happy Fourth of July, folks. May you all leave this holiday, in possession of exactly the same number of fingers with which you entered it. The depth of this preview is potentially constrained by the burgers and hot dogs being ready, at which point, it will come to a rapid conclusion, as I make a beeline for the dining room. Until then, I’ll do what I can. We’ll see whether Kelly can end his losing streak, currently at five consecutive appearances. He’s the first D-back since Shelby Miller in 2017 to lose five starts in a row. Miller also did it the year before. The last to lose six in a row was the Big Unit in June/July 2008. A rare bad spell by Johnson, with a 7.94 ERA in those six starts.

The franchise record holder, however, is Edgar Gonzalez, who dropped seven consecutive L’s during the trauma that was the 2004 season. He started ten times that year, and went 0-9 with a 9.32 ERA. The tenth? Well, that was easily his best start of the year: a Game Score of 64, thirteen points more than any other start. He took a shutout into the seventh, and allowed two runs over seven, but Mike Fetters coughed up four runs immediately in relief, and the D-backs lost that as well. One more fun fact, Silvino Bracho appeared in 24 consecutive losses as a D-back, including his first 23 appearances of 2016. He only took the L in two of those.

And with that, I hear the sultry sounds of Mrs. S yelling from elsewhere in the house. So that’s my sign! See you in the thread, post-dinner.