Why the Mets are taking a chance on promoting top prospect A.J. Ewing and what scouts see

The Mets are desperate, obviously. They had to try something, anything to give angry fans a reason to cling to any sort of hope at Citi Field as a six-game homestand opens Tuesday night. Or, in truth, a reason not to boo from the jump.

So here come A.J. Ewing, and under ordinary circumstances David Stearns wouldn’t be calling up a 21-year old kid with all of 12 games at Triple-A under his belt. But under these circumstances it’s the right move to make, and not just because Stearns knows that fans want to run him out of town.

That is, it’s right because Ewing might just have the game to make it pay dividends.

At least that’s the opinion of scouts I’ve spoken to, before and after Monday night’s decision, via sources, to call up Ewing.

“If you’re looking for a spark, like they are, he’s got the game to bring energy,” one scout told me Monday night. “He’s got great speed. He’ll steal a base, he’ll make a diving play. He gets really good jumps in the outfield -- he’s a natural in center field.

“Whether he’ll hit major league pitching right away, that’s always the toughest thing to project. But he’s got the tools for it. His swing is short and quick to the ball, and he has a knack for fouling off pitches to keep at-bats alive until he gets a pitch he can handle. He adapted quickly to Triple-A pitching, so I wouldn’t bet against him.”

As the Mets’ fourth-round pick out of high school in Ohio in the 2023 MLB Draft, the left-handed-hitting Ewing has exceeded projections as he has excelled offensively and moved up quickly in the minors.

Last season Ewing moved up two levels as he put up numbers, finishing the season in Double A, where he hit .339 in 28 games. He began this year in Double A and was hitting .349 with a 1.051 OPS after 18 games, forcing his way to Triple-A as he began to show power in addition to his contact skills.

He was hitting everything his first week in Triple-A, and though he cooled recently, he was still hitting .326 with a .392 on-base percentage at the time of his call-up, with five stolen bases -- and never caught stealing.

In short, he profiles as an obvious leadoff hitter, and you’d have to think he’ll be in that spot on Tuesday against the Detroit Tigers, which would allow Carlos Mendoza to slide Juan Soto back to the No. 2 or 3 spot, especially considering Soto has been slumping since being moved to leadoff himself.

 

“He’s got leadoff skills,” a second scout said of Ewing. “He gets into deep counts because he fouls off tough pitches and doesn’t chase a lot, but he’ll see a different caliber of pitching now, and that’s always the X factor, especially for someone making the jump so quickly.

“He could use more at-bats in Triple-A, where you usually see more spin, better command than you do in Double-A. So it’s not ideal, rushing him to the big leagues, but I understand why they’re doing it. He’s got a good approach, and he’s short and quick to the ball, which gives him an advantage over a lot of guys as far as having immediate success.”

Indeed, Ewing has made an impression with his ability to adapt at every level of the minors and continue to improve his offensive game.

For example, he recently made a huge jump in Baseball America’s ranking of prospects throughout the minors. He moved from No. 83 to the No. 37 overall prospect, based on the way he was tearing it up early this season.

After what Ewing did last season, the Mets were convinced he was keeper. Still, they weren’t thinking he’d be at Citi Field this soon, considering they made the gamble to trade for injury-prone Luis Robert, who is currently on the IL -- surprise, surprise.

In any case, I got a sense of just how high the Mets were on Ewing during spring training. I happened to be talking with a Mets’ person in the seats behind home plate when Ewing came to bat late in the first game of the Grapefruit League season. 

The bases were loaded with one out the time and Ewing worked a long at-bat, fouling off a few pitches before hitting a fly ball to center field, deep enough to score a run with a sacrifice fly.

“I love that at-bat,” the Mets’ person said. “He’s up there grinding, just trying to put the ball in play to get the run in, like he’s in a pennant race. He plays the game that way. He’s going to be our center fielder at some point.”

The person who was speaking certainly didn’t expect it to be just a few months later, in mid-May. Nobody did. Ewing is getting a chance only because Stearns couldn’t stand by and watch the season crumble without trying something.

And logic says it’s too soon. Yet Ewing’s fast rise through the minors, with success at every level, says maybe it’s not.

Cubs BCB After Dark: Is Ryan Rolison in the Circle of Trust?

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - MAY 5: Ryan Rolison #33 of the Chicago Cubs reacts in a game against the Cincinnati Reds at Wrigley Field on May 5, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Matt Dirksen/Chicago Cubs/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s another week here at BCB After Dark: the hippest hangout for night owls, early risers, new parents and Cubs fans abroad. Come on in and sit with us for a while. We’re always open for a friendly face. There’s no cover charge. The dress code is casual. We still have a few tables available. There’s a two-drink minimum, but it’s bring your own beverage.

BCB After Dark is the place for you to talk baseball, music, movies, or anything else you need to get off your chest, as long as it is within the rules of the site. The late-nighters are encouraged to get the party started, but everyone else is invited to join in as you wake up the next morning and into the afternoon.

Last week I asked you if you would like the Cubs to trade for an injured Tarik Skubal on the hope that he would be healthy and his old dominant self by the playoffs. That idea seemed too risky for you, as 88 percent of you would rather the Cubs look elsewhere for starting pitching help. Presumably someone who was healthy at the time the deal was made.

Here’s the part where we listen to jazz and talk movies. You’re free to skip ahead if you want.


Tonight we’re featuring one of those fun Postmodern Jukebox videos. Postmodern Jukebox is the creation of pianist Scott Bradlee and here he’s joined by Gunhild Carling on vocals and trumpet and Aaron McLendon on drums.

This is ABBA’s “Dancing Queen” performed as a 1920s hot jazz number.


Dillinger was the surprise hit film of 1945 from Poverty Row studio Monogram Pictures. Directed by German exile Max Nosseck and starring a then-unknown Lawrence Tierney, Dillinger is a throwback to the gangster films of a decade earlier. The film received a Oscar-nomination for Best Screenplay for screenwriter Philip Yordan, but the script is nowhere near the best part of the film. Instead, Tierney’s cold and psychopathic portrayal of John Dillinger is what makes the film.

Monogram Pictures was one of the many, and arguably the most-successful, of the many small independent movie studios outside of the major or “Big Five” studios during the Golden Age of Hollywood. These studios specialized in churning out cheap films, often with lurid subject matter, that could turn a small profit even if they weren’t big hits. Dillinger broke out of that B-movie ghetto and became a huge hit in 1945, which led to more films from Monogram and producers the King Brothers that dealt with sensationalist themes. Its success also led to the Hays Code banning films made about real-life criminals for fear that they glamourized them.

The King Brothers never had any money to pay actors, but in this case, they wanted an unknown face, believing that the public wouldn’t accept a well-known actor as the infamous John Dillinger. They landed on Lawrence Tierney, who had only a few small credits to his name when he got the part. Tierney had spent more time in the Los Angeles County jail for fighting and being drunk and disorderly than he’d spent on-screen. But it was an inspired choice. I’m not sure what Tierney does on screen is acting so much as it is inhabiting the screen with a glowering presence. His Dillinger is a cold-blooded killer who shows no emotion when he decides to shoot one of his fellow outlaws or carve up a waiter who disrespected him years earlier with a broken beer mug. Ironically, it’s the lack of on-screen emotion that makes Tierney’s Dillinger so scary.

Tierney would go on to have a long career playing violent tough guys in crime pictures. Most of you probably remember him from his later work, which includes Reservoir Dogs (Quentin Tarantino was unsurprisingly a fan) and guest appearances on Star Trek: The Next Generation and Deep Space Nine.

The plot of Dillinger very loosely follows the career of the title gangster. He does crimes, gets arrested, breaks out, does more crimes again. He has a girlfriend Helen Rogers (Anne Jeffreys) who will become the infamous “woman in red” who betrays him. There’s a gang, and Dillinger’s relationship with the older Specs (Edmund Lowe) is a major theme of the film. Specs goes from a cellmate to a mentor to someone whom Dillinger battles for control of the gang once they get out. The always great Elisha Cook Jr. also plays one of the members of Dillinger’s gang.

Because Dillinger is about crime and came out in the heart of the noir period, some people claim that the film qualifies as a noir. But while there are some noir elements, it’s really a throwback to the gangster films of the 1930s. A man goes down a wicked path of crime and ends up paying the ultimate price is the story of The Public Enemy, Scarface, and Little Caesar. It’s a stretch to call Jeffrey’s Helen a femme fatale, even if she ends up betraying him. He pulls her into a life of crime rather than the other way around, for example. Most of the noir elements are just the way the film was shot with some of the trademark shadows and Dutch angles, but those were popular in a lot of films of the forties.

Another way that Dillinger reflects the gangster film tradition is that, in a cost-cutting move, they just re-use action scenes earlier crime pictures of the era, in particular director Fritz Lang’s 1937 film You Only Live Once. So there’s literally a different gangster film inside of this one.

Dillinger is a great example of how a low-budget film can turn a lack of money into an asset. The 70-minute runtime means that the plot has to be simple, tight and fast-moving. (That also meant that theaters could get in more showings of the film every night, bringing in even more money.) The lack of money for a big-name actor made them turn to Tierney, who is biggest reason to watch the film. Even the crime scenes that were reused from Lang were undoubtedly better than anything Nosseck could have shot.

Dillinger isn’t a great film. It’s Oscar-nomination aside, the script is more good rather than great. (Although looking at the other nominees, it’s a surprise it didn’t win.) But it’s certainly worth 70 minutes of your time just to see Tierney’s terrifying performance as John Dillinger.

Here’s the trailer for Dillinger.

Dillinger is on HBO Max, Watch TCM and there are free copies floating all over the internet as well. I believe it’s in the public domain.


Welcome back to everyone who skips the music and movies.

Last year, the Cubs built a pretty good bullpen out of castoffs. Two big pieces were Brad Keller, whom the Cubs signed on a minor league deal, and Drew Pomeranz, whom the Cubs acquired from the Mariners after he opted out of his minor league deal with the Mariners.

Both of those players went and signed free agent contracts elsewhere. This year, the potential “scrap heap to scrap iron” reliever just might be southpaw Ryan Rolison. Rolison was a first-round pick of the Rockies out of Ole Miss in 2018, which has got to be a good news/bad news thing for a college pitcher. The good news is that you’re a first-round pick. The bad news is that they’re expecting you to pitch for the Rockies.

Rolison was a top-five prospect for Colorado, as you might expect from a first-round pick. Scouts weren’t enamored with his pure stuff which graded out as more average, but he got good grades for plus command and “pitchability,” or the ability to mix up his stuff to keep hitters off balance.

But Rolison battled injuries during his time with the Rockies, which included two shoulder surgeries and a broken finger. He finally made it to the majors last year, but by that time he’d been moved to the bullpen full-time. He also didn’t pitch well in Colorado, putting up a 7.02 ERA in 42.1 innings. Even for the Rockies, that’s bad.

This winter, Rolison got stuck in waiver wire purgatory. The Rockies designated him for assignment in November and they ended up trading him to the Braves for cash. The Braves tried to sneak him through waivers in December, but the White Sox claimed him. Then, just two days before Christmas, the White Sox designated him for assignment with the Cubs claiming him in early January.

Rolison made his Cubs debut on April 14 as the Cubs bullpen was decimated with injuries. But he only pitched one inning until April 24 when he pitched three scoreless innings in that dramatic comeback win over the Dodgers.

Since then, Rolison has gotten his name called more often from manager Craig Counsell. Not only did he get the win in that Dodgers game, he improved his record to 3-0 with wins in back-to-back games against the Reds. Rolison has an ERA of 4.00 even, most of which was earned in a game against the Diamondbacks where he gave up a three-run home run to Geraldo Perdomo. Not good, but he’s not the first one to mess up against Perdomo and he won’t be the last.

But can Rolison keep it up? This article by Matthew Trueblood argues that he (probably) can. For one, Rolison has added about 1.3 miles per hour on to his fastball this year and it features a bit more vertical rise. But the more interesting point that Trueblood makes is that Rolison is uniquely qualified to take advantage of the new strike zone this year. As others have noted, the strike zone as called by ABS is slightly smaller than what had been called in previous years. In particular, there is less room at the top of the zone. Trueblood argues Rolison’s command and movement allows him to work the top of the zone better than a lot of pitchers out there.

Now maybe that’s true and maybe it isn’t. You can read the article and make up your mind for yourself. But tonight I’m asking you if you think that Rolison is going to be a critical member of the Cubs bullpen this year. I’m essentially asking a “circle of trust” question and whether or not you think he will be in or close enough to the circle of trust to stay in the Cubs bullpen all year.

I’m giving you three options to pick from. The first is that you think Rolison will pitch well enough to stay in the majors all season—or at least only make one short trip back to Iowa. The second option is that he doesn’t earn a permanent spot in the ‘pen, but that he rides the “Des Moines shuttle” between the majors and Triple-A most of the year. Rolison has an option left, so as long as the Cubs leave him on the 40-man, he can go back and forth betwen the majors and the minors.

The final option is that you don’t think Rolison will continue to pitch well and that eventually he’ll be designated for assignment. I put “injured” in with this choice as well. I don’t know how you could possibly predict that Rolison will suffer an injury that will cost him much or all of the season, but I have to admit that’s a real possibility with every pitcher. So I put it in with the DFA option because I didn’t want to put any of you on the record thinking that a Cub is going to get hurt.

Thank you for stopping in tonight. It’s always good to see you. We hope you’ve enjoyed being here as much as we’ve enjoyed hosting you. Travel home safely. Don’t forget any personal items. Recycle any cans and bottles. Tip your waitstaff. And join us again tomorrow evening for more BCB After Dark.

Arizona Diamondbacks 1, Texas Rangers 0: Love to Slurve You, Baby

LOS ANGELES - 1979: Singer Donna Summer poses for a portrait in 1979 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Harry Langdon/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Record: 20-20. Pace: 81-81. Change on 2025: -1.

It’s amazing to think that, not long ago, the D-backs’ rotation was going through one of the most wretched sequences in team history. On May 1st, here’s what Arizona’s starting pitchers had done over the previous two turns through the rotation:
AZ rotation: 39 IP, 67 H, 48 ER, 24 BB, 33 SO, 11.08 ERA
It was enough to compel manager Torey to have a meeting – unusually, with the entire group – when the team was in Chicago. “I let them know what was on my mind,” Lovullo said – adding ominously, “It was a one-way conversation.”

Well, whatever he said, I hope it’s available in a format suitable for framing. Because it’s as if the talent switch was flicked in their brains, to the ON position. Tonight was just the latest example, Michael Soroka tossing 6.1 scoreless innings as the D-backs battled their way to the second 1-0 win of the season (the first being on April 1 against Detroit). That’s now seven starts in a row where the starter has gone six-plus innings, and in all but one of those, they have also allowed one or zero runs. The total numbers across this period:
AZ rotation: 47.2 IP, 27 H, 8 ER, 15 BB, 40 SO, 1.51 ERA

I guess it’s kinda galling that the team is only 4-3 in that time, because the offense has been as limp and flaccid as… [looks over shoulder at SB Nation’s Standards and Practices department] a limp, flaccid thing. But on the other hand, we’re at the quarter-mark on the season, and the team has already picked up four wins where they scored two runs or fewer. They only had five such victories in all of 2025, and just two in 2024. For what it’s worth, the Diamondbacks are also 12-1 when scoring more than five runs. We know what a problem that was last season: Arizona was only 4-3 when scoring 11+ runs in 2025.

What this all means, I don’t really know. It certainly makes for exciting baseball, when every swing of the bat could result in a lead change. It also makes for quick games, which the recapper welcomes. This one lasted only 2:21, and it would have been less except for Texas making every single one of their pitching changes in the middle of an inning. And there were a few, despite the score. Planned starter Nathan Eovaldi was scratched, and so the Rangers had to go with a bullpen game. Probably less an issue for them than most teams, considering they came in with an MLB-best 2.80 ERA, close to half a run better than anyone else.

The late change in plans didn’t seem to bother Arizona. Three batters in, they took a 1-0 lead, Geraldo Perdomo following up Corbin Carroll’s double, with one of his own. Little did we know that it would be the last time either side would cross home plate. Indeed, scoring opportunities in general would be few and far between. The best probably came to the D-backs in the eighth. With one out, Ketel Marte doubled, Carroll walked, and Perdomo singled to left, loading the bases. But Jose Fernandez went down swinging (he’s now 3-for-26 since April 26th, with nine strikeouts) and Ildemaro Vargas (5-for-36 since briefly brushing .400) grounded out.

Meanwhile, the Rangers only had three at-bats with a runner in scoring position. All of them came in the bottom of the opening frame. Marte booted what should have been an double-play, after the first two Rangers singled off Soroka. He still got the hitter at first, so it won’t go down as an error. But it meant Texas had men on second and third with one out, rather than just third with two outs. Fortunately, Soroka got out of the jam, helped by a key strikeout of Josh Jung, and was never trouble thereafter. Arizona was helped by some key plays on defense: Gabriel Moreno nailed a SB attempt, Ryan Waldschmidt had a fine catch in center (above), and Taylor Clarke picked a runner off first.

Soroka seemed to get better as he went on. He retired 11 batters in a row before allowing a lead-off single in the sixth, and was remarkably efficient with it. After needing 23 pitches in the first, thanks in part to Marte, his pitch counts for the next four innings were 13, 12, 6 and 8. Soroka did need 24 pitches for the sixth, and that might be why he was pulled with one out in the seventh. He was at 89 pitches, which is about his average. It’s worth noting that while he did go over 100 against the White Sox, his next time out was far and away his worst start of the year. So this might have been Lovullo playing the long game, ensuring Michael isn’t overtaxed.

The bullpen did it’s duty, with Brandyn Garcia finishing the seventh, Clarke working the eighth, and Paul Sewald notching his ninth save. He’s our first closer since Brad Boxberger in 2018 to reach that number of saves in the first 40 games. That did involve him facing Corey Seager with two outs. Of course, we all remember Game 1 of the 2023 World Series, where Seager hit a game-tying 2-run homer off Sewald, Texas winning in extra innings. Tonight though, Sewald hit Seager instead, on the ankle. While that brought the winning run to the plate, a harmless fly-ball ended the game, and the D-backs were back to .500 again.

You’ll have noticed the offense is notable by its absence from this recap. That’s because the offense were, again, notable by their absence. They could muster only six hits and two walks. Nolan Arenado doubled and singled, as did Perdomo, while Carroll drew both walks in addition to his double. But in the end, they did just enough to secure victory.

Click here for details, at Fangraphs.com
I Feel Love: Michael Soroka, +44%
He Works Hard for The Money: Sewald, +19%; Clarke, +14%; Perdomo, +11%
Macarthur Park: Ildemaro Vargas, -14%

A bright and energetic Gameday Thread, passing 300 comments without difficulty. If we were still playing the Mets, I’d continue the musical theme and nominate Dan’s version of Money For Nothing. But that joke’s time has passed and it’s too big to screen-cap. 🙂 So, instead, I’ll give it to the very Dan-adjacent TheRealRamona:

Same two teams tomorrow, and we will see whether a) the offense wakes up, and b) the rotation can keep up its miraculous resurrection. Zac Gallen starts, with first pitch in Texas at 5:05 pm. See you then! I’m off to watch 20 Million Miles to Earth.

Mariners beleaguered bullpen busts through, blasts ‘Stros in 3-1 win

May 11, 2026; Houston, Texas, USA; Seattle Mariners pitcher Andres Munoz (75) celebrates after getting the final out during the ninth inning against the Houston Astros at Daikin Park. Mandatory Credit: Troy Taormina-Imagn Images | Troy Taormina-Imagn Images

Three runs of offense and five innings from a starter aren’t the typical blueprint for a Mariners win, but the bullpen – missing two of its leverage arms – made those three runs hold up in a 3-1 victory in the series opener with the Astros.

This game got off to a frustrating start: the Mariners hit the ball hard in the first four batters but foul or into gloves – so of course the first hit to fall for the Mariners was an 87 mph exit velo parachute shot by Randy Arozarena with one out in the second. Astros starter Peter Lambert struggled with the zone after that, walking Luke Raley on five pitches and falling behind J.P. Crawford 3-1 before he lined out to Cam Smith in right field, but Dominic Canzone made sure the Mariners would get something out of the traffic, smoking a line drive (104.7 mph off the bat) that Astros left fielder Zach Cole couldn’t handle cleanly, allowing Arozarena to hustle home. Cole Young then ambushed a first-pitch fastball up but in the middle of the zone for his own hard-hit RBI single (103.6 mph EV) to give the Mariners a 2-0 advantage and also treat us to some vintage Luke Raley Running. Look at him chug home like he’s driving a chariot made out of scrap metal harvested from the shores of Lake Erie and tell me this does not spark joy:

Carrying forward the good vibes into the third, Julio eventually got his rightful homer. Crawford Boxes? He don’t need no stinkin’ Crawford Boxes. This was estimated at 414 feet but it feels like that pesky wall just got in the way of a ball that could have traveled deep into the heart of Texas.

But the offense would shut down after that, leading to a game that was closer than it probably needed to be, especially because George Kirby was good-not-great tonight. Last week I wrote about how Kirby has traded some of his strikeout stuff to become a groundball king in 2026, so today of course he decided to revert to 2025 Kirby, racking up seven strikeouts in his first four innings but also pushing his pitch count to 81 through those four innings. Kirby had to work around traffic in each of his first four innings as the Astros made him work, scattering base hits and walks but keeping the Astros from stacking a sustained threat. The biggest culprit for Kirby: a lack of first pitch strikes. Over those first four innings, he threw just seven of 17 first-pitch strikes, compared to 16 of 26 in his start against Atlanta.

Because he loves to be oppositional, right after I typed that paragraph Kirby immediately went back to throwing first-pitch strikes, throwing five of six in the fifth inning to bring his number up to a respectable ratio for the day. Because baseball loves to be oppositional even more, of course that was the inning where Kirby got stung by some bad batted-ball luck and porous infield defense to give up his first run of the day. It started, as most annoying Astros things do, with José Altuve ambushing a first pitch, this time parachuting a sweeper (77 EV) into center. Yordan Álvarez then punched a sinker that was in and off the plate for a single, because Yordan, and Paredes followed that with an RBI single on a sweeper that a rangy defensive shortstop gets to, but J.P. Crawford does not. Kirby was able to close things up from there without further damage on the scoreboard, but did take more damage to his pitch count, necessitating Dan Wilson to call on his bullpen about an inning before is ideal.

The Mariners hitters – who did not score after the Julio homer in the third, allowing Jose Espada to ride a wave of cromulence with Lambert and save his deeply crummy bullpen – didn’t do their part to give the Mariners’ beat-down bullpen any extra help. To their credit, Nick Davila delivered a scoreless bottom of the sixth and a flurry of puns on his name, as did Cooper Criswell, forced into a leverage spot facing the top of the Astros lineup in the seventh. Criswell did get some help from a strong diving play by Brendan Donovan (!) at third, who wolfed up a ball hit weakly in front of him to rob Altuve of yet another annoying infield single against the Mariners, but Criswell also somehow struck out Yordan swinging on a slider that looked like it landed right in the middle of the plate. So much talk this spring training about how tall Cooper Criswell is and not enough about how he is, apparently, a powerful wizard.

Speaking of powerful wizardry, you can’t spell “Boo, A Wizard!” without “Barzardo,” who bounced back nicely after a tough outing in Chicago to hang a Bazero in the bottom of the eighth, working around a leadoff walk but then obliterating his next three hitters, who looked very baffled by what Bazardo was sending to the plate. The element of surprise! Sometimes it works out.

Because of course the Mariners hitters failed to do anything in the ninth – except pinch-hitter Rob Refsnyder, who got a single off Astros lefty Bryan King to break up the long, long string of consecutive Mariners batters sent back to the bench – that meantAndrés Muñoz would be handed the same slender lead Davila, Criswell, and Bazardo all had to work with. Muñoz – subject of this excellent breakdown by Ryan Blake which you should read if you were otherwise engaged on Sunday – has hovered just this side of the dreaded “embattled” label this season, but he was nails tonight, disposing of the Astros despite yet another pesky Altuve single, ending on this strikeout of Álvarez on the changeup of all pitche,s in an at-bat wheretwo pitches before he hit a season-high 101.3 mph. It was a fantastic exclamation point on a night when the bullpen carried the day.

Not the typical route to a Mariners victory. But a necessary one, after the disappointment this weekend in Chicago, and an encouraging one, especially for the lesser-heralded bullpen arms. Tomorrow it will be Bryan Woo’s turn, and hopefully the Mariners hitters can provide him, and the hard-working bullpen, a little more offensive cushion.

Guardians Finally Win a Stress-Free Game

CLEVELAND, OH - MAY 09: Rhys Hoskins #8 of the Cleveland Guardians jogs to first after being intentionally walked in the tenth inning during the game between the Minnesota Twins and the Cleveland Guardians at Progressive Field on Saturday, May 9, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Leigh Bacho/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The Guardians had a blowout win tonight, 7-2, over a very bad baseball team in the Los Angeles Angels.

Brayan Rocchio finally got the team a hit with runners in scoring position in the second:

Daniel Schneemann got a bloop to fall for two RBI’s in the 3rd. Funny after all those hard hits I saw caught last series, including a screamer from Schnee:

Travis Bazzana closed out Cleveland’s scoring for the night with a two-run double:

The top five hitters in the Guardians’ lineup went 0-14… but they did take a combined six walks (2 from Steven Kwan, one from Chase DeLauter and THREE from Rhys Hoskins). Jose Ramirez hit a couple balls hard, but went 0 for 5 with a strikeout. It’ll sure be nice when he finally turns it around. But, if the bottom of the lineup goes 7 for 17 with four walks, we will see this team win a lot of baseball games while we wait.

Joey Cantillo was very good, going six scoreless, allowing five hits, one walk and striking out four. Matt Festa was shaky but threw a soreless inning, Colin Holderman and Peyton Pallette both gave up runs, but, hey, it didn’t matter so it doesn’t count.

Let’s see if the Guardians can clinch a series victory in the toughest matchup (on paper) of the series, with Slade Cecconi facing off against Walbert Urena.

All the small things: Rays 8, Andrés Giménez 5

TORONTO, CANADA - MAY 11: Chandler Simpson #14 of the Tampa Bay Rays steals second base against the Toronto Blue Jays during the second inning in their MLB game at the Rogers Centre on May 11, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (Photo by Mark Blinch/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Baseball, especially the Rays brand of baseball, relies on doing all the little things well. Baseball is also a very luck dependent sport. But, doing the little things can help manufacture some luck.

Perhaps no player exemplifies that more than Chandler Simpson. Simpson got things started right away, with a comebacker to Gausman, who was rushed to try and field it and took his attention and eyes off the ball litterally and figuratively trying to get the speedy Simpson. Once on first, Simpson drew even more attention even without running. A few pitches later Chandler was in motion allowing Junior Caminero to punch one the other way into a gaping wide hole drawn by the runner in motion. Of course once that ball found grass, Simpson was cruising into 3rd, allowing Jonathan Aranda to lift a fly ball to get the Rays on the board in the 1st.

The Rays weren’t done with Gausman in the 1st, and with some 2 out magic, Jake Fraley double and a Richie Palacios two RBI base hit gave the Rays an early 3-0 lead. They would expand that in the 2nd, with some more clutch and agressive base running. Hunter Feduccia got a single, followed by a Taylor Walls triple (it was a game for inexplicable contributions, more on that later) with Feduccia getting a good read and sprinting around to score 1st to home.

After a sharp Chandler Simpson grounder to a drawn in Vlad Jr, Vladdy was able to make an excellent throw home to get Walls just in time to save a run. However, that trade off meant Chandler was now on 1st. He would be on 2nd a few pitches later, swiping his 13th bag of the season. Aranda (again) got a broken bat liner to fall in to give the Rays a 5-0 lead.

With the Rays pitching lately that should have been all she wrote. And with Drew Rasmussen on the mound, things were looking good. In fact, Drew was fairly sharp today. 13 total whiffs, only 3 hard hit balls over the course of 6 innings with 4 scattered hits, 1 walk, and 6 strikeouts. However, there was one little thing that proved to be a thorn in the Rays side.

You probably guessed by the title of this recap who that is: light hitting defensive wiz Andrés Giménez. In the 2nd inning Rasmussen ran into a bit of trouble. After nearly working his way off the hook, Giménez stepped up to the plate with runners at 3rd and 1st, 2 out. Rasmussen fell behind and landed a sharp 97 MPH fastball busting him inside.

Absolutely no way that’s a dangerous or risky pitch. Especially not to Giménez. And yet, Andrés guessed correctly and was able to turn on it with just enough speed and just enough distance to just get out. About as many runs as the Rays have given up in any game in weeks and it came on one swing by a guy who had 3 HRs on the year. That’s luck and that’s baseball.

But again, you gotta generate your own luck and back to Chandler to provide some insurance. In the 4th, 2 outs and Guasman back to cruising along after a rough first two innings, Chandler Simpson worked the count full and hit a grounder to 1st that drew Vlad off the bag to field it. Chandler won the footrace with ease beating Gausman by a full length. Once on 1st, Gausman was cruising no more, clearly preoccupied with Simpson.

First two throw overs and then Gausman was up there balking around, which Chandler and the umps caught. Once on 2nd, even with Junior at the plate, the Rays and Chandler decided to keep the pressure ball on the very next pitch.

The steal 3rd force a throw and maybe you can generate a run play is a thing of beauty when it works, and with Chandler running it causes all sorts of chaos. Small ball, big rewards.

The game was all but decided there, but the drama still had some turns. Aranda who took the lead in the RBI race after his 2nd RBI of the night decided to celebrate that with a towering HR to center field.

Of course, when I talk about little things, and the Jays are involved, I have to talk about John Schneider, manager of the Jays and a small, petty man. After Aranda’s HR the next time up, Braydon Fisher who has normally excellent command, very few walks or HBP, threw his first pitch nearly behind Aranda drilling him in the back.

Rays were able to expand their lead after a couple of grounders to advance Aranda, and a 2 out base knock by Palacios. Small ball revenge, after Schneider’s feelings were hurt and he showed off his own small beanball.

Andrés Giménez would add another HR, this time of the 2-run variety, but that would just bring the score closer to eventually allow Bryan Baker to get his 11th save of the season (fittingly with a punchout to Andrés Giménez).

4o games into the season (around 25% of the season) is roughly around the time you start to know what a team is in baseball. With this win in game number 40 today, the Rays maintain their AL best 27-13 record.

This team does a lot of little things really well. This team confounds several bits of traditional wisdom. This team is an outlier.

Mostly, to paraphrase an expression of one of the Rays new employees: this team is fun!

20-22: Chart

HOUSTON, TEXAS - MAY 11: George Kirby #68 of the Seattle Mariners pitches in the first inning against the Houston Astros at Daikin Park on May 11, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Mariners 3, Astros 1

When Andrés Muñoz is happy: George Kirby, .17 WPA

When Andrés Muñoz is sad: J.P. Crawford and Brendan Donovan, -.08 WPA

Game thread comment of the day:

I gotta go with BirdNerd’s time to shine. Thanks for making us all smarter!

And BONUS CONTENT because it was too good to pass up:

Ryan Weathers lost nine pounds – and then a no-hitter and game he deserved to win

BALTIMORE — Ryan Weathers got violently ill, had to quarantine from his newborn, lost nine pounds, returned to the New York Yankees rotation with his rotation spot in jeopardy and promptly took a no-hitter into the seventh inning.

Yet all the toil of a turbulent two weeks went for naught.

Weathers, the Yankees left-hander turned over a one-hit shutout with one out in the seventh to his bullpen on Monday, May 11, only to see lefty Brent Headrick give up a towering three-run home run to Baltimore Orioles DH Coby Mayo.

Gone was the two-run advantage Weathers handed him. Moments later, the Yankees were stewing in their fourth consecutive loss, a 3-2 setback to the offensively impotent Orioles, a team they steamrolled in four games in the Bronx just a week ago.

It was not the outcome the Yankees expected. Nor was it anything Weathers deserved, not at this odd point in his career.

Weathers was working on eight days of rest, because he fell ill the day of his most recent start on May 2. He spent the next couple of days with his insides turned out, leading to the nine-pound weight loss.

A further indignity: Weathers and his wife Thayer welcomed their first child, Paul David Weathers, on April 22. Weathers’ virus meant he had to sleep on a different floor at home than wife and newborn.

“It’s definitely been a couple weeks, for sure,” says Weathers. “But that doesn’t stop me from doing my job.

“My job is to go out and compete and throw up as many zeroes and get as many outs as I can get.”

Adding to the drama: His time in the Yankees rotation was ticking down as he recovered. Left-hander Carlos Rodón returned from off-season elbow surgery on May 10; Rodón’s procedure largely spurred the Yankees to acquire Weathers from Miami in the off-season.

And ace Gerrit Cole has now made five rehab starts and should line up to rejoin the rotation by month’s end.

With his future in flux, Weathers went out and pitched the game of his life – even as he was unaware he was tossing a no-hitter.

He’d never thrown a complete game in 62 career starts and hadn’t thrown more than 101 pitches in a start this season. So at 85 pitches through six no-hit innings, it figured he wouldn’t finish a solo no-hitter.

Yet Weathers bedeviled the Orioles, striking out nine and using an almost equal four-pitch mix of changeup, his sinking and four-seam fastballs and sweeper. The no-hitter was intact until Adley Rutschman – the only Oriole who hit the ball hard off Weathers this night – poked a single to the right of second base.

When Weathers issued just his second walk of the game to Tyler O’Neill, manager Aaron Boone went and got him. With the Yankees suffering three narrow losses at Milwaukee before arriving here, relievers Tim Hill and Fernando Cruz were down.

Headrick was summoned to face the righty-swinging, but .158-hitting Mayo. Boone liked Headrick’s slider against Mayo. Mayo liked the slider Headrick threw him, clubbing it 389 feet out to left field.

A 2-0 lead became a 3-2 deficit. And with the Yankees struggling offensively, that was that.

And Weathers, through little fault of his own, was the losing pitcher.

New York Yankees pitcher Ryan Weathers delivers during the second inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on May 11, 2026.

“We’ve scored zero, three, three, two,” says Boone of the skid that started in Milwaukee. “Pitching’s been there. Continues to be there.

“We gotta get some guys unlocked. We got a handful of guys scuffling.”

None more than Jazz Chisholm, who went 0-for-4 with three strikeouts and is in an 8-for-48 slide, with one extra-base hit in that span. He refused comment after the game.

Despite the skid, the Yankees are still 26-16, though they now trail Tampa Bay by two games.

Weathers, too, has a deficit to make up: He has not gained back all of his nine pounds, noting he needed to re-hydrate initially and then coax some food down after a couple days.

“I’m sneaking,” he said of gaining back all the weight he lost off his 6-foot-1, 230-pound frame. “I’m sneaking.”

Just not quite enough to add a historic night to his career.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Ryan Weathers carries no-hitter into seventh, only for Yankees to lose

19-22 – Rangers silenced by Diamondbacks 1-0

May 11, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Texas Rangers center fielder Evan Carter (32) miss plays a ball during the first inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images | Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images

The Texas Rangers didn’t score a run but the Arizona Diamondbacks scored one run.

Everything you come to expect from a first inning at The Shed came to pass as the Rangers immediately allowed a first inning run and then wasted a chance for a first inning rally of their own with three consecutive outs with runners in scoring position.

And that was essentially the entire game. No joke. Nothing else happened.

Sure, Texas was put in an unfavorable position with a pregame Nathan Eovaldi ailment forcing them into a bullpen game but that bullpen allowed one run. The pitch totals and inning load is tomorrow’s problem.

Five members of that bullpen combined to produce a game that Eovaldi himself would have been happy with while the lineup collected four hits on the night, only two of which came after the second batter of the evening.

Everyone pinpointed the post-40 game mark for when the Rangers needed to step on the gas and instead, for game No. 41, the engine stalled, exploded, and the car tumbled off a cliff.

Player of the Game: Heaven knows it ain’t anyone from a lineup that let Michael Soroka shut them down for more than six innings.

We’ll go with Peyton Gray who tied Jakob Junis for a Ranger-high 2.2 innings. Unlike Junis, who allowed the first inning run that won the game for Arizona, Gray held Arizona scoreless with a team-high two strikeouts.

Up Next: The Rangers and Diamondbacks are back at it tomorrow night with LHP MacKenzie Gore looking to get right for Texas opposite RHP Zac Gallen for Arizona.

The Tuesday night first pitch from The Shed is scheduled for 7:05 pm CDT and you can catch it on the Rangers Sports Network.

Dodgers vs. Giants game IV chat

Los Angeles, CA - March 31: Shortstop Mookie Betts #50 of the Los Angeles Dodgers throws out Gabriel Arias (not pictured) of the Cleveland Guardians at first base in the fifth inning of a baseball game at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (Photo by Keith Birmingham/MediaNews Group/Pasadena Star-News via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images

The San Francisco Giants come to Dodger Stadium for the first time in 2026—Mookie Betts returns from the injured list.

Monday’s game info

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

Purple Row After Dark: It’s been a year. Grade Rockies manager Warren Schaeffer

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 11: (L-R) Manager Warren Schaeffer #4 and bench coach Jeff Pickler #61 of the Colorado Rockies look on from the dugout during the eighth inning against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park on April 11, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It seems impossible, but one year ago today, the Colorado Rockies fired then-manager Bud Black and named third-base coach Warren Schaeffer their interim manager.

On November 24, 2025, he was given the permanent position.

As Rockies president of baseball operations Paul DePodesta said at the press conference introducing Schaeffer as permanent manager,

“I certainly explored the idea [of exploring other managerial candidates],” he told the media. “I thought it was important to do that and talk to a lot of people about different potential candidates, but ultimately, this is where I landed. And it was pretty quick. I mean, I would say even a week in with the number of people that I had spoken to, both in the organization and outside the organization, about ‘Schaeff’ it became pretty clear to me that this was a good direction to go.”

Whether or not this was the right decision was a subject we’ve written about a lot (see here, here, here, here, and here, for example).

Despite the change, the Rockies still finished 2025 with a historically bad 43-119, and while they are better in 2026, many of the problems remain.

So, Purple Row Night Owls, here’s the question: How would you grade Warren Schaeffer’s first year as the Rockies manager?

Vote in the poll, and explain your evaluation in the comments!


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How to watch San Francisco Giants vs. Los Angeles Dodgers

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 04: Trevor McDonald #72 of the San Francisco Giants pitches against the San Diego Padres in the top of the first inning at Oracle Park on May 04, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The San Francisco Giants head south today to begin a four-game series against the Los Angeles Dodgers this afternoon.

Taking the mound for the Giants will be right-hander Trevor McDonald, who will be making his second start for the Giants this season. His first start was in the team’s 3-2 win over the San Diego Padres last Monday, in which he allowed just one run on two hits with eight strikeouts in seven innings.

He’ll be facing off against Dodgers right-hander Rōki Sasaki, who enters tonight’s game with a 5.97 ERA, 6.81 FIP, with 26 strikeouts to 15 walks in 28.2 innings pitched. His last start was in the Dodgers’ 3-2 loss to the St. Louis Cardinals on May 2nd, in which he allowed three runs on five hits with four strikeouts and two walks in six innings.

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Lineups

Giants

  1. Jung Hoo Lee — RF
  2. Luis Arráez — 2B
  3. Casey Schmitt — 1B
  4. Rafael Devers — DH
  5. Heliot Ramos — LF
  6. Willy Adames — SS
  7. Matt Chapman — 3B
  8. Harrison Bader — CF
  9. Jesús Rodríguez — C

RHP. Trevor McDonald

Dodgers

  1. Shohei Ohtani — DH
  2. Mookie Betts — SS
  3. Freddie Freeman — 1B
  4. Kyle Tucker — RF
  5. Will Smith — C
  6. Max Muncy — 3B
  7. Andy Pages — CF
  8. Teoscar Hernández — LF
  9. Hyeseong Kim — 2B

RHP. Rōki Sasaki

Game #41

Who: San Francisco Giants (16-24) vs. Los Angeles Dodgers (24-16)

Where: UNIQLO Field at Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles, California

When: 7:10 p.m. PT

Regional broadcast: NBC Sports Bay Area

National broadcast: n/a

Radio: KNBR 680 AM/104.5 FM, KSFN 1510 AM

Yankees’ offense short-circuits as Orioles rally late to take series opener

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - MAY 11: Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees looks on before batting against the Baltimore Orioles during the third inning at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on May 11, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Sometimes you just have to tell yourself it’s a long, long season. These are one of these days.

After a mildly depressing sweep at the hands of the Milwaukee Brewers over the weekend, the Yankees’ offense looked to break out against a pitching staff with considerably less firepower, one which they dominated last week in a four-game series at Yankee Stadium. With a depleted bullpen, they needed both length from Ryan Weathers and some offense to give the high-leverage guys some rest.

It all started according to plan with six no-hit innings by Weathers and an early home run by Ben Rice, but a perpetual struggle with runners in scoring position carried over from Milwaukee, and the O’s capitalized on their only real traffic of the night, stealing a 3-2 heartbreaker over the Yankees to mark their fourth consecutive defeat.

A trend in the first couple of innings for the Yankees’ offense was to make Brandon Young work, which is what they did in the first. Rice ripped a single after getting it to 3-2 and Cody Bellinger drew a two-out walk, only to be stranded by a weak fly ball from Jazz Chisholm Jr. Weathers got things started by working around a leadoff walk to put up a quick zero.

Both pitchers worked 1-2-3 second innings, but Young wasn’t as fortunate in the third. After walking Trent Grisham with one out, Rice worked another three-ball count before getting a 3-1 sinker up and driving it to left-center field for a home run into the bullpen. His 13th of the season, it put the Yanks up 2-0 in the third.

Weathers continued to be absolutely brilliant. He retired 13 consecutive hitters at one point, only getting into a tad of trouble when he walked Coby Mayo with one out in the fifth. He was able to get to scoring position after a mental blunder by Rice trying to turn a double play, but Weathers was able to strand that first real threat.

Aaron Judge led off the sixth with a double and got to third on a Cody Bellinger groundout to chase Young. Despite being in a prime tack-on scoring position, one-time Yankee farmhand Dietrich Enns struck out Chisholm and got a soft groundball out of Ryan McMahon, in which he had to bail out Pete Alonso at first base from a truly awful toss to first that would’ve been a run-scoring E3.

After another scoreless inning by Weathers, the Yankees once again stranded a runner at third following a one-out double by Max Schuemann when Grisham and Austin Wells both grounded out. The recent injuries, coupled with some deep slumps, have made this lineup a lot easier to navigate for a manager who has a lefty to deploy.

The Orioles didn’t have a hit through six innings, but just as Michael Kay started to talk about potential history afoot, Adley Rutschman fought off a 1-2 changeup out of the zone into right field for a leadoff single in the seventh. Tyler O’Neill worked a gritty walk with one out to finally chase Weathers. Brent Headrick came in to face the struggling Mayo, and he got revenge after getting spiked by Schuemann a few innings prior, golfing a fly ball into the left field seats for a crushing, go-ahead three-run homer.

It ruined a really great outing by Weathers, who only surrendered one hit on soft contact and walked O’Neill in a long at-bat after six no-hit innings. He has two runs on his ledger, though it was at least Headrick saddled with the loss.

After Headrick finished the inning, Rico Garcia tore through the heart of the Yankees’ order in the eighth. He was a Yankee very briefly during the summer last year, so it may hurt to see this guy utterly dominating for a division rival, but considering he was cut by the Mets twice last year as well, we aren’t alone in feeling left out.

Camilo Doval tossed a pretty solid bottom of the eighth to give the bottom of the order a chance in the ninth against Anthony Nunez. McMahon put a charge into the ball with one out, coming oh-so-close to a game-tying home run, but hit it to the (slightly) wrong spot and also a bit too high, allowing O’Neill to make a jumping catch.

Paul Goldschmidt extended the game with a two-out single and was pulled for José Caballero, who’s battling a finger issue. Despite that, the Yankees had him try to steal second to get in scoring position for Schuemann, but he was thrown out in plenty of time to end the game in 1926 World Series Game 7 fashion.

The Yankees will look to even this three-game set at Camden Yards tomorrow night at 6:35 pm. It’ll be Will Warren against a pitcher to be determined (likely Trevor Rogers back from illness). The offense is in need of another breakout and more eyes will be watching.

Box Score

Mets to call up A.J. Ewing

A.J. Ewing prepares to swing in a home white Binghamton Rumble Ponies uniform
A.J. Ewing | (Photo: Chris McShane)

The Mets are calling up top A.J. Ewing, their most exciting prospect right now, per a report by Will Sammon. The 21-year-old was drafted by the Mets in the fourth round in 2023, and he’s been even better this season than he was in his breakout year in the minors last year.

After finishing the 2025 season in Double-A Binghamton following two promotions earlier in that season, Ewing started this season back in Binghamton. But after hitting an outstanding .349/.481/.571 with two home runs and twelve stolen bases, he was promoted to Triple-A Syracuse.

Since that promotion, Ewing has appeared in twelve games at the highest level of the minors, and he’s hit .326/.392/.435 despite not hitting a home run yet at the level. He’s stolen five more bases since that promotion, too, giving him a total of 17 steals in a season that’s only seen him be caught stealing once.

There’s no word yet on who the Mets will cut to make room for Ewing on the active roster, but given the putrid state of the major league lineup, there are plenty of options. He’s played center field the overwhelming majority of the time this season, but he has played a good amount of second base in his professional career. He’s logged innings in both outfield corners, as well.

René Cárdenas, longtime Dodgers Spanish-language announcer, dies

Spanish-language play-by-play announcer Rene Cardenas (left), of the radio station KWKW, listens as baseball player Don Drysdale, of the Los Angeles Dodgers, talks about pitching strategy, Los Angeles, California, 1959. (Photo by PhotoQuest/Getty Images) | Getty Images

René Cárdenas, the Dodgers first Spanish-language play-by-play broadcaster when they moved to Los Angeles, died on Sunday at age 96.

Cárdenas started with the Dodgers in 1958, and helped train Jaime Jarrín, who joined him in the booth one year later. After four years in Los Angeles, Cárdenas moved to the expansion Houston Colt .45s, and also called one year of games for the Texas Rangers before returning to call Dodgers games from 1982-1998.

Born in Managua, Nicaragua in 1930, Cárdenas covered several sports, including baseball, before moving to the United States.

From José de Jesus Ortiz at La Esquina:

“Rene was a true pioneer in our industry,” said Hall of Famer Jaime Jarrin, the legendary former Spanish voice of the Los Angeles Dodgers. “He played a predominant role in my start as a baseball broadcaster. 

“I learned a lot from him and from Jose el Fat Garcia, both of the land of Ruben Dario. Rest in peace, my maestro and friend Chelito Cardenas.”

After the initial run with the Dodgers, Cárdenas called games for the Astros from 1962-75 and again in 2007-2008, including some television broadcasts in 2008. In 2024, he was inducted into the Astros Hall of Fame.

Per his profile in the Astros Hall of Fame: “During his illustrious career, Cardenas also called high-profile events in other sports, including the famous Muhammad Ali-Jimmy Ellis heavyweight boxing match that took place in the Astrodome in 1971.”

Cárdenas was a finalist last year for the Ford C. Frick Award for broadcast excellence by the Hall of Fame, but did not get inducted. He was also a finalist in 2011and 2012, but his consideration for Cooperstown has been discussed for decades. Back in 1995, Kevin Baxter wrote about Cardenas and his Hall of Fame chances at the Los Angeles Times:

“It was an honor just to be nominated,” Cardenas says of his consideration for a place in baseball’s shrine. “There are a lot of people who would like to be in. It’s a very exclusive club.

“[But] I’d love to be elected while I’m alive, not after I’m dead. That’s no fun.”

Cárdenas was inducted into the broadcasters wing of the Hispanic Heritage Baseball Museum Hall of Fame in 2002 and is also in the Nicaragua Baseball Hall of Fame.